Christopher Eccleston — who played the Ninth Doctor — and Matt Smith — who played the Eleventh Doctor — spotted each other at London Film and Comic Con and gave each other a massive hug.
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The pieces are all in place.
Christopher Eccleston — who played the Ninth Doctor — and Matt Smith — who played the Eleventh Doctor — spotted each other at London Film and Comic Con and gave each other a massive hug.
Indeed, Eccleston has actually spoken highly of Smith in the past, Eccleston once saw Smith in a play and commented how great he was.Nice little moment but I don't think it's any more than two former Doctor Who actors who respect each others work as actors.
Day of the Doctor? Not much really. As written, the War Doctor is such an obvious Eccleston substitute, and in some cases the writing doesn't even try to differentiate the characters (jokes about John Hurt's ears make no sense at all). Thankfully, John Hurt's performance gives us some differences to work with for the characters.What a shame Eccleston doesn't want to return. He was so good in that role, and the 50th really lost something without him.
I wonder how the story would have been different.
I don't think the line about the sonic screwdriver would have worked with Eccleston: "What are you going to do - assemble a cabinet at them?" Hurt put the right amount of crochety annoyance into that line.Indeed, Eccleston has actually spoken highly of Smith in the past, Eccleston once saw Smith in a play and commented how great he was.
Day of the Doctor? Not much really. As written, the War Doctor is such an obvious Eccleston substitute, and in some cases the writing doesn't even try to differentiate the characters (jokes about John Hurt's ears make no sense at all). Thankfully, John Hurt's performance gives us some differences to work with for the characters.
Moffat claims a war-hardened Doctor would have been inconsistent with McGann's upbeat performance from the TV movie. Personally, I disagree. IMO, seeing McGann's Doctor war-hardened and at the end of his rope would have done a better job showing how war can change people than having the Eighth Doctor literally turn into a different person for the purposes of fighting a war did.But I'm more steamed about Paul McGann. Why couldn't they have asked him, rather than retcon this "War Doctor" nonsense?
At the very least, having Eccleston appear at the end of the War Doctor's regeneration would have been excellent. Hasn't he said in recent years that, in retrospect, he would have liked to have taken part in the 50th? Somehow, that makes it even worse.What a shame Eccleston doesn't want to return. He was so good in that role, and the 50th really lost something without him.
I wonder how the story would have been different.
Agreed. None of the Doctors were the same way all the time. People accuse Tom Baker of always being an over-the-top clown, but there were times when his Doctor was quite serious, and issue-focused (ie. the drug-smuggling story in "Nightmare of Eden").Moffat claims a war-hardened Doctor would have been inconsistent with McGann's upbeat performance from the TV movie. Personally, I disagree. IMO, seeing McGann's Doctor war-hardened and at the end of his rope would have done a better job showing how war can change people than having the Eighth Doctor literally turn into a different person for the purposes of fighting a war did.
Yup. Up until then, I actually believed that the Eighth Doctor was the one that fought in the Time War. Nothing against the late John Hurt--he was one of my favorite actors and I thought he was great as the War Doctor--but there's still a part of me that probably always would have liked to see the Tenth and Eleventh Doctors square off against a war-hardened Eighth Doctor that indeed was a far cry from what we saw in the TV movie.Moffat claims a war-hardened Doctor would have been inconsistent with McGann's upbeat performance from the TV movie. Personally, I disagree. IMO, seeing McGann's Doctor war-hardened and at the end of his rope would have done a better job showing how war can change people than having the Eighth Doctor literally turn into a different person for the purposes of fighting a war did.
I'd eat my own leg Hannibal-style if it got both of them to do Big Finish Who.
The irony is, the War Doctor's character arc could have worked perfectly with McGann in the role, the shunned Doctor who finally earns acceptance. Okay, obviously they couldn't sell McGann as a "forgotten Doctor" since we have seen imagery of him in the current series already, but you could still have Tennant and Smith have a similar attitude towards him they had towards the War Doctor since he was the Doctor from the Time War and the one they blame for destroying Gallifrey until over the course of their shared adventure they discover an alternative and eventually forgive their former self. With McGann you could even work in an added poignancy of having it a reflection of how fandom at first didn't respond well to the TV movie from 96 but eventually learned to accept McGann as the Doctor.Yup. Up until then, I actually believed that the Eighth Doctor was the one that fought in the Time War. Nothing against the late John Hurt--he was one of my favorite actors and I thought he was great as the War Doctor--but there's still a part of me that probably always would have liked to see the Tenth and Eleventh Doctors square off against a war-hardened Eighth Doctor that indeed was a far cry from what we saw in the TV movie.
Totally. This is an example of how Moffat gets a little too attached to his ideas for their own good. Moffat fell in love with the idea of introducing a "forgotten Doctor" or "mayfly" who they could bring in for an episode and cast a big celebrity in the role. A combination of Eccleston not being interested in returning and the fact we never saw a McGann to Eccleston regeneration meant he could insert a forgotten Doctor and he ran with it without even considering the fact that the storyline would have worked just fine with McGann.What a pathetic excuse to not use McGann. He proved in the webisode that he can play the gamut of the Doctor's emotions and attitudes, and all in a few minutes.
Agreed. I think that's a much stronger story arc. Even the Doctor is changed by the horrors of war. As it is, it kind of whitewashes that emotional impact away in a disposable Doctor.Moffat claims a war-hardened Doctor would have been inconsistent with McGann's upbeat performance from the TV movie. Personally, I disagree. IMO, seeing McGann's Doctor war-hardened and at the end of his rope would have done a better job showing how war can change people than having the Eighth Doctor literally turn into a different person for the purposes of fighting a war did.
It's especially frustrating now that even after we go through this whole song and dance of introducing a forgotten Doctor, having him be accepted by his successors by the end and supposedly now considered a true Doctor, he's still treated as an "unofficial" Doctor. The official numbering system still stays the old way, with Eccleston through to Whitaker still considered the Ninth to Thirteenth Doctors, and most of the official tie-in material overlooks the War Doctor anyway. Yes, he got a story arc in Titan's comics, one novel and a Big Finish series which only ended because of John Hurt's death, but that's pretty much it. All the various short story anthologies that supposedly feature "all Doctors" leave him out.
Basically, any story featuring him should enforce how vastly different he was as the Warrior, as opposed to the Doctor, and that's a good reason not to have frequent stories published about him.
...it also means demystifying the Time War further.
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