Lost Doctor Who Episode Clips

 

With everything going on this week, I remembered Saturday Night Showcase and forgot it again on and off during the week. At least this time I remembered to put a note about it. I’ll try to find something good for next week. Yesterday I got lucky with being able to announce they found two episodes of “The Dalek’s Master Plan”, a still incomplete serial with the First Doctor’s fourth meeting with the Daleks. The BBC, doing something right for a change, also provided a highlight reel of clips from the lost episodes, discovered by lost media and classic Doctor Who episode hunters Film Is Fabulous. So I can show you something cool tonight.

How long it takes before the full episodes are put out internationally hasn’t been said, though a theatrical showing and the BBC I-Player is scheduled for Easter if the restorations are done by then. There are still episodes missing from the serial, but we have more of it than we did, with only two additions to the previous count. That makes five episodes and a clip used for the BBC children’s show Blue Peter of the twelve episodes produced, the longest serial depending on whether you classify “Trial Of A Time Lord” as one arc or a series of arcs with a connecting story.

Just shows you never know what you’ll find while decluttering. And yes, that was Nicholas Courtney in his first appearance on the show, as Bret Vyon, prior to being cast as Brigadier Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart. That may be the best thing to have back. Here’s a video by the BBC about Film Is Fabulous showing the episode to Peter Purves, who played Steven, and an interview with him by FIF after seeing it.

BW’s Saturday Article Link> DC VS Manga On Genre Variety

In a recent article of mine, I went over what DC Comics could and couldn’t learn from manga, after Jim Lee’s comments that they should look to their success to chart DC course. One of the things I’ve mentioned is that in the past American comics embraced multiple genres, while today only indie comics try to do anything other than superheroes and licenced works. We actually made more comics for “everyone” than we do now when certain groups are demanding comics be “made for everyone”, only not as disingenuous. It other words it was done for story variety rather than placating (insert group who doesn’t actually read comics here).

In an article for his Megacosm website, writer Victor James digs more into how comics used to make multiple genres of comics, like Japanese manga creators and publishers do today. Manga followed the Golden Age formula of tackling multiple storytelling genres for multiple age groups, and while that’s only one reason for their success, it’s one comic fans and commentators were requesting and suggesting even before the rise of Japanese media in the West to current levels. Something to think about.

Filler Video: Dalek Master Plan Episodes Recovered

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No CBS Transformers This Week

I didn’t forget, but there’s a good reason I didn’t have time to do this week’s installment. I just brought my dad home from the hospital today. Nothing major (or at least no surgery), but he’s been in there all week so that was the priority. I considered just having this week’s CBS Transformers later, but opted against it. So we’ll finish the sample episodes next week, followed by the one script they did, a final thoughts, and then this series will be done.

“Yesterday’s” Comic> Jumbo Comics #13

Sheena faces her biggest threat yet: Tarzan’s lawyers!

Jumbo Comics #13

Real Adventure Publishing Co (March, 1940)

Okay, now we’ll be caught up with this series. It’s not easy needing new ways to open these reviews. Even in speed mode these reviews take awhile, and that’s after, or rather while reading a bunch of comic stories altogether. Sure, they’re short. Sometimes too short to fully tell their stories. However, numbers do count for something. This is just under 70 pages of comics and a text story. That’s a lot to go over, hence why I usually bypass the text stories and lame gag pages. There’s multiple creators so I can’t just do a creator page. So instead I pad out for the homepage with nonsense like this. That’s good, so let’s get started.

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Daily Video> Did The Chipmunks Rip Off Huey, Dewey, And Louie?

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The big question is why do so few of them wear pants?

Watchmen #1: A First Time Read

While this isn’t going to be a weekly series I did want to at last start the first one. For more about the comic, how I got it, why I’m reviewing it, and all the biases coming with it, check out the introductory article to this series.

You’ll also notice I amended something from the when it was originally posted. Tales Of The Black Freighter being an allegedly popular comic in the Watchmen universe rather than anything with superheroes gets talked up alot. They even made a direct-to-video animation of the thing to coincide with the movie. I always assumed the story itself showed up in the pages. I have since learned only covers show up. We don’t actually get a story within the story. Apparently it was an actual DC comic published in our world, and there’s a spiritual connection between the two works or something, but there won’t be a section devoted to that comic after all. I will, however, still give the documentation it’s own review section.

With that, I guess we just go into the first issue.

I’m not cleaning that up.

Watchmen #1

DC Comics (September, 1986)

“At Midnight, All The Agents…”

WRITER: Alan Moore

ARTIST/LETTERER: Dave Gibbons

COLORIST: John Higgins, who never gets credit, possibly because he’s not a co-creator of the concept and characters.

I’m working from the 2014 “New Edition”, a reprint of the “Absolute Edition” which redid the colors. Higgins is still credited, but I thought I’d bring it up. Images used to prove a point or break the text wall come from scans of the original 1986 comic, or so the site I’m using would let you believe. Yes, I’m using a pirate site, who in turn stole it from a DIFFERENT pirate site, which is kind of appropriate given Moore’s current opinion of DC and the pirate comic showing up as what he thinks would be the popular comic in that universe. However, my reviews are coming from the edition I personally and legally own. All I had to do was draw the right game piece out of a bag, but it’s still legally my copy.

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