Into the Dalek: Next Time trailer

Sunday, 24 August 2014 - Reported by Marcus


Welcome to the most dangerous place in the universe… The Daleks are back and the Doctor embarks on his deadliest mission ever.




FILTER: - Series 8/34

6.8 Million watch Deep Breath

Sunday, 24 August 2014 - Reported by Marcus
Doctor Who: Deep Breath has an audience on BBC One of 6.8 million viewers. It had a 32.5% share of the total TV audience.

Doctor Who was by far the most watched programme of Saturday night, getting over two million more viewers than the second placed Casualty, which had 4.2 million watching. Tumble, the programme leading into Doctor Who had 3.3 million. The BBC took the top five places of the day with ITV's highest rated programme being Tipping Point: Lucky Stars with 3.3 million viewers.

The audience rose slowly through the episode, peaking at 7.0 million towards the end.

Doctor Who is currently the third highest rated programme for the week, with The Great British Bake Off leading the charts with 7.4 million.

Figures for the week are generally lower than average due to it being towards the end of the holiday season in England and Wales, with many families being away from home. The last season opener Asylum of the Daleks, shown 1st September 2012, had an overnight figure of 6.4 million.

The overnight figure is an estimate of the numbers watching when the show was transmitted and on catchup the same day. It does not include those watching at the Cinema. A full consolidated figure, including those who watch the programme within 1 week of transmission, will be released by BARB next week. The consolidated figure is likely to be substantially more then the initial overnight and could see Doctor Who reaching top place in the charts.




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 8/34 - UK

Deep Breath: media reaction

Sunday, 24 August 2014 - Reported by Chuck Foster
A roundup of some of the reaction from mainstream media for the premiere of Deep Breath last night - links to full reviews can be found via the author's name.

Please note that as these are reviews, spoilers may be present within the text!



This was a wise and thoughtful opening gambit from Moffat, and from the wonderful Capaldi – if you can utterly disregard the demented plot. Granted, this might be like saying "apart from that, 6 August was a typically pleasant day in Hiroshima", but the underlying, and cleverer, theme was of age, and ageing, and looks, and perception, very nicely summed up when Clara (Jenna Colman, in a performance of great nuance if you can forget that last faux-Scots diphthong) asks the pretty lesbian lizard-lady, "When did you suddenly stop wearing that veil?" "When you stopped seeing it," comes the reply.

The whole thing is daft, some say. Certainly the plots, much of the bangy noise, and all of the hype. But some tremendous subtleties emerge. The restaurant scenes were genuinely scary. And Commander Strax, that cross between R2D2 and a pepperoni Wayne Rooney, for instance taught last night's teenagers a great difference by saying "it is to be hoped" (correct) rather than the over-misused "hopefully".

Euan Ferguson, The Observer
In the spirit of empathy, you might have wondered what younger viewers – if children still watch Doctor Who – were supposed to make of such existential hand-wringing while they were waiting for the fighting to start. To be fair, there was a smattering of comedy to enjoy as Clara exchanged amusing cultural misunderstandings with some of the Doctor's old plasticky alien acquaintances, but the jeopardy – clockwork zombie androids harvesting body parts – was a long time coming and lazily derivative in form (knowing acknowledgements to Burke and Hare and Sweeney Todd didn't make it less so). The excitement was over before Capaldi had the chance to stamp his personality on things.

Phil Hogan, The Observer
Peter Capaldi’s 12th Doctor has probably been the most fiercely anticipated new leading man in the show’s history. And in the end he was … probably exactly how you would imagine Peter Capaldi playing the Doctor to be. Not the Malcolm Tucker clone that Tumblr had so much fun anticipating, but far from an easy sell, either. We saw, at the end, the vulnerability underneath, but it took a bloody long time to get there. And when the 11th Doctor turned up at the end to reassure Clara that this was the same man (surprise! And well done if you managed to avoid that spoiler), he was pretty much doing the same for the audience.

Deep Breath was a gothic period drama, true to promises of a show with a grittier tone and longer, more grounded scenes. In many ways, it was surprisingly low-key for a series opener. In reality, it maybe could have done with being shaved down to an hour.

It’s a measure of Doctor Who’s madness that our familiar territory is the Victorian household of a lizard detective, her ninja housemaid wife and their Sontaran butler, but here we are, and it’s lovely and familiar to have them back. Neve McIntosh as Madame Vastra is emerging as a true star of the show, and she gets fleshed out, with her blunt condemnation of Clara’s attitude and her lustful manipulation of Jenny. Here is an inter-species lesbian couple in the 19th century that you can actually believe in.

Dan Martin, The Guardian
Writer Steven Moffat’s smart dialogue got the jump on viewers by second-guessing how they would be commenting from the sofa: there were references to Capaldi being grey, wrinkly and Scottish (like Moffat himself). His first word was “Shush!”, as if silencing potential naysayers. Capaldi signals a conscious break from the Doctor’s boyish recent incarnations. A blend of Doctor Doolittle and Sherlock Holmes, he crackled with fierce intelligence and nervous energy. Whether riding a horse in his pyjamas or dismissing Earth as “planet of the pudding brains”, he was a class act. His unpredictable air added dramatic tension. Twice he abandoned Clara and it was uncertain whether he would come back for her.

Along with its new leading man, the show had taken the opportunity to spruce up in other aspects. There was a new credits sequence (with the usual time tunnel being replaced by rather literal clocks and cogs), a tweaked, squeaky theme tune and a redecorated Tardis (an industrial look which rather complemented Capaldi’s all-black outfit). The tone seemed different, too, quieter and more thoughtful – less about running down corridors holding hands, more about self-discovery and redemption.

Michael Hogan, Telegraph
Look, I know that I’m the voice of bitter old fans who think New Who was rubbish from conception, but I’ve stuck with the show and I want it to succeed. I also want it to be daring in more than just a visual or political way. I want it to be sophisticated, fun science fiction that opens kids’ minds to intellectual possibility. Maybe this new series will move in that direction, maybe not. But I will still be watching it. If only to find out what that crazy lady with the umbrella is up to.

Tim Stanley, Telegraph
‘Deep Breath’ is fun enough but is unlikely to become an instant classic in the same way as Smith’s introduction in ‘The Eleventh Hour’. Ben Wheatley’s superb direction keeps things creepy and adult. The special effects and cinematography are dazzling.

Meanwhile Moffat’s script is suitably darker and more mature to match the new Doctor, yet the Time Lord's dialogue is side-splittingly funny to balance the darkness. Within the story he even addresses everything from Scottish independence, the Doctor's age and Clara's relationship with the previous incarnation, which is an impressive feat in itself.

Neela Debnath, Independent
Capaldi plays the tartan time traveller as a serious thinker, an almost troubled being, with a burden. An independent soul, he is not ?nding his way in the world – he has already been there. In short, the new Doctor is one of us; older, kindly, grumpy at times, and with regrets. “I’ve made mistakes,” he says solemnly.

Once he gets over his post-traumatic regeneration disorder, this worldly Doctor could become a classic but do not expect the scarf to make a return. He may be an avuncular Doctor in a frock coat but he will not be reaching for the pipe and slippers.

David Stephenson, Express
Deep Breath is simultaneously familiar and yet unfamiliar. It’s a familiar ‘new Doctor’ episode which touches on the after-effects of regeneration. Steven Moffat’s clockwork droids from The Girl in the Fireplace return. And we’re reunited with the Paternoster Gang of Vastra, Jenny and Strax, who help uncover the droids’ murderous attempts to repair their spacecraft and reach the promised land. At the same time, however, everything is different. The Doctor himself certainly is, with both he and Clara struggling to come to terms with his new appearance and personality.

This is unmistakably a new style of story for a new Doctor. While there’s plenty of Moffat’s rapid-fire wordplay and humour, we’re no longer constantly hurtling from one hyperactive setpiece to the next. Instead the characters are allowed to carry the story. Will this continue when we return to standard length episodes? We’ll have to see.

Tim Liew, Metro
Not much is natural in Doctor Who. But Peter Capaldi’s debut as The Doctor was so astute and assured it quickly confirmed that he has the type of wily charisma that makes it a role he was born to play. In fact Capaldi was so confident about his selection as only the twelfth actor to portray one of television’s great icons that he even let himself be upstaged on his big night – not once but twice.

Capaldi’s low-key start was a welcome change to the zany antics of both Matt Smith and David Tennant when they burst into the show and which set the tone for The Doctor’s previous two incarnations. It was always hard to shake the suspicion that the way Smith and Tennant played The Doctor with such ostentatious gusto was more about making themselves popular than just playing him. Their grinning idiocy didn’t leave much room for The Doctor’s fabled gravitas, borne of 2000 years time travel. In Capaldi’s capable hands this will return, while The Doctor’s problems adjusting to his regeneration were less madcap and had more pathos.

All in all, it was an impressive, entertaining start for the new era, which will surely see Capaldi coming more and more to the fore.

Jim Shelley, Daily Mail
It's almost impossible to wade into Doctor Who. You can't just settle on the sofa and switch it on carelessly. If you're a novice you need to prepare. You must study the history and the recurring characters. It's like trying to understand the Second World War: you need to go back and understand the First, and to understand the First you need to go back further still and try to understand Imperialism and the intricacies of the European balance of power…it's exhausting.

You can't just turn up, fresh-faced and keen, hoping to innocently enjoy some Saturday night TV. There is just too much history and backstory with Doctor Who and it feels like it's groaning under the weight of its own continuity as well as under the demands of its fans.
Julie McDowall, Herald Scotland
I never had any doubt that Peter Capaldi would be brilliant. He is. On the evidence of Deep Breath, he’s the Doctor I’ve longed for since the series came back in 2005 – quite frankly, since 1981 when Tom Baker’s Doctor plunged to his demise. For many I’ve spoken to, he’s the perfect choice. They’re already convinced. But, in Deep Breath, the programme itself seems overly anxious that its now global audience won’t take to an older, craggier Time Lord. It is willing those millions attuned to, nay moistened by, the geeky good looks of Messrs Tennant and Smith to have faith in Capaldi.

Patrick Mulkern, Radio Times
As a standalone episode of Doctor Who, it had almost everything a fan can hope for. But more importantly, and more interestingly, it set us up for a turbulent series, which we now know culminates in the departure of Clara Oswald... although we don’t yet know how.

One certainty remains. Whether you love or hate Steven Moffat-written episodes, and in spite of Moffat’s love for neatly packaged, filmic individual episodes, he remains the master of the story arc.

If you watched Deep Breath and you don’t want to watch the rest of series 8, then there truly is something wrong with you (indeed, you may need help from a Doctor).
Richard Beech, Mirror
Never was it clearer that this was a regeneration, not a rejuvenation, in Doctor Who’s most hallowed traditions, that much will be demanded of its youthful audience. But, if the challenges may be great, so too will be the rewards. Judging by Peter Capaldi’s debut episode, the Tardis is, once again, in very safe hands.

Caroline Frost, Huffington Post
Capaldi’s incarnation of the sci-fi icon is a more mature, no-nonsense expression of Who-ishness, lacking the rubbery physicality of Smith but remaining as quick-witted and free spirited as ever. He’s a throwback to darker tones of the first few Whos—intentionally, per the behind-the-scenes feature that accompanied the episode. That modality is captured by the look he’s chosen for himself, a fitted long black coat streaked with crimson on the inside, suggesting power, danger, and a little whimsy. He’s a top hat and longer tails away from resembling an old-school stage magician. This is not another romantic, “boyfriend” imagining of Doctor Who, and it isn’t another reckless, rogue/borderline anti-hero version of the franchise, either. At least, not yet. “I’ve made a lot of mistakes,” he tells companion Clara (Jenna Coleman). “It’s time I did something about that.” We’ll see how that goes.

As bold and refreshing as this out-with-the-old, in-with-the-older regeneration promises to be, I resented the manipulative ways in which the premiere demanded we roll with things. The new era of Doctor Who should do the hard work of earning our affection and loyalty—not vice versa.

Jeff Jenson, Entertainment Weekly

Read other reviews from: Den of Geek; Digital Spy; Indie Wire; MTV; IGN; The Arts Desk; Forbes; Wales Online; io9; The Wrap; TV Fanatic; Twitch; Courier; The Backlot; Irish Examiner; The Atlantic; Cheddar Valley Gazette; News.Com (Australia); Variety; AV Club Milwaukee; Los Angeles Times; New York Times; Toronto Sun; Sydney Morning Herald




FILTER: - Press - Series 8/34

Doctor Who Extra: Red Button times

Friday, 22 August 2014 - Reported by Chuck Foster
Peter Capaldi as the Doctor, with Jenna Coleman as Clara (Credit: BBC/Adrian Rogers)The new online behind-the-scenes programme Doctor Who Extra will also be available on British television via the BBC's Red Button service at the following times over the course of next week:

Sunday6:15pm-7:00pm
Tuesday5:00pm-8:00pm
Wednesday10:00am-4:00pm
Thursday5:00pm-9:00pm
Friday3:45pm-11:00pm
Saturday2:00am-6:00am

Doctor Who Extra will be available online via the BBC iPlayer.






FILTER: - Doctor Who Extra - Series 8/34 - UK

Germany: subtitled episodes for new series

Friday, 22 August 2014 - Reported by Pascal Salzmann and Chuck Foster
In a followup to yesterday's report on the status of Doctor Who in Germany, broadcaster FOX have received an update from BBC Worldwide on how the series will be presented in the country, at least for the present:

We are happy to announce that we found a preliminary solution for the German speaking DOCTOR WHO fans. We guarantee to deliver episodes with German subtitles on time for their weekly repetition Saturday evenings on FOX. We are still working on a timeline for the delivery of German dubbed episodes.
Wir freuen uns eine vorläufige Lösung für deutschsprachige DOCTOR WHO Fans bekanntgeben zu können. Wir garantieren, Episoden mit deutschen Untertiteln rechtzeitig für die Wiederholung am Samstag abends auf FOX zu liefern. Wir arbeiten aktuell noch an einem Zeitplan für die Lieferung der Folgen auf Deutsch.

In previous years, FOX has presented Doctor Who fully dubbed into German; however, the leak of several episodes online last month via a BBC Worldwide server in Miami has led to more stringent controls being put into place over how the series is distributed internationally.






FILTER: - BBC Worldwide - Broadcasting - Germany - International Broadcasting - Series 8/34

TARDIS Crash-lands in Parliament Square

Friday, 22 August 2014 - Reported by Marcus
The Doctor and Clara made a surprise appearance in central London this morning when the TARDIS made a crash landing in Parliament Square, near the seat of the British Government.

A specially constructed set greeted commuters and tourists outside the Palace of Westminster, where Peter Capaldi and Jenna Coleman posed for pictures to promote the worldwide screening of Deep Breath tomorrow.

The square is dominated by the Elizabeth Tower, housing the world famous Big Ben, now repaired following the attack by the Slitheen in 2005.

TARDIS Crash lands (Credit: BBC/Guy Levy) TARDIS Crash lands (Credit: BBC/Guy Levy) TARDIS Crash lands (Credit: BBC/Guy Levy) TARDIS Crash lands (Credit: BBC/Guy Levy) TARDIS Crash lands (Credit: BBC/Guy Levy)


Deep Breath can be seen in the UK on BBC One at 7.50pm Saturday, followed by screenings around the World.




FILTER: - Jenna Coleman - Peter Capaldi - Series 8/34 - World Tour 2014

BBC Worldwide statement on episode dubbing in German

Thursday, 21 August 2014 - Reported by Chuck Foster and Pascal Salzmann
FOX in Germany have published a statement from BBC Worldwide over the channel being unable to broadcast a German-dubbed version of Deep Breath this coming Saturday:

Wir bedauern, dass es aufgrund von Änderungen in den Produktions-Timelines von Doctor Who BBC Worldwide nicht möglich war, FOX die notwendigen Episoden rechtzeitig zu liefern, damit eine deutsche Übersetzung zur gleichzeitigen Ausstrahlung mit der englischen Fassung angefertigt werden kann. Wir können jedoch garantieren, dass FOX die deutsche Fassung zu einem späteren Zeitpunkt zeigen wird. Wir hoffen, dass durch eine Ausstrahlung der beiden Sprachversionen so viele Fans wie möglich in den Genuss der achten Staffel von Doctor Who kommen werden. Leider können wir FOX bis heute keine Details über die Materiallieferungen für die Synchronisation der kommenden Episoden geben.
We regret that due to changes in the production timelines it was not possible for BBC Worldwide to deliver the required episodes of Doctor Who to FOX in time for them to translate and transmit the series in German simultaneously with the UK broadcast. We can guarantee that FOX will be showing the German-language version of the series as well. We hope that with FOX showing both language versions that as many fans as possible will be able to enjoy season 8 of Doctor Who. Unfortunately, as of now we can’t give Fox any further details about delivery timelines for the dubbing of the upcoming episodes.

Deep Breath airs on FOX this Saturday at 9:00pm.





FILTER: - BBC Worldwide - Broadcasting - Germany - International Broadcasting - Series 8/34

Robot Of Sherwood: Press Details

Thursday, 21 August 2014 - Reported by Marcus
The BBC have released details of the third episode of the upcoming series of Doctor Who Robot Of Sherwood.

The episode will show on BBC One on Saturday 6th September. No transmission time has yet been set.

In a sun-dappled Sherwood forest, the Doctor discovers an evil plan from beyond the stars and strikes up an unlikely alliance with Robin Hood.

With all of Nottingham at stake, the Doctor must decide who is real and who is fake. Can impossible heroes really exist?


Meanwhile the UK transmission time for Episode Two, Into the Dalek, has now been set at 7.30pm, the heart of the Saturday night schedule. On BBC One it will once more follow Tumble the celebrity gymnastics show. Against the Doctor ITV will offer a celebrity edition of the quiz show The Chase and the brand new series of The X Factor.




FILTER: - Broadcasting - Series 8/34

Doctor Who Extra

Wednesday, 20 August 2014 - Reported by Marcus
The BBC has today announced Doctor Who Extra - a brand new series, exclusively on BBC iPlayer.

Doctor Who Extra will follow Peter Capaldi every step of the way throughout the creation of his first season as the Doctor. Over the course of 12 programmes it will trace the highs and lows of Doctor Who’s most ambitious run of episodes yet, getting the inside take on series 8 from the people who made it.

The Doctor Who Extra team had unparalleled access to stars including Peter Capaldi, Jenna Coleman and Samuel Anderson (series regular Danny Pink) plus guests Frank Skinner, Keeley Hawes, Michelle Gomez, Ben Miller, Foxes and many more. Writers, such as Lead Writer and Executive Producer Steven Moffat, and directors also contribute as they spill the beans on the on and off-screen drama.

Casual viewers will enjoy the fun, fast pace and lighter side of Doctor Who Extra but there’s plenty for fans, too, with a quick dip into the archive for every edition, reflecting on how Doctor Who’s history is echoed in this current series.

Doctor Who Extra is described as essential viewing for everyone who’s ever watched Doctor Who and wondered what it’s a like to be a part of the team that brings this global phenomena to our screens.

Doctor Who Extra is produced by BBC Cymru Wales and executive produced by Steven Moffat, Brian Minchin and Jo Pearce. Each 10 minute Doctor Who Extra episode will be available after that week’s Doctor Who episode on BBC One. It will also be available via the BBC's Red Button.




FILTER: - Doctor Who Extra - Series 8/34

Germany: FOX unable to produce German dub of Deep Breath for premiere

Wednesday, 20 August 2014 - Reported by Pascal Salzmann
FOX Deutschland have announced on Facebook that they are not going to air the German dub of Deep Breath on Saturday, but instead will only broadcast the original English language version. According to the channel this decision is due to the BBC's enhanced security after the leaks, which resulted in the material arriving later than usual and making it impossible to finish the German dub on time.

FOX have apologised to viewers, and stated that they will make the German-dubbed episode available through On-Demand services from Sky and Kabel Deutschland as soon as possible.

Here is the full statement by FOX:

Liebe FOX-Fans, unser Ziel ist es, euch deutsche Erstausstrahlungen so zeitnah wie möglich zur Weltpremiere zu präsentieren - in Originalsprache und auf Deutsch. Mit THE WALKING DEAD, THE BRIDGE - AMERICA und DA VINCI‘S DEMONS ist uns das erfolgreich gelungen. Daher waren wir stolz, euch auch DOCTOR WHO Staffel 8 zeitgleich zur UK-Premiere zeigen zu können. Und euer sehr positives Feedback hat uns gezeigt, dass das der richtige Weg ist.

Im Produktionsprozess der Serie ist ein Drehbuch an die Öffentlichkeit gelangt ( http://bit.ly/1tgwjcR ), was zu höheren Sicherheitsmaßnahmen und damit erheblichen Verzögerungen in der Materiallieferung und der Synchronisation geführt hat. Daher können wir nur einen Teil unseres Versprechens einlösen: Ihr werdet DOCTOR WHO Staffel 8 am gleichen Tag wie in UK auf FOX erleben, jedoch in der Originalfassung. Das tut uns sehr leid!  Die deutschen Folgen werden wir euch im VOD-Bereich von Sky und Kabel Deutschland anbieten. Sobald diese verfügbar sind, erfahrt ihr es hier auf Facebook!
Dear FOX-fans, it is our goal to present to you German premieres as near as possible to their world premieres - in the original language and in german. We did this successfully with THE WALKING DEAD, THE BRIDGE - AMERICA and DA VINCI'S DEMONS. That is why we were proud to announce a simulcast broadcast to the UK premiere of Series 8 of DOCTOR WHO. And your very positive feedback showed us that this is the right thing to do.

During producing of the show a script was leaked to the public ( http://bit.ly/1tgwjcR ) which lead to advanced security politics and later arrivals of material and dubbings. This is the reason why we are only able to fulfill one part of our promise: You will be able to experience Series 8 of DOCTOR WHO on FOX on the same day as the UK, but only in its original version. We are very sorry! The German episodes will be presented to you on your VoD account at Sky and Kabel Deutschland. As soon as they are available, you will get a notice from us here at Facebook.

Doctor Who: Deep Breath will air this Saturday at 9 PM on FOX.





FILTER: - Germany - Series 8/34