logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
back to top
Search tags: Sylvester-McCoy
Load new posts () and activity
Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2015-04-10 18:28
Doctor Who: A Thousand Tiny Wings (Big Finish Doctor Who Audio Dramas #130) by Andy Lane
A Thousand Tiny Wings (Doctor Who) - Andy Lane,Sylvester McCoy,Tracey Childs
bookshelves: spring-2015
Recommended for: BBC Radio Listeners
Read from April 02 to 10, 2015

 



http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01hy35y

Description: 1950s Kenya: The Mau Mau uprising. A disparate group of women lie low in a remote house in the jungle, waiting for a resolution or for rescue. Among these British imperialists is Elizabeth Klein, a refugee from a timeline that no longer exists - thanks to the Doctor.

Reunited, the Doctor and Klein are forced to set aside their differences by terrifying circumstances. People are dying in this remote place. One by one. And there's something out there, in the jungle, accompanied only by the flutter of a thousand tiny wings...

Starring Sylvester McCoy as The Doctor, Tracey Childs as Elizabeth Klein, Ann Bell as Mrs Sylvia O'Donnell and Abigail McKern as Mrs Denise Waterford.


I was distracted by the real life happenings in Kenya and wish the doctor could come back and take away a university massacre timeline.
Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
url 2013-11-19 09:10
Listen To This. Listen To This Now

I am a big Doctor Who fan. I *love* it. I'm not wild about the most recent of the new series for a lot of reasons (enough to make me think then deserve their own blog - we'll see how this Saturday's episode goes) but the classics from the old ones are great.

 

What you may or may not know is that there are also a heap of radio plays (and novels) out there continuing the adventures of the pre-reboot Doctors. I'm not their biggest fan because I never know who any of the characters are, but this one, Protect and Survive - linked to at the BBC iplayer above and which is available until next Monday the 25th November worldwide - is pretty damn special.

 

First, it's got Ace in it. I had two heroines when I was growing up - Evangeline Eliott from The House of Eliott, and Ace from Doctor Who. I loved Ace because she was brave and blew things up, two qualities I still aspire to have. 

 

Second, it's in-your-bones scary. Maybe it's an age thing, but I'm just about old enough to remember this type of thing. My Mammy was involved in Greenham Common. 

 

Third, the first part owes a massive, massive debt to Raymond Briggs' graphic novel, When the Wind Blows. Even if you don't listen to the rest of it, listen to the first part. Also, go and read that book because it is fucking amazing.

 

(Cynics may also add a fourth reason: because Sylvester McCoy hardly puts in an appearance. They will be dealt with harshly.)

 

More posts
Your Dashboard view:
Need help?