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Doctor Who The Tenth Planet: Far From Over

22 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by Paul Bowler in All, Dr Who (Classic Series)

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Anneke Wills, Ben, Cybermen, Doctor Who, Dr Who, Gerry Davis, Kit Pedler, Krail, Michael Craze, Mondas, Polly, regeneration, Snowcap Base, TARDIS, The 10th Planet, The Doctor, William Hartnell

The Tenth Planet

Far From Over

By Paul Bowler

 The 10th Planet (Cybermen2)

Born in London, 1908, William Hartnell grew up during a dark time of war and social poverty. His admiration for Charlie Chaplin inspired him to become an actor, and in 1926 he got this first job working with Sir Frank Benson’s Shakespearean Company. Further parts in theatre quickly followed, along with small film roles, until his career really took off in 1943 with his memorable role as the army officer in The Way Ahead. Carol Reed’s film opened the doors to numerous film roles for Hartnell, often receiving star billing, but the actor was frustrated by the “tough guy” roles he was always offered, preferring the comedy and farce of his early career.

However, fate would soon intervene when Hartnell’s roles in the Granada TV series The Army Game and Lindsay Anderson’s film, This Sporting Life (1963), led to Verity Lambert considering William Hartnell for the role of the Doctor. The rest, as they say, is history. Over the next three years William Hartnell would help forge the role of the Doctor, a mysterious time traveller, an outcast from his own people, a glorious – if somewhat cantankerous – grandfather from another world. Hartnell adored his time as the Doctor, becoming a hero to millions of children as he took his companions on fantastic adventures in time and space: visiting great historical figures like Marco Polo and King Richard the Lionheart, bizarre aliens like the Zabri and Sensorites appeared with strange cultures and customs, they experienced the futility of trying to alter history and the Aztec civilization in 15th Century Mexico, even turning on each other when the TARDIS drifted towards the edge of destruction, and they were always ready to fight the intergalactic menace of the Daleks which returned time and again to keep viewers enthralled as the Doctor valiantly fought them wherever their evil plans of universal domination threatened to destroy every living thing that dared to stand in their way.

The 10th Planet (Doctor)

Although Doctor Who enjoyed phenomenal success during its formative seasons, as the series entered its fourth year its popularity has begun to wane somewhat, and with new producer Innes Lloyd and story editor Gerry Davis attempting to revitalize the shows format the gruelling schedule sadly began to take its toll on Hartnell who was already in poor health. Once the decision was taken to recast the role of the Doctor it set in motion a chain of events that would not only mark the end of an era, but it would also see the introduction of a new race of monsters whose popularity would go on to rival even that of the Daleks themselves.

So when the TARDIS brought the Doctor, Polly (Anneke Wills), and Ben (Michael Craze) to the South Pole Space Tracking Station under the command of General Cutler (Robert Beatty), viewers would have never imagined how their favourite science fiction series was about to undergo the most crucial metamorphosis of all. In only a few short weeks during October 1966, history would be made as The Tenth Planet was broadcast, and nothing – not even the ever present threat of cancellation – would ever diminish the incredible journey that still endures today as Doctor Who gets ready to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of its unparallel success.

The Doctor arrives at the Tracking Station and discovers that a new planet has entered the solar system, its gravitational pull is threatening a manned space capsule as it approaches, where it is soon revealed to be Earth’s twin planet Mondas. Having been cast adrift in space the people of Mondas turned to cybernetics to prolong their lives, becoming emotionless Cybemen. Now they have returned to replenish their planets recourses by draining energy from Earth and harvesting the population to create the next generation of Cybermen. The Doctor and his friends face a desperate race against time to defeat the Cybermen and prevent General Cutler from launching the deadly Z-Bomb, a weapon that would destroy both worlds. Fortunately Cutler’s plan is thwarted by Ben and Mondas explodes after absorbing too much energy from the Earth, killing all the Cybermen in the process; their bodies disintegrating as soon as they are cut off from their worlds power supply. Ben then rescue the Doctor and Polly from the Cybemen’s spacecraft, but the Doctor appears to be ill, stating that his body is “wearing a bit thin” before rushing back to the TARDIS, where he collapses to the floor as startling transformation begins…

The 10th Planet (Cybermen3)

The Cybermen were created in collaboration by Doctor Who’s very own – unofficial – scientific advisor Kit Pedler and story editor Gerry Davis as a possible replacement for Terry Nations incredibly popular Daleks. Pedler envisioned the Cybermen as people who had taken the advances of medical science to the ultimate extreme, replacing their worn out bodies with cybernetic limbs, even computerizing their brains to become nightmarish husks of plastic, metal, and flesh. These creatures are so utterly devoid of emotion that they are no longer even capable of comprehending what it means to be human, as Polly discovers to her horror when she tries to reason with the Cyberman Krail.

With impassive, noseless faces, their bodies adorned with gleaming chest units and lethal energy weapons, these early Cybermen have more than a hint of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein about them. Like Shelley’s creation they are twisted anachronisms of life, a mutilation of science and gothic themes gone mad in the darkness of interstellar space. In many ways they are far more memorable than their modern counterparts, still clinging to the last vestiges of their humanity, utilizing the formality of individual names even though they no longer have any emotional resonance for them, and going so far as to adopt disguises to infiltrate the Space Tracking Station.

The 10th Planet (Cybermen Doctor Polly)

After attacking someone from the Snowcap Base outside the TARDIS, our first close-up of a Cyberman as it turns over Tito’s lifeless body reveals the monsters featureless visage, one that is stretched and distorted beyond anything even remotely human, with dark bulbous eyes and a leathery slit of a mouth. The headpiece is like an elaborate sensor array, with tubes and wires spilling out from the bulky chest unit, while the limbs support and array of cybernetics that end abruptly with cold humanoid hands. The patchwork nature of the Cybermen gives some inkling towards their nomadic existence, sacrificing their humanity as the vast expanse of space loomed before them, until their technological advances drew them inexorably back to their origins like some intergalactic swarm seeking to wrap their human cousins in their cold embrace.

Once they arrive, the Cybermen dominate every scene, looming over the inhabitants of the Snowcap base as cold logic dictates their actions. One of the most unnerving qualities about the Cybermen are their curiously harmonic voices, provided by Roy Skelton, an effect that is made more disquieting by the way the creature’s mouths stay open as they speak. It is almost as if the Cybermen have yet to realize that they no longer need to articulate the words anymore. The citizens of Mondas are now lost forever, even their original objective to survive has become consumed by their dedication to logic, leaving only a mutilated husk of flesh cocooned in a shell metal and plastic.

The 10th Planet (Ben & Polly)

The Tenth Planet is a clear indication of the new format the series was about to take, one that would arguably see the series grow above and beyond its original premise, becoming instilled with many of the familiar themes and concepts that are still prevalent in Doctor Who today. Although the Troughton era would successfully build on  the “base under siege” formula, the early steps taken in The Tenth Planet show considerable flare and imagination in terms of its production. The Tenth Planet quickly establishes the isolated military settlement, where the humans are threatened by an alien menace, and the Doctor has to battle against the blind ignorance of authority (General Cutler’s selfish determination to rescue his son’s spacecraft despite the risks) to save everyone from the extraterrestrial threat by destroying the aliens link to their own power supply. It may seem existentially simply in the extreme, but what the Tenth Planet lacks in finesse it more than makes up for with its sheer ambition.

If you can see past the polystyrene snow and the clear sticky tape holding the Cybermen’s helmets together, there is a lot to enjoy here, particularly an eclectic cast of characters and a greater empathise on the Doctor’s companions. Having only been introduced at the end of season three during The War Machines (1966), Polly and Ben were a world away from the Doctor’s original companions: school teachers Ian (William Russell) and Barbara (Jacqueline Hill), whose curiosity about the Doctor’s granddaughter, Susan (Carole Anne Ford) led them to a fog shrouded junkyard and a strange metropolitan Police Box. The companions who followed were in may ways a reflection of the original trinity of TARDIS crewmembers, Vicky (Maureen O‘Brien), Steven (Peter Purves), Dodo (Jackie Lane), all offered great potential that was only partially realized in some cases – however the valiant acts of self sacrifice by Katarina (Adrienne Hill) and Sarah Kingdom (Jean Marsh) in The Dalek Master Plan (1965-66) brought home the terrible price the Doctor often pays for his most decisive victories.. Just as the show was evolving, so to was the role of the companion, Innes Lloyd wanted to bring a new dynamic to the male and female companions – and Secretary Polly Wright and Seaman Ben Jackson were a further attempt on Lloyd’s part to update the series with more contemporary characters.

Gerry Davis’ Target novelisation added even more depth and substance to the Snowcap personnel, with Ben and Polly getting an even greater share of the action – something which was necessitated during the recording of Episode 3 of The Tenth Planet when William Hartnell became unwell. While the fourth episode of The Tenth Planet sadly no longer resides in the BBC’s archives, this episode was eventually reconstructed from images and the remaining footage to be released as part of a BBC Video set (Which also included Attack of the Cybermen), and it is these final pivotal seconds of grainy footage that catalogues the most momentous moment of all in Doctor Who’s fifty year history.

The 10th Planet Doctor Regenerates

As the Doctor collapsed onto the floor of the TARDIS the lights inside the time machine wax and wane, before a brilliant glow begins to flair around his face. It is unclear if it is the energy drain from Mondas, the battle with the Cybermen, or just the Doctor’s immense age that causes the regeneration – but his haste to reach the TARDIS indicates that the sanctuary of the time machine is crucial to surviving the transformation.  In those few, brief seconds William Hartnell was transformed into Patrick Troughton, leaving a legacy that would endure to this very day. For me one of the quintessential moments in Doctor Who is when William Hartnell stands in defiance of the Cybermen’s impassive adherence to logic: “Emotions. Love, pride, hate, fear. Have you no emotions sir?” The Doctor’s impassioned speech is one that will resonate down through the decades, infusing every incarnation with a righteous anger in the face of tyranny and evil. It would seem that the Cyber Race also hold this moment in high regard, as it forms part of a  sequence of clips used in Earthshock (1982) when the Cyber Leader reviews their past encounters with the Doctor.

From the moment the Doctor Who theme tune gives way to the special computer tape opening and closing graphics (created for this story by Bernard Lodge) it becomes clear that The Tenth Planet is about to herald significant change. The Cybermen proved immensely popular and would return many times to menace Patrick Troughton’s new incarnation throughout the course of the sixties: appearing in such classic stories as The Moonbase (1967), Tomb of the Cybermen (1967), The Wheel in Space (1968), and even invading Earth in The Invasion (1968), their design evolving and changing with each successive story, rightfully earning them their place amongst the elite pantheon of Doctor Who’s most successful recurring monsters.

The 10th Planet (Cybermen4)

We can only hope that the fourth episode of The Tenth Planet might be found one day, but for now at least we can still enjoy the DVD release of The Tenth Planet. The missing fourth episode is presented as an animated reconstruction on The Tenth Planet DVD, using a similar animation process that was employed to represent the missing 4th & 5th episodes for The Reign of Terror DVD. The Tenth Planet DVD also features a documentary, Frozen Out, by Chris Chapman about the making of the story, which will include contributions from Anneke Wills (Polly), Earl Cameron (Williams) and Reg Whitehead (Cyberman), along with designer Peter Kindred and the woman who vision-mixed the first regeneration, Shirly Coward.

The adventures that began in a junkyard in 1963 with William Hartnell could very well have come to an end if the regeneration had not been successful. It was a bold move for its time, but in those closing moments The Tenth Planet secured the series a longevity that nobody could ever have dared to dream possible in 1966. A winning formula was born; Doctor Who endured this change of lead actor, as it would do again, many, many times. We must never forget the great debt we owe to William Hartnell, especially as we enter the 50th Anniversary Year of Doctor Who. So as we prepare to celebrate Doctor Who’s fifty glorious years let us all take a moment to remember the first great champion of time and space, William Hartnell.

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New Dr Who Season 7 Official Pictures

06 Wednesday Mar 2013

Posted by Paul Bowler in All, Doctor Who

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Doctor Who, Dr Who, Dr Who Season 7, Ice Warriors, Jenna-Louise Coleman, Matt Smith

First New Official Pictures For Dr Who Season 7

The Doctor and Clara return for 8 exciting new adventures that begin on Saturday 30th March, check out these new official pictures of the new season just released by the BBC. These pictures are from the first few episodes, and they look fantastic!

Dr Who Season 7B New Pictures 1

Dr Who Season 7B New Pictures 2

Dr Who Season 7B New Pictures 3

Dr Who Season 7B New Pictures 4

Dr Who Season 7B New Pictures 5

Dr Who Season 7B New Pictures 6

Dr Who Season 7B New Pictures 7

Dr Who Season 7B New Pictures 9

Dr Who Season 7B New Pictures 10

Dr Who Season 7B New Pictures 8

Check out the full image gallery on the Official BBC Website http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/galleries/p015xzmf

Images Belong To BBC

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Dr Who: New Ice Warrior Revealed!

05 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by Paul Bowler in All, Doctor Who

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Tags

Doctor Who, Douglas Mackinnon, Dr Who, Dr Who Season 7, Ice Warriors, Mark Gatiss, The Ice Warriors

Doctor Who: New Ice Warrior Revealed!

The new Ice Warrior design was officially unveiled today by SFX Magazine. This stunning new version of the classic monster will debut in the third episode of Doctor Who Series 7B, featuring in a story written by Mark Gatiss and directed by Douglas Mackinnon.  I really like the design of the new Ice Warrior, it remains faithful to the classic design, while giving them a great new look for their spectacular return.

Dr Who New Ice Warrior (2013)

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First Official Picture of The New Season Seven Doctor Who Episode The Bells of St John

01 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by Paul Bowler in All, Doctor Who

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Clara, Clara Oswlad, Cybermen, Doctor Who, Dr Who, Dr Who 50th Anniversary, Dr Who Season 7, Ice Warriors, Jenna-Louise Coleman, London, Matt Smith, Spoonheads, Steven Moffat, The Bells of St John, The Doctor

First Official Picture of The New Doctor Who Episode

The Bells of St John

 Dr Who The Bells of St John (Picture)

The first official picture from the new season of Doctor Who has been released today. Doctor Who returns to our screen on the 30th of March with a brand new episode entitled “The Bells of St John”. Written by show runner Steven Moffat, The Bells of St John will mark the official introduction of the Doctor’s new companion, Clara Oswald, played by Jenna-Louise Coleman.

Jenna-Louise Coleman has already become a familiar face to Doctor Who fans, as she made her surprise debut in Asylum of the Daleks last year, before returning in the 2012 Christmas Special: The Snowmen. Now at last Clara will join the Doctor as his full time companion for the rest of the seasons eight adventures in time and space.

The Bells of St John is set in London and will feature a number of the capitols famous landmarks, including The Shard and Westminster Bridge. This episode will also introduce a brand new enemy, the Spoonheads, who will fight the Doctor after he discovers something hiding in the Wi-Fi.

Executive Producer and lead writer of Doctor Who, Steven Moffat said: “Its the 50th year of  Doctor Who and look what’s gong on! We’re up in the sky and under the sea! We’re running around the rings of an alien world and then a haunted house. There’s new Cybermen, new Ice Warriors and a never before attempted journey to the centre of the TARDIS. And in the finale, the Doctor’s greatest sect will be revealed! If this wasn’t already our most exciting year it would be anyway!”

Featuring blockbuster movie style episodes each week:, featuring a ghost story, an underwater siege, and a period drama, the rest of Season Seven will also see the return of the Ice Warriros and the Cybermen. If you take a close look at the first official picture of The Bells of St John you will be able to get a glimpse of some of the new monsters as well!

The series’ all star cast will  feature: Celia Imrie, Richard E Grant, Warwick Davis, Jessica Raine, Dougray Scott, and Tamzin Outhwaite, as well as the first time on screen for mother and daughter Dame Diana Rig and Rachel Stirling.

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The Ice Warriors to Return in the New Series of Doctor Who!

11 Monday Feb 2013

Posted by Paul Bowler in All

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David Warner, Doctor Who, Douglas Mackinnon, Dr Who, Dr Who Season 7, Ice Warriors, Jenna-Louise Coleman, Mark Gatiss, Matt Smith, Submarine, The Curse of Peladon, The Ice Warriors, The Monster of Peladon, The Seeds of Death

The Ice Warriors Return to Doctor Who

By Paul Bowler

Ice Warriro (1)

There are few Sci-Fi TV shows that can match Doctor Who for the sheer diversity of memorable alien monsters that have returned time and again to menace the Doctor over his many adventures in time and space. As we get ready for Doctor Who to return to our screens this Easter, on Saturday 30th March, news emerged today that Matt Smith and Jenna-Louise Coleman will face one of the Time Lords classic adversaries – the Ice Warriors!

The reptilian creatures who originated from the planet Mars will return in the second half of Series Seven of Doctor Who during the third episode. Written by fan favourite and horror aficionado Mark Gatiss, and directed by Douglas Mackinnon, the episode takes place on a submarine, staring David Warner, and will see the Doctor battling against the Ice Warriors.

Talking exclusively to SFX Magazine executive producer Caro Skinner said: “We’ve got the most fantastic episode by Mark Gatiss, where we bring back the Ice Warriors… on a submarine! It’s a really wonderful kind of ‘bunker’ episode, and a classic monster which Mark has brought his own inimitable twist to. We wanted to bring them back because they are wonderful!” Skinner said, adding. “Mark is an enormous fan of the Ice Warrior stories, and came up with the idea.”

After the return of the Daleks, the Cybermen, the Sontarans, and the Great Intelligence in the 2012 Christmas Special: The Snowmen, it seems only fitting that  the Ice Warriors finally make an appearance in the new series as Doctor Who gets ready to celebrate its 50th anniversary.

Ice Warriros (Victoria)

The Martians from the red planet first appeared in 1967 during the programmes fifth season, when Patrick Troughton played the 2nd Doctor. The Ice Warriors saw the world locked in the grip of a news ice age. The Doctor, Jamie (Frazer Hines), and Victoria (Deborah Watling) arrive as a group of scientists discover a giant figure buried inside a glacier. When the Ice Warrior thaws out it breaks free and captures Victoria, before returning to its spaceship in the ice to revive its crew. Written by Brian Hayles, the Ice Warriors is one of Doctor Who’s all time classic stories.  The Ice Warriors distinctive armoured costumes were designed by Martin Baugh, their rasping voices made them even more sinister, and Director Derek Martinus cast tall actors to play the Ice Warriors – including Bernard Bresslaw (famous for his roles in the Carry On films) as the Martians ruthless leader Varga.

After proving popular with viewers the Ice Warriors returned to fight the 2nd Doctor again in The Seeds of Death (1969), taking control of a base on the Moon, they used the T-Mat to transport deadly seed pods to Earth in an attempt to terra form the planets atmosphere into one that would be more hospitable for the Martian invaders.  This time Brian Hayles gave the Ice Warriors a new leader, the Ice Lord Slaar (Alan Bennion), and we also get a brief glimpse of his superior the Grand Marshall (Graham Leaman). This time the Doctor and Jamie, along with new companion Zoe (Wendy Padbury), have to find a way to stop the Ice Warriors and prevent the seed pods from destroying Earth’s atmosphere.

The Ice Warriors would be back a few years later to face the 3rd Doctor (Jon Pertwee), in two more stories also scripted by Brian Hayles: The Curse of Peladon (1972), and The Monster of Peladon (1974).  The Curse of Peladon saw the Doctor and Jo Grant (Katy Manning) visit King Peladon’s (David Troughton) cliff top citadel just as an important delegation is about to decide if his planet should to join the Galactic Federation. Here they encounter a bizarre group of alien delegates: Alpha Centauri, Arcturus, and the Martian Ice Lord Izlyr (Alan Bennion) and his Ice Warrior Ssorg (Sonny Caldinez). Together they must find a way to overcome their differences and prevent a coupe to overthrow the King, led by High Priest Hepesh (Geoffrey Toone), who has used the legend of the Beast of Agaddor to instigate an uprising to prevent Peladon joining the Federation.

Ice Lord Peladon

What makes The Curse of Peladon so special is the way it depicts the Ice Warriors as diplomatic envoys to Peladon, having joined the Galactic Federation and abandoned their conquering ways. This is a brilliant move by Hayles, as is having Alan Bennion return, this time as the Ice Lord Izlyr. The Ice Warriors look really menacing as they stalk the torch lit halls of the citadel, for once the Doctor is forced into changing his views on an old enemy, and the Ice Warriors themselves are portrayed as a proud and noble race with honourable customs.

The Monster of Peladon (1974) was a direct sequel to The Curse of Peladon, set fifty years later, this time the 3rd Doctor and Sarah Jane (Elisabeth Sladen) have to help the late King Peladon’s daughter, Queen Thalira (Nina Thomas), solve what is behind the ghostly image of Agador that has been killing people in the planets trisilicate mines. It turns out that a rogue faction of Ice Warriors, led by Lord Azaxyr (played once more by Alan Bennion), want to steal the trisilicate and turn the tide of the Galactic Federations war with Galaxy 5 to their own advantage.

Although the same director (Lennie Mayne) and designer (Gloria Clayton) were appointed to try and replicate the look and feel of The Curse of Peladon, along with the return of Alpha Centauri (played once more by Stuart Fell & voiced by Ysanne Churchman) and Aggedor (with Nick Hobbs reprising his role as the Royal Beast), The Monster of Peladon isn’t as enjoyable as its predecessor. The Ice Warriors are as imposing as ever as they stalk the dark corridors, and Alan Bennion gives a great performance as the villainous Lord Azaxyr.

ICE-WARRIOR

The Ice Warriors have remained one of Doctor Who’s most popular monsters, going on to appear in a wealth of comic strips, a number of excellent novels  from the Virgin New Adventures and BBC Books range, as well as the immensely popular full cast audio adventures from Big Finish. Mission to Magnus, a story that would have seen the Ice Warriors return to fight the 6th Doctor (Colin Baker) never went into production when Season 23 was cancelled. This story was later adapted by Target books, and then Big Finish for release as part of their Lost Stories range, which also included Thin Ice, a 7th Doctor (Sylvester McCoy) story featuring the Ice Warriors that could have formed part of Doctor Who’s 27th Season if the series hadn’t been cancelled in 1989.

Ever since the 10th Doctor (David Tennant) mentioned them in The Waters of Mars (2009), fans have been speculating about when the Ice Warriors would be back. Now the Ice Warriors will return in time to be part of  Doctor Who’s 50th Anniversary celebrations. The Ice Warriors scaly armoured form will no doubt get a fantastic update for the monsters return to our screens, along with their distinctive rasping voices, Series Seven is shaping up to one of the best yet!

Check Out the link to read the full Exclusive article at SFX

http://www.sfx.co.uk/2013/02/11/sfx-exclusive-official-ice-warriors-return-to-doctor-who-this-year/

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Dr Who Christmas Special The Snowmen

25 Tuesday Dec 2012

Posted by Paul Bowler in All, Doctor Who

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Captain Latimer, Clara, Doctor Who, Dr Simeon, Dr Who, Dr Who Christmas Speical 2012, Great Intelligence, Jenna-Louise Coleman, Jenny, Madame Vastra, Matt Smith, Oswin, Richard E Grant, Saul Mctzstein, Steven Moffat, Strax, TARDIS, The Doctor, The Snowmen

Dr Who Christmas Special 2012

The Snowmen

[Contains Spoilers]

Review by Paul Bowler

On a snowy Christmas Eve in 1842 a little boy is busily building a snowman, blissfully unaware that he is creating a monster out of telepathic snow… Fifty years later we rejoin The Doctor on Christmas Eve as an ancient alien force descends over the snowy streets of Victorian London in 1892, but instead of being full of Christmas cheer, the Time Lord has been left devastated by the loss of Amy and Rory after their terrifying encounter with the Weeping Angels in Manhattan. Consumed by sadness The Doctor has become a lonely recluse, cutting himself off from the universe, content to wallow in his despair as the festive season overtakes him unnoticed.

Dr Who Christmas Special 2012 (Wallpaer 1 Globe)

However, when the villainous Dr Simeon hatches a deadly plot it falls to a resourceful young governess, Clara, to enlist the help of The Doctor when Captain Latimer and his children are threatened by Dr Simeon’s plans. Clara manages to lift the stubborn Time Lord’s spirits, coaxing him out of his dark mood to save mankind, and together with the help some his old friends Madame Vastra, Jenny and The Sontatran Strax, they battle to save the world from the icy clutches of Dr Simeon and his menacing horde of icicle-toothed Snowmen!

The fall of the Ponds has had a marked effect on The Doctor and Matt Smith’s superb portrayal here of a more sombre, and melancholic, Time Lord is quite startling. Having turned his back on adventuring he now lives in the TARDIS high amongst the clouds and rarely visits the city below. It would seem that a considerable amount of time has passed since the tragic events in The Angels Take Manhattan, and this years Christmas Special gives Matt Smith a chance to really address The Doctor’s pain in a sensitive way that allows a satisfying sense of closure for him. Matt Smith’s striking new outfit for this adventure has more than a hint of  the Artful Dodger about it, with a long purple coat, and battered top hat the Time Lord looks perfectly at home as he wanders the Dickensian streets. The Doctor even adopts a deerstalker as part of his Sherlock Holmes disguise when he breaks into Dr Seimeon’s laboratory, where he discovers the giant snowgobe housing the alien intelligence that controls the great swarm.

Dr Who Christmas Special 2012 (Wallpaer 2 Cast)

Of course The Snowmen is an extra special Christmas episode of Doctor Who because it features the debut of Jenna Louise Coleman as Clara, in her first full adventure as The Doctor’s new companion since her surprise appearance in September as the ill-fated Oswin in Asylum of the Daleks. There has been endless speculation about what role the Warterloo Road and Emmerdale actress Jenna Louise Coleman would play after Oswin’s unfortunate fate in Asylum of The Daleks. It turns out that Clara is an entirely different person who just happens to looks like someone The Doctor has encountered before; but as the story unfolds we learn there is much more to Clara than meets the eye… Jenna Louise Coleman does a remarkable job in establishing her role as The Doctor’s new companion. Clara is a very different character to Amy Pond, she’s more down to earth, from the Victorian era, feisty and curious with a mission of her own, and she certainly has a profound effect on the Time Lord. When we first meet Clara she is working as a barmaid in the Rose and Crown to make ends meet, but a chance meeting with The Doctor leaves her determined to follow him so she can find out who he really is. The Snowmen is a wonderful introduction for Clara’s character, someone who The Doctor is immediately drawn to by her strength of will and tenacity. It can be tricky to introduce a new companion to viewers, particularly when The Doctor’s bond with his previous companions is still so clear in our minds, but Jenna’s fantastic onscreen chemistry with Matt Smith and her spirited performance as Clara will win you over in a heartbeat.

Richard E Grant (who once starred as The Doctor himself in the animated adventure Scream of the Shalka and a Comic Relief Spoof) plays the wickedly evil Dr Simeon, a man consumed by the power and corruption of a malicious alien intellect, who is determined to unleash his deadly army of Snowmen as a living blizzard of death sweeps across the city of London. Armed with a talking glass globe (voiced by Sir Ian McKellen) that allows him to control the Snowmen, Dr Simeon provides a suitably chilling menace for this Doctor Who Christmas Special. Richard E Grant gives a scenery chewing performance as the power crazed Doctor Simeon, basking in the glory of his evil plan as the snow begins to feed on the thoughts of the terrified children in an attempt to resurrect the Ice Governess, as well as some terrifically tense confrontations with Matt Smith’s newly invigorated Time Lord.

Dr Who Christmas Special 2012 (Wallpaer 3 Cast)

Joining The Doctor and Clara against The Snowmen is Captain Latimer, played by Tom Ward, who is best known for his role in the forensic crime drama: Silent Witness. Captain Latimer is an old naval captain; he is struggling to build a relationship with his children, and becomes unwittingly embroiled in Dr Simeon’s plot to overthrow the world. Fortunately his children’s governess, Clara, is able to convince The Doctor to help them save the world from Dr Simeon’s icy clutches.

Also making a welcome return for this yuletide special is Neve McIntosh as the Silurian warrior Madame Vastra, she is accompanied by Catrin Stewart who plays Vastra’s loyal human companion Jenny, and Dan Starkey is also back as the straight-talking Sontaran Nurse Strax. These characters quickly became fan favourites after they banded together to help The Doctor and Rory rescue Amy Pond from Madame Kovarian’s base on Demon’s Run  in A Good Man Goes To War (2011). Its great to see these characters return again, the Silurian Detective and her faithful maid make a brilliant team as they prowl the streets of London, while Strax has plenty of humorous observations to share as the planets only Sontaran Nurse/Butler. There will be more adventures with the Victorian Era Duo to look forward to when they return for the spring 2013 season of Doctor Who. If ever there was a Dr Who spin-off crying out to be made, then one featuring Vastra, Jenny, and Strax solving mysteries and fighting strange alien menaces in the fog shrouded streets of Victorian London would certainly fit the bill!

Madame Vastra, Jenny, & Strax return to help the Doctor

The special effects in The Snowmen are astonishingly good, seamlessly enhancing Steven Moffat’s action packed story: the streets sparkle with the silvery shimmer of telepathic snow, the Snowmen themselves are one of the series most fantastic creations to date, a frightening encounter with the Ice Governess is brilliantly staged, and the “ascent” from a magically suspended ladder which shows Clara climbing a winding staircase to discover the TARDIS floating above the cloud tops is a magical moment that will endure long after the credits have rolled across the screen.

Just as The Doctor finds a new companion in Clara, the TARDIS also gets a makeover for this Christmas Special – courtesy of designer Michael Pickwoad. This new, slightly darker TARDIS console room, is the third time the set has been remodelled since Doctor Who returned to our screens in 2005. The splendid new consol is a more refined version than the one seen in Matt Smith’s first two seasons. Bathed in an aquatic glow, it has a design which harkens back to the more traditional TARDIS interiors from the classic series, as well as a central column that swoops upwards into a lighting unit adorned with uncanny symbols from the Gallifreyan alphabet that swirl and rotate when the TARDIS is in flight. As well as a new TARDIS interior, The Snowmen will also see the introduction of an exciting new theme tune, as well as a colourful new title sequence that finally contains a glimpse of The Doctor’s face – both features reminiscent of the early years of Dr Who – that I’m sure will leave many viewers with a warm fuzzy glow of nostalgia as the opening moments harmonize exquisitely with the programmes past.

New TARDIS Interior 2013

The Doctor Who Christmas Special is always an extra special box of delights for Doctor Who fans on Christmas Day, and The Snowmen is no exception to this rule. Steven Moffat’s has crafted a hauntingly magical tale that glitters with the spirit of Christmas, transporting us into a winter wonderland of fantasy and adventure as The Doctor returns from his self-imposed retirement from adventuring to battle Dr Simeon and his frosty legion of Snowmen. Of course Clara is the special person who persuades him to leave the confines of his rickety old TARDIS and take up the good fight against Dr Simeon, they make a fantastic team, and when the alien entity manifests itself as the Ice Governess (voiced by Juliet Cadzow), the children’s former Governess who drowned in a pond within the grounds of Darkover House, Clara’s true spirit and resolve shines through to allow The Doctor to save the day.

Dr Who Christmas Special 2012 (Wallpaer 4 Dr & Clara)

It is then, after climbing up to the TARDIS to escape the Ice Governess, that Clara actually enters the TARDIS for the very first time, and we finally get a hint of the tenuous ancestral – or should that be temporal – connection Clara has with Oswin. When the Ice Governess drags Clara from the TARDIS and Clara plummets to the ground even The Doctor is unable to save her. As Clara lay dying at Darkover House, The Doctor and Vastra take the TARDIS to Dr Siemon’s lab where The Doctor tricks Siemon into being bitten by a mind draining parasitic worm, but the globes intelligence still manages to possess Dr Siemon‘s body anyway. The Doctor and Vastra are no match for Dr Siemons’s newfound strength, however, the grief of Captain Latimer and his children as Clara dies, shedding a single tear, provides enough psychic energy to turn the snow into rain, destroying Dr Siemon’s and the alien entity controlling his body. With this new “Great Intelligence dissipated – a nice link to the alien force that controlled the Yeti in the London Underground during the 1968 story The Web of Fear  – The Doctor visits Clara’s gravestone with Vastra and Jenny and sees Clara’s full name: Clara Oswin Oswald. Although he only ever heard Oswins voice, The Doctor begins to realize what might be happening. He rushes off  to discover the mystery of the souffle girl who died twice, just as a very familiar face visit’s the same cemetery in the present day, Clara Oswin…

Clara’s identity remains a mystery, at least for now, even the fantastic coming soon trailer doesn’t give too much away – although it provides a tantalizing glimpse of some of the new episodes; with scenes featuring Jenna Louise Coleman, and plenty of monsters, including a brief glimpse of the new look Cybermen! It is entirely possible that Clara is indeed the same person, living out each life as she adventures with The Doctor, or maybe she is fragmented throughout time and space by some external force, perhaps in much the same way as The Key to Time? Clara’s connection to Oswin is sure to keep us all guessing. Whatever awaits us, I’m sure Steven Moffat will have plenty of surprises in store for as the mystery of Clara Oswin unfolds when Doctor Who returns in the spring.

The period detail lavished on The Snowmen by director Saul Mctzstein (Dinosaurs on a Spaceship / A Town Called Mercy) is nothing short of excellent; effortlessly recreating a bustling Dickensian world shimmering beneath a fairytale blanket of crisp white snow. Every moment of this blockbusting Christmas Special is overflowing with verve and energy as Mctzstein teases every Christmassy nuance from Moffat’s script as The Doctor and Clara team up with Vastra, Jenny, and Strax to face the snowmen.

Dr Who Christmas Special 2012 (Movie Poster)

The Snowmen is a hugely enjoyable story for all the family. There are plenty of nice continuity touches for fans to pick up on, the Ponds are far from forgotten (the mere mention of their name during  crucial telephone conversation with Vastra is more than enough to bring The Doctor back down to earth), we get a brilliant twist on Clara’s first reaction to the TARDIS “smaller on the outside”, and even the sonic screwdriver gets a new setting! The moment The Doctor gives Clara a key to the TARDIS is wonderful, and when The Doctor straightens his bow tie near the end you can see that the Time Lord is well and truly back in business! It successfully introduces a new companion for The Doctor, offering an endearing slice of festive fun whilst providing a fitting coda to the Ponds heartbreaking exit, allowing the show to embrace a new era – along with a sleek new TARDIS interior – as we take our  first exciting step towards Doctor Who’s 50th Anniversary  celebrations coming up in November 2013!

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Vworp Vworp! New Dr Who TARDIS Interior Revealed

19 Wednesday Dec 2012

Posted by Paul Bowler in All, Doctor Who

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Tags

Doctor Who, Dr Who, Dr Who Season 7, TARDIS, TARDIS Interior

Dr Who: New TARDIS Interior Revealed

Today the BBC released the latest image of the new TARDIS interior that will debut in the Doctor Who Christmas special: The Snowmen.

After a week of teasing images and a fantastic prequel episode featuring Madame Vastra, Jenny, and Strax, we have finally been treated to a preview of the brand new TARDIS interior created by Doctor Who production designer Michael Pickwoad.

The new design is fantastic, and Matt Smith looks really pleased with his new Console Room. I think it really captures the look and feel of the Classic Series!

New TARDIS Interior 2013

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Dr Who: The Snowmen Gets New Theme Tune & Opening Title Sequence

17 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by Paul Bowler in All, Doctor Who

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Doctor Who, Dr Who, Dr Who Christmas Speical 2012, Jena Louise Coleman, Madame Vastra, Matt Smith, New TARDIS Interior, Silurian, The Snowmen

Doctor Who Christmas Special 2012 Gets New Theme Tune

 & Opening Title Sequence For The Snowmen

Matt & Jenna

It seems there are even more surprises in store for us in The Doctor Who Christmas Special this year. As well as featuring the debut of Jenna Louise Coleman as Clara, and a stunning new TARDIS interior, The Snowmen will also see the premier of a new title sequence and revamped theme tune!

Vastra & Jenny

This sounds like a perfect way to start a whole new era of Doctor Who as Clara begins her adventures in time and space. In the meantime, why not enjoy this new prequel to The Snowmen on the Official BBC Dr Who website: Vastra Investigates http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p012q4yl

So get ready to enjoy the new theme tune and opening title sequence when you watch The Snowmen on BBC One, Christmas Day at 5.15pm.

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New Dr Who Christmas Special 2012 Poster & Snowmen Image

27 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by Paul Bowler in All, Doctor Who

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Christmas Special, Clara, Doctor Who, Dr Who, Jenna-Louise Coleman, Matt Smith, Snowmen, The Doctor

New Dr Who Christmas Special 2012 Poster & Snowmen Image

After treating us to a trailer and mini prequel for the Dr Who Christmas Special during the Children in Need Appeal, the BBC has also just released a stunning “movie style” poster for this years Christmas Special. So far every episode of Season 7 has been given one of these fantastic promotional images, it nice to see the trend continuing as we get ready for the Time Lords new festive adventure.

The movie poster features The Doctor (Matt Smith) and his new companion, Clara (Jenna Louise Coleman), while a separate image gives us a close up look at the sinister Snowmen who we caught a brief glimpse of in the Children in Need trailer. If the prequel is anything to go by it would seem that the Doctor is acting very much like Scrooge, having become something of a heartbroken recluse after loosing Amy and Rory to the Weeping Angels. So when the world is threatened again this Christmas it falls to new companion Clara to get the Time Lord take up the fight and save the day.

This Christmas Special also sees the return of fan favourites Madame Vastra (Neve Mclntosh) and Jenny (Catrin Stewart), along with Dan Starkey as Strax. As well as the Snowmen the Doctor and Clara will have to defeat the villainous Doctor Simeon – played by Richard E Grant. The Snowmen looks set to be the most exciting Dr Who Christmas Special yet, and will be all the more special because it will be the 11th Doctor’s first full adventure alongside his new travelling companion. Time to start counting down the days to Christmas!

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The Angels Take Manhattan

29 Saturday Sep 2012

Posted by Paul Bowler in All, Doctor Who

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Arthur Darvill, Doctor Who, Dr Who, Dr Who Season 7, Karen Gillan, Matt Smith, River Song, The Angels Take Manhattan, Weeping Angels

The Angels Take Manhattan

Review by Paul Bowler

[Contains Spoilers]

The Angels Take Manhattan takes full advantage of New York’s famous landmarks

The Angels Take Manhattan opens in the shadowy streets of 1930’s Downtown New York as Sam Garner (Rob David) narrates the darkest day of his life. Garner has been given the task of investigating an old apartment block, Winter Quays, by an odious collector called Grayle (Mike McShane). When Sam arrives at the run-down building he explores its dark corridors, where he is shocked to discover a version of himself as a dying old man. His older self urges him to escape but before he can flee Sam is attacked by the Weeping Angels…

An idyllic moment of happiness for the TARDIS crew

We join The Doctor, Amy, and Rory in present day New York as they enjoy a relaxing day in Central Park. The Doctor has been reading aloud from a pulp-fiction novel that he has found, although his companions don’t quite share the Time Lords enthusiasm for the adventures of private detective Melody Malone. But this idyllic moment of happiness for the TARDIS crew soon gives way to horror when Rory goes to fetch them all some coffees, only to be hunted by a cackling stone cherub near a fountain that transports him back to 1938 where he is reunited with Professor River Song before they are both captured by Grayle’s henchmen.

The new “Cherub” Angels with their mischievous giggling are particularly unsettling

The Doctor and Amy must travel back to Manhattan 1938 to save Rory, as the Weeping Angels begin to unleash a wave of terror from within Winter Quays, but as The Doctor and River race against time to help the Ponds escape, the time has come for Amy and Rory to make the ultimate sacrifice…

The Angels Take Manhattan sees The Doctor faced with an almost impossible situation. Matt Smith is excellent in this episode, giving his most emotive performance yet as he effortlessly walks the fine line between the Time Lords turbulent eccentricity and menacing gloom. Indeed, Matt Smith has done some remarkable things with The Doctor’s character this season, nevermore so than here – when the stakes have been raised so high – do we get to see the strength and humility that makes The Doctor such a universal force of nature.

Amy and Rory’s lives are ripped apart by the Weeping Angles

As this is the last story to feature Amy and Rory as The Doctor’s companions, it is perhaps all the more poignant that Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill are to depart just as the Ponds are at the height of their popularity. Steven Moffat’s incredible script for The Angels Take Manhattan sees the Ponds lives ripped apart by the Weeping Angles as their plot to ensnare the Time Travellers draws them inexorably towards the episodes tear-jerking climax. This is an episode full of fraught emotions: even the stoniest heart will melt when Rory tries to get Amy to push him off the roof of Winter Quays, and you’ll be dismayed as River Song is forced to allow fate to take its course, but nothing will prepare you for The Doctor’s heartrending cries of despair as Amy valiantly stands her ground against a Weeping Angel to be with the man she loves.

Steven Moffat’s quantum locked creations are utterly remorseless and without mercy

Ever since their first appearance in Blink (2007) The Weeping Angles have gone on to become one of the series most popular monsters. Here they are at their horrific best, lurking amongst the shadowy halls of Winter Quays, ready to strike from the dark without warning, and the startling new “Cherub” Angels with their mischievous giggling are particularly unsettling when  Rory is trapped with them in Grayle‘s basement. Steven Moffat’s quantum locked creations are utterly remorseless and without mercy, predators of time who feed on the timelines of sentient beings in order to survive. After their apparent destruction in The Time of Angles / Flesh and Stone (2010), the Weeping Angels are back with a vengeance, gorging themselves on the latent energy of “the city that never sleeps” to feed their relentless hunger: turning every stone statue, monument, and gargoyle around Winter Quays into Weeping Angels. Even the Statue of Liberty itself becomes a twisted monstrosity as it silently stalks its prey across the Manhattan skyline.

Matt Smith and Alex Kingston have some great scenes together

Alex Kingston makes a welcome return as Professor River Song, making her most timey wimey entrance yet as she inveigles her way back into the Time Lords life from the very pages of the Melody Malone novel he’s been reading. The Professor River Song we meet in The Angels Take Manhattan is as vivacious as ever, and still flies the TARDIS better than The Doctor, but the woman that Alex Kingston portrays here seems more akin to the River Song we first saw in her fateful encounter with the 10th Doctor (David Tenant) in Silence in the Library / Forest of the Dead (2008). There are some great scenes between Matt Smith and Alex Kingston in The Angels Take Manhattan: when River is trapped by Grayle’s chained Weeping Angel we learn she has been pardoned for her crimes and that all knowledge of the man River was imprisoned for killing has been wiped from every data bank in the universe; which perhaps explains what The Doctor has been up to while the Ponds decided to remain on Earth between adventures. The Doctor now dwells within a mysterious veil of anonymity, even the Daleks don’t seem to know who he is anymore, leaving only River Song to weave the last remaining threads of his past, present, and future to form the unequivocal testimony of the woman who killed Doctor Who…

Amy know the risks inherent when The Doctor travels alone for too long

River may have been able to help Rory after he got transported back to 1938, whilst able to keep one step ahead of Grayle and his sinister plans, but even her incredible foreknowledge is no match for the power of the Weeping Angels. The Melody Malone novel holds even more secrets than River’s diary, binding them all too future events that cannot be changed once they are read. She lies about breaking her wrist to escape Grayle’s prized exhibit, the chained Weeping Angel, but the Doctor uses his regeneration energy to heal her – which leaves River none to impressed with The Doctor. A brief interlude between River and Amy after they’ve escaped Grayle’s building also foreshadows the gathering storm that will soon engulf them all. When River warns her mother never to let the Time Lord see the damage he does, adding that The Doctor“doesn’t like endings”, which is especially poignant as they both know the risks inherent when The Doctor travels alone for too long.

Grayle’s prized exhibit, the chained Weeping Angel

Mike McShane’s villainous collector has foolishly imprisoned a Weeping Angel. He needs River Song to help him find out what the creature is, but is unprepared for the full extent of their terrible power. Having tortured the latest addition to his collection, it is perhaps fitting that when the Weeping Angels come for Grayle, their revenge is sure and swift.

Nick Hurran’s lavish cinematic direction elevates this episode to a whole new level; the location filming in New York looks absolutely stunning. The impeccable attention to the period detail of the scenes set in the 1930’s also help Hurran to strike the perfect balance between the two time zones. The Angels Take Manhattan takes full advantage of New York’s famous landmarks: Tudor City, Central Park, Times Square, and The Brooklyn Bridge, all play a part in Doctor Who’s most ambitious transatlantic adventure to date. Hurran also filmed some key scenes in Cardiff: locations that range from Cardiff University, The Glamorgan building in Cathays Park, and Box Cemetery in Llaneli are all flawlessly enhanced by the magic of CGI to give them the distinct look and feel of the high rise buildings of New York.

The Doctor and Amy must travel back to Manhattan 1938 to save Rory

Murray Gold’s score for The Angels Take Manhattan is as equally spellbinding, enhancing every key emotional moment as the Ponds exit draws near; no doubt leaving many fans reaching for the tissues as we say goodbye to Amy and Rory for the last time.

Steven Moffat promised that Amy and Rory’s departure from the TARDIS would be truly heartbreaking, and he is true to his word. From the moment you see the black swirling vortex of the title sequence – and the Doctor Who logo wickedly tinged in green – you are propelled into one of Moffat’s most labyrinthine scripts ever as he effortlessly ties everything up, even finding time to include a lovely coda for the young Amelia Pond’s very first story: The 11th Hour (2010.

Amy And Rory decide to face their destiny “together, or not at all”

The weeping Angels have been feeding off the residents of Winter Quays, using them like a battery farm, but when The Doctor, River, and Amy catch up with Rory at Winter Quays they find he has discovered an old man – and just like Sam before him – Rory is confronted by the fully horror of his elderly self dying in a bed. Rory and Amy witness the older Rory die as The Doctor and River look on, soon the Weeping Angels begin to come for Rory, determined to send him back in time again and feed off him like the other residents. But Amy has other ideas, leaving The Doctor and River to cover their escape, they plan to leave and cause a paradox – the only thing powerful enough to destroy the Weeping Angels. Trapped on the roof by a giant Weeping Angel, Rory decides to jump to his death to create the paradox. Amy refuses to let him, instead joining him on the ledge, and as Ponds decide to jump from the roof and  face their destiny “together, or not at all” they sadly find that the last page of their story has already becomes set in stone; and not even The Doctor can save them.

A Weeping Angel has survived and catches Rory unawares as he finds his own gravestone

As the Paradox wipes out the Weeping Angles it returns Amy and Rory safe and well to the Graveyard to rejoin The Doctor and River in the present – where we caught a glimpse Rory’s grave earlier. Tragically a lone Weeping Angel has survived and catches Rory unawares as he finds his own gravestone. As Rory is catapulted back into the past a distraught Amy confronts the Weeping Angel, ignoring The Doctor’s warnings, she turns and says goodbye to her “raggedy man” and fades away to be together with Rory in the past. As the wailing Time Lord sinks to his knees Amy’s name appears alongside Rory’s on the gravestone. River leads The Doctor back to the TARDIS, where The Doctor asks River to travel with him. She agrees, at least to joining him at some point in the future, as right now she has a date with history and a novel to write…

So as the credits roll and we leave the girl who waited and the last centurion to their fate, the brief teaser for the Christmas Special will at least go some way to easing the pain of Amy and Rory’s final adventure with the mad man in a blue box. The Angels Take Manhattan is one of the best episodes so far this season, full of grand spectacle and fantastic scenery; it also offers a thrilling finale for Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill. Together they have found a place in our hearts, they will be fondly missed, and their time during the 11th Doctor’s era will be forever in our thoughts.

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