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Month: July 2016

DOCTOR WHO – RARE COLLECTABLE VINYLS

DOCTOR WHO – RARE COLLECTABLE VINYLS

Two of Big Finish’s most popular and acclaimed Doctor Who titles are returning… Is this a record?

In October 2016 and April 2017, Big Finish release the second and third ever versions of their titles to appear on vinyl LPs. The first release – 2013’s gorgeous vinyl limited edition release of Doctor Who – The Light at the End – is long since deleted and hard to come by, and with limited runs of 500 copies on the new titles these will again be much sought after by collectors of this beautiful format.

Doctor Who – The Chimes of Midnight is the macabre Rob Shearman story that Big Finish listeners revisit again and again for a regular yuletide experience. After all, Christmas wouldn’t be Christmas without the Eighth Doctor (Paul McGann) and Charley (India Fisher) encountering inexplicable seasonal murders in a large house, would it?

Today we’re delighted to make a short clip available to listeners from the new Chimes of Midnight documentary, with writer Rob Shearman setting the scene for the early days of Big Finish, and what informed the creation of this classic:

Doctor Who – Spare Parts, coming on vinyl in April 2017,  has long been praised for its mature, chilling portrayal of a society in decay, of a people on the verge of extinction, until they determine a solution that will have horrific consequences for the universe. Can Nyssa (Sarah Sutton) and the Doctor (Peter Davison) prevent the creation of the Cybermen (Nicholas Briggs)?

Both Doctor Who – The Chimes of Midnight, and Doctor Who – Spare Parts are sumptuous four-disc sets pressed in heavy vinyl, each accompanied by brand new 2016 documentaries looking back on the stories. The gatefold sleeve contains brand new artwork commissioned from artist Tom Webster, and would look perfect in a collection, or being autographed at a convention. The releases are exclusive to the Big Finish site, priced at £79.00 each plus postage and packaging which includes global courier delivery.

Check out our full range of releases currently exclusive to Big Finish, and our Doctor Who – Special Releases.

DOCTOR WHO – SHORT TRIPS: THE BLAME GAME

DOCTOR WHO – SHORT TRIPS: THE BLAME GAME

The Monk has returned, with an offer the Doctor can’t refuse! Rufus Hound performs our latest downloadable Short Trip, available today for just £2.99!

To escape his Earth exile, the Doctor is prepared to make any bargain, come to any arrangement, or to do any deal with any devil – even if in this case the Devil wears a monk’s robes. But when past misdeeds start catching up with both the Doctor and the Monk, who can Liz Shaw trust when time is running out and death is rapidly approaching?

Written by range producer Ian Atkins and performed by Rufus Hound, Doctor Who – Short Trips: The Blame Game is an irresistible new story set early in the Third Doctor’s exile, which sees Big Finish’s latest incarnation of the Monk meeting his trapped fellow Time Lord. But is this more than just some prison visit?

Download this website exclusive title today for just £2.99. Smartphone users can listen on the go with the Big Finish Player app, available now for iOS devices.

The Monk will return in 2017 to menace the Fourth Doctor, Sarah and Harry in Doctor Who: How to Win Planets and Influence People, with more details coming soon. You can also download his earlier encounter with the Doctor in Doctor Who: The Black Hole, while Graeme Garden’s incarnation matches wits with the Eighth Doctor (Paul McGann) in five stories from The Eighth Doctor Adventures Series 4.

Our monthly Short Trips continue in August with another Third Doctor adventure – Doctor Who: Damascus, performed by Tim Treloar. Other upcoming stories include an E-Space encounter for Adric (Matthew Waterhouse) in Doctor Who: A Full Life and a strange new situation for Peri (Nicola Bryant) in Doctor Who: Rulebook.

For extra adventures, you can subscribe to the Doctor Who Main Range, where every three months an exclusive Subscriber Short Trip is added to your account – including Doctor Who: The Shrine of Sorrows by Julian Richards, a new story for the Seventh Doctor and Ace performed by Stephen Critchlow, available with subscriptions containing Doctor Who: Maker of Demons.

For more of the Third Doctor’s Big Finish titles, visit our Third Doctor Collected Page here.

DOCTOR WHO – ORDER OF THE DALEKS!

DOCTOR WHO – ORDER OF THE DALEKS!

Mrs Clarke (Miranda Raison) has her first encounter with the Daleks – but the Sixth Doctor (Colin Baker) discovers they’re not quite themselves…

As exclusively revealed in this month’s Doctor Who Magazine, Big Finish have not only confirmed the full title of November’s Doctor Who – Main Range story: Doctor Who – Order of the Daleks, but have put the brand new Simon Holub cover online. The intricate CGI imagery was done by Chris Thomson, who has put some notes on the work and some early renders on the story’s Behind The Scenes tab.

Voiced by Nicholas Briggs, the Daleks were last seen in the main range in July 2015’sDoctor Who – We Are The Daleks, but it’s a very different time and place and Doctor for Mike Tucker’s new script:

In the Galactic Census, idyllic Strellin is recorded as a Grade Three planet – its inhabitants possessing neither advanced technology, nor knowledge of other worlds. Accordingly, Strellin is protected: landings by off-worlders are strictly prohibited. Unless, of course, those off-worlders are officials of the Galactic Census itself, come to investigate the origin of a mysterious sub-space signal – a signal no native of Strellin should be able to send…

Breaking all local by-laws, the time-travelling Doctor and his companion L/Wren Mrs Constance Clarke (AWOL) have only just landed on Strellin, too. But they and the Census officials aren’t the only off-worlders to have come here. Inside a nearby monastery, the monks of the reclusive Brotherhood of the Black Petal are guarding a strange and terrible secret. Something might bring disaster not just to Strellin, but to every civilised world in the galaxy!

Doctor Who – Order of the Daleks will be released in November exclusively from Big Finish, and will have a general release at the end of December.

There are thirteen Doctor Who – Main Range stories a year, covering a wealth of adventures with the FifthSixth, and Seventh Doctors. Subscriptions are available for runs of both six or twelve stories, which are not only offered at a bargain price but come with free script PDF downloads, extended extras, and up to four free brand new Doctor Who – Short Tripsreadings a year!

Collections: how to avoid a hobby becoming a problem

Collections: how to avoid a hobby becoming a problem

A few tips on what to do if your geek merchandise and DVD/Blu-ray collections run the risk of getting out of hand…

How do you cope when your prized memorabilia turns from a healthy collection of a few hundred items into an obsession of Guinness Book of Records proportions? With Star Wars and Doctor Who collections now making said Guinness Book of Records, by nature of their perceived uniqueness and sheer range, we look at what constitutes a collection which is of some merit, as opposed to just a few hundred things many people may have. And how do you spot when that innocent set of artefacts has outgrown its purpose and threatens to overtake your home and your life?

So, you’ve grown up with a TV series or film franchise and for many years you’ve collected the related merchandise. Not that you’ve needed much encouragement, indeed sci-fi fans in general are super-served, by stores like Forbidden Planet, to indulge their hobby. Not only can we watch our favourite film or TV show but we can collect every possible item under the sun, within reason. That last proviso: ‘within reason’, suggests we are only too aware that our collections may rapidly get out of control, due to either space issues, financial issues, relationship issues or a mixture of all three.

I have always subscribed to the view that an incomplete collection is always far more interesting than a complete one. Though it is fair to say that the nature of science fiction dictates no collection, no matter what the subject matter, is ever likely to be truly complete. There will always be a new improved special edition around the corner. It’s what you haven’t got that makes things sweet. It’s what you may never get but you keep hoping one day you might just spy, that adds spice to collecting. Everyone has that ‘holy grail’ item, the one thing that above all else would make the collection worthwhile and give it a tangible reason its existence.

We’re are familiar with “hoarder next-door” type documentaries, programmes of varying sensitivity about a serious mental health disorder. One measure is if the collection fills a box room and you can still at least sleep in the room (or put someone else up) then it’s not likely to be an issue. If it is encroaching every available space in the house, however, things might be getting desperate. If you literally cannot get through the door to any room and struggle to even get through the front door, it’s likely that there’s a problem. Here’s a useful link if you want to understand more about Obsessive-Compulsive behaviour.

Try to step back (if you can!) from your collection. Examine its full extent. Just how far does it overtake your living space? Is it manageable or is it out of hand? If you find yourself moving a model of the Millennium Falcon just to boil the kettle, there’s a problem. If you have to remove an army of Sea Devils and Silurians to take a bath, there’s a problem. If you can’t get into bed for an array of cos-play costumes, there’s a problem. Such things should be obvious but sadly, for complex reasons, some people are unable to see that. The point for collectors to watch is when you become less discerning and everything ends up in “the collection”, the whole house becomes a collection to an extent. As long as you can disseminate “collection” items from household items, you’re probably on safe ground.

If you live alone you get the final say on how big the collection should be, though remember that houseroom is finite. If you’re in a relationship, does your partner condone or even indulge your collection? Does he or she have one of their own? Or do they actively take against the collection and has it become a source of friction? That’s when it’s worth thinking about how important the relationship is to you. I don’t mean to be flippant but if you truly believe your collection is more important to you than a potentially worthwhile relationship, you should perhaps question your values. Compromise is part of sharing your life with someone. It might be that you need to take (potentially drastic) action to appease their objections to a collection that’s growing out of hand. No one should be in a relationship where one partner makes all the decisions or demands a collection is broken up to try and ‘reform’ the collector. If you’re as passionate about your collection as you are about your other half, they should be aware of that and accommodate (within reason) your interests in the same way you would accommodate theirs.

You shouldn’t try to change someone too fundamentally when entering a relationship but equally there needs to be give and take on both sides. If your collection is deemed too excessive or to be a potential stumbling block, consider paring things down. If it is a relatively small and discerning collection then you may need to stand your ground a bit more. Maybe as a token gesture, get rid of a few non-essential items to show willing? If a collection takes up a small box room intended for such a venture then that is fine, as long as space isn’t at a premium. If the box room needs to become a nursery, you may need to think again!

One extreme solution is to throw it all away. It’s certainly a cathartic and healthy-seeming approach on the surface, but one that could be quite damaging emotionally. It is a huge step and unless you are suddenly forced to relinquish the collection as a last resort, a complete clear-out should probably be avoided. Even if you are made of very strong stuff and have truly mentally prepared – it is better to gradually reduce the collection. You should attempt to sell most of it on, remember, the majority of a decent collection will be saleable, not least because serious collectors obsess about the “mint condition” of items.

Always be honest and realistic. When did you last read a particular book or magazine or watch a Blu-ray, DVD or video? Or listen to an audio? Big Finish – a fine company don’t get me wrong – have produced nearly 1,500 audio dramas across a range of sci-fi franchises, arguably at a rate where it is almost impossible to keep up, yet it remains tantalising to know there is so much out there but you need a serious amount of shelving to accommodate them all. Is your collection of action figures for show or for your kids, nephews and nieces or grandchildren to play with? Perhap’s it’s a way to encourage the younger generation who don’t yet possess the (not inconsiderable) disposable income required to put a serious collection together.

Try not to be overly sentimental. Take photographs of larger items in the context of your home – prove you had them. Then move on. Remember, by paring things down, you not only get space back you might stand to make a pretty tidy sum too. A win/win situation. Keep a positive attitude, see the process as a chance to rearrange the room. Invest in new shelving if you can afford it, with the intention of accommodating the collection more efficiently, in a way that shows off some of your most prized items. You are cutting down the collection for good reasons but it is very tough to have to part with so many treasured items. Always think of the future and how you can approach the collection from a different angle. I had to sell many of my DVDs to make ends meet a few years ago. Cathartic on one level, yet gripped by necessity, I couldn’t afford to be over-sentimental and realising most DVDs can be bought again, I chose to make my collection smaller and different.

Many collectors have a slightly deluded idea that one day their collection “will be worth thousands”. Well, unless you have literally thousands of items, keep dreaming. Hundreds? Maybe, if the items are sufficiently unique, or interesting. Bear in mind, major TV or film franchises – most especially Star Wars, Doctor Who and Star Trek, are hugely popular and therefore very little in your collection is likely to be either unique or irreplaceable. Autographs and genuine props being the most obvious exceptions. With autographs, realistically speaking, don’t expect too much but if the star in question has passed away, the autograph will probably become more collectable and consequently be worth considerably higher prices. If you are able to get a collection of names together – maybe in a nice frame – say the original cast of Star Wars; or all the living former Doctors from Doctor Who, together with the incumbent Doctor and genuine signatures from those who’ve passed away; or perhaps all the Star Trek captains  – then you can probably name your price. Rare prop items can sometimes be a quirky addition to a collection and they don’t always have to be that large: Gerald Harper, who played Adam Adamant wore false eyebrows and a fake widow’s peak. A collector put Harper’s signature together with the eyebrows in a frame, an unusual item that would be worth far more than the autograph alone.

So where are the best places to cash in? Places such as CEX on the high street and the likes of Music Magpie online will give you anything from 10p to 10 quid (occasionally more) for most items. Be aware that many CDs produced in the last ten years and of a particularly mainstream interest, especially teen bands and talent show singers are worth next to nothing (for the moment at least). If you know an organisation that could give you a better deal then approach them. There is always the convention circuit for trading cards and smaller merchandise and for larger prop items, there’s auction houses.

Always bear in mind, ‘specialist’ material will not be worth much to high street retailers who deal with comparatively mainstream product. Try places like the The Vintage Magazine Company (Vin Mag) to offload rare magazines or The Who Shop, which will take Doctor Who items in good condition. Forbidden Planet don’t tend to deal with buying up collections, regardless of their “mint” condition. Many large towns have TV and Film collectors shops or market stalls, which (if they can’t help you directly) may be able to put you in touch with someone who can.

So, you have pared down your hallowed collection. What happens next? Simple rule: Don’t keep buying! Replacing one item for a new one doesn’t break down the collection. Always consider how much you really need new items, decide if you can afford them and if you genuinely love them. If the item you desire is truly a ‘now or never’ purchase then get rid of at least three other artefacts. If it is large then consider releasing five to ten items from your collection. So, do you still want it? Can you borrow it? If it’s a DVD can you watch it online? If it’s a book, can you borrow it from library? If not, why not ask the library to stock it? Just how big do you really want or need the collection to be? A smaller, more discerning collection is the best way forward. You know what you have, you know roughly what its worth and most importantly, you know that you can keep it in check!

In short, be a realistic and discerning collector. Enjoy what you already have but give plenty of consideration to any new purchase and hopefully you will avoid the pitfalls.

Happy collecting!

Doctor Who: Classic Doctors New Monsters

Doctor Who: Classic Doctors New Monsters

A brand new boxset of four adventures, featuring monsters from the new series of Doctor Who!

1.1 Fallen Angels by Phil Mulryne

2015: When sightseers Joel and Gabby Finch encounter a strange man in Edwardian cricketing garb in the Sistine Chapel, their honeymoon suddenly takes a terrifying turn.

1511: Michelangelo is commissioned to create some very special sculptures by a mysterious sect. But as he carves, angels seem to emerge fully-formed from the rock. Almost as if they are alive…

From Michelangelo’s workshop to the catacombs of Rome, the Fifth Doctor must keep his wits about him and his eyes wide open as he confronts the Weeping Angels.

1.2 Judoon in Chains by Simon Barnard and Paul Morris

The Sixth Doctor is no stranger to courtroom drama, but faces a very different challenge when he prepares to defend a most unusual Judoon.

After an environmental clearance mission goes wrong, Captain Kybo of the Nineteenth Judoon Interplantary Force is stranded in Victorian England, bound in chains, an exhibit in a circus show. But he has allies: Eliza Jenkins – known to audiences as ‘Thomasina Thumb’ – and the larger-than-life ‘clown’ in the colourful coat.

Uncovering a trail of injustice and corruption, the Doctor and Kybo soon find themselves on trial for their lives…

1.3 Harvest of the Sycorax by James Goss

In the far future, humanity has a remedy for everything. Whatever the problem, Pharma Corps has the answer and a designer disease tailored to every human’s blood-type. Zanzibar Hashtag has no need to be sad, scared, stressed, or depressed ever again.

That is, until vicious aliens arrive on her space station intent on opening its Vault. What will it mean for the human race if the Sycorax take control of what’s inside?

And when the Seventh Doctor arrives on the scene, can he convince Zanzibar to care about her life long enough to help him?

1.4 The Sontaran Ordeal by Andrew Smith

An instant of the Time War brings centuries of conflict to the planet Drakkis, and the Eighth Doctor is there to witness the terrible results.

A Sontaran fleet, desperate to join the epic conflict, follows in its wake to take advantage of the fallout. But when Commander Jask is beamed down to the ravaged surface, there is more to his arrival than first appears.

Soon, an unlikely champion joins forces with the Time Lord to fight for the future of her world, and together they must face the Sontaran Ordeal…

Written By: Phil Mulryne, Simon Barnard, Paul Morris, James Goss, Andrew Smith
Directed By: Barnaby Edwards

Cast

Fallen Angels

Peter Davison (The Doctor) Sacha Dhawan (Joel Finch), Diane Morgan (Gabby Finch), Matthew Kelly (Michelangelo), Joe Jameson (Piero), Dan Starkey (Priest). Other parts played by members of the cast.

Judoon in Chains

Colin Baker (The Doctor), Nicholas Briggs (Captain Kybo), Kiruna Stamell (Eliza Jenkins), Trevor Cooper (Jonathan Jaggers Esq), Tony Millan (Justice Burrows/Jonty), Sabina Franklyn (Herculania) Nicholas Pegg (Business Owner). Other parts played by members of the cast.

Harvest of the Sycorax

Sylvester McCoy (The Doctor), Nisha Nayar (Zanzibar), Jonathan Firth (Cadwallader), Rebecca Callard (Shadrak), Giles Watling (The Sycorax Chief)

The Sontaran Ordeal

Paul McGann (The Doctor), Josette Simon (Sarana Teel), Dan Starkey (Jask), Christopher Ryan (General Stenk/Flitch), Sean Connolly (Tag Menkin/Ensign Stipe).

Producer David Richardson
Script Editor Matt Fitton
Executive Producers Jason Haigh-Ellery and Nicholas Briggs

Video By: Tom Saunders
3D Models By: Chris Thompson

Order online now from:
https://www.bigfinish.com/releases/v/…

Series 10 Latest Round Up!

Series 10 Latest Round Up!

The new series of Doctor Who has been in production since June, with block one just coming to an end – insert your favourite time pun here! There’s been plenty going on behind the scenes with the cast and crew hard at work; we can’t show you everything, you’ll have to wait until series 10 hits our screens for that, but we can provide the occasional sneak peek…

Here’s a roundup of what’s been happening on Doctor Who series 10 production over the past few weeks!

Are the Sonic Sunglasses making a comeback in Doctor Who series 10?

Are the Sonic Sunglasses making a comeback in Doctor Who series 10?

Are the Sonic Sunglasses making a comeback in Doctor Who series 10?

The Sonic Sunglasses were a controversial feature of Doctor Who series nine, with some fans even signing a petition to bring back the Sonic Screwdriver after it was temporarily replaced by the shades.

In the end, the TARDIS did create a new Screwdriver for Peter Capaldi’s Twelfth Doctor but even then, the Sunglasses proved impossible to shake. They were snapped in half by Odin, leader of the Mire, but then either repaired or replaced. They were lost to the Doctor when Clara and Me’s Diner TARDIS dematerialised with the Sunglasses on board, but again they were replaced, turning up in Christmas special The Husbands of River Song.

So it should probably come as no surprise that these survivors of the wearable tech world are apparently back again in series ten…

There they are, having a great time, basking in the Valencia sunshine alongside the new Sonic. In fact, is it just us or do they even look a little bit smug…?

Jenna Coleman responds to talk of her Doctor Who return

Jenna Coleman responds to talk of her Doctor Who return

Jenna Coleman responds to talk of her Doctor Who return

Peter Capaldi may have said recently that we haven’t seen the last of his former companion Clara Oswald, but actress Jenna Coleman isn’t anticipating a return just yet.

Not that she’s writing it off, of course…

“We had the exit in the works for so long. Who knows, in the future,” said Coleman. “But I think, at least for a good while, Clara is probably broken down somewhere in time and space, trying to understand how to work a TARDIS with Ashildr/Maisie [Williams].

“You don’t want to unpick it, in any way,” she told Collider. “Steven [Moffat] spoke about the exit for so long, and I think he did such a great job. From Face the Raven to the finale of twists and turns, I couldn’t really ask for anything more. It’s been an incredible three series. That was that unique time in my life, and that was amazing.”

Of her time on the long-running sci-fi show, Coleman – who is about to lead ITV’s big costume drama Victoria – said being part of Doctor Who is “a different way of working”.

“It’s such a unique show and a unique beast, in itself. Every two weeks is so, so different, and you’re playing that story with an over-arching character. It really is the relationships with Matt [Smith] and Peter [Capaldi] that made that job everything that is it, and what they taught me as actors. They’re so uniquely wonderful. They’re really amazing friends. I think I was lucky to have fallen into the hands of both of them, and they’re really good friends today. Today being six months later.”

Doctor Who spin-off Class started with a rejected Who episode

Doctor Who spin-off Class started with a rejected Who episode

Doctor Who spin-off Class started with a rejected Who episode

We still don’t know much about what we can expect from upcoming Doctor Who spin-off Class yet (Who’s the alien? What is Shadow? And how much is Peter Capaldi in it?), but we are beginning to learn a little bit about its origins thanks to showrunner Patrick Ness.

The novelist, who is making his TV debut with the BBC3 sci-fi series, revealed today at Young Adult Literature Con in London that the whole project started when he was asked to get involved with Doctor Who itself – only to turn the tempting offer down flat.

“At first they asked me to write an episode of Doctor Who,” the A Monster Calls author told the crowd, “and I said it’s a brilliant show, but I’ve just spent so much time doing work for other people, and I really want to do something of my own.”

But luckily for Ness (and Whovians worldwide), the Doctor Who producers had a plan B…

“And they said, well we have this idea for setting a spin-off in a school. And it was like, ‘ding’!”

Now, as the series reaches the home stretch, Ness clearly couldn’t be happier that he backed away from the original Doctor Who offer.

“It’s been fantastic,” he said. “I’ve got six weeks of filming to go. The cast are great, and it’s been a fantastic experience. I can’t wait for you to see it.

“Fingers crossed! It’s going well.”

Class will be released this autumn