...this time about things the BBC have in their archive and I wish would share with me. Well, everyone, obviously, but especially me. (Partly made because last time I did this, I discovered that against all the odds what I wanted was on YouTube.... This is not the same, however, as Things the BBC Once Had in Their Archive and have Since Wiped/
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Comments 19
Also, more David Collings is always good (WHEN DID THIS HAPPEN ;P). Also:
'Mind, I think most DW fans do this. Er. We do, don't we??'
Well, I certainly do! :-) Also, people being referred to by numbers, as "Nine" etc, in any context. *g*
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ETA: Of those I have watched so far, which is actually only about 5. It just feels like more, because I have to go slow and I watched Julius Caesar twice.
And LOL. You noticed him. You are okay with David Collings until you notice him.... That was my fault. I'm sorry. Also you should totally watch the BBC Julius Caesar sometime did I mention that before? When you are up to ( ... )
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they're all up there too somewhere.
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But thank you for the recs! I shall note them - aargh, my to-watch list is going to last me for a good long time, I can see...
:-)
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Hell yes!
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That sounds amazing! I know there was an 80s version of Twelth night with felicity kendall that I really want to see. But that is availble I've just not got around to buying the dvd yet.
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I've seen that Twelfth Night, as we did it for A-Level - it's part of the BBC Shakespeare that I'm working my way through. I can't really remember anything now except Felicity Kendal, though. She made a good Viola.
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Aw, I will have to get a copy! Twelth Night is my favourite Shakepeare play and I love both Felicity kendal and Viola. But first I need to watch the King Lear my mum got me for Christmas...
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I'm always amazed how much television from that era is effectively "lost", even if it wasn't actually burninated. Not just fictional TV but all of those great BBC documentaries (not just the flagships with Attenborough etc involved, but things like Chronicle and Timewatch and so on). Most of them have probably been superseded by the march of science, but still...they do not make 'em like that any more.
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The good thing is, I suppose, that, unless some of it is in a v bad state, they might even start releasing things in new ways at some point. I could see the BBC trying that in the future, provided nobody kills the internet. But, yes, they're just not really going to release old documentaries like that otherwise. Even if I want to see Ian Marter and David Collings as the Brothers Grimm!
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We can only hope. Unless, as you say, somebody kills the internet which doesn't seem as unlikely now as it might have a year ago. Hmm. I am, by now, thanks to your efforts fairly well-versed on the Collings oeuvre, but the only non-Who thing I think of off the top of my head with Ian Marter in is one of the Brett Sherlock Holmes stories, where he had a small part as a policeman. I'm thinking it was The Musgrave Ritual (also features that chap out of London's Burning as well as the captain who foolishly decides to "apologise to Lord Vader personally" in The Empire Strikes Back). Must have been one of the last things he did before he passed away, because that was 1986 iirc. But he must have been in other things.
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:lol: I am terrible flister to have, I know. What even more obscure thing will it be next, one dreads to think? Still, I haven't quite done with David Collings's IMBD yet..
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The BBC need to stop hoarding all their goodies and just stick everything on DVD now. Well, and make the next series of Sherlock, of course. :oD
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Heh, yes! Trouble is, some of the original source has degraded and things, I suppose. But, yes, hurry up, BBC!!
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