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Post by Stuart Douglas on Apr 16, 2015 13:13:55 GMT
Is this a known telesnap/image from this Hartnell story, does anyone know? Stuart
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Post by Rob Moss on Apr 16, 2015 13:43:47 GMT
No, I believe it's from The Massacre.
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Post by Will Weller on Apr 16, 2015 13:47:16 GMT
Sorry to disappoint you Stuart, but this is definitely from "The Massacre". However, I've never seen this picture before, so thanks for sharing it!
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Post by Stuart Douglas on Apr 16, 2015 13:48:28 GMT
Sorry to disappoint you Stuart, but this is definitely from "The Massacre". However, I've never seen this picture before, so thanks for sharing it! Damn - I realised I'd had a brain fart about two seconds ago and rushed back to change the title to 'The Massacre' but I see you and Rob have already spotted my foolishness! Stuart
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Post by George D on Apr 16, 2015 15:46:13 GMT
It's still a great picture and sadly we have so little from the massacre
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Post by John Andersen on Apr 16, 2015 18:35:40 GMT
Sorry to disappoint you Stuart, but this is definitely from "The Massacre". However, I've never seen this picture before, so thanks for sharing it! Damn - I realised I'd had a brain fart about two seconds ago and rushed back to change the title to 'The Massacre' but I see you and Rob have already spotted my foolishness! Stuart I have not seen that picture from The Massacre before. I am not sure whether it is on any of the recons for this particular story. Where did this picture come from?
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Post by Richard Bignell on Apr 16, 2015 21:23:20 GMT
It's been around for some time. It certainly appears on DWM's The Complete First Doctor from 2004.
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Post by John Green on Apr 17, 2015 0:12:44 GMT
Steven's wearing late 16th/early 17th century doublet and hose,while the Doctor seems to be favouring a sort of low-crowned top-hat from the French Revolutionary period.Wasn't he wearing something similar,with a tricolor ribbon draped round it on the cover of the video boxed set?
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Richard Develyn
Member
Living in hope that more missing episodes will come back to us.
Posts: 574
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Post by Richard Develyn on Apr 17, 2015 8:33:17 GMT
I've always found The Massacre a really difficult story to understand.
Richard
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Post by John Green on Apr 17, 2015 8:59:30 GMT
I've always found The Massacre a really difficult story to understand. Richard As an historian,I find it an interesting choice.Almost as gripping as 'The Pretenders',the children's serial set during the Monmouth rebellion.As The Velvet Underground sang "those were different times". When I say "historian",I've got a degree... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Bartholomew%27s_Day_massacre Of course,Hartnell playing two roles won't help with following the audio...If only they'd chosen the St.Valentine's Day Massacre!
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Post by Ant Harvison - WIPED NEWS on Apr 17, 2015 9:36:33 GMT
The Massacre is by far one of my favourite stories, missing or otherwise. If only the same level of intelligence, eloquence and attention to detail were to be seen in today's Who then the series would, IMHO, be far better. Bring back the pure historicals! Bug-eyed monsters aren't a sine qua non for the programme.
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Post by John Green on Apr 17, 2015 9:40:32 GMT
The Massacre is by far one of my favourite stories, missing or otherwise. If only the same level of intelligence, eloquence and attention to detail were to be seen in today's Who then the series would, IMHO, be far better. Bring back the pure historicals! Bug-eyed monsters aren't a sine qua non for the programme. In some ways,I found the historicals scarier.On a distant world,it might always be possible to hitch a ride home even if the Tardis is lost.Not so if you're stuck in the cholera-laden past.
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RWels
Member
Posts: 2,857
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Post by RWels on Apr 17, 2015 13:36:28 GMT
The Massacre is by far one of my favourite stories, missing or otherwise. If only the same level of intelligence, eloquence and attention to detail were to be seen in today's Who then the series would, IMHO, be far better. Bring back the pure historicals! Bug-eyed monsters aren't a sine qua non for the programme. In some ways,I found the historicals scarier.On a distant world,it might always be possible to hitch a ride home even if the Tardis is lost.Not so if you're stuck in the cholera-laden past. As a historian, you should know that the past is a foreign country... so theoretically it shouldn't be any different. That also means that "a long time ago" IS THE SAME AS "in a galaxy far away".
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Post by John Green on Apr 17, 2015 13:48:40 GMT
In some ways,I found the historicals scarier.On a distant world,it might always be possible to hitch a ride home even if the Tardis is lost.Not so if you're stuck in the cholera-laden past. As a historian, you should know that the past is a foreign country... so theoretically it shouldn't be any different. That also means that "a long time ago" IS THE SAME AS "in a galaxy far away". All of which leads me into my only St.Bartholomew joke.(You have to assume it's a Second Doctor story).Thus: It's a Huguenot Jamie! Aye,you're no' wrong there,Doctor! So...was this a candid on-set photo?
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Post by Richard Bignell on Apr 17, 2015 14:27:37 GMT
No, it's a set photo taken for the Design Department.
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