Review The Cushing Doctor!

Gavin

Member: Rank 6
VIP
The movies took a number of liberties with the character (most notably making the Doctor a human from the future) but I always felt Cushing did a great job with the role (as you'd expect from such a great actor).
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
New Doctor Who novel confirms that Peter Cushing is canonical - sort of

Dr. Who and Tardis are now 100% official.



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It's been a matter of debate for Doctor Who fans for decades: where does Peter Cushing's version fit in? Now, we might finally have an answer.

For those of you not in the know, Cushing starred in two Doctor Who movies in the 1960s: Dr. Who and the Daleks (1965) and Daleks – Invasion Earth: 2150 A.D. (1966).

The films were remakes of stories from the television series and reinvented the alien Doctor as a human scientist who travelled through time and space in "Tardis" - a self-made craft.

And, yes, his name actually was "Dr. Who".

Given these huge deviations from the TV show's official canon, it's been difficult to place the Cushing movies within Who mythology... until now.

In his new novelisation of Doctor Who's 50th anniversary special 'The Day of the Doctor', Steven Moffat reveals that the films exist in the Whoniverse as actual movies, with Cushing starring in big-screen adventures adapted from the Doctor's "real" exploits.

"Seen them? [The Doctor] loves them," UNIT's Kate Stewart tells Clara in a specially-written scene. "He loaned Peter Cushing a waistcoat for the second one, they were great friends."

Moffat had previously wanted to incorporate this idea into the TV version of 'The Day of the Doctor', with plans for UNIT's Black Archive to include posters for the Cushing films.

"In my head, in the Doctor's universe, those films exist as distorted accounts of his adventures," Moffat told Doctor Who Magazine. "Sadly, we couldn't afford the rights to the posters."

No such issues when it comes to rewriting 'The Day of the Doctor' for the printed page!

Steven Moffat's 'The Day of the Doctor' novelisation is out now from BBC Books.
 

Gavin

Member: Rank 6
VIP
I think it's time for another Cushing Doctor Who movie. After all if he was up for a reprise of his Star Wars role, surely he'd be happy to do another Doctor Who :emoji_wink:
 

chainsaw_metal1

Member: Rank 8
New Doctor Who novel confirms that Peter Cushing is canonical - sort of

Dr. Who and Tardis are now 100% official.



View attachment 7280

It's been a matter of debate for Doctor Who fans for decades: where does Peter Cushing's version fit in? Now, we might finally have an answer.

For those of you not in the know, Cushing starred in two Doctor Who movies in the 1960s: Dr. Who and the Daleks (1965) and Daleks – Invasion Earth: 2150 A.D. (1966).

The films were remakes of stories from the television series and reinvented the alien Doctor as a human scientist who travelled through time and space in "Tardis" - a self-made craft.

And, yes, his name actually was "Dr. Who".

Given these huge deviations from the TV show's official canon, it's been difficult to place the Cushing movies within Who mythology... until now.

In his new novelisation of Doctor Who's 50th anniversary special 'The Day of the Doctor', Steven Moffat reveals that the films exist in the Whoniverse as actual movies, with Cushing starring in big-screen adventures adapted from the Doctor's "real" exploits.

"Seen them? [The Doctor] loves them," UNIT's Kate Stewart tells Clara in a specially-written scene. "He loaned Peter Cushing a waistcoat for the second one, they were great friends."

Moffat had previously wanted to incorporate this idea into the TV version of 'The Day of the Doctor', with plans for UNIT's Black Archive to include posters for the Cushing films.

"In my head, in the Doctor's universe, those films exist as distorted accounts of his adventures," Moffat told Doctor Who Magazine. "Sadly, we couldn't afford the rights to the posters."

No such issues when it comes to rewriting 'The Day of the Doctor' for the printed page!

Steven Moffat's 'The Day of the Doctor' novelisation is out now from BBC Books.
It seems to me they did something similar in the 90s with that series of novels, where (if memory serves) they travel to a parallel universe where the Doctor is a character in a show loosely based on his exploits, but one where he has a penchant for gun play. If someone remembers better than I do, please help.
I think it's time for another Cushing Doctor Who movie. After all if he was up for a reprise of his Star Wars role, surely he'd be happy to do another Doctor Who :emoji_wink:
Indeed. The old chap seemed quite chuffed to continue his work.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
that series of novels, where (if memory serves) they travel to a parallel universe where the Doctor is a character in a show loosely based on his exploits, but one where he has a penchant for gun play.

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I gave up on the novels around about that time, CSM, as they were churning them out so thick and fast, but remember reading about this......



Kadiatu Lethbridge-Stewart's time travel experiments (PROSE: Set Piece) created a space-time anomalywhich allowed energy from the Land of Fiction to bleed into the real universe. This created the Miracle, an energy source which for a time sustained the dying planet Detrios. It also re-activated Jason, who sought to gain revenge on the Doctor, by creating a fictional version of him, Dr. Who. Jason employed Dr. Who in a plot to assassinate Queen Elizabeth II. Although the Queen was killed by Dr. Who, Jason's distaste for bloodshed made him use his powers to restore her to life. Jason helped the real Doctor seal off the anomaly, after which the Doctor wiped Jason's memory and returned him to Earth. (PROSE: Head Games)
 

chainsaw_metal1

Member: Rank 8
Thanks, Doc! I just remember when that novel came out, and seeing the cover with McCoy holding the gun, and thinking "That's not my Doctor!" I never read it, but had read a synopsis of it that reassured me that it wasn't, indeed, my Doctor, but some sort of "Hey, I'm an author, look how clever I am!" Which , actually, is a clever idea, but the cover wasn't a selling point.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
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FANNUAL PUBLISHED FOR PETER CUSHING’S DOCTOR
Posted on March 2, 2014 by Planet Mondas News



An annual devoted to the film version of the Doctor as played by Peter Cushing has been created by fans.


Designed to fit between the second and third annuals brought out by World Distributors in the 1960′s and produced in a similar style, the unofficial FANNUAL: The Peter Cushing Dr. Who Annual has more than 160 pages filled with stories, features and artwork, all complying with the continuity of the two 1960s films Dr. Who and the Daleks and Daleks – Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.

Publisher Scott Burditt said:

It’s rare to find new adventures of Peter Cushing’s Dr. Who in print. There was a comic book adaption of Dr. Who and the Daleks by Dell Publishing in 1966 and that’s about it. FANNUAL is all set to change this. For the first time ever, the unofficial Dr. Who is treated to his very own unofficial annual. Most appropriate!

This really has been a labour of love for all concerned, done out of genuine affection and fondness for the films’ interpretation of the Doctor Who mythology, and I’ve had a great response from the people who already have a copy of it.

The publication is available in the following options:


  • HARDBACK
  • Yellow or violet cover with colour pages
  • Blue or lime cover with black-and-white pages

  • PAPERBACK
  • Red cover with colour pages
Plus, in a nod to one of the scenes in the first film, there is also an alternative paperback cover available with the title Time Travel For The Inquiring Mind. This version has black-and-white pages.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
A teaser message from Dr. Who himself is given below:

Time travel. It’s supposed to be impossible, isn’t it? Well, actually, going forwards in time isn’t really a problem at all is it? Just imagine if you could bend the rules . . . Well, I have managed to do just that! Moving freely forwards and backwards through time and space with my own invention is most exciting I can tell you!

1963 was the year it all began. I finally worked out how to make the machine work, and despite the fact that I am a grandfather and quite an old man now, I am still very sprightly because my adventures have given me a new lease of life! Which is just as well, as you will soon discover! Sadly, I can’t turn back my own body clock and travel around the cosmos as a young man but I have shared all of the fun with my close friends and family and now I will share it with you. . .

So, let me take a rest from adventuring for a moment to regale some of the tales and the mysteries and challenges we’ve all faced across the galaxy from visiting our own and other strange worlds, with all of the many unusual and terrifying creatures we have encountered and the new lessons the universe has taught us in the process.

In this book you will find out about myself, my family and friends and the inner workings of my wonderful time machine with a friendly technical diagram highlighting all of the main features.

In my travels I have become caught in events surrounding the civil war of the 1600s, been to a distant alien world in a prelude to a mystery involving a couple I encountered on Barnes Common, and visited the planet Silicus, where I discovered men made of metal! Scary stuff indeed!

I’ve become a hostage of alien stowaways in my time machine, and on the planet Samsara my granddaughter and I were caught up in a conflict between two sides of the Brethren of Infinity as they waited for their Great Deity to save them from its imminent apocalypse. . .

My friends have even been accidentally miniaturised with one of my other inventions! Oh, the fun they had sorting that out! I’ve upset a couple of alien traders, encountered familiar-looking robots and landed in one of the most terrible places in human history – No Man’s Land during the First World War.

I’ve explored the far side of the galaxy and managed to salvage the cultural heritage of an alien race, and I visited the strange Museum of Space Science in the year 3000. . .

Also, on a very beautiful planet, my granddaughter encountered an alien prince and the two became romantically involved, which was very sweet. I’ve defeated evil terrifying robots who enslaved the people of the Earth in the year 2150AD and met intergalactic traders on the War Moon of planet Skirm, and my granddaughter befriended a strange creature on yet another alien planet, unaware that it was actually plotting to kill her at the first opportunity!

I’ve upset The Knights of Chronos, who are the self-styled guardians of time, and they put me on trial for creating a temporal paradox by returning a policeman I had met to 1966 before he actually left with me on my travels! Most confusing!

Anyway, you can find out about it all for yourself in detail in this marvellous book. I had hoped to write more about my adventures but I am so very busy exploring as I just don’t want to miss out on all of the wonders and secrets the universe has to offer before, one day, I have to retire.

I know this sounds like the witterings of a mad old man but I can promise you that these events did actually happen! Enjoy this volume compiled by my friends and travel with me into this fantasy world that I have made a reality!

Examples of the pages can be seen below:


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