Difference between revisions of "You'll believe a Dalek can fly"
From The Doctor Who Cuttings Archive
Jump to navigationJump to searchJohn Lavalie (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{article | publication = The Sunday Telegraph | file = 2005-03-20 Sunday Telegraph.jpg | px = 500 | height = | width = | date = 2005-03-20 | author = Russell T. Davies | pa...") |
John Lavalie (talk | contribs) |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{article | {{article | ||
− | | publication = The Sunday Telegraph | + | | publication = The Sunday Telegraph (England) |
| file = 2005-03-20 Sunday Telegraph.jpg | | file = 2005-03-20 Sunday Telegraph.jpg | ||
| px = 500 | | px = 500 | ||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
| moreDates = | | moreDates = | ||
| text = | | text = | ||
− | 'Doctor Who' returns this week. Prepare to be scared, says Russell T. Davies, its new scriptwriter and lifelong fan remember [[broadwcast:Spearhead from Space|shop-window dummies coming to life]]. I remember [[broadwcast:The Green Death|maggots]]. I remeber [[broadwcast:The Sea Devils|devils coming out of the sea]], [[broadwcast:The | + | 'Doctor Who' returns this week. Prepare to be scared, says Russell T. Davies, its new scriptwriter and lifelong fan remember [[broadwcast:Spearhead from Space|shop-window dummies coming to life]]. I remember [[broadwcast:The Green Death|maggots]]. I remeber [[broadwcast:The Sea Devils|devils coming out of the sea]], [[broadwcast:The Seeds of Doom|an evil plant]] bigger than a house and a [[broadwcast:The Brain of Morbius|Frankenstein's monster with a goldfish bowl]] for a head. And if you're somewhere over 35, you might remember the same things. That's Doctor Who, the show that burned its way into children's heads and stayed there for ever, as beautiful and vivid as a folk tale. |
Now the good and constant Doctor is coming back, and I'm one of those in charge of it. This week, I'm trapped in the tornado of the BBC publicity machine as the launch, on Easter Saturday, approaches. I'll do anything to sell this lovely show. | Now the good and constant Doctor is coming back, and I'm one of those in charge of it. This week, I'm trapped in the tornado of the BBC publicity machine as the launch, on Easter Saturday, approaches. I'll do anything to sell this lovely show. | ||
Line 34: | Line 34: | ||
Consider that formative memory, the shop-window dummies coming to life and invading the high street. In memory, there's the most wonderful moment as the dummies, trapped in store-front displays, walk forward, raise their arms, chop downwards, and shatter the shop window into a thousand pieces. But watch the actual episode - Spearhead from Space (1970), still a wonderful piece of telly to this day - and, yes. the dummies spring to life; yes, they walk forward; yes, they raise their arms and chop down... But no glass smashes. It must have been too expensive! Instead, we cut to a shocked policeman, turning round as he hears the glass smash. A brilliant solution, but my false memory is every bit as valid as the transmitted version. | Consider that formative memory, the shop-window dummies coming to life and invading the high street. In memory, there's the most wonderful moment as the dummies, trapped in store-front displays, walk forward, raise their arms, chop downwards, and shatter the shop window into a thousand pieces. But watch the actual episode - Spearhead from Space (1970), still a wonderful piece of telly to this day - and, yes. the dummies spring to life; yes, they walk forward; yes, they raise their arms and chop down... But no glass smashes. It must have been too expensive! Instead, we cut to a shocked policeman, turning round as he hears the glass smash. A brilliant solution, but my false memory is every bit as valid as the transmitted version. | ||
− | So as I watched, I imagined my own versions, my own stories, my own epic quests. I'd love to tell you I was 12, but this went on for years. I was a student at Oxford University in the early 1980s, still wondering if the [[broadwcast:Claws of Axos|Claws of Axos]] (1971) deserved a sequel. My head would boil with stories! In fact, I think Doctor Who made me a writer. I believe it instilled in me an appreciation of plotting, pacing, a thrill followed by relief, the need for a joke in a moment of tension. Whether I'm writing soap opera or space opera, I've remembered those lessons. | + | So as I watched, I imagined my own versions, my own stories, my own epic quests. I'd love to tell you I was 12, but this went on for years. I was a student at Oxford University in the early 1980s, still wondering if the [[broadwcast:The Claws of Axos|Claws of Axos]] (1971) deserved a sequel. My head would boil with stories! In fact, I think Doctor Who made me a writer. I believe it instilled in me an appreciation of plotting, pacing, a thrill followed by relief, the need for a joke in a moment of tension. Whether I'm writing soap opera or space opera, I've remembered those lessons. |
Meanwhile, back in the real world, the years passed and Doctor Who's reputation declined, and sometimes it felt as though I was the only one still watching. Those lovely gaps in the production became the only thing that we remembered. | Meanwhile, back in the real world, the years passed and Doctor Who's reputation declined, and sometimes it felt as though I was the only one still watching. Those lovely gaps in the production became the only thing that we remembered. |