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Poor Colin Baker, the Sixth Doctor. Over the years, it appears that Baker, a glowing actor, and, as far as I’M concerned, a lovely Doctor, has become the Rodney Dangerfield of Doctor Who’s—he don’t come by no respect at all (or, at least, not very considerable) . It seems that the Sixth Doctor is not looked wait on upon with too noteworthy fondness for several reasons: his aggressive behavior/bad temper, his very loud wardrobe, and the violent nature of some of his first-season episodes—”Vengeance On Varos” taking state on a planet where people stare “video nasties” on television, “Attack Of The Cybermen” with a main character’s hands being crushed by a Cyberman until they bleed (though NOT graphically, unless the gape of deceptive blood makes you faint), and “Revelation Of The Daleks” with it’s various deaths. Throw in an 18-month hiatus dealt to the “Doctor Who” series during Baker’s tenure, as well as continuously sagging ratings, and you’ve got yourself the only actor to ever actually have been *fired* from the role of everyone’s approved Timelord (shame on you Michael Grade, the BBC controller at the time) . The BBC then had the audacity to try to pick up Baker to arrive serve for a final regeneration epic so they could “properly” bump off his Doctor—Baker responded by telling the BBC to shove it, and rightfully so. Who could blame him? And now I’ve objective read in Doctor Who Magazine that a unusual poll the magazine took has named Colin’s debut legend, “The Twin Problem,” the all-time worst Doctor Who memoir ever, ranking a bottom-of-the-barrel #200 out of 200 stories. With the imminent release of “The Twin Plight” on DVD, it’s time for THIS Sixth Doctor fan to near to the defense. I’ll try to be brief:
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I’ve always liked Colin Baker’s Sixth Doctor. In fact, I sinful him honest late Jon Pertwee as my all-time common Doctor (though Tom Baker, Patrick Troughton and David Tennant are also in my personal Top Five) . After Peter Davison’s quaint, passive Fifth Doctor (though he was respectable, especially in his classic finale, “The Caves Of Androzani”), I greatly appreciated that the Sixth Doctor was a tough, take-no-prisoners Timelord. Despite his tetchyness, I peaceful fancy the Sixth Doctor for his intelligence, his bravery, and his wit. Had Baker been allowed to play the Doctor longer than a mere two seasons, I’m distinct he would’ve grown in the fragment even more, and shown us sides to the Sixth Doctor that we hadn’t seen yet. Alas, it was not to be, but you can’t blame Colin for that. Yes, the Sixth Doctor had a temper—not too unlike William Hartnell’s First Doctor, in fact—but he was collected a Advantageous guy, fighting on the side of First-rate. And don’t notify me that the Sixth Doctor never showed Peri any kindness, because he most certainly did. Yes, his temper would briefly flare up every so often, but he would always still down, and he showed time and time again that he cared about Peri. His friendship with her had certainly grown by the time the events of “The Trial Of A Timelord” happened, so he obviously liked her. So there.
His loud, luminous wardrobe….I liked it! The understanding of producer John Nathan Turner was to give the Sixth Doctor a whirlpool costume to suit his whirlpool personality, and I believe it worked quite well. I never liked the demand marks on the Doctor’s collar, but JNT started that with Tom Baker, so JNT has to purchase the blame for that.
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Finally, the violent nature of some of the Sixth Doctor’s adventures….I LIKED that the “Doctor Who” series had gotten tougher with Colin Baker at the helm. It showed that the makers of “Doctor Who” were not unnerved to catch some risks with the series. However, I composed bear that Colin Baker’s era was not, I expose, NOT as graphic as many have been led to enjoy. I’ve seen far worse things on TV then a bloodied pair of hands, enjoy me.
As for “The Twin Jam” itself, I don’t gain for one single second that it’s the turkey it’s been made out to be. Okay, so it may not boast the greatest of scripts, and it may not be a terribly *exciting* memoir, but I collected acquire the anecdote very engaging, the characters tantalizing, the notice and feel of it quite beautiful, and the performances of the cast qualified, with Colin Baker’s unusual, shiny performance as the novel Doctor at the center.
Peter Davison, as edifying as he was, was at times a bit too soft. Davison also wasn’t served well by his writers, who usually had his Fifth Doctor acknowledge with “I don’t know” virtually every time a companion asked him what they should do (and you know a Doctor is in serious anxiety, writing-wise, when a companion seems to be more brilliant than he is—in Peter Davison’s case, the snotty-nosed Nyssa) . Colin Baker’s Doctor was unashamedly aggressive, but so is James Bond, and you wouldn’t want to mess with him, either. James Bond is peaceful a satisfactory guy, fighting on our side. So is Colin Baker’s Sixth Doctor. With “The Twin Problem,” Colin Baker showed that there was a totally fresh Doctor in town, and totally novel in more ways than one. And I like him.
How could you possibly say this is the worst episode in the series. Paradise Towers has got to be the absolute worst Doctor Who ever. I felt embarassed to explore such garbage. The music, effects, companions and stories that were given to the seventh Doctor stunk. It was no wonder the series was cancelled.
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