If you imagine hard enough, you picture something essential about this moment it's the tardis in that movie. The doors opening and the view of the street the angle to the street is opposite to the way the door opened and Bernard fell against the tardis doors before they shut. Of course, it is a movie and something as it seems on a tardis? And I believe this footage has a magnificent moment, and I think Bernard would have loved it. He worked with so many great actors across the years, and he himself could have been a delight as the doctor to, the third or fourth, it was revealed years ago while he was being intertwined I think? As for this again, I think it could be the character Bernard was playing could turn out to be Wilfreds cousin. After all, cousins can look alike, and it fits a bit well in a script? Ian Chesterton PC?
Maybe have Wilf have a brother or a cousin who was a police man, like how Martha had a cousin who was played by freema Like Wilf will see the box and say off handedly, you know I had a cousin named Tom, he was a police man
Iirc, he was too sick to do more than he did. I'm glad that they didn't kill Wilf at the end though, he gets to live on, happy and surrounded by his loving family.
The absolute best. His Bilbo in Jackanory's multi-reader version of The Hobbit was one of the most important influences on my childhood. Thorin's death scene has never left me, I can hear it now. I was 7, and I've never re-listened to it in 40+ years, despite the temptation.
It would have been funny if they tied in the multiverse thing they're going for to the movie where Dr. Who (spelt that way) is actually a human so we'd then have 4 Doctors in play across the start of this Whoniverse thing.
@@michaelsoftbinbowsThe _Doctor Who_ movies exist in the setting of the usual Whoniverse and are based on the Ian and Barbara's adventures with the First Doctor.
@@michaelsoftbinbows It's canonical. Shoe-runner Stephen Moffat wanted to include it in _The Day of the Doctor_ TV special but was unable to due to rights issues, but later featured it in his novelisation of that story. The Doctor even watches the movies and calls Cushing.
For many years, the two 1960s movies featuring the Cushing Doctor werer viewed as being non canon. To this day, many fans of the program still have the same opinion. Personally, with the advent of the multiverse concept in many movies and television programs - including Doctor Who itself - I'd like to think those two early movies can now be viewed as part of the canon. The Cushing Doctor was not a Time Lord. He was a terran inventor who created a time machine, called it a Tardis, and used it to travel through space and time. Infinite universes, infinite possibilities. Remember Pete's World?
The novelisation of Day of The Doctor adds back in a scene that was scripted for but cut from the special - Clara noticing the posters for the Cushing movies on the wall of the Undergallery, with Kate noting that it was quite difficult to round up all the copies of them, and that the Doctor was quite fond of them, so much so that he lent Cushing one of his coats for filming the second film.
I actually like the Dalek Invasion of Earth 2150 AD better than the TV show (It was in colour and had a bigger budget of course, but also, it had a lot of the "fat" trimmed away from the script. I also think Roberta Tovey is a better Susan (I know, I'm in for it now!) Actually, she's quite mature in a lot of ways, but if she acted as child-like as Susan did in some of the episodes, it would make more sense. But knowing the grueling schedule of the television series, it makes more sense for the actress to be a true adult, as opposed to a tween as Tovey was