auroracloud: Patrick Troughton as the Second Doctor, colour image (Patrick Troughton)
Aurora ([personal profile] auroracloud) wrote2018-12-13 12:19 pm

Look, what a nice rabbit hole!

This morning I finished listening to the latest weekly episode of Radio Free Skaro (a Doctor Who podcast), and in the news segment they mentioned a thing called Box of Delights, which apparently is a children's fantasy series from the 1980s which is something of Big Thing and stars Patrick Troughton as one of the leads. (The reason they mentioned it on the podcast is that the soundtrack is being released.) I felt curious and looked up what this is, and oh dear, it really sounds like something I would love to watch, even if Patrick Troughton looks very different in it than he does in Doctor Who, and why have I never heard of this before anyway?

I looked it up on Zoom.co.uk (I recently found that website when I looked for a way to find Doctor Who things at a reasonable price without buying them from Amazon) and they have it, and then I clicked on the Patrick Troughton tag there... And it kindly gave me all the Patrick Troughton DVDs they have. In addition to much Doctor Who, there's also a bunch of other TV stuff he made over the decades, including a lot of historical adventures, and ooh, look, I could watch him in a Scarlet Pimpernel adaptation! And apparently he's been in some Count of Monte Cristo adaptation as well - hmm, I've managed to steer clear of Monte Cristo adaptations so far as I really like the book, I wonder if that will hold... And look at all these other adventures and historical dramas and such...

... Oh, what was that phrase about rabbit holes... Something about falling down them...

I should probably get recommendations.
liadt: Fuji Maiden by Tamasaburo propped on elbow looking to right of frame (Default)

[personal profile] liadt 2018-12-15 11:37 am (UTC)(link)
Heh, well TV stays theatrical enough for a while yet, you get many of the actors going on about it on who commentaries. It's interesting how in the early 1980s bbc camera work became so static: a backward step. They made an effort with Age of Kings in 1960, static camera but they tried different shots, frequent close ups (cos it's on a small screen) n live special(oh yes!) effects while being v.v.v theatrical being Shakespeare. There is fun 50s TV like The Adventures of Sir Lancelot (William Russell) and The Buccaneers but they were kids tea time shows with action. Robin Hood isn't as fun which I put down to being too well written! Quatermass is also good can't remember how theatrical it was. A for Andromeda and sequel (1960/1) have a lot of talking even for then which I don't mind but shows it was written by someone who mostly did non fiction.