Abstractions
Leave a comment

Doctor Who archive expert shares update on hunt for missing episodes

Doctor Who archive expert shares update on hunt for missing episodes


Film is Fabulous founder John Franklin has shared an update on the charitable trust’s work to catalogue and preserve private film collections, while also clarifying its current position on missing Doctor Who episodes.

Franklin, an established film collector and trustee of Film is Fabulous!, was speaking at the Recovered: The Daleks’ Master Plan comes HOME event at HOME Manchester on Saturday 23 May, following the recent recovery of two missing episodes from the classic William Hartnell serial.

Film is Fabulous! is a charitable trust run by film collectors, cinema lovers, and vintage television enthusiasts. Its primary objective is to ensure that vulnerable film collections held in the U.K. are preserved when private film collectors, and former industry professionals, pass away. Since 2023, the team have preserved many private film collections.

Speaking at the event, Franklin said: “We are fully committed to this, and we are going to do everything we can to save film and preserve film collections and their legacies.”

However, he was also clear about where things currently stand with Doctor Who specifically.

William Hartnell as the First Doctor and Peter Purves as Steven Taylor in Doctor Who's The Daleks' Master Plan: Devil's Planet

William Hartnell as the First Doctor and Peter Purves as Steven Taylor in Doctor Who’s The Daleks’ Master Plan: Devil’s Planet. BBC

“If you want to know about Doctor Who, I will say two things: at the moment, we categorically do not have any missing episodes of Doctor Who,” he said.

The BBC sci-fi series famously still has 95 episodes missing from its 1960s run, after many early instalments were wiped or junked as part of archive practices between 1967 and 1978, when broadcasters routinely cleared programmes because of storage issues, material costs and rights limitations.

The total was reduced earlier this year when Film is Fabulous! announced the recovery of two episodes from 1965 serial The Daleks’ Master Plan – The Nightmare Begins and Devil’s Planet – from a private collection, marking the first major Doctor Who episode recovery since episodes were found in Nigeria in 2013.

Franklin suggested that further recoveries could yet be possible, but explained that the scale of some private collections makes the process extremely time-consuming.

“We are aware of some collections in which… the thing is, some of these collections are so large it’s not even necessarily what the individuals might want to do, it’s how we can actually align with their ideas and thoughts as well,” he said.

“Taking a collection where there’s 16,000 films would currently take us two years to catalogue. I mean, it’s a lot of work.

“So we work on the basis that as long as we know things are safe […] And we can come back to them when it’s right for the collector and it’s right for us.”

He continued: “It’s my hope, my expectation that we will be in a position soon to take some of those collections, to identify some of the missing items that those people have, to return them to the BBC.”

Read more:

Doctor Who is available to stream on BBC iPlayer. Dive into our Doctor Who story guide: reviews of every episode since 1963, plus cast & crew listings, production trivia, and exclusive material from the Radio Times archive.

Add Doctor Who to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

Check out more of our Sci-fi coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.



Source link

Filed under: Abstractions

by

Avatar photo

I studied medicine in Brighton and qualified as a doctor and for the last 2 years been writing blogs. While there are are many excellent blogs devoted to the topics of faith, humanism, atheism, political viewpoints, and wider kinds of rationalism and philosophical doubt, those are not the only focus here.Im going to blog about what ever comes to my mind in a day.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *