DWDVDF 2: Difference between revisions

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* A [[Zygon]]s main food supply is [[Skarasen]] milk.
* A [[Zygon]]s main food supply is [[Skarasen]] milk.
* The [[Dalek Emperor]] model was only 1.5 [[metre]]s tall.
* The [[Dalek Emperor]] model was only 1.5 [[metre]]s tall.
* [[Steven Moffat]] also wrote the 1999 [[Comic Relief]] skit ''[[The Curse of Fatal Death]''].
* [[Steven Moffat]] also wrote the 1999 [[Comic Relief]] skit ''[[The Curse of Fatal Death]]''.


== Credits ==
== Credits ==

Revision as of 12:45, 28 May 2012

The Doctor Who DVD Files –“The Ultimate Build-up Doctor Who Encyclopaedia” in fortnightly issues.

Contents

Collectable loose leaf pages divided into seven categories that could be filed accordingly.

The Early Years
Face of Boe
Rose Tyler
Zygons
The Master
Model Behaviour: Interview with Mike Tucker Model Maker
Slitheen Ship
The Unquiet Dead
Aliens of London


DVD release (with cover blurb)

Each issue came with a DVD release covering two episodes.
Reversible DVD sleeves enabled the collector to display one of two designs featuring either the Doctor and his enemies or his companions.
"Pity the Gelth! There is so little time – help us!"
The Doctor and Rose step back into the 19th Century and meet Charles Dickens, who has just been visited by a mysterious gaseous creature that terrorised the theatre he was performing in! What is the connection between the phantasm and a serving girl with an uncanny ability to read people's minds? The Doctor discovers a race of aliens on the verge of extinction – but can the Gelth be trusted?
"It's not an invasion! That was a genuine crash-landing!"
Rose thinks she's the only person in the world who knows about spaceships until one roars overhead. With central London gridlocked, the Doctor and Rose can't investigate after the ship crashes through Big Ben and into the Thames. Is this a new age for mankind? And just what has happened to the Prime Minister?

Notable Information

Credits

Additional Notes

  • This issue came with a free Doctor Who binder to file away the magazine pages.

Online Content

  • The supporting website [1] gave online subscribers unlimited access to the magazine content as they were released (and the Doctor Who: Battles in Time comic strip pages). Subscription cost £3 per month or £25 per year.
  • The supporting website also offered online games, downloads (including wallpapers and further additional content.

External links