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Those are the Eleventh Doctor's goggles.I don't see what difference that makes... They were still a dumb idea, and those goggles look even dumber to me.
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Those are the Eleventh Doctor's goggles.I don't see what difference that makes... They were still a dumb idea, and those goggles look even dumber to me.
Yeah, that's pretty much the context of it. It's like Tennant's 3D glasses or the dreaded fez.Are the goggles even a part of her outfit? It looks more like she's using them while she is working on the dildo looking sonic screwdriver.
They looked dumb on 11, they look absolutely ridiculous on Whittaker.Those are the Eleventh Doctor's goggles.
Again, youre hyper focusing one one small part of what I said. Has the doctor ever had a derpy look on his face while ogling what it, for all intents and purposes, a sex toy?I mean, the Doctor's always looked a bit derpy TBH. A bit like a weird uncle or that dodgy guy hiding around the back of a gas station offering you sweets.View attachment 486757
He was.Gary seems like an interesting kind of failure, wasn't he a child actor ala Wil Wheaton before getting a job on Doctor Who?
Yeah, the Eighth Doctor Adventures is a great listen and perfect for Big Finish beginners. You don't need to have listened to all the Charley stories to understand what's going on either.As you've no doubt noticed, I go through a lot of audios.
Anyways, with little interesting me coming out any time soon, I found myself going back to the audios that got me into Big Finish in the first place- The 8th Doctor Adventures. (Not to be confused with the book series of the same name)
These audios originally came out at the beginning of 2007, right before Series 3 of New Who started airing. I bring that up only because the influence of New Who on it is really obvious.
These are some of the first (if not THE first) Big Finish releases to follow the new show's >40 minute format, (compared to their usual up to 2.5+ hour stories). This was also the first time Big Finish created an entire "series" of their own for a Doctor, rather than finding slots where new stories could fit in. This makes it incredibly easy to just jump in and listen to these with no other knowledge of previous stories. (Particularly handy for a Doctor with as relatively little continuity as 8 had at the time)
With all of that said, after re-listening, I would HIGHLY recommend all 4 of these audio sets. I would especially recommend them as an entry point to Big Finish for people who like (at very least the first few seasons of) New Who. Not convinced? Here are some random thoughts.
tl;drThe Companion:
The main companion for these 4 sets is Lucie Miller. If I had to compare Lucie to any other companion, it would probably be Rose Tyler (with quite a bit of Donna Noble thrown in there for good measure). Lucie is... not a perfect person, and she has some rough edges around her. Frankly, I kind of thought she was a bitch for the entire first series. (And my opinion of her somewhat fluctuated over the next 3 series, but I will say I never really "hated" her.) She's a bit of a ditz (another character calls her a "chav" and after looking up what that was, I would say that's probably a fair assessment). Unlike Rose though, she does actually grow and develop as a character, and I was surprised how much I genuinely cared about her by the end of series 4. She is most definitely NOT a Mary sue, and I appreciate that, dear god do I appreciate that...
She gets stuck with the Doctor in the first episode against both of their wills, for reasons that will be made apparent eventually... She's kind of abrasive, but she works with the 8th Doctor surprisingly well.
Side note: I don't think it was intentional, but Lucie actually comes off as being casually racist multiple times throughout this series (and it's funny every single time), in a way that I really don't think would fly in today's Doctor Who, actually I found myself thinking that quite a few times throughout these sets.
The 8th Doctor:
I had seen the TV movie before listening to these, but this 8th Doctor is a bit more cynical than his only real televised appearance up to this point (for reasons that do actually make sense if you follow his earlier stories with Charley) though by the end of his story, he gets a LOT more cynical.
All of this shit that happens to him makes me REALLY wish that they had made 8 be the War Doctor. (At very least, we're getting to see him experience the time war in the aptly named "The Eighth Doctor - The Time War").Travelling with Charley, he was shown to have had two (previously unmentioned) companions kidnapped and fucked up by Davros, have has his memory of them wiped, and then have to see one of those two die when he meets up with them again; lose another companion in C'rizz; have his memory fucked with AGAIN so he doesn't completely know what happened to Charley... (She survived her last encounter with him, and worse after, but I do believe he thinks she's ok though); alsoLucie dies by the end of the 4th set, as does his Great Grandson (The son of Susan Foreman, who also appears in this set); he also sees a much shorter-lived companion Tamsin Drew die.
Eventually, in the next series of box sets, he will also lose companion Molly O'Sullivan... and in the future, I would frankly be amazed if he doesn't lose one or both of his current companions, Liv Chenka or Helen Sinclair (probably both) by the end of Ravenous.
I do believe that 8 has had by far the most companions die on him of any Doctor, and that's not even counting all of his books and comics I haven't read.
Villains:
These sets have quite the list of villains in them. In addition to the obvious Daleks and Cybermen (both of which show up in the first series, because of course they do, lol), we also get appearances from:
-The Autons
-The Zygons (their first appearance outside of books, since the original 4th Doctor Story)
-Morbius
-The Krynoids
-The Spiders... err The Eight Legs...
-The Monk (Again, I think his first appearance in a long time)
-The Ice Warriors
The Doctor also takes on.
-"The Head Hunter" who is surprisingly the closest thing this box set has to a unifying "villain". She's kind of a bounty hunter/mercenary, and she always has some ulterior motive.
-An evil office building
-Christopher Benjamin (The actor who plays Henry Gordon Jago) hamming it up as a hilarious and villainous artist/inventor.
-Transsexual crab people(!)
-Evil goats.
-A radical environmentalist group led by basically Bono. (Where the message oddly ends up being more pro immigration than pro environmentalism.)
-Literally Scientology, but with spiders.
Stories:
I would be lying if I said that all of these stories were jewels, but I found even the stinkers were still highly listenable. (The serialized format helps in that greatly.)
I'm only going to single out a few here, one from each series, because this post is already going to be hella long:
Series 1, Human Resources(1 and 2):
This is the Series 1 finale 2-parter. Unlike some of the other finales in this set, this entire series has been building up to this. It gives a satisfying reason as to why Lucie got stuck with the Doctor in the first place (the Time Lords fucked up), it has a surprise villain that I don't feel like spoiling here, it turns office buildings into war-mongering death machines, and it was really good.
Series 2, Brave New Town:
It's a bit of a stereotype for me at this point, but any time a story manages to surprise me, I tend to like it a lot more. This story managed to surprise more than any other in these sets. The premise is that there is a simple British town is still living in September 1, 1991... only it's 2008. I won't say who the villain of this story is, because that would ruin it, but do check it out.
Series 3, Orbis:
This is the first story of Series 3, and in-between the finale of series 2, and this, the Doctor was stranded without his companion or his TARDIS, on a primitive planet full of sentient talking jelly fish for 600 YEARS! This isn't just a throwaway gag either... at the end of this story, the Doctor has all but forgotten about his companion Lucie (whom he is still traveling with, but for a bit at least he treats her as someone he doesn't know...) he even questions what he originally saw in humanity in the first place after meeting some particularly nasty humans.
Probably the funniest part of this episode is when the Doctor (seemingly intentionally) misgenders a member of the evil race of transsexual crab people(!). (just go with it) Again, I don't think this would happen in today's Doctor Who... Too problematic and all that shit.
Series 4, Situation Vacant: The premise is basically: "(For reasons) The Doctor is looking for a new companion, and he decides to hold what is essentially a reality tv competition to pick the next one." (If that sounds bonkers to you, and totally out of character for the Doctor... Well, you aren't wrong, but just listen to it anyways.) It's (obviously) not entirely what it appears to be originally, and it is still a lot of fun... Also great, it isn't particularly apparent who the Doctor is going to choose initially.
Overall:
The first 4 series of the Eighth Doctor Adventures are overall pretty good, and I hope I managed to get at least one person to check them out.
John Hurt was great, but I'm still bothered by the whole "he fought in a war so he doesn't get a number" bullshit they had to pull to explain him.But John Hurt tho.
Frog.Is that a lizard with a cigar?
John Hurt was great, but I'm still bothered by the whole "he fought in a war so he doesn't get a number" bullshit they had to pull to explain him.
I do still believe a battle-hardened 8 (with all of the shit he's been through) interacting with 10 and 11 would have been a lot more impactful than a random grumpy old man we'd never seen before... (No offense to Hurt)
At least they were nice enough to give 8 a regeneration scene. (one which validates the audios, no less)