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Post by Hugh Pearson on Jan 30, 2017 23:41:43 GMT
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Jan 16, 2017 20:16:55 GMT
Cheers Richard! The annotated camera scripts for those four "lost" compilations would be the thing to consult. The math on the 4 episodes of Day of the Daleks puts them at around 96 minutes, so chopping those titles would do it REPLY to Richard's note below - doh, blame it on my winter cold. The VHS movie version of Day ran nearly 90 minutes, which is what I was unclear about in my second sentence above
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Jan 16, 2017 19:14:54 GMT
I see from the DWAS Reference Journal that The Day of the Daleks compilation ran 60 minutes & 29 seconds and it was broadcast on on 3 Sep 1973 (BBC Cymru on 06-09-1973). There was a movie format VHS released in 1986 (re-released in 1988) for this story that ran "nearly 90 minutes". So, there are two different condensed versions that were done. It would be interesting to compare the two - is there any paperwork, like a PasB for that 1973 compilation Day of the Daleks still in existance? EDIT - upon reflection, the PasB wouldn't give us much information, see episodic one - www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/pasb/dayofdaleks.pdf it would be a camera script, but of course that wouldn't exist for the compilation - any editing notes in existance?
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Jan 8, 2017 13:49:45 GMT
Yup, one of the benefits? of having a crappy CAD $ = makes it cheaper to have "colourised" when the USD goes a lot further. Just "Blame it on Canada"
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Dec 29, 2016 17:17:33 GMT
Well, there was an extra on The Time Meddlers DVD that tried. It was called Episode 4 - The Lost Twelve Seconds - a reconstruction of sorts, audio + script excerpt.
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Dec 24, 2016 20:52:58 GMT
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Dec 24, 2016 20:50:36 GMT
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Dec 18, 2016 23:15:33 GMT
Cheers John - that's what I needed!
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Dec 17, 2016 19:17:34 GMT
This is an article from 11th February 2011 and is interesting none the less. Unfortunately, some of the links in the article are dead now. For some of the old BBC websites like Cult, I like to use the WayBack Machine to access what remains eg. -> wayback.archive.org/web/20050301034314/http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/Would still like to be able to see what he had archived though.
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Dec 1, 2016 10:57:42 GMT
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Nov 22, 2016 12:37:15 GMT
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Nov 11, 2016 13:44:23 GMT
Hi Charles if you are still around - thank you for this wonderful animation, and could I ask a quick question?
For the feature Servants and Masters - The Making of The Power of the Daleks - will the dates when the various interviews were conducted be listed anywhere? The DVD booklet perhaps?
Thanks in advance, Hugh
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Oct 15, 2016 13:06:46 GMT
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Oct 4, 2016 20:40:33 GMT
Nothing on Power, but searches in the National Archives of Australia indicate that many reports/records - "Application for the Registration of a Film and Certificate of Registration, Film Censorship Board - exist in Sydney. Here is a link to the 2 pages of paperwork for The Reign of Terror that have been digitised: recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=1804313 WARNING - not very much has been digitised and many records come with the caveat that they are "PAPER FILES AND DOCUMENTS (allocated at series level)" or even "holdings of this item need to be verified".
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Post by Hugh Pearson on Sept 18, 2016 23:16:55 GMT
Here's one for you
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