A Small Problem?

Wednesday, 12 January 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
A report in today's Daily Mirror (echoed by other services) say that the new series has been hit by a shortage of dwarf actors because of the filming of two films, "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" and the next Harry Potter film. "It's very difficult to employ persons of restricted growth when, as our producer Phil Collinson says, `Bloody Gringotts and the Chocolate Factory are filming at the same time'," executive producer Russell T Davies has been quoted by the Mirror as saying. Outpost Gallifrey has learned that this is, in fact, simply a quote from the latest issue of Doctor Who Magazine and, in fact, is from the filming sessions several months ago (which we reported on with photos taken from an on-location shoot.) (Thanks to Paul Engelberg, Steve Tribe, Chuck Foster, Sean Bradshaw, Kenny Smith, David Collins)




FILTER: - Press

Mind Robber - Cleared DVD Extras

Monday, 10 January 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
The British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) has issued the following data about the extras for the forthcoming DVD release of The Mind Robber in March 2005 in the UK. The extras include:

00:22:25:19 | HIGHLANDER THE JAMIE MCCRIMMON STORY
00:34:54:20 | THE FACT OF FICTION THE MAKING OF THE MIND ROBBER
00:06:49:22 | THE MIND ROBBER GALLERY
00:02:02:08 | EASTER EGG

While all of these extras are known, this actually quantifies them with running times. (Thanks to Steve Tribe)




FILTER: - Classic Series - Blu-ray/DVD

Sunday Herald Comments

Monday, 10 January 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
The Scottish Sunday Herald ran a feature in their magazine on January 9 called "101 Big Events of 2005". The introduction features a large picture of Moses holding the Ten Commandments. The byline begins "Thou shalt watch enraptured as Dr Who returns to the small screen!" The section of the article concerning Doctor Who read as follows: "#74 - DOCTOR WHO. Fifteen years after it was taken off the air, Dr Who is remembered as a defining piece of cult television. The programme was actually much bigger than that, a mainstream popular success sustained over 26 years, which only went into decline when the writers began catering to a niche market of sci-fi freaks and not the majority of the British public. In 2005 Dr Who will be returned to BBC primetime by a well-selected team of specialists - chiefly long-time aficionado and gifted populist TV writer Russell T Davis (Queer As Folk). Davis has hired like-minded talents to script the 13 new episodes, including League of Gentlemen co-founder and former Dr Who fan-fiction writer, Mark Gatiss. 'It's a brilliant reinvention,' Gatiss has promised. 'I'm not just saying that. Very funny, very scary. A great piece of television.' And the more you hear, the greater it sounds. The brilliant character actor Christopher Eccleston will be the new Doctor - that curious, inscrutable, vaguely unsettling alien time-traveller who defends humanity for his own whimsical reasons. Billie Piper will be his sidekick. Simon Pegg of Shaun Of The Dead will appear. There will be episodes set in the forties and the Victorian era. Simon Callow will be Charles Dickens who helps save the world from alien infestation. And there will be Daleks." (Thanks to Francis O'Dowd, John Bollan)




FILTER: - Press

New Year Location Filming

Monday, 10 January 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
We've received a brief report from the folks at TIMELESS, the Cardiff branch of the Doctor Who Appreciation Society, concerning filming in Cardiff this weekend on location for the new series. Click on the spoiler tags to check it out (with thanks to Timothy Farr for the info!)
On the afternoon of Sunday 9th January 2005, the two ends of Womanby Street (one in Quay Street and the other opposite Cardiff Castle) were sealed with traffic cones and security people in yellow reflective waistcoats. Shortly before 7pm, Christopher Eccleston as the Doctor and Billie Piper as Rose Tyler were performing a sequence in which they run into an alley off Womanby Street opposite The Gatekeeper pub. The alley was dressed with washing hanging to dry from lines between the buildings and looked not unlike the closing credits to 1960's editions of soap opera Coronation Street, albeit in colour. This prompted speculation among onlookers that these scenes are intended for the rumoured storyline in which Rose finds herself in a time when her deceased father was still alive. There was one strong overhead light source on set shining into the Alley from Womanby Street all evening, suggesting both a moonlit scene and that all shots being recorded were taking place in the Alley. There was a break in recording at 9pm and Billie Piper left at this time. Sources on set claim that recording is set to continue through until 3am.




FILTER: - Conventions

BBC Competitions

Sunday, 9 January 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
The official Doctor Who site is currently running a competition to win a copy of "Match of the Day," the January 2005 BBC Books Fourth Doctor/Leela novel by Chris Boucher; meanwhile, the BBC Wiltshire site is running a competition to win a copy of the new BBC DVD "Horror of Fang Rock". Both competitions are, by BBC rules, open only to UK residents. Click on each link for more details.




FILTER: - Competitions

Geoffrey Sax

Sunday, 9 January 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
The feature directing debut of Geoffrey Sax, director of the 1996 Doctor Who movie, placed No. 2 in the US Box Office this past weekend; "White Noise" opened with $24 million despite largely negative reviews and modest expectations. (Thanks to Richard Allison)




FILTER: - People

Fifty Key Programmes book

Sunday, 9 January 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
Doctor Who is featured in a new book, 'Fifty Key Television Programmes', an academic work edited by Glen Creeber of the University of Aberwystywth; the Doctor who section is written by Matt Hills. The book is distributed by Arnold Publishers in the UK and Oxford University Press in the USA. (Thanks to Steve Freestone)




FILTER: - Books

First Look: To The Slaughter

Sunday, 9 January 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
Outpost Gallifrey has received a hazy but legible version of the cover illustration for the BBC Books novel To the Slaughter by Stephen Cole, due in February 2005. Click on the thumbnail for a larger version. Update - January 11: The official site has posted a clear version of the cover so we've replaced our original view with the official version. (Thanks to Jim Trenowden)




FILTER: - Books

Guardian: New Series a "Must See"

Sunday, 9 January 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
Today's edition of the Guardian newspaper features an article (available online here) called "50 must-sees for spring" that names the new Doctor Who series at #5. Says the article, "Few people under the age of 30 will remember Tom Baker at his most magnetic, as the Dalek-thwarting timelord. Their parents may claim to this day that the hirsute one was not a patch on William Hartnell or Patrick Troughton, that he whimpered in the wake of the mighty Jon Pertwee. The real nippers probably think that Peter Davison was the best. One thing is sure, however: by the time Sylvester McCoy succeeded Colin Baker in 1984, the doctor's bankable days were over, the plots - and sets - too flimsy to convince in a post-Spielberg world. Four decades on from the first shows the BBC is bringing the doctor back and the signs for success are good, with the brilliant Russell T Davies on writing duty. A massive Doctor Who fan of old, he promises 'full-blooded drama' and storylines which are 'fun, exciting, contemporary and scary', while Christopher Eccleston should have just the right balance of bit-of-rough charm and glowering, Messianic intensity to merit the shabby great coat and (we hope) loop-the-loop scarf. Billie Piper in the role of his assistant, Rose Tyler, will doubtless help keep teenage boys of all ages happy."




FILTER: - Press

News Tidbits from DWM

Saturday, 8 January 2005 - Reported by Shaun Lyon
In the latest issue of Doctor Who Magazine, there are a few items of confirmation. From BBC Books: after publication of "The Gallifrey Chronicles" on 28 March, the next regular BBC Books release will be Barry Letts' "Island of Death" on 4 July. All three Ninth Doctor novels, as well as Justin Richards' Monsters and Villains, will now be published on Monday 19 May, to enable "some robust marketing". "Monsters and Villains," the previously announced non-fiction book, will include some new series material written specially by new series producer Russell T Davies. The three novels can be read in any order. The new logo will appear on all four books. And there's been decision yet on which logo will be used for the resumption of the regular book line. As for Big Finish news, Nicholas Briggs' new "Cybermen" miniseries is announced and confirmed for August to November; currently untitled it will feature some of the "Dalek Empire" cast and will have some links to the previous Cybermen adventure "Sword of Orion," "being about the different generations of the Cybermen." Actress Jennie Linden from the Dalek films will be in "Unregenerate!" in June, too.




FILTER: - Magazines - DWM