auroracloud: Second Doctor and Jamie McCrimmon with open sky behind, looking at something (2 & Jamie)
I got a Two & Jamie / Two, Jamie & Victoria era story for my Public Call gift! It's sweet and comforting with found family vibes and affection. (Very mild warning: Might be slightly uncomfortable if you've got a strong aversion to descriptions of stomach issues and vomiting, but nothing terribly graphic and it's quite quickly over.)

A Duty of Care (1608 words) by paynesgrey
Fandom: Doctor Who (1963)
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Second Doctor & Jamie McCrimmon
Characters: Second Doctor, Jamie McCrimmon, Victoria Waterfield
Additional Tags: One Shot, Hurt/Comfort, Sickfic
Summary: Jamie has a bad reaction to some alien foods and must rely on the Doctor and Victoria to take care of him.
auroracloud: Second Doctor and Jamie McCrimmon with open sky behind, looking at something (2 & Jamie)
Sometimes I like it that websites remember what I like. YouTube just shoved this at me this morning (when I went looking for a morning yoga):



There's going to be an animated release of The Macra Terror next year! Aaaaaaahhh! Wheeeee!!!

For those not in the know, getting into Classic Who and in particular 1960s Who means I've also joined the shared fandom experience/trauma of 'oh gods why did all those episodes from the 1960s get wiped and why haven't they all been recovered??' The short version: Macra Terror is a story from the early Second Doctor (Patrick Troughton) era that has been completely missing until now, only the audio of the serial and a few short clips existing (and scripts, telesnaps, fan-made reconstructions etc.). And now they've created an animated version to the audio, and it will be released in March 2019! It's one of the stories long-term fans constantly keep wishing would be found, so I'm pretty darn excited about an animation!


The long version, ie. more background to those not in the Classic Who fandom but curious to know more about this whole thing. More background about the missing stories and the animated reconstructions )

Most of you might remember that this summer, when Twitch did the Classic Who Marathon where they showed most of the existing Classic Who during about two months, I watched as much as I could, fell head over heels in love with Classic Who (I should still post about why I love it!) and most of all I fell in love with the Second Doctor era. I still should post why that, too - briefly, though, Troughton is a fabulous actor, I really love his interpretation of the Doctor, and he has a wonderful camaraderie with his companions. Two's companions are among my all-time favourites, too, and I enjoy the old-time adventurous charm of the era combined with the fact that they've already figured out how to do TV drama and sci-fi TV. I also love the warm-heartedness and fun, and I feel the era it's quite progressive for its time in many of its values. (Not so much in terms of race, alas. If you watch The Tomb of the Cybermen, please watch something else as well. It has a racism problem and is only a middling story despite being often recommended; there are much better ones in existence. I'll try to write a proper Second Doctor era recs post when I'm done watching all of it. But meanwhile, you can start with the Enemy of the World, it's fab, and even has a really interesting woman of colour among the guest characters.)

In the past months I've been cursing my luck at managing to fall in love exactly with the era that has the most missing stories! The Troughton era was disproportionally affected by the episode wipes, especially the two first series, probably because regeneration was a new weird idea at a time so fewer foreign TV stations were on board for an entirely new chap playing the Doctor, even if he was actually The Best Doctor Ever (My Subjective Opinion That Is Objective Truth, y'know). So it's super exciting to get news that another completely missing episode will be available on proper DVD!

Still, I shouldn't complain, because this seems to be the best time since 1966-1969 to be a fan of the Troughton era. They've been finding more episodes in the recent years - before 2013 I wouldn't have been able to watch The Enemy Of the World or The Web of Fear, which are both wonderful, especially the former. There are all these partially or even completely animated stories that have been released on DVD. And Big Finish keeps churning out audios as long as some of the actors playing the companions still live, and it turns out Frazer Hines (Jamie) is uncannily good at channeling the Second Doctor as well.

I haven't yet watched any reconstruction of The Macra Terror or read a novelization or anything - I figured that when I started watching properly through the Second Doctor era, I'd start with stories that do exist mostly in moving pictures form. So with this news, I'm going to wait until I can watch the animation on DVD!

I'm also being hopeful about The Wheel in Space, the first adventure with Zoe Heriot, because recently a 10-minute animation condensing the first episode has been created, and I assume they didn't really do it for just one screening at a conference about missing BBC episodes. I recently watched the two existing episodes of The Wheel in Space, and they're fantastic - I was riveted despite not even having watched any reconstruction of the missing episodes! Say if they've found even one more episode and then just make an animation or reconstruction of the remaining ones... In fact, there apparently is an official telesnap reconstruction already available on Britbox. We'll see if anything comes out of this later...

December 2020

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