purplecat: The Second Doctor holding his diary (Who:Books)
purplecat ([personal profile] purplecat) wrote2022-08-27 05:36 pm

Random Doctor Who Picture




One of the advantages, as a child, of a birthday in late November was that one tended to get hot-of-the-presses anniversary stuff for Doctor Who as gifts. I recall the excitement of receiving this book. It wasn't the first book about the history of Doctor Who, but it certainly one of the earlier examples of a genre of books that there are now a lot of. Its high production values, with a hard cover, plenty of photos (some of which were in colour!) made it really special.

Of course, today, it seems fairly simplistic, but its probably hard to over-estimate how influential it was to how a lot of people my age understand the history of the show.

[personal profile] magister 2022-08-28 12:36 pm (UTC)(link)
I think it's a mixture of the two. The Eccleston series, like the rest of New Who, has never been out of reach in the same way Hartnell Who once was. VHS copies, repeats on BBC3, repeats on Gold, dvds, blurays, iplayer- since it was broadcast, it's always been available to rewatch.

But, as you say, 18 years to a 10 year old is unimaginable. The same period to someone a few weeks away from turning 51 merely provokes a vague thought that it should longer.

[personal profile] magister 2022-08-29 04:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Rather than Survival, surely it should be either Seeds of Doom (end of series 13) or Logopolis (17 years later)?

Anyway, definitely yes. The main changes from Rose to Flux are improved effects and the story being slightly more serialised. With the classic series, as well as changes in production, the character of the Doctor and the ethos of the show had changed. What was the story of two teachers trying to return home had become the adventures of a heroic alien and his friends.