Christian Cawley's Blog, page 296
December 27, 2013
2013 Shows from the Who Team You Should Watch!
Andrew Reynolds is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Hold onto your hats because I’m about to spin you right round, baby right round; apparently (according to my mysterious ‘insider source’) there are other television shows apart from Doctor Who!
I know!
Who would have thunk it? What the thunk!
So, drawing the shortest of short straws, I’ve been elected/threaten with physical harm to be a representative of Kasterborous and ‘investigate’ these ‘others’ in order to ascertain a) Which of these shows are the best this year has to offer and b) What makes them worthy of leaving the TARDIS for such uncharted telly-based adventures in Newdom.
Naturally, to help me through this difficult transistor period, I’ve specifically chosen programmes which feature in some way, shape or form, recognisable Doctor Who stars and guest stars – it’s best not to go whole hog and cold turkey completely from Who, he said using perhaps the grossest mixture of meat based metaphors since Aldi’s mythical, car crash in cellophane, the Three Bird Roast…
What?
That things real?
May God have mercy on us all…
So without further ado, and with no large amount of fanfare (times are hard; I’ve had to settle for a moth fluttering past a trumpet as my signature theme) here it is – 2013 Shows from the Who Team You Should Watch!
Masters of Sex (featuring Michael Sheen)
Michael Sheen – extraordinary mimic and former TARDIS eater – wants to talk to you about sex. But more importantly, a countries shifting cultural attitudes towards sex as we approach something baring an uncanny resembles to modernity in altogether better clothes (or out of them).
A more explicit Mad Men-influenced look at the landmark study into sexual mores by Masters and Johnson; Masters of Sex features some of the former Doctor Who guest stars finest acting in an already distinguished career.
At the heart (and the other organs) of the show is the relationship between Sheen’s Dr William Masters – an introverted, determined character, and his wife, the luminescent, beguiling Virginia Johnson, played by the equally superb Lizzy Caplan.
Despite a glacial start, it’s her spark that grounds this unbelievable true story – evolving as it does towards being a genuine pretender to Mad Men’s crown and to something altogether more unique and, more importantly, human.
For a drama all about sex, it just goes to prove that it’s all about chemistry.
Broadchurch (starring David Tennant, Olivia Coleman, Arthur Darvill and David Bradley, along with Who contributor, Writer & Creator Chris Chibnall)
Before the influx of quality imported crime dramas, TV detectives would wrap up the kind of case that forms the central arch of the impeccable Broadchurch in roughly an hour; give or take a quick, pleasant laugh at the end to remind audiences that ‘Hey! The case is solved! Murder is over now!’
Now, the onus is on crafting the kind of perpetual tormented atmosphere that Broadchurch excels at, amounting to a reflective study into loss and anger amongst some of the most rugged, beautifully shot scenery this country has to offer.
Broadchurch succeeds where others fail because, unlike the detective shows of old, those charged with finding the murderer of an 11 year-old boy, at times, seem ill-equipped for the job at hand.
Olivia Coleman’s Ellie Milller is both personally affected and seemingly unprepared for the weight the job requires, while David Tennant’s Alec Hardy, coming off a similar botch investigation and nursing his own ill health, at times seems like a liability rather than the ideal man to lead the case.
However, over the course of eight episodes, as the impact slowly dawns on the quiet coastal community, it’s that haunting atmosphere that lingers long after the case itself has concluded.
Direction is shared between James Strong (The Impossible Planet/ The Satan Pit; Planet of the Dead) and Euros Lyn (The End of the World; Fear Her).
Chris Chibnall (42; Dinosaurs on a Spaceship) is working on a second series, thankfully, which will also see the return of Rory Pond/Williams himself, Arthur Darvill.
The Escape Artist (starring David Tennant, Sophie Okonedo, Roy Marsden and Patrick Ryecart)
Sliding almost undetected across our schedules in and amongst a brace of other David Tennant led dramas, The Escape Artist shone because it chose to favour the head rather than the heart; presenting, by its conclusion, a cerebral attack on the judicial system which, even if it did at times wobble under its ludicrousness, chose to leave its main character who, in his own words, had lost his heart but was ultimately triumphant.
If that seems a little wishy-washy, it’s intended to leave you not with the traditional fist-pumping climax – the kind that sees your characters reflecting on the dawn of a new day as they walk triumphantly down the steps of their respective Court – but with something a little more challenging.
It’s hard for any drama to recover once it chooses to off an seemingly untouchable marque star – it makes light of our ultimately one-sided relationship with dramas like this, that even as our heroes are pursued, no harm will come to the ‘family in peril’ when in reality, the latter is often horrifyingly true.
Perhaps in attempting to both have its cake and eat it, it lost that connection which stopped it achieving the kind of expected heights these tense, inquisitive law based dramas should reach.
This isn’t necessarily a bad thing – expectations need to be subverted; sometimes something needs to make light of the rules that we abide by – the results might not be pretty but they can be entertaining in a different way.
It opens the doors for further exploration…
The case continues.
Last Tango in Halifax (Featuring Derek Jacobi, Anne Reid, Sarah Lancashire, Nina Sosanya, Sacha Dhawan, and music from Murray Gold)
It seems bizarre, pitched as it was as some sort of hidden, deadly weapon against facile pandering to younger audiences – to read some of the reactions to this wonderful sensitive drama you’d think telly, in its attempts to plumb the depths of ‘yoof’ culture had unwittingly stumbled upon an old, unexploded landmine amongst the sod- blowing apart preconceptions about audiences willingness to watch realistic portrayals of elderly folk and telly’s need to produce them.
The fact remains – in and amongst such metaphorical demarking of lines in the sand – that the drama is pitched perfectly; a sentimental fairy tale romance; the likes of which could only come from people who have had to put aside such dreams for their responsibilities for most of their adult life, and the modern, pressing concerns that those responsibilities bring – namely their disbelieving, incredulous children and grandchildren.
The cast are stunning: Derek Jacobi and Anne Reid in particular can seemingly convey such heart-breaking and heart-warming emotions in nothing more than a subtle gesture and the writing is on par with that of Alan Bennett.
Don’t let the sweet, vaguely twee nature of the descriptions fool you into dismissing this; you’ll be missing out on one of the year’s best dramas.
Imagine: Who’s Afraid of Machiavelli? (Featuring Peter Capaldi)
Here it is; the future…or something very similar.
It was hard not to draw parallels with Doctor Who during this, a study of The Prince by Machiavelli, the very term Machiavellian and what exactly that means and its place within the current political system (newsflash: it’s still horrifying relevant now, even if our shiny faced PM attempts to disarm you with a robot’s impression of a description of charm he found in the wreckage of a train-crushed working families modest home*).
In fact, while the choice of Capaldi had more to do with his previous role as ‘the master of the dark arts’ Malcolm Tucker (and him also being a pretty stunning actor too) in the peerless and Peer filled The Thick of It, it seemed like a conscious choice to reflect some very Doctor-like traits.
The long coat? Check.
A Title Card Proclaiming the Location In a Font Representative of That Area Interposed on The Landscape? Check.
That Moment When the Doctor Stares Contemplatively Out at the Horizon? Check (although Capaldi was on board the London Eye, so he could have just been wondering why he didn’t bring a camera… other than the one pointing at his face obviously)
The Moment When the Doctor Makes A Devastating Speech to An Alien Race that are Threatening the Universe that Evokes All One Thousand Years of His Existence? Check (and its presented in a roving, heavily cut fashion much like the moment in The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit where he connects the dots with what could be the actual Prince of Darkness).
It would be funny if Capaldi weren’t so scary – it goes without saying that these dramatic recantations of The Prince’s philosophy were the cherry on the cake you wouldn’t dare touch less you incur his wrath, in this edifying, engagingly produced documentary.
*My lawyers have advised me to remind you, dear reader, that this is all demented fiction, to not refer to them as ‘my lawyers’ ever again and that they ordered Ham and Pineapple, not Cheese and Tomato.
Other TV shows you might be interested in from the Who team include The Great Train Robbery, written by Chris Chibnall; The Tractate Middoth, adapted by Mark Gatiss and starring Sacha Dhawan; Arrow, with Professor River So – – uh, Alex Kingston; and, continuing tonight, Death Comes to Pemberley, starring The Snowmen‘s Tom Ward, The Long Game‘s Anna Maxwell Martin, and our lovely companion, Jenna Coleman! What, aside from Doctor Who of course, have been your telly highlights this year…?
The post 2013 Shows from the Who Team You Should Watch! appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
The TARDIS on Teesside Uncovers the Origins of Kasterborous!
Christian Cawley is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
In early December Kasterborous editor Christian Cawley visited his local BBC building to talk about Doctor Who with presenter Bob Fischer. It was a very interesting evening…
Just one of many contributors (including Teesside-born Rose actor Mark Benton, and Neil and Sue Perryman of Adventures with the Wife in Space), the show featured Christian discussing being a young Doctor Who fan in the 1980s, being shot by the Master’s TCE and regenerating and even the origins of this very website
You can now listen to The TARDIS on Teesside for another 6 days via the BBC iPlayer service at the BBC Tees website, or tune into the repeat at 3pm on New Year’s Eve.
Even if it was Kasterborous-free, this is a fascinating look at how Doctor Who has inspired a group of different fans in a small region of the North East. Please don’t miss it!
The post The TARDIS on Teesside Uncovers the Origins of Kasterborous! appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
Behind the Scenes on The Time of the Doctor [VIDEO]
Christian Cawley is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Matt Smith has left Doctor Who. Yes, it’ true, and you can see his final moments on set and the subsequent cast and crew group shot in this new behind-the-scenes video from the BBC.
It’s not quite Doctor Who Confidential, and for some reason a Richard Bacon soundalike has been used for linking narration, but all in all this is an uplifting look at a sad moment in our favourite long-running show.
Be warned, however: this is a Capaldi-free zone. Instead, get ready for Steven Moffat, Jenna Coleman, Matt Smith and VFX man Danny Cohen chatting about the episode.
The post Behind the Scenes on The Time of the Doctor [VIDEO] appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
Deleted Scene: The Time of the Doctor
Christian Cawley is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
BBC America has released a deleted scene from Matt Smith’s final Doctor Who episode The Time of the Doctor, which would have appeared in the first few minutes of the show, in which Clara explains her ambivalent feelings towards Christmas…
According to overnight figures, 8.3 million people tuned in to the 2013 Christmas special, beaten only (and incredibly) by Mrs Brown’s Boys. Ten million are believed to have seen Matt Smith utter his final words as the Eleventh Doctor hallucinated about Amy Pond and suddenly transformed into his twelfth self after acquiring a new set of regenerations.
The post Deleted Scene: The Time of the Doctor appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
December 26, 2013
What Will The Twelfth Doctor Wear?
Rebecca Crockett is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
The Time of the Doctor has passed, and we’ve met the new man. Eventually, he’ll find his own threads, and much speculation has been had on what Peter Capaldi’s Twelfth Doctor should wear. Will the costume reflect the man he is now, will it be a nod to the past and the man he once was, or will it be something new and completely different than anything he has ever worn? Let’s look at some options.
1. The Sixth Doctor’s Coat of Many Colors
Ok, let’s get this one out of the way. We’ve already seen comments from Moffat that while he isn’t really getting involved in the costume choices this time, as he was originally against Matt Smith’s bowtie, he’s said that if this happens -
- he’d object to it. And I agree with him. If anything, it would only ever again work as a joke, or maybe another shot of the TARDIS’ wardrobe like we had when Ten was choosing his look. A funny look back but nothing to be taken seriously.
2. Mixing items from all of his past incarnations, maybe Ten’s long coat, Five’s celery, and Seven’s question mark jumper.
Again, like the idea of Twelve wearing Six’s Coat of Many Colors, this would only be a joke a best, and something that would almost feel like a mockery of the past at worst. We all love the show too much for that, and so do Moffat and Capaldi. Every Doctor, while still the same man, is a man all his own.
3. The tattooed tough guy – maybe a military style with camouflage or motorcycle lover with leather and chains.
No. Not at all what the Doctor would ever look like – or act like.
4. He’s the oldest man to play the Doctor, let’s have him wear cardigans and loafers, a grandfatherly look.
He may be the oldest man to play the part, but that doesn’t mean he needs to look like he should be living in a retirement home and using a cane to walk with support! What I am hoping for, though, is that this is something of the relationship he will have with Clara, once she moves past the shock of his regeneration. While Eleven and Clara were more friends, like Eleven was with Rory and Amy since he looked like he was in their same age range, I’m hoping we’ll see a wiser, older Doctor, something more along the lines of how the First Doctor could be. It’s not something we’ve seen in the new Doctor Who era, and something that would be a welcome change.
5. Velvet coat, leather pants, maybe throw in some lace.
I call this the Aging Rock Star Doctor.
We’re saying goodbye to our Old Man in a Young Man’s Body Doctor.
This would be more like the Trying To Still Look Hip Doctor.
Plus, the Third Doctor had an outfit that might be classified the same way, but the dandy look worked well for him and for his era.
6. The adventurer type – boots, khaki trousers, always looking slightly rumpled, like Indiana Jones.
The Doctor laughs at archaeologists, including his wife. Why would he dress like one?
7. Whatever, just give him facial hair!
This is an interesting thought as well, as we’ve never had a Doctor with a beard or mustache. Why not now? We know Capaldi looks dashing with one!
8. Polo shirt, suit jacket, and distressed denim jeans.
While this might be a common look adopted by many men trying to look as if they took some care in what they are wearing instead of a sloppy white t-shirt and jeans, I don’t know that this works for our Doctor. It’s too much on the casual side.
9. Victorian era
This too close to what the Eighth Doctor first wore, with the longer coat and ruffles, and exactly what Eleven adopted in his last season. While the look isn’t a bad one, it’s been done, and done recently. Each Doctor has had a different look they call their own and unless for some reason the Twelfth Doctor is stuck in London with the Paternoster Gang the whole of Series 8 (hey, why not – Ed), this just isn’t right.
10. All black, like Capaldi wore when he was introduced to the world as the man to become the Twelfth Doctor.
This is another idea I like. It’s something that has not been done by any other Doctor and like Nine’s jumper and leather jacket, Ten’s suits, or even Eleven’s tweed and bow tie, is something that won’t feel dated in a few years. It would reflect the notion that Capaldi’s Doctor will be one that is a little darker than his past incarnations.
I would also add to this no more color changes depending on traveling forward or backwards in time. While this was basically true of our most recent Doctors, I think it’s something that has been given way too much meaning by the fans, especially since it didn’t always stick to the pattern. If you’re going to give something as subtle as a color change a meaning, make sure you always stick to it. Otherwise it’s confusing, and Doctor Who can be confusing enough!
11. He should go back to wearing a suit, but depending on where and when the TARDIS lands, his outfit should reflect the time period.
This is one idea I like. We’ve never really seen the Doctor do this, although we know the TARDIS has a vast wardrobe. You would think the Doctor would take more advantage of said wardrobe. We saw Rose and Donna take the time to change into something a little more appropriate for the time periods they visited. It would be nice to see the Doctor do this as well. And perfectly set up a visual gag for Capaldi if an episode is set in ancient Rome or Greece…
(You all know this is something you want to see – Capaldi as the Twelfth Doctor in a toga. It needs to happen.)
12. The Doctors saved Gallifrey. GALLIFREY FALLS NO MORE! Let’s bring back those wonderful Time Lord high collared robes!
No. Just no.
The post What Will The Twelfth Doctor Wear? appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
December 25, 2013
It’s a New Era of Doctor Who!
Christian Cawley is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
We’ll be back tomorrow with a review of The Time of the Doctor. Until then, enjoy the anticipation of Peter Capaldi!
The post It’s a New Era of Doctor Who! appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
How Was Your Time of the Doctor? [POLL]
Christian Cawley is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
For UK viewers, The Time of the Doctor has been and gone – if you watched it live, that is – so the time has come to leave your thoughts about one of the series’ most important episodes ever.
Yes, it’s poll time; cast your vote below and then leave a comment. We’ll be featuring comments in our reaction roundup later in the week, and the best rated opinion (use the “thumbs up” button if you like a comment) will be the winner of a 2014 Daily Dalek calendar!
Let the debate begin!
Take Our Poll
The post How Was Your Time of the Doctor? [POLL] appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
How Will You Remember The Eleventh Doctor?
Philip Bates is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Tonight, silence will fall.
Matt Smith, the Eleventh Doctor, regenerates in The Time of the Doctor, written by Steven Moffat. He first appeared in 2010, the youngest actor to take on the role, making his debut briefly in The End of Time before announcing himself properly as the Doctor in The Eleventh Hour. In three incredible series and a ground-breaking 50th anniversary special, the Doctor’s eaten fish fingers and custard, made friends and enemies, battled Daleks and Cybermen, and proved that bow ties are cool.
We asked the Kasterborous team how they’ll remember Matt Smith’s Eleventh Doctor.
ALEX SKERRATT:
Fondly! I see a lot of myself in that man – socially awkward, an old man in a young man’s body, little-to-no dress sense, mind-of-its-own hair, a passion for bunk beds… He’s more fun than I am, though. I will remember him for all these things, plus his energy, and the wiry way in which he ‘dances’ through his adventures, almost oblivious to the chaos around him. He’s going to be a hard act to follow…
NICK KITCHEN:
Matt Smith’s Doctor was my first Doctor, and even though I’ve loved pieces of all the other incarnations, the Eleventh is my Doctor. What I’ll always remember the most from Matt Smith’s terrific performances is how full of hope Smith’s Doctor was; the Doctor, at his best, brings hope to all those that he crosses paths with. While Smith gets plenty of nods about how he looks young but plays an old Doctor, I’d say that his playing of the Doctor always had a bit of child-like wonderment; not unlike the look upon a child’s face on Christmas morning when you can see that for that child, anything is possible. So, definitely that. Also, the whole dialogue from The Eleventh Hour, as I’m not sure any other actor could have spun the lines from Moffat’s pen with as much excellence as Smith did.
DREW BOYNTON:
At first, I was not a fan of the Eleventh Doctor. He was too young and too hyperactive. He seemed to be doing a bad David Tennant impression – I hate it when the Doctor excitedly rattles off a bunch of information under his breath super-fast. It’s supposed to be funny, but it’s not. I also was not a fan of the Ponds. I did not hate them, but I thought they were pretty boring, and still do. I was anxious to see Matt Smith with a different companion, and I think he has come into his own with Clara. He seems more relaxed, more sure of himself, and well, more mature. Or maybe it was the change away from the tweed coat?
Honestly, I don’t know how the Eleventh will be viewed in the future compared to the other Doctors, but I suspect somewhere square in the middle. A person cannot deny, though, that Matt Smith’s time has seen an explosion in Doctor Who‘s world-wide popularity. And the actor himself is a great ambassador for the show. Now it feels like he’s leaving too soon, just as he got going.
I hope the Eleventh Doctor comes back in a couple years for the 10th anniversary of the “new” show.
REBECCA CROCKETT:
That’s easy. He’s “MY” Doctor. I once said, when asked who my Doctor was, that Nine, Ten, and Eleven were all my Doctor because I watched the whole new series so quickly. But since then I’ve come to realise that while I love Eccleston and Tennant, Smith is the one that really wrote the Doctor on my heart. His smile, his utter seriousness one moment and silliness the next, his constant curiosity – they all came to exemplify who the Doctor is and always has been the more I look back on the shows from the classic era. I knew I liked the show before I began his episodes, but I fell in love with it because of Smith’s Eleven and will be a fan for the rest of my life.
ANDREW REYNOLDS:
Whenever I feel like testing the very limits of language by describing just how wonderful Matt Smith has been in the role of the Eleventh Doctor, I’m always drawn towards The Eleventh Hour.
I cannot overstate what an amazing hour it was: here was the youngest Doctor, the most alien of Doctors; pushed to his limits, forced to improvise and hurting from regeneration – a man with no means and no plan; forced to rely on his wits while his wits were ‘still cooking’.
But perhaps the most enduring aspect of that episode and all subsequent episodes was the Eleventh Doctor’s charm, his heart, and his ability to be a clown and a battle-hardened warrior and not have that seem like an improbable, unlikely combination – it’s within that combination, wrestling with untold evil and perilous foes where the Eleventh Doctor truly shined.
We’ll miss you Matt!
PHILIP BATES:
Choosing your favourite Doctor is a tough one. And I maintain that I don’t have a favourite. They’re all the same man and they’re all just brilliant.
Ah, but my Doctor – that’s different. He’s the one that connects the most; the one that helped you out in tough times; the one who helped form who you are. I have no qualms in saying that Matt Smith is and will always be My Doctor. His every performance is perfect, his entire era simply fantastic.
I will be truly hearts-broken when he regenerates, but I know that he is the Doctor, no matter what. And he’s just like us. He’s fallen in love with the show and is a true ambassador. Thank you, Matt. It’s been an honour.
And as to the future? Geronimo…!
HOW WILL YOU REMEMBER THE ELEVENTH DOCTOR?
The post How Will You Remember The Eleventh Doctor? appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
Obituary: The Doctor
Philip Bates is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
The Doctor, a Time Lord who has saved the universe countless times, has died.
Though records of the legendary peace-keeper have largely been wiped, partly due to a strange Bad Wolf Virus, the Doctor is a figure woven throughout history. When disaster came, he was there. He brought a storm in his wake and he had many companions, spanning many times and many places. Certainly over a thousand years old, the Doctor’s actual age is unknown, but he was most active on the planet Sol 3 (locally known as Earth), during the Humanian Era, 1960s- 2010s.
The Doctor took a prominent role in the Time War, a devastating battle between his own race and the Daleks, and was the Last of the Time Lords. Though he had numerous enemies, including Cybermen, Weeping Angels, the Headless Monks, Sontarans, and the Nestene Intelligence, the number of friends he had is incalculably excessive.
Amongst his friends were noted Earth astronomer, Sir Patrick Moore; Egyptian Queen, Cleopatra; founder of A Charitable Earth, Dorothy ‘Ace’ McShane; writer, Amelia Williams; and cosmic wheeler-dealer, Drax. He’s also said to have married at least three times.
Despite spending much of his lives running through time and space, the Doctor was occasionally employed as a caretaker, school teacher and most notably, Scientific Advisor for the Earth defence team, UNIT.
He also enjoyed football, cricket, dancing, fishing, cooking, and occasional politics, as well as being a keen runner.
Traces of the Doctor can be found on over 800 planets like Karfel, Trenzalore, Vortis, Androzani Minor, Necros, Karn, and the Cheetah World.
The whereabouts of his grave and time-space ship, the TARDIS, remain unknown, as does the location of his funeral; however, species from across the universe will continue to sing his praise. One such individual is Raxacoricofallapatorius native, Blon Fel-Fotch Pasameer-Day Slitheen, who told us: “He killed my entire family then saved me from myself. That was the Doctor, and he shall be greatly missed. By everyone.”
It has also been noted that “a universe without the Doctor scarcely bears thinking about.”
Right until his very last breath, he lived by the same promise to himself and to the universe: Never cruel nor cowardly. Never give up. Never give in.
It is said that when the Doctor died, silence fell across the whole of existence.
The post Obituary: The Doctor appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
December 24, 2013
Awesome Doctor Who Regeneration T-Shirt Available Christmas Day Only!
Christian Cawley is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
What’s this? Promoting a Doctor Who t-shirt on Christmas Day? Well, this isn’t any old t-shirt – it’s one that commemorates a moment that has long-been prepared for…
Available from TeeFury today for just $11 (plus shipping – international available), this tee is a perfect purchase for any fan of Matt Smith’s Doctor.
But there’s something else: photochromatic ink makes this design change colors in the sunlight, as illustrated above!
“The 11th Hour” by zerobriant is available for one day only, so we suggest you head to TeeFury right now to place your order and remember the time of the Eleventh Doctor.
Merry Christmas!
The post Awesome Doctor Who Regeneration T-Shirt Available Christmas Day Only! appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
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