Found! The lost Derek Deadman Doctor Who title sequence.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on September 8th, 2010 filed in Doctor Hasn't a Clue, Doctor Who, Humour, LEGO
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Most records from the Derek Deadman years as the 83rd Doctor are of course lost on the basis that the BBC wisely destroyed all recordings of this era of the show, and the subsequent Fandom Wars saw the destruction of many more off-screen archives. However we have recently uncovered some exclusive off-air stills of the opening title sequence that ran during seasons 340-342 (2338-2338).

DWHAC_Title_Sequence

Dr. S.

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Doctor Hasn’t A Clue #10.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on September 8th, 2010 filed in Doctor Hasn't a Clue, Doctor Who, Humour, LEGO, Vignettes
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The missing tenth instalment! This one was initially created as an exclusive for James Shields to include in a LEGO/SF related fanzine at the 2010 Worldcon. On the basis that the event has now finished, I can post it here.

DWHAC_010

 

Paying a visit to the famous floating rocks of Krebulon VI, the 83rd Doctor and Millicent found themselves in a spot of bother after the TARDIS materialised on one of the smaller rocks, and an absent-minded K-9 sent them tumbling over the edge.

In a slightly existential twist necessitated by budgetary constraints, our heroes were forced to spend the next 45 minutes contemplating the meaning of existence before being rescued by their robotic friend whom, it was revealed, in a highly unlikely twist, had rockets built into the sides of his body all the time that enabled him to fly. Still, if it was good enough for R2D2, then it was good enough for K-9, albeit 336 years later.

It is not without a certain amount of irony that this episode, aired in 2338, was entitled “Hanging On” – since by the middle of Season 342 of which it was a part, the series was in dire straits, having suffered the lowest ratings in the program’s history, and was close to cancellation.

Therefore, in a desperate attempt to boost the audience appreciation scores and to recreate the past glories of earlier, cannier Producers in 2006, 2145, 2157 and 2288 respectively, the robot dog character of K-9 was reintroduced to the series.

However, true to form on the part of current Producer Cambridge-Smythe, this revamped incarnation of the Doctor’s companion was played strictly for laughs and was portrayed as a bumbling, forgetful, accident-prone character that kept breaking down and bumping into things. This did not sit well with the half-dozen or so people still watching Doctor Who, but since this audience consisted for the main part of a group of quadriplegics on a particular hospital wing that suffered a faulty television that couldn’t be switched over to another channel, there was little they could do about it other than to tut loudly and flicker their eyelids a lot.

The addition of comedy bells and whistles whenever K-9 moved on screen was an additional miscalculation, as was the high-pitched camp voice dubbed in post-production.

To make matters worse, K-9′s complete inability to move in a straight line was not always the result of the scripts, and much like the original K-9 prop used between 1977 and 1981, the creation proved extremely difficult to control on set. Despite the 361 years of advances in technology, the machine spent more time being repaired than actually being used for filming.

One particularly nasty incident occurred on location for this very story – with K-9 hurrying to the rescue of the TARDIS crew, the polarity of the machine’s remote control receiver was reversed, causing an erroneous signal to be sent back to the control unit which promptly recalibrated itself to a default factory setting.

Unfortunately, this setting matched one being used at a nearby nuclear reactor for the control of a robotic arm to manipulate control rods, and within minutes, the reactor went critical and suffered a minor but catastrophic explosion, releasing tons of radioactive material into the atmosphere and irradiating half of the country.

The incident was hurriedly covered up by the BBC as they could not afford another scandal, having only recently been bailed out by the British Government for enormous debts, partly incurred by senior management in their massively expensive and excessive coverage of yet another Football World Cup fiasco, and in any event, since most of Britain in 2338 was full of retarded celebrity-obsessed dullards, the radiation appeared to cause no real additional ill-effects.

K9 model by Louise Dade.

Dr. S.

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Nighttime Landing.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on September 5th, 2010 filed in Creations, Doctor Who, LEGO
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The TARDIS makes a nighttime landing by a calm lake on the planet Balakov.

 

LEGO TARDIS with lighting kit from Lifelites and engraved tiles from The Brick Engraver. Exposure – 15 seconds.

Setup shot:

I named this planet in honour of Flickr user Balakov (Mike Stimpson), who I think was the first (only?) person I’ve seen who uses the technique for water that I’ve copied.

This image is Photoshop free, I merely rotated and trimmed it.

Dr. S.

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My Weird Children.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on September 5th, 2010 filed in Children, Family, Life
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No, I don’t know what’s going on either.

My Weird Children.

Dr. S.

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Fun with Han & Chewie! Number 006.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on September 4th, 2010 filed in Comic Strips, Fun With Han & Chewie!, Humour, LEGO, Star Wars
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Fun with Han & Chewie! Number 006.

“Watch your mouth kid or you’re gonna find yourself floating home”.

Dr. S.

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Dalek Bully.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on September 2nd, 2010 filed in Baby Daleks, Doctor Who, Humour
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Teenage Daleks often get a kick out of annoying the little kids.

Dalek Bully

Dr. S.

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Lifelites TARDIS.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on September 1st, 2010 filed in Creations, Doctor Who, LEGO
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My Lifelites kit arrived today! Yes, my TARDIS is now fully lit, internally and in the lamp at the top.

Lifelites_TARDIS

All I needed to do was a small amount of drilling through the roof sections to get one of the wires through to the lamp. Otherwise, the TARDIS is as it was, I haven’t even had to glue it together – it’s remarkably sturdy, although I have to take it apart to turn off the lights and I’m not looking forward to that as it’s a bit fiddly to cram it all back in there.

Still…looks fantastic eh? No Photoshoppery involved here, I simply resized the image, otherwise you see it as it was originally taken.

This is the kit I used:

lifelites.com/products/110

Dr. S.

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Video – How to build your own Minifig scale LEGO TARDIS.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on September 1st, 2010 filed in Creations, Doctor Who, LEGO, Videos
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Following many requests, I hereby present an instructional video outlining how to build your own Minifig scale LEGO TARDIS. A step by step video, including a list of parts that you will need.

Enjoy!  Shot using a Sony DCR-SX33 Handycam.

Dr. S.

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Doctor Hasn’t A Clue #13.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on August 31st, 2010 filed in Doctor Hasn't a Clue, Doctor Who, Humour, LEGO, Vignettes
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DWHAC_013

During Doctor Who‘s history, there have been occasional celebratory or anniversary stories where our hero would accidentally meet a past incarnation of himself and/or old enemies from the show’s history.  However aside from two cut scenes from the 3rd Doctor story Day of the Daleks, the Time Lord had skillfully managed to avoid ever bumping into his own present incarnation.

All that would change of course with the arrival of the 83rd Doctor, who, as we have previously seen, was utterly incompetent and incapable of avoiding trouble even if it was heavily signposted with flashing neon arrows.

Thus it was that, in 2337, having incorrectly calculated the date using a clapped out calculator, drunken BBC executives happily agreed that that the 341st season of Doctor Who could feature an extra special episode to celebrate the 375th anniversary of the show, a whole year ahead of the true 375th anniversary.

Not believing his luck, Producer Cambridge-Smythe immediately set about writing what he thought would be the “ultimate” Doctor Who story, featuring all the surviving Doctors and many of the alien races he had encountered through the centuries.

All that came to a grinding halt half-way through planning, with an urgent memo’ from the 6th floor.  Having temporarily sobered up long enough to notice a big hole in the budget, someone in the BBC Executive Suite had spotted that the celebration of the show’s anniversary was a whole year ahead of schedule.  And to make it worse, someone else had installed new batteries in the previously errant calculator and as a result, the episode’s budget was slashed to less than 5% of what it had been before.

Quick thinking was required, not to mention the firing of several hundred actors and actresses who had been lined up to start filming during the following week.  A new script was commissioned and sets hastily built.

The resulting episode was wittily entitled The Half Doctor, and it opened with the TARDIS materialising on a tiny desert island on the planet Metraxis II, whereupon it immediately broke down, forcing the Doctor and his assistant Millicent to evacuate the craft and await rescue.

Although small and in danger of being swamped by the endless Metraxian sea, the island was home to some micro biotic indigenous forms of life.  However after a desperate and unsuccessful attempt by the Doctor to remotely fix the time machine with his sonic hammer backfired, the TARDIS console was damaged, and dangerous energies from the time vortex began to spill outside the ship.  This caused the previously benign creatures on the island to commence a process of vastly accelerated transmutation, evolving in a Darwinian cataclysm that threatened within days to overwhelm the Doctor and his companion as monstrous radioactive creatures began to emerge from the sands…

Things took a turn for the worse when, two weeks into their exile, the Doctor and Millicent were initially relieved to hear the wheezing, groaning arrival of another TARDIS…only to discover that in fact the new arrival was a future version of the 83rd Doctor, who, in his time stream, had successfully escaped the island after three years of being trapped, only to accidentally hit the fast return switch and arrive back on the island after five minutes and nearly three years in his own past.  This Doctor had also witnessed the death of Millicent, two years before, and now his TARDIS was again non-functional.

Now trapped with two useless Doctors and two broken TARDISes, and determined to avoid her apparently pre-determined fate, Millicent was forced to find a solution to the problems that beset the three travelers, on the basis that the two Doctors either spent their time arguing amongst themselves about who’s fault this all was, or telling each other appalling jokes to which they already knew the punchlines.

Alas, the desperate cost-cutting measures employed in the making of this episode were more than evident on screen…with the show’s denouement making less than optimal use of a number of painfully obvious polystyrene rocks, plastic crabs and rubber snakes.  The BBC couldn’t even afford proper water for the Metraxian sea, and had to make do with cellophane and blue card.  In addition to this, Derek Deadman’s insistence on receiving twice his fee for the episode resulted in all pre-publicity for the show being scrapped due to lack of funds,  resulting in an extremely low audience for the transmission, which may have been just as well.

The Half Doctor was a dismal failure, and meant no proper anniversary show in 2338 – but by that time, anyone taking the remotest interest in the show was generally back on the booze, including Cambridge-Smythe, Deadman, the cleaning lady and the entire BBC Executive on the 6th floor who hadn’t really given a toss about the show in the first place.

Dr. S.

 

PS:  Yes, I’ve built a second LEGO TARDIS. One will have functioning lights, the other is a spare which won’t have.

Dr. S.

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Dalek Toddler.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on August 31st, 2010 filed in Baby Daleks, Doctor Who, Humour
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He’s had a little accident…

Dalek Toddler

Dr. S.

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Doctor Hasn’t A Clue #12.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on August 30th, 2010 filed in Doctor Hasn't a Clue, Doctor Who, Humour, LEGO, Vignettes
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Scholars of the Doctor Who television series will recall, if for no other reason than through my own enlightening articles on the era, that series 340-343 of the program were its most controversial. Regular readers of this series will also remember that season 343 saw a marked change in the series’ format, with the Doctor leaving the confines of the TARDIS and living in a Seattle apartment which he shared with a Dalek named Martin (and his raggedy old chair), a naughty Cybermat named Eddie, and Millicent, who became his housekeeper.

DWHAC_012

Despite the change in setting, the series retained a certain SF air to it, albeit with light entertainment Producer Geoff Cambridge-Smythe’s own unique bent. The series now had a laughter track, and plots would centre around the Doctor’s dating exploits with alien lifeforms, and Millicent’s dallying with the Master, who had become obsessed with her beauty and who would hang around the apartment for no apparent reason, even if the Doctor was out.

With most episodes from the era now wiped since the infamous and highly destructive “Fandom Wars” of 2340 which followed lead actor Derek Deadman’s assassination, many records from that period are sadly (or fortunately, depending on your point of view) lost. Luckily, some on-set stills remain, and we have here an exclusive shot from a season 343 episode entitled “Sleepwalking in Seattle” which saw the Dalek, Martin, revert to type and begin randomly exterminating visitors to the Doctor’s apartment, with amusing results!

Many people have of course criticised the blatant copying of the format of the TV sitcom Frasier (1993-2004 and revived between 2142-2185), but BBC Producers ploughed on with production of the series, regardless of all litigation thrown at them, on the basis that they had by now been sued by just about everybody in the world for just about every reason known to man, and had THE most experienced and fearless Lawyers on the planet.

This is the Frasier-style set used in Season 343 of the long-running TV series, which aired in 2339. It featured the panoramic window leading onto a balcony, the eclectic styling of the original show and even the crusty-old chair owned by Martin, the Dalek.

Apartment

This is the Frasier-style Doctor Who logo used in Season 343 of the long-running TV series, which aired in 2339. Featuring the Seattle skyline, with the TARDIS taking the place of the Space Needle.

Doctor Who Seattle Logo

Oh, and this will teach me to write a one-line throwaway gag that kind of paints me into a corner and that I just HAVE to see through to conclusion!

Dr. S.

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Dalek Creche.

Posted by Doctor Sinister on August 29th, 2010 filed in Baby Daleks, Doctor Who, Humour
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Awww…

Dalek Creche

Dr. S.

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