- Joined
- Oct 20, 2019
@Anonitolia I'm going to disagree with some of the advice here. Unless you are a particular fan of old style television and Sci-Fi for its own sake then going through all the old episodes would be a slog; and I believe I said something like that myself. But going to the opposite extreme and skipping several of the first Doctors is also a mistake imo.
Firstly, all of the early Doctors are good and enjoyable. Secondly you do miss out on some background by skipping them. For your situation I would suggest picking out one, maybe two, highlight stories for each Doctor so that you at least have seen them. If you do want to start with Five, I'll try to give a couple of nominations you should watch from the previous four.
For the First Doctor: The Aztecs has the most critical acclaim. The Dalek Invasion of Earth is a classic because of the iconic villains. And I personally have a soft spot for The War Machines though apparently that's not highly regarded. You also couldn't go wrong with watching An Unearthly Child. It's only the first episode and you should probably watch it as much just because of that, even if you don't watch any further First Doctor stories.
For the Second Doctor, for me it has to be Tomb of the Cybermen. The special effects will seem very hokey to you but it gives you a good feel for the Second Doctor. I'd also pick out The Abomniable Snowmen.
For the Third Doctor, he's not my favourite and I struggle to pick out anything specifically above the others. Spearhead from Space is probably the most acclaimed. For me though, The Sea Devils or The Curse of Peladon.
For the Fourth, even if you're disregarding the general idea of watching some of each Doctor, I'd really recommend you watch at least a couple of essentials from the Fourth era. These have to include Genesis of the Daleks. And I personally have a soft-spot for Talons of Wang-Chiang. The interaction between Leela and polite Victorian society is entertaining. And Androids of Tara I always thought was pretty good. Horror of Fang Rock is in some ways my favourite of the Fourth Doctor stories.
Finally, though this is kind of a 50/50, City of Death. On the one hand it kind of doesn't fully fit with Doctor Who, on the other hand it's very good. Barring a long and very self-indulgent sequence where they walk about Paris which I think exists solely to justify the cast and crew having a little jaunt abroad. It also gives us Tom Baker's impeccable delivery of the line: "You're a beautiful woman, probably" which always makes me laugh.
You said you were thinking of starting with the Fifth Doctor so I'll stop my essentials list there.
I would skip the Seventh Doctor entirely. Sylvester McCoy is good, almost everything else about the show is bad. It was also the height of Progressivism in the show and gave us the immortal: "White kids did it and ran away."
"That is most bogus, my Timey-Wimey friend."
"And that is why you need Eddie Van Halen as one of your companions."
"I'm sorry... what?"
Firstly, all of the early Doctors are good and enjoyable. Secondly you do miss out on some background by skipping them. For your situation I would suggest picking out one, maybe two, highlight stories for each Doctor so that you at least have seen them. If you do want to start with Five, I'll try to give a couple of nominations you should watch from the previous four.
For the First Doctor: The Aztecs has the most critical acclaim. The Dalek Invasion of Earth is a classic because of the iconic villains. And I personally have a soft spot for The War Machines though apparently that's not highly regarded. You also couldn't go wrong with watching An Unearthly Child. It's only the first episode and you should probably watch it as much just because of that, even if you don't watch any further First Doctor stories.
For the Second Doctor, for me it has to be Tomb of the Cybermen. The special effects will seem very hokey to you but it gives you a good feel for the Second Doctor. I'd also pick out The Abomniable Snowmen.
For the Third Doctor, he's not my favourite and I struggle to pick out anything specifically above the others. Spearhead from Space is probably the most acclaimed. For me though, The Sea Devils or The Curse of Peladon.
For the Fourth, even if you're disregarding the general idea of watching some of each Doctor, I'd really recommend you watch at least a couple of essentials from the Fourth era. These have to include Genesis of the Daleks. And I personally have a soft-spot for Talons of Wang-Chiang. The interaction between Leela and polite Victorian society is entertaining. And Androids of Tara I always thought was pretty good. Horror of Fang Rock is in some ways my favourite of the Fourth Doctor stories.
Finally, though this is kind of a 50/50, City of Death. On the one hand it kind of doesn't fully fit with Doctor Who, on the other hand it's very good. Barring a long and very self-indulgent sequence where they walk about Paris which I think exists solely to justify the cast and crew having a little jaunt abroad. It also gives us Tom Baker's impeccable delivery of the line: "You're a beautiful woman, probably" which always makes me laugh.
You said you were thinking of starting with the Fifth Doctor so I'll stop my essentials list there.
I would skip the Seventh Doctor entirely. Sylvester McCoy is good, almost everything else about the show is bad. It was also the height of Progressivism in the show and gave us the immortal: "White kids did it and ran away."
Well, James Bond is arguably a Time Lord, too. Multiple incarnations, a propensity for gadgets and an almost absurd ability for escaping from near impossible situations. All we're really missing are the regeneration scenes between Connory and Moore, etc. James Bond is clearly a renegade Time Lord who got stranded on Earth sometime in the Sixties.Reading more into 3 he really does seem to be going for more of a weird Bond-esque figure than the kind of stuff I'm looking for in this immediate moment.
"I'm the last of my kind. My entire planet is gone."
"That is most bogus, my Timey-Wimey friend."
"And that is why you need Eddie Van Halen as one of your companions."
"I'm sorry... what?"





