Doctor Who, the great sci-fi hipster wanna’be

Matt Smith as Doctor Who and Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill as his companions
Matt Smith as Doctor Who and Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill as his companions

I’ve been a fan of Doctor Who nearly as long as Matt Smith, the current actor in the title role, has been alive. Back when I started watching the series in the mid-1980s, it was a show barely popular enough here to air late Saturday nights on our local PBS station just before the nightly sign-off. Now, nearly 30 years later, Doctor Who has become a bonafide pop-culture phenomena where series actors are mega-celebs and the show has a world-wide audience.

Tom Baker as Doctor Who
Tom Baker as Doctor Who

I spent countless Saturday nights literally camped out in front of our TV trying not to fall asleep and make it to the end of the latest episode of Doctor Who but not often being successful.

In its original form, each season of Doctor Who consisted of five or six stories, each of which was told over (usually) four 30 minute weekly TV episodes with “oh my God is the Doctor really dead this time!?” cliffhanger endings meant to lure the viewer back each week. Here in the US, however, these 30 minute episodes were edited together into a complete two hour movie of the week that would be aired all at once. Which meant that there’d be this cliffhanger one minute which would immediately be resolved seconds later.

While Doctor Who wasn’t always popular here, it was popular for decades in Great Britain where it originated. What began in 1963 as a crude black and white TV serial would continue an ongoing series for a staggering 26 years before finally ending in 1989 after some 230+ episodes had aired.

What makes Doctor Who so long lasting is that, through the miracle of sci fi, the actor playing the Doctor is regularly swapped out with a new actor every so often. And with these new actors comes new and different takes on the character of the Doctor leading to new and different stories than what had come before. Some Doctors are serious and some are silly. Some are young and some are old. Some are nice and some are not so nice.

Patrick Troughton as Doctor Who
Patrick Troughton as Doctor Who

The current version Doctor Who is much different than the one I grew up with. Now, the character is much more teen oriented, to the point where he’s almost a hipster. And while here in the US the classic version of Doctor Who was always a niche series at best, the modern version of the character has gotten popular enough to be featured on the covers of magazines like EW.

Matt Smith as Doctor Who
Matt Smith as Doctor Who

To me, though, I loved the classic version of Doctor Who but only kind’a like the modern hipster Doctor.

That being said, this Christmas current Doctor Matt Smith, age 31, is set to be replaced by a new Doctor, Peter Capaldi, age 55. So who knows what that older version of Doctor Who will be like? Will he be more Patrick Troughton than Matt Smith? Only time will tell.

The classic version of Doctor Who was cancelled in ’89 and other than an attempt at creating an American version of the show on Fox in ’96 the character was essentially dead and gone. It took the revitalization of the series by writer Russell T. Davies in 2005 that introduced a new, modern, hipper version of the character that would launch the Doctor to world-wide popularity.

Now, Doctor Who is popular enough that friends of mine who don’t do sci-fi watch and like the show because it doesn’t seem overtly like science fiction.

Peter Davison as Doctor Who
Peter Davison as Doctor Who

The only thing that bugs me about the current version of Doctor Who is that it mostly ignores anything that came before ’05. Sure, there’s been TV specials this year about previous Doctors and even Netflix carries a smattering of old stories. But, for the most part, I get the sense that the older Doctor Who is intentional being ignored, especially here in the US.

It’s probably the same feeling that fans of the original Star Trek got when Star Trek: The Next Generation premiered and mostly ignored the original show. I guess that just means I’m the old fart pining for the good old days.

Doctor Who: Day of the Doctor, Doctor Who‘s 50th anniversary special it set to premiere November 23 on BBC America. My favorite actor who portrayed the Doctor is, was and always will be, Peter Davison, the fifth Doctor. Visit me online at DangerousUniverse.com.

Zombies in His Past, Now Onto Cops

In preparing for “Mob City,” a fictional look at the seedy underbelly of 1940s-era Los Angeles and his first new television series in three years, Frank Darabont has had to excise other favorite TV shows and movies from his regular cultural diet.

Gone were dramas like HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire,” which is set in an earlier era than “Mob City” but also deals with the roots of organized crime, as well as thrillers like “L.A. Confidential,” which could be a source of distraction or envy to anyone looking to cover similar turf.

Nor has he been keeping up with the AMC series “The Walking Dead,” but that is for a very different reason.

Click here to read the whole story.

Space: Above and Beyond Review #2: The Farthest Man from Home

Originally aired October 1, 1995

Army special forces soldiers have rescued a survivor of the doomed Tellus colony giving Lt. Nathan West hope that his girlfriend might still be alive. Disobeying orders, West recklessly flies off to save her. But will his actions threaten his life as well as the lives of the 58th and jeopardize the whole war effort against the Chigs as well?

Nathan West (Morgan Weisser) finds the remnants of the Tellus colony
Nathan West (Morgan Weisser) finds the remnants of the Tellus colony

For the first real episode of Space: Above and Beyond, “The Farthest Man from Home” is not one of the best ones of the series.  It’s an episode with a lot of problems that features the Nathan West character in a poor light. (Though I do wonder if the creators of the show Glen Morgan and James Wong were still trying to figure the characters out and that’s where this odd version of West from?)

Here, West disobeys a direct order not to go search for his girlfriend Kylen when he learns that not everyone was killed when the Telus colony ship was shot down by the Chigs. And when he disobeys, during his rescue mission, West himself is nearly shot down, crash lands and nearly becomes a prisoner himself.

The problem isn’t that West disobeys the order, it’s that he comes off as incredibly annoying when he does it. He essentially takes everything he’s learned in the previous episode, throws it away and goes off on his own. This is something I could have seen the Cooper Hawkes character do, but not Nathan West.

Shane Vansen (Kristen Cloke) and Cooper Hawkes (Rodney Rowland) decide to go after West.
Shane Vansen (Kristen Cloke) and Cooper Hawkes (Rodney Rowland) decide to go after West.

On the Tellus planet, we do get some eerie vistas of the skeletal remains of the crashed colony ship as well as a flag flapping in the breeze that could have only been left by someone that survived the crash. (Up until that point it was assumed there were no survivors.) I also got the feeling with things like the Army special forces soldiers and talk about the Chigs “hitting” Procyon and that the “3rd Wing are getting their asses kicked” that Morgan and Wong were trying to show that the universe of SAaB was much bigger than we’d so far seen.

What I found most interesting about the episode was one of the survivors of the colony, played by a pre-3rd Rock from the Sun French Stewart. He’s a guy who’s survived the crash of a ship from orbit, been alone for months on an alien planet all the while dodging alien patrols out to find him. And he’s gone a more than a little crazy. He’s a lone survivor of a mini-apocalypse, and while he isn’t the last man left alive in the universe, he most certainly is the farthest man from home.

This episode also features the first appearance of the nefarious Aero-Tech corporation that will play a central role in the main conspiracy theory elements of the SAaB story coming later in the series.

Grade: B-

Favorite Quote: Tellus Survivor: “I’m the farthest man from home! Ok!? (Points to the sky) Look there, right there. See? There are twelve billion people, twelve billion lives — and then there me.”

Stray Observations: For the life of me I can’t remember why, but I totally missed this episode when it first aired and didn’t get to see it until years later.

Guts and Gumption: Vietnam Helicopter Pilots Wore Their Hearts on Their Helmets

Like the soldiers who fought in World War II, most of the men and women who served in the U.S. military during the Vietnam War in the ’60s and ’70s were remarkably young, between the ages of 18 and 25. Those who volunteered to man the primary aircraft of the war, the helicopter, put their lives at a risk every day they were on tour. As a result, their commanding officers were often willing to look the other way when the pilots, gunners, and other crew members had their helmets painted in bright colors with their girlfriend’s name; their call sign or unit insignia; their favorite rock bands or comic-book characters; or mascots from their hometowns, in much the same way World War II pilots painted their leather A-2 flight jackets.

Click here to read the whole story.