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List of Doctor Who villains. This is a list of villains from the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. For other, related lists, see below. A[edit] Helen A[edit] Abzorbaloff[edit] The Abzorbaloff is a monster designed by nine-year-old William Grantham of Colchester, Essex for a "Design a Doctor Who Monster" competition held by Blue Peter.[3] The competition was announced in July 2005, and received 43,920 entries. Russell T Davies revealed on the Doctor Who Confidential episode "New World of Who" that Grantham imagined the Abzorbaloff to be the size of a double-decker bus, so was initially disappointed to see the final size of his creation. Appearing in the episode "Love & Monsters", the Abzorbaloff, played by Peter Kay, is a creature that absorbs other living beings into his body with a simple touch.

"Abzorbaloff" is not the actual name of the species, but was coined independently by Elton Pope and the Doctor. Father Angelo[edit] Animus[edit] Azal[edit] B[edit] Baltazar[edit] Beast[edit] Doctor Who. Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre. Après 26 saisons, la BBC décide d'annuler la série à cause d'une baisse d'audience et d'intérêt du public. Dans l'espoir de pouvoir la redémarrer, la chaîne produisit avec la FOX un téléfilm diffusé en 1996 mais qui eut peu de succès, condamnant le projet. En 2003, la BBC annonce qu'une seconde série serait produite par Russell T Davies et Julie Gardner, avec Davies comme scénariste principal. Christopher Eccleston est annoncé comme le nouvel interprète du personnage principal. Doctor Who est la plus longue série de science-fiction du monde[1], la série originale comptant 679 épisodes de 26 minutes (dont 255 en noir et blanc), 15 épisodes de 45 minutes et un épisode de 90 minutes.

Synopsis[modifier | modifier le code] Histoire[modifier | modifier le code] Le département des séries de la BBC a produit 26 saisons, diffusées sur BBC One. Les droits de diffusion ont été vendus à de nombreux autres pays, dont la France. Le Docteur (Doctor Who) Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre. Le Docteur ne s'appelle pas « Doctor Who ». La fonction du « Who » (« Qui ? », en anglais) est de souligner la nature énigmatique du personnage et de son nom. La confusion a été entretenue par certains génériques de la série qui le créditent sous le nom de « Doctor Who ». Le Docteur est un Seigneur du Temps, un extraterrestre de la planète Gallifrey de la constellation de Kasterborous[réf. nécessaire] qui voyage dans l'espace-temps grâce à un vaisseau spatial, le TARDIS (Time and Relative Dimension in Space/Temps À Relativité Dimensionnelle Inter-Spatiale dans la version française).

Le Docteur possède également un tournevis sonique doté de diverses fonctions : ouvrir les portes, manipuler des objets, fermer une issue, etc. Dans La Cheminée des temps, Madame de Pompadour voit quelques-uns de ses souvenirs d'enfance lors d'un contact télépathique et s'écrie : « Oh, quelle enfance si solitaire ! « Je suis éternel. Liste des épisodes de Doctor Who. Doctor Who missing episodes. Material from missing Doctor Who serials has seen release in books, in audio form on CD, and four episodes have been animated for DVD release. DVDs have also been released of surviving episodes from otherwise-missing serials, and tele-snaps exist of many wiped stories. The Doctor Who missing episodes are the instalments of the long-running British science-fiction television programme Doctor Who that have no known film or videotape copies.

They were wiped (or "junked") by the BBC during the 1960s and 1970s for economic and space-saving reasons. There are 27 incomplete Doctor Who serials, with 106 of 253 episodes from the first six years of the programme missing. Doctor Who is not unique in this respect, as thousands of hours of programming from across all genres were destroyed by the BBC until 1978, when the corporation's archiving policies were changed. Doctor Who is unique, however, in that all of its missing episodes survive in audio form, recorded off-air by fans at home. Companion (Doctor Who) The character of Harry Sullivan was created by the production team when it was expected that the Fourth Doctor would be played by an older actor who would have trouble with the activity expressed by his predecessor.

In the event, the Fourth Doctor part went to 40-year-old Tom Baker and the part of Harry, no longer required for the action role, was reduced.[3] In the final season for the Fourth Doctor, he acquired three companions (Adric, Tegan and Nyssa) and this situation continued under the Fifth Doctor for a while. Adric was written out by the unusual method within the series of being "killed off". By the Sixth Doctor, the Doctor was down to a single companion again. Although the term "companion" is designated to specific characters by the show's producers, and appears in the BBC's promotional material and off-screen fictional terminology, there is no formal definition that constitutes such a designation.

Science & Environment - Doctor Who: 50 years of time travel in the TARDIS. TV's most famous Time Lord has been to different worlds and ages, but what do these journeys look like? Take a trip through our interactive map and see archive clips too. Number 76 Totter’s Lane. As any fan of Doctor Who will tell you that’s where the famous Time Lord and the TARDIS first appeared on our television sets. Since that day in 1963 we’ve seen eleven Doctors and their assistants travel through time to different worlds, facing threats in all shapes and sizes. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of this iconic sci-fi programme, we at BBC Future have created our own version of time travel by tracking the Doctors’ trips in one interactive infographic. We recruited a crack team of Whovians to compile the list, including crowdsourcing some data. Télécharger Doctor Who (1963) | Dl-More.eu. Wibbly Wobbly Team.