Special Screening of The Magician's Apprentice at Lucca Comic and Games Festival

Thursday, 8 October 2015 - Reported by Chuck Foster
Lucca Comics and Games (Credit: Lucca Comics and Games)The premiere of Series Nine, The Magician's Apprentice, is to receive a special screening in Italy on Friday 30th October as part of the Lucca Comic and Games Festival. The episode, which will be dubbed into Italian, will be shown at 6:30pm at Cinema Astraat, and will be introduced by its writer, Steven Moffat.

The series' lead writer is at the event for the weekend, and will feature in a Q&A alongside fellow writer Jamie Mathieson in the San Romano auditorium at 9:00pm on Saturday, which will be hosted by comic writer Gabriella Cordone Lisiero. Fans will have the opportunity to ask questions about the writing process and how a Doctor Who script is turned from words on a page to the series seen on screen.

Tickets for both events are available on the festival website website (English version of the site here).


The series itself, also dubbed into Italian, is expected to be shown in the country within the next few months on RAI4; full details will be available via the This Week in Doctor Who website and on Facebook once known.




FILTER: - Italy - Series 9/35 - Special Events - Steven Moffat

Magician's Apprentice - Online Viewing

Wednesday, 7 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Peter Capaldi as the Doctor in The Magician's Apprentice (Credit: BBC/Simon Ridgway)Barb has released figures estimating the number of viewers who watched Doctor Who online.

This year, the Broadcaster's Audience Research Board is, for the first time, issuing a report on the online viewing habits of the UK audience. The Beta report is based on the same technology that measures conventional TV viewing as well as incorporating data received from broadcasters via their viewing platforms. The data does not yet include those watching on Android devices.

The report ending 27th September indicates that Doctor Who: The Magician's Apprentice was streamed 373,826 in the eight days following transmission. It currently stands as the 6th most streamed programme in the previous 28 days, behind five episodes of The Great British Bake Off and one episode of Doctor Foster.

The Doctor Who New Series Prologue is currently the 12th most watched streamed programme over the period.

In the two days it was available The Witch's Familiar was streamed 202,949 times.




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35

Before the Flood: New Pictures

Tuesday, 6 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
The BBC has released publicity imagery for the forthcoming episode, Before the Flood

On a remote Army outpost, a fearsome alien warlord - the Fisher King - sets in motion a twisted plan to ensure his own survival. The ripples will be felt around the universe. Is this chain of events inevitable? And can the Doctor do the unthinkable?

Writer: Toby Whithouse
Director: Daniel O’Hara
Producer: Derek Ritchie
Before the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the FloodBefore the Flood
Before the Flood: Known Broadcast Details
United KingdomBBC OneSat 10 Oct 20158:25pm
United States of AmericaBBC AmericaSat 10 Oct 20159:00pm EDT(2:00am BST)
CanadaSPACESat 10 Oct 20159:00pm EDT(2:00am BST)
Asia PacificBBC EntertainmentSun 11 Oct 201510:00am SGT(3:00am BST)
New ZealandPRIMESun 11 Oct 20157:30pm NZDT(7:30am BST)
AustraliaABCSun 11 Oct 20157:40pm AEDT(9:40am BST)
Europe (Benelux)BBC FirstTue 13 Oct 20159:00pm CEST
United KingdomBBC TwoFri 16 Oct 20151:45am(British Signed Language)
FinlandYLE2Mon 12 Oct 20156:05pm EEST
IndiaFXSun 25 Oct 201511:00pm IST
South AfricaBBC FirstSat 31 Oct 20157:30pm SAST
GermanyFOXThu 10 Dec 201510:00pm CET(dubbed into German)




FILTER: - Publicity - Series 9/35

The Witch's Familiar - Official Rating

Monday, 5 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Ratings The Witch's FamiliarDoctor Who: The Witch's Familiar finished with an official rating of 5.71 million viewers.

The rating issued by the Broadcasters' Audience Research Board, or BARB, includes all those who watched the programme within one week of transmission.

The rating makes Doctor Who the 24th most watched programme on British Television for the week and the 8th most watched BBC programme for the week.

The live Rugby where England played Wales, which took a sizable proportion of Doctor Who's audience, finished with a consolidated rating of 8.96 million. Top of the list was The Great British Bake Off which had a final audience of 11.09 million viewers.

The final rating of 5.71 million is the lowest since the series returned in 2005, although Silence in the Library in 2008, had a lower chart position with 27th.




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35 - UK

Under the Lake - AI:84

Monday, 5 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Under The Lake (Credit: BBC/Simon Ridgway)
Doctor Who: Under the Lake had an Audience Appreciation or AI score of 84.

The Appreciation Index or AI is a measure of how much the audience enjoyed the programme. The score, out of a hundred, is compiled by a specially selected panel of around 5,000 people who go online and rate and comment on programmes.





FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35

Under the Lake - AI:84

Monday, 5 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Under The Lake (Credit: BBC/Simon Ridgway)
Doctor Who: Under the Lake had an Audience Appreciation or AI score of 84.

The Appreciation Index or AI is a measure of how much the audience enjoyed the programme. The score, out of a hundred, is compiled by a specially selected panel of around 5,000 people who go online and rate and comment on programmes.





FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35

Australian overnight ratings for Under the Lake and consolidated ratings for The

Monday, 5 October 2015 - Reported by Adam Kirk
Under the Lake has debuted in Australia, averaging 428,000 viewers in the five major capital cities. Directly up against the national rugby league grand final, it was the second-highest rating ABC drama of the day and the thirteenth highest rating program of the day overallThese ratings do not include regional or time-shifted viewers.

Meanwhile, including time-shifted viewers, The Magician's Apprentice averaged 847,000 consolidated viewers in the five major capital cities. With 190,000 extra viewers, it was the second-highest time-shifted program of the day and the eighth highest rating program of the day overallThese ratings do not include regional viewers.




FILTER: - Australia - Broadcasting - Ratings - Series 9/35

Under the Lake - Press Reaction

Sunday, 4 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Under The Lake: Paul Kaye as Prentis and Colin McFarlane as MoranThis item Contains Plot Spoilers

Doctor Who - Under the Lake receives mostly praise in the press with many reviewers welcoming the move to a more traditional type of Doctor Who story.

The Independent enjoys the variety that Doctor Who offers, with this weeks episode being very different than last week's Dalek battle. Under the Lake neatly pulls off one of the tried-and-tested tricks of Who’s elastic format by gleefully mashing together genres and expectations. It has rarely been done with such palpable tension and slow-burning dread..

The Telegraph thought the episode enjoyably old-fashioned saying This rollicking, hair-raising romp demonstrated that the sci-fi franchise still has the power to thrill and chill in equal measure.

The Express found the story terrifying If you weren't given the willies by Under the Lake - even just a little bit, then you could well be the bravest member of the audience. Doctor Who really did put the frights on this week with a scary episode that left most shuddering.

The return to roots idea was also noticed by Stuff.co.nz. The story ends with a cliff hanger, a device used in every classic Doctor Who story but seldom in new Who, tying something old to something new. And it's a cliff hanger which is bound to have audiences tuning in to next week's episode, Before The Flood, in droves

Online Den of Geek described the episode as a cracking slice of old-style Doctor Who, praising the Director Daniel O'Hara. He had never directed an episode of Doctor Who before this one, but it can’t just be me hoping he gets many repeat calls. He makes full use of the claustrophobia afforded by the base setting, using time honoured tricks such as relaying scale on computer screens and shooting from different angles to make everything appear far bigger on the inside. It works.

O'Hara also won plaudits from Metro praising both him and the writer Toby Whithouse who produce a taut, claustrophobic atmosphere which ramps up the tension beautifully. The physical sets add to that, as does the CGI used to realise the ghosts.

Radio Times is not convinced saying With a tweak and a fiddle, it can remain fresh, and maybe Under the Lake does appear fresh to younger viewers, but this time, to me, it does not. It feels derivative, even by Doctor Who’s standards. They do however praise the casting of Sophie Stone, the first deaf woman to have studied at Rada.

Digital Spy found the story atmospheric but flawed. It's refreshing to have our heroes simply stumble upon a crisis and resolve to fix it. It's the set-up for a good old-fashioned Doctor Who adventure, and spared another of the Doctor's personal crises., while TV.com thought it was better than the season premiere and enjoyed the premise of the episode. As the Doctor said, death was the one thing that united every creature in the universe and the idea of it no longer being a boundary made him giddier than a school girl. More curious than afraid, he had several questions for the ghosts, like whether or not they missed being alive and what death was like.

TV Fanatic feels frustrated by the two part nature of this season. Yeah, I'm a Netflix guy and rather than build anticipation for the second part, waiting a week (with other shows in-between) simply frustrates me. Can't you already tell the juicy stuff is coming in the second half?

Meanwhile Mashable, while being unsure about some of the dialogue, enjoyed the cue cards. I loved the idea that Clara has trained the Time Lord to carry around index cards with little scripts for situations where his emotional cluelessness gets him into trouble. Longtime fans will be punching the air to see a card marked "I'm sorry, I thought you lived in Aberdeen.". Finally IGN welcomes the direction change after the four part Missy story. Under the Lake feels like a bit of a throttle down for Doctor Who with its fairly ordinary tale of just plain old, oh, you know… ghosts!.

You can read the Doctor Who News review in our reviews section.




FILTER: - Press - Series 9/35

Under the Lake: Overnight Viewing Figures

Sunday, 4 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
3.7 million watched Doctor Who: Under the Lake, according to unofficial overnight figures.

Doctor Who, which had a share of 16.3% of the total audience, once more suffered by being placed directly opposite live Rugby, where this week, England V Australia was watched by an average of 8.04 million, to top the overnight figures for Saturday.

BBC One's top programme was Strictly Come Dancing, with 7.92 million watching. Casualty, which was directly after Doctor Who, had 3.77 million, just edging above The Doctor, although the positions are likely to be reversed when consolidated figures are released next week.

Overall Doctor Who was 5th for the day and is currently 43rd for the week.




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35 - UK

Under the Lake: Overnight Viewing Figures

Sunday, 4 October 2015 - Reported by Marcus
3.7 million watched Doctor Who: Under the Lake, according to unofficial overnight figures.

Full details shortly




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35 - UK