Christian Cawley's Blog, page 61
September 16, 2015
Clara and the Doctor: Romance Would be “Creepy” Says Capaldi
Josh Maxton 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.
Unless you’ve been living under a rock since Series 7B of our favorite show, you’ll know that Clara and the Eleventh Doctor (Matt Smith) were secretly in love. Unfortunately that wonderful duo was torn to shreds when the Eleventh Doctor regenerated into the Twelfth Doctor (Peter Capaldi). As with all regenerations though, there was a happy side to this; we wouldn’t have Capaldi in the Tardis without it. I’m not going to dive into comparing the Eleventh Doctor with the Twelfth at this time, even though I have an opinion regarding that.
Instead, I have news to bring you from the mouth of Peter Capaldi himself. Before you get out your fez and your unicorn-covered notebook to write fan-fiction where the Twelfth Doctor is reciting love sonnets to his companion Clara, listen up: Peter Capaldi has ruled out a romance between the Doctor and his assistant Clara as it would be “completely creepy”.
“It’s fine if you have young men like Matt [Smith] and David Tennant but as a father I felt it would be inappropriate.”
Instead of romance there’s “deep love”, as Capaldi calls it – a sort of an unspoken, yet unbreakable bond. Jenna comments on this:
“Age made no difference. He’s an alien. We’re not lovey-dovey. Everything is more about what is unsaid, rather than said. Clara may seem like a control freak, but she’s trying to control the uncontrollable”
Peter also has some very nice things to say about Jenna Coleman, the fab actress behind Clara Oswald. He explains their characters’ relationship more as well:
“It has no equivalent in TV or fiction, a friendship between an alien creature and an extremely bright, clever and brave young woman,” says Capaldi. “It’s unusual for a man of my age to be friendly with such a youthful lady. She wants to go out into the universe and enjoy herself, happy to be reckless and in danger.
“I was so lucky it was Jenna because it might not have worked with anyone else. It’s tricky to come into a long-established show, especially as the lead, and Jenna has proved to be a wonderful actress and friend.”
Whenever I think of the Doctor having a relationship with a human I think of when the Tenth Doctor explains to Rose why he had to leave Sarah Jane:
“I don’t age. I regenerate. But humans decay. You wither and you die. Imagine watching that happen to someone you… You can spend the rest of your life with me. But I can’t spend the rest of mine with you. I have to live on, alone. That’s the curse of the Timelords.”
~The Doctor, School Reunion (Series 2)
What do YOU think?
Let us know in the comments!
The post Clara and the Doctor: Romance Would be “Creepy” Says Capaldi appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
Jenna Cast in Royal TV Drama – Has She Left the TARDIS?
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.
Has Jenna Coleman said goodbye to Doctor Who to play Queen Victoria in a new ITV production?
That’s certainly the impression we’re getting this morning, with several online newspapers (by our reckoning, The Telegraph was first) reporting that the Clara Oswald actress – who first appeared in 2012’s Asylum of the Daleks – is set to move onto a new drama by novelist Daisy Goodwin, who used Queen Victoria’s diaries to help research the £10 million series, called – imaginatively enough – Victoria.
If true, (Alex Kingston’s presence in the Christmas special plus Coleman’s recent convention appearances suggest that it is) then this would be “third time lucky” for the actress to leave Doctor Who. Initially she was expected to leave at the end of Series 8, and then again in the 2014 Christmas special, Last Christmas. She is only the second nuWho co-star to appear as regular companion to two Doctors (Matt Smith and Peter Capaldi) and has of course appeared alongside David Tennant and John Hurt in The Day of the Doctor. If Clara makes it to the end of Series 9, Coleman will also become longest running modern companion, with 36 episodes, ahead of Karen Gillan and Billie Piper (34 and 27 episodes, respectively).
Of course, with rumours of a cut-down, three episode run in 2016, Jenna may not have left the TARDIS just yet. But there is a ring of familiarity (and finality) to all this…
The post Jenna Cast in Royal TV Drama – Has She Left the TARDIS? appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
September 15, 2015
Do You Think That Peter Capaldi is Still to “Nail” Playing the Doctor?
Billy Garratt-John 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 a recent interview with Chloe Fox of The Telegraph, Peter Capaldi has revealed he doesn’t feel he’s “nailed it yet” in regards to his portrayal of the Doctor. Fresh from the set of Doctor Who Series 9, Capaldi told Fox;
“I don’t feel I’ve nailed it yet – from an acting point of view, I mean. I don’t yet feel that I know how to do this. Quite who the Doctor is remains mysterious to me – which is of course as it should be – but one of the biggest challenges that I’ve found, and am finding, is that you have to sort of be able to spin on a penny.”
Peter there, echoing sentiments that conjure up one of the most wonderful quotes regarding the Doctor’s personality, spoken by Colin Baker. I’m paraphrasing horribly here (sorry Colin), but Baker did a wonderful piece summing up the character, about stepping over dead bodies in a field without a care and then crying at the death of a butterfly. The Doctor is such a wonderfully complex character and one of Peter’s strongest points as Twelve is that deep rooted complexity.
He goes on to say;
It might just be my Scottish melancholia, but the very first day I found out I’d got the job, I started to feel sad that one day I would not have it; that there would come a day, in the not too distant future, that I wouldn’t be Doctor Who any more. And that is why I try really hard to get as much out of it as possible. Because one day I’ll just be an overweight has-been, trying to get a meeting with Jenna Coleman and being ejected from a Doctor Who Convention in Bolton for being drunk and disorderly. I mean, this is surely my high point, isn’t it?
I love this man.
It is clear to all fans, whether you’re a fan of Peter’s take on the role or not, that he has 100% invested himself in the part. The important thing here is that playing the Doctor isn’t just an on-screen thing. This man is Doctor Who (yeah, I said it – if it’s good enough for Peter…) all day, every day – and will be, forever. It’s a daunting prospect, isn’t it?
How do you guys feel about Peter Capaldi’s ability to play the part? Has he nailed if for you, yet? Is he…the Doctor?
The post Do You Think That Peter Capaldi is Still to “Nail” Playing the Doctor? appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
PodKast Previews Doctor Who Series 9!
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.
Doctor Who Series 9 is almost upon us, which gives Christian Cawley and James McLean the chance to mull over the recent prologue and look forward to the forthcoming run… Plus we’ve got recommendations and some interesting news about the immediate future of the podKast.
Kasterborous PodKast Series 5 Episode 31 Shownotes
Doctor Who Series 9 Prologue
Kasterborous Doctor Who Series 9 Preview Page
Recommendations: Death in Paradise Series 2, Mutant 59: The Plastic Eater by Kit Pedler & Gerry Davis, Doctor Who: Impossible Worlds, Community, Philip Hinchcliffe,
The podKast theme tune is by Russell Hugo. He’s excelled himself this time, hasn’t he?
Listen to the PodKast
There are several ways to listen. In addition to the usual player above, we’re pleased to announce that you can also stream the podKast using Stitcher, an award-winning, free mobile app available for Android and iPhone/iPad. This pretty much means that you can listen to us anywhere without downloading – pretty neat, we think you’ll agree! (Note that it can take a few hours after a new podKast is published to “catch up”.)
Stitcher
Audioboom
What’s more, you can now listen and subscribe to the podKast via our Audioboom channel (formerly Audioboo)! Head to https://audioboom.com/channel/doctorwhopodkast and click play to start listening. You can also comment and record your own boos in response to our discussions! Meanwhile you can use the player below to listen through Audioboom:
You haven’t clicked play yet?! What are you waiting for? As well as our new Stitcher and Audioboo presence you can also use one of these amazingly convenient ways to download and enjoy this week’s podKast.
Use the player in the top right of the Kasterborous home page, or visit the podKast menu link.
Listen with the “pop out” player above, which also allows you to download the podKast to your computer.
You can also take advantage of the RSS feed to subscribe to the podKast for your media player, and even find us on iTunes, where your reviews will help the show considerably.
The post PodKast Previews Doctor Who Series 9! appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
David A McIntee Discusses Lethbridge-Stewart Book “The Schizoid Earth”
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.
Candy Jar Books has confirmed the release date of the second title in the Lethbridge-Stewart series, The Schizoid Earth by David A McIntee, which will be available from September 25th 2015 in paperback and on Kindle.
This follows the announcement that the range schedule was being reorganized following delays. Here’s what the follow up to The Forgotten Son is all about…
Blurb: “Lethbridge-Stewart was supposed to be in the mountains of the east. Things didn’t quite go according to plan.
On the eve of war, something appeared in the sky; a presence that blotted out the moon. Now it has returned, and no battle plan can survive first contact with this enemy.
Plagued by nightmares of being trapped in a past that never happened, Lethbridge-Stewart must unravel the mystery of a man ten years out of his time; a man who cannot possibly still exist.
Why do the ghosts of fallen soldiers still fight long-forgotten battles against living men? What is the secret of the rural English town of Deepdene? Lethbridge-Stewart has good reason to doubt his own sanity, but is he suffering illness or injury, or is something more sinister going on?”
To accompany this news, author David A McIntee has chatted about the release, which sees him return to the Doctor Who universe following a rich history of involvement with the Virgin and BBC Books in the years when the show was off air..
McIntee has been writing TV tie-in books for twenty-two years for popular franchises such as Star Trek and Doctor Who. From 1993 to 2004 he was one of the very few authors to write novels for every Doctor from the classic series, as well as one Doctor-less novel which saw Lethbridge-Stewart taking the lead.
MicIntee said: “I was asked by Andy Frankham-Allen at Candy Jar to write The Schizoid Earth, because he liked what I’d done with some of the Doctor Who books – in particular The Face Of The Enemy, which was very UNIT-heavy, with the Master and Lethbridge- Stewart as co-leads. I was given the basic idea by Candy Jar, and given how much I love the character, and could see lots of cool ideas to do with a pre-UNIT Lethbridge-Stewart, I wasn’t going to turn that down. There’s just so much opportunity with the character at that stage of his life.”
David A McIntee has seized that opportunity with both hands with an exciting and complex tale that covers two worlds, acting as a dark mirror to the first Lethbridge-Stewart novel, The Forgotten Son, creating a sinister plot against the title hero that will be sure to have readers on the edge of their seats.
“You have to be careful with characters,” McIntee explains when asked about writing a spin-off based on one of the most enduring supporting characters in Doctor Who’s long history. “For example one can’t have the unintelligent Lethbridge-Stewart that sometimes appeared (the one who thinks an alien planet is Cromer, for example [in the television story The Three Doctors broadcast in 1972]), because you don’t have this alien bloke to look smart by comparison. And, in my opinion, that’s a good thing, because you want everybody to be portrayed as at their best – these are supposed to be the elite, after all”.
When asked about whether The Schizoid Earth will have any connection to his previous solo outing for Lethbridge-Stewart, McIntee said, “Yes, in some ways, but not necessarily in the way you’d think. For example, what you see on the cover isn’t what you think you see on the cover. And there is at least one linking character.”
Talking about the enduring popularity of the character, McIntee said the continued success of Alistair Lethbridge-Stewart was thanks to the actor who brought the character to life from 1968 to 2007, Nicholas Courtney: “The character’s strengths, when written properly, are his intelligence and loyalty and honour, which I think are also timeless qualities we look for in our fictional heroes – especially military type ones. But Nick was, is, and always will be at the heart of it.”
When asked what to expect, Editor Andy Frankham-Allen says, “The rug to be pulled from under you. The cover, I feel, produces certain expectations from long-term fans, and if there’s one thing we like to do, is play on expectations and then do something completely unexpected. And David has done that brilliantly. It’s something of a dark reflection of The Forgotten Son, and, to utilise a well-worn cliché, Lethbridge-Stewart’s life will never be the same again.” McIntee agrees, and adds, “you can expect ’60s style Spy-Fi, action, thrills, explosions, sudden mad reversals and shocking cliff-hangers.”
Lethbridge-Stewart: The Schizoid Earth can be ordered from the Candy Jar online store for just £8.99.
The post David A McIntee Discusses Lethbridge-Stewart Book “The Schizoid Earth” appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
Doctor Who Related Casting News Blast
David Power 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.
Happy Doctor Who week everyone! You excited? I sure am. Now, if you’re so desperate to see familiar faces regardless of if you’re seeing them in Doctor Who or not, then this news blast is for you!
High Priestess to High Prosecutor?
Clare Higgins, (Ohila in The Night of the Doctor and the newly released prologue for Series 9), will play the role of prosecutor Hazel Warren in an upcoming storyline of EastEnders starting Tuesday 15th of September.
About her time on the show Higgins said:
“I had such a great time at EastEnders. It was a privilege to be part of such an exciting storyline and work with such a fantastic group of actors.”
Safe House‘s Second Season’s Story a Secret

Ninth Doctor actor Christopher Eccleston will reprise his role as former detective Robert in the second season of ITV’s Safe House.
The story of the show’s second season is being kept secret at the moment, Paula Cuddy, Eleventh Hour Films’ head of development simply said:
“We’re thrilled to be returning to tell another complex and engaging story.”
Jemma Redgrave as the Doctor?!
Jemma Redgrave, known to us as UNIT’s Chief Scientific Officer Kate Stewart, will be joining BBC1’s long running medical drama Holby City.
She’ll be playing the role of Bernice (Bernie) Wolfe, a battlefield experienced general surgeon. She will first appear as a patient on Darwin ward, before settling professionally in Keller ward.
Jemma, who briefly played the titular Dr. Eleanor Bramwell in ITV’s Bramwell, had this to say about her role:
“It will be great to be practising medicine again, on one of the BBC’s flagship dramas. I am so happy to be joining the cast.”
Peter Capaldi directing episodes of Veep
The political comedy show Veep on HBO is created by Armanda Iannuci, creator of The Thick of It, y’know, that one show that made Peter Capaldi famous. Well the show is entering it’s fifth season, and in a recent interview ShortList Magazine Peter announced that he’ll be directing a couple of episodes of the 2016 season.
When asked about making a cameo in Veep as Thick of It favourite Malcolm Tucker, Peter replied:
“Sure, why not? It would be fine by me. I’m about to direct a couple of episodes, does that count? That seems like the compromise option. The only thing is, Doctor Who takes up so much time, it doesn’t leave a lot of time to do other things. That whole team are all dear friends. I’d love to work with them at some point again.”
Know of any more casting news? Let us know in the comments!
The post Doctor Who Related Casting News Blast appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
Pre-Advance Review: The Magician’s Apprentice / The Witch’s Familiar
Richard Forbes 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.
You’ve read the previews, buzzed about the praise, admired the interviews and gawked in delight at the stills, but only at Kasterborous do we have your exclusive look at… your exclusive look at Series 9’s audacious two-part premiere: The Magician’s Apprentice / The Witch’s Familiar, written by showrunner, Steven Moffat and directed by Blink’s Hettie MacDonald.
The Magician’s Apprentice begins with a surprising revelation – a cold open sure to have you screaming in disbelief as the titles appear: oooooooooeeeeeooooo. Things aren’t looking that good for the Doctor as an impossible dilemma arises – a compelling choice that no man, woman or ood would ever want to make.
Clara returns too, with a spunky but soft touch, yet this particularly blockerbuster premiere will challenge her in ways we have yet to see from our beloved schoolteacher as events unfold around her; a storm – nay, the perfect storm – brews as old enemies of the Doctor’s return, a harbinger of only darker things to come…
Expect nothing short of an action-packed explosion of thrills and the occasional laugh – this premiere packs a mighty punch – taking audiences from one end of the universe to the next; not even the end of the universe itself is too big for this engrossing tale of the trials of its heroes and the summery triumph of optimism over its seemingly insurmountable odds.
When a particularly triumphant moment comes, I know you too will be singing along with the music of Murray Gold, spellbinded by the ‘magic’ of this series premiere. Certainly too the return of the Daleks and Death in Heaven’s Missy (played deliciously by fan favourite Michelle Gomez) helps to raise the stakes in a story where increasingly the Doctor and Clara are forced by events out of their control (kind of) to decide who to trust and who not to. They may not be the best shots in the universe, but in my opinion, the Daleks do muster a few good “EXTERMINATE!!” ‘s – and do watch out for Missy too, whose appearance will almost surely have you cackling along with a sinister brogue! This is a series premiere, I can confidently say, that fans won’t want to miss – and that’s not an opinion, that’s a fact!
You heard it here with Kasterborous first: some of you, I am certain, will come to regard this premiere as Steven Moffat’s BEST WORK since Blink, others too, The Curse of Fatal Death (you might even catch a passing reference to the latter if you’re lucky). Even if the conclusion doesn’t leave you wanting more, I assure you at the very least a particularly shocking cliffhanger is around the corner, ready to spark waves of awe and urine-inducing screams. Ultimately however, it’s hard to say what fans will make of this premiere – whether it’ll rise to the heights of a classic or fall into infamy – whether it’ll be beloved or beleaguered. That is to say: good, bad or Love & Monsters. Judging a classic has become something of a clairvoyant act among a notoriously fickle fandom. Honestly, even if we did have an opinion though, we probably couldn’t tell you. The BBC’s watching, after all.
Mark it down on your calendar, folks: September 19 through to September 26.
Have any questions about the series premiere for our resident pre-previewer? Ask below and prepare for the delicate tap-dance sure to follow…
The post Pre-Advance Review: The Magician’s Apprentice / The Witch’s Familiar appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
“Harvest of the Sycorax” Details Emerge
Richard Forbes 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.
Big Finish has dropped a few more nuggets of gold regarding their new series of audios, Classic Doctors, New Monsters. In particular: casting details for the Sylvester McCoy story, Harvest of the Sycorax.
In a long anticipated voyage for Big Finish into the seemingly uncharted, well copyrighted wilderness of New Who, Classic Doctors, New Monsters sees former Doctors (Peter Davison, Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy, Paul McGann) in a brand new set of audio dramas tackle monsters from the revived series, including: a species that not only doesn’t speak but also doesn’t move when you’re looking, two races competing for the most annoying, barking voice in the universe, and a monster created by Robert Holmes… more than forty years ago. If a success, this series will long be regarded as an example of how being bonkers mad has paid off surprisingly well for the team at Big Finish Productions.
Harvest of the Sycorax, in particular, sees the Seventh Doctor (Sylvester McCoy) face off against the Sycorax, whose sole appearance in Doctor Who from The Christmas Invasion left an appetite in the world for more of these space ruffians’ special brand of hauteur and deceit. The story follows the Sycorax and their attempts to attack a “deep-space medical facility”. Harvest of the Sycorax has been written by James Goss and directed by Barnaby Edwards, the latter of which only had good things to say about the upcoming project:
“I think Harvest of the Sycorax is one of Sylvester’s strongest performances,” says Edwards. “He’s funny, fast and, when required to be, furious. The Seventh Doctor and the Sycorax make for thrilling adversaries. And the supporting cast are wonderful!”
As for the casting details, Giles Watling has been cast as a Sycorax chief, while victims of the Sycorax will include Cadwallader (Jonathan Firth), Shadrak (Rebecca Callard) and Zanzibar played by Nisha Nayar. Interestingly, bridging the gap between Classic and New Who is old hat for Nayar, who has played two other roles in Doctor Who: first as a Red Kang in Paradise Towers and next as a female programmer who helped operate the murderous Anne Droid in Bad Wolf / The Parting of the Ways.
(Nisha Nayar as a female programmer in Bad Wolf.)
Classic Doctors, New Monsters will be released in 2016 and is available for pre-order now.
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September 14, 2015
Doctor Who Makes Bones About X-mas Special
Richard Forbes 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.
Sure to wet your appetite, the official Doctor Who Instagram account is at it again, this time showing a mysterious picture of two skulls from the upcoming 2015 Christmas Special apparently –
A photo posted by Doctor Who Official (@bbcdoctorwho) on Sep 14, 2015 at 9:40am PDT
The Instagram account has also previously teased pictures of River Song from the Christmas Special and a picture taken after the Christmas Special readthrough that’ll have you dusting off your magnifying glass for an exciting-yet-ultimately-futile expedition (see Vixen filling in for Peter Capaldi below) –
A photo posted by Doctor Who Official (@bbcdoctorwho) on Sep 3, 2015 at 7:09am PDT
Reports from the filming of this special (written by Steven Moffat and directed by Douglas Mackinnon) have been sparse, with fans citing only a few glimpses of Doctor Who filming recently including a rumored Bristol shoot.
What do you, dear Kasterbourites, think the skulls mean? While it’s certainly possible the skulls are just random props taken aside by the publicity team from the set, I personally wonder if the skulls are a sign that the Vashta Nerada from Silence in the Library are making a return this Christmas. Christmas in The Library! Beat that, Moffat. Fans on Instagram, however, are speculating that the skulls may belong to, yep, you guessed it: the late Amy and Rory. Yikes!
The post Doctor Who Makes Bones About X-mas Special appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
Doctor Who Stars Among Hollywood-Smashing Voice Cast in LEGO Dimensions!
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 a new video, Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment has revealed some of the famous voice talent in LEGO Dimensions, the upcoming entertainment experience that merges physical LEGO brick building with interactive console gameplay.
And it goes way beyond Doctor Who!
In case you didn’t know, LEGO Dimensions fuses 14 fan-favourite universes from film, television and games together with the principal actors voicing their characters from almost every property lending authenticity to the game’s epic story. You already know that Peter Capaldi is the Twelfth Doctor, Jenna Coleman is Clara Oswald, and Michelle Gomez is Missy – but did you know that many other original actors from the long running British science fiction television series have also returned to voice their characters in the game?
But it doesn’t stop with Doctor Who, as you can see in the video above. Some of the talent include Michael J. Fox who played Marty McFly and Christopher Lloyd who played Doc Brown in the Back to the Future films, and have rerecorded and reprised their roles in LEGO Dimensions. From The LEGO Movie, Chris Pratt returns as Emmet, Elizabeth Banks as Wyldstyle, Alison Brie as UniKitty and Charlie Day as Benny, along with several other actors from the film. And as part of the original LEGO Dimensions story, Joel McHale is X-PO, the game’s robot guide, and Gary Oldman is Lord Vortech, the evil mastermind who seeks to control the LEGO Multiverse.
Had enough? There’s more! LEGO Dimensions includes many other famous voice actors in addition to those featured in the video. Members of the original cast of Ghostbusters, The Lord of the Rings, The Simpsons ™ and Scooby-Doo™ will also be reprising their roles for the game, with Chris Pratt also voicing Owen Grady from Jurassic World, along with other members of the film’s original cast. From the world of DC Comics, Troy Baker is Batman and Tara Strong is Harley Quinn. Ricky Gervais’ comedy partner Stephen Merchant is Wheatley and Ellen McLain is GLaDOS from the Portal video game series.
We can’t wait to see all of this in action, and we’ve just two weeks to wait. Launching 29th September, LEGO Dimensions will be available for Xbox One, the all-in one games and entertainment system from Microsoft and the Xbox 360 games and entertainment system from Microsoft, PlayStation®4 and PlayStation®3 computer entertainment systems and Nintendo´s Wii U™ System, and you can order your copy of the LEGO Dimensions Starter Park from Amazon right now!
The post Doctor Who Stars Among Hollywood-Smashing Voice Cast in LEGO Dimensions! appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
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