7/20/2023 0 Comments Docxtor who an unearthly child![]() The instant and incredible success of the Daleks in the very next adventure, however, would move things around a bit). (The plan, legend has it, was to teach kids about history. Early Doctor Who is a very mixed bag, but this first episode, with so much to introduce and no guarantee of the audience getting their heads round any of it, does so in a brilliantly enticing manner.īut while An Unearthly Child is acknowledged as a classic episode for good reason, the four-episode story it kicked off about a Palaeolithic tribe and their quest for fire, is definitely not the most memorable tale in the canon. It's startling quite how many of the key elements of Doctor Who were there from the very start: the Tardis, both its sound and design concept the music the havoc wreaked upon the lives of everyday earthlings and of course, escaping the baddies. But now, on with this week's choice … An Unearthly Child (23 November 1963) We know that our choices won't necessarily be the ones you would have picked – so towards the end of the run, we will be taking requests. We'll be using the same format as our episode-by-episode Doctor Who blog for current broadcasts, and leaving comments open until the 50th anniversary celebrations in November. Over the coming months we'll be revisiting 20 key episodes from the Doctor Who canon classic stories that demand in-depth discussion.Įvery episode we'll let you know which we'll be looking at next, and when to expect the blog – roughly once a fortnight – so you can refresh your memory or discover the episode for the first time in advance. And for our adventure through the history of Doctor Who, the beginning is a very good place to start. Also if you know of anywhere that I can promote this project please do let me know.In November 1963, one of the greatest stories British TV ever told began. If there are any comments, question, queries or your own ideas about this set, be sure to post them in the comments section and I'll try to respond to as many as I can. If you have a blog or website and you've featured this idea on it, be sure to let me know, and I'll update the project with the links. Its also available to like on LEGO's Re:Brick Site, be sure to like it there as well! You can tweet about it on Twitter, and 'Like' it on Facebook using the links under the 'SUPPORT' button. If you liked this project, Thank You! Be sure to tell your friends about it. This project has a Flickr account, which will have more images of this set, and other sets in higher resolutions as they arrive. ![]() This set, if produced would contain 4 minifigures, the TARDIS and Junkyard Street Diorama. The junkyard as first visited in ‘ An Unearthly Child’ has been featured a number of times in Doctor Who history, mostly during the shows anniversaries The Sixth Doctor in ‘ Attack of the Cybermen’, the Seventh Doctor in ' Remembrance of the Daleks’ and most recently in the fiftieth anniversary special ‘ The Day of the Doctor’ with David Tennant’s and Matt Smith’s Doctors. " I know that free movement in time and space is a scientific dream I don't expect to find solved in a junkyard!" Ian Chesterton The Junkyard With a little help from the TARDIS, the Doctor can collide with characters from Pirates, Castle, Ninjago, Chima, The Hobbit, Blacktron and more! Now you can visit different locations across the LEGO universe and create new stories with your own TARDIS. ![]() Arguably more iconic than the Doctor himself, the space and time machine has been a staple of the show since day one (as represented here) a clever mix of visionary design and budgetary constrains, the idea for a humble police box to become a Type 40 TARDIS was ingenious. No Doctor Who set would be complete without a TARDIS, and this set is no exception. The minifigures included in this set are as always the Doctor and his companions the First Doctor (played by William Hartnell), his eager granddaughter Susan (Carol Ann-Ford), the skilful Ian Chesterton (William Russell) and the empathic Barbara Wright(Jacqueline Hill). This set includes the entrance to 76 Totter’s Lane, where the First Doctor parked his TARDIS so his granddaughter Susan could visit the local Coal Hill School to learn about the twentieth century, but her strange unworldly behaviour intrigues two of the staff members history teacher Barbara Wright and Science teacher Ian Chesterton, who decide to visit Susan at home, only to find Susan entering the mysterious junkyard! The Minifigures ![]()
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