Author Topic: Doctor Who - Christmas Special  (Read 5675 times)

I thought about beginning to watch all series of this a few days ago. How and where can I watch it?
You'll have to do a google search if you're looking for online streaming, but I wouldn't vouch for the legality of that.
Or try YouTube or something.

Or just go and buy a boxset.

If you want to watch the most recent ones out this series however, check every saturday on www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer to catch up with those just being shown.

Or try YouTube or something.

I tried that. I can't find any complete episodes.

Or just go and buy a boxset.

I have a television if that's what you mean.

If you want to watch the most recent ones out this series however, check every saturday on www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer to catch up with those just being shown.

I'm guessing watching that first would mess up the timeline pretty badly, though.

I have a television if that's what you mean.

A boxset of DVDs.

It's showing on BBC America at 9 tonight, yeah?

A boxset of DVDs.

Right, that makes sense I suppose. I'll do that if I can't find any other solutions.

Right, that makes sense I suppose. I'll do that if I can't find any other solutions.
Netflix?


I have a television if that's what you mean.
A boxset of DVDs.
Yeah, I meant DVD's.
I'm guessing watching that first would mess up the timeline pretty badly, though.
Not really. You can get into it whenever you want.
So long as you start at the beginning of a series and watch all of that series, then it's fine. You shouldn't encounter too many problems if you watch series 7 and then series 6.

They have references to each other and stuff, but each new series has a new primary storyline.
And if you watch a new series and then an older one, it'll just reinform what you've seen.

The only one's I suppose that are more difficult to see in reverse order are Season 2 beginning, before Season 1, and then Season 5 beginning before Season 4.
That's just because there is a regeneration in between those (A change in the actor who plays the doctor).
And Season 2/Season 1 is weirder just because there is a new Doctor, but the same companions.


Just watch the series however you want really, it's all good.
Of course, be aware that if you go latest then oldest, you miiight see some drop in quality.
But not too much. It's all got a rather sweet sort of... almost amateurish feel. It's good quality, but obviously it's not a hollywood drama.

It's showing on BBC America at 9 tonight, yeah?
http://www.bbcamerica.com/doctor-who/

Do I need to watch the episodes from the 60's and onward to know what's going on, or is Series 7 independent?

Of course, be aware that if you go latest then oldest, you miiight see some drop in quality.
But not too much. It's all got a rather sweet sort of... almost amateurish feel. It's good quality, but obviously it's not a hollywood drama.

Having watched all of the Star Trek TOS, TNG, etc. episodes, I prefer the "almost amateurish feel" anyway.

I hope this is going to be Matt Smith's final season, I've never really liked him.

I also hope they do another three doctors special with Eccleston, Tennant, and Smith this time around

Do I need to watch the episodes from the 60's and onward to know what's going on, or is Series 7 independent?

Everything from the 60s-80s is its own storyline, everything from 2005-2012 is what people refer to as series 1-7.

Doctor who has a nice way of having every episode being its own thing that anyone can watch and enjoy with a few exceptions.
important series/season wide plot points are generally only addressed during finales and at the end of an episode.

I wish the original episodes from before the break (1st-8th doctors) were up on netflix, they only have the specials up.

I AM A HUUUUMAN.
I AM A HUUUUMAN.
I AM NOT A DARLEK...


ex... term... in...ate!

the whole woman in the darlek thing was full of wat

Having watched all of the Star Trek TOS, TNG, etc. episodes, I prefer the "almost amateurish feel" anyway.
Mm, it certainly works well for it and similar programs.
I suppose sci-fi can benefit from the style.

But I would say that Star Trek is a different sort of amateur to Doctor Who, if that makes sense...
Like Star Trek was low budget, obviously silly at times, but still took itself seriously.
Whereas Doctor Who is relatively low budget, designed to be silly, and probably fits in (atleast these days) more silliness that seriousness into it.

I think with Doctor Who, it's the great mix of it being both a children's program and a sci-fi program that people of all ages can enjoy.

Basically, I love the way Doctor Who is done. I can't properly explain it, but it works out greatly, and the writers and actors and producers and directors and everyone who works on it does a great job.

Do I need to watch the episodes from the 60's and onward to know what's going on, or is Series 7 independent?
Not at all.
Even back then you could watch one doctor, not watch the next, start with the one after and not miss anything.

The stories now are entirely independant from the old ones. When Eccleston started in Series 1, they didn't even bother with an explanation of where he's been since his last appearance. They didn't need to.

Occasionally they do have some reference to old things, but it's nothing you'll miss. If it's important, they explain it.
Most people who watched it back when it first started are on into their 40s and such.
None of the main audience who watches it now ever watched it back then (And can't, due to most of the old tapes being destroyed).

But they do like to put in easter eggs whenever they can. Like there is one episode in Series 1, where they go to this person's own private museum of alien artifacts, and in it is things like the old Cybermen heads and other such stuff.
And this episode had easter eggs that related to the images of the Daleks throughout the series.


I'd say the only big big part from back in the old series that they brought back was the episode in which Sarah Jane Smith, (played by the great Elisabeth Sladen, who sadly passed away last year), returns with K-9.
And then together they had a spin-off series, The Sarah Jane Adventures, which was a more child-orientated series on BBC's CBBC.

Doctor who has a nice way of having every episode being its own thing that anyone can watch and enjoy with a few exceptions.
important series/season wide plot points are generally only addressed during finales and at the end of an episode.
This was one of my favourite features. They don't do it so much with Matt Smith's Doctor though. It's much less subtle.

I absolutely loved the first series finale and it's twist.

Really, who actually picked up on Bad Wolf.