Culshaw's impression of the Brigadier is so good that it created one of the most heartbreaking moments for me in The Sacrifice of Jo Grant. When Kate Stewart gets to hear her father's voice again...boy, if you haven't listened to that one yet, then Culshaw is going right for the feels.
Jon does this so well. I am with you on this. He is so emotionally invested in these characters and is so happy to be performing them, his emotion flows on to us. It's really quite incredible.
The Master was to be revealed to be part of the Doctor separated by the Time Lords. A prototype of the Valeyard idea. The brother thing was more 1980s. The Spider Daleks were a concept from the Amblin TV movie.
Also, I'm so used to hearing Jon Culshaw's version of the character, that I was expecting that it was he who recorded the audio track heard in Doctor Who: Flux. So imagine my surprise when I learned that was actually Nicholas Courtney's voice, which is some nice respect to the past.
Am so gutted that Culshaw chose to disregard Kamelions voice (Gerald Flood). His explanation of how the Robots voice would revert to a 'default setting' after 'The King's Demons' is nonsense, as he still spoke like Gerald Flood in 'Planet of Fire'. Kamelions voice made his character and to throw that away and replace with a blank, bland and boring cadence is a tragedy.
I agree. The voice doesn't bring anything to Kamelion and just doesn't evoke him. He should have stuck with Gerald Flood like Planet of Fire showed us.
Culshaw's impression of the Brigadier is so good that it created one of the most heartbreaking moments for me in The Sacrifice of Jo Grant. When Kate Stewart gets to hear her father's voice again...boy, if you haven't listened to that one yet, then Culshaw is going right for the feels.
Jon does this so well. I am with you on this. He is so emotionally invested in these characters and is so happy to be performing them, his emotion flows on to us. It's really quite incredible.
@@AudioSirens Importantly, Jon respects the Third Doctor era and is paying homage to it, or at least that's how I see it.
Just found you on your tube .brilliant keep up the good work
Thanks so much. Will do our best.
The Master was to be revealed to be part of the Doctor separated by the Time Lords. A prototype of the Valeyard idea. The brother thing was more 1980s. The Spider Daleks were a concept from the Amblin TV movie.
Great interview!
Thanks for the feedback!
What a talent.
Agreed!
Thumbs up just for starting with Katy!
Thank you!
I Have A Question For You. If You Gonna Pair Each Doctor From The Revival Era Of Doctor Who With A Companion From The classic era. Who Will It Be?
Ace with Eccleston, Stephen with Tennant, Jo with Smith and Barbara with Capaldi. That's as far as I will go with this list.
Also, I'm so used to hearing Jon Culshaw's version of the character, that I was expecting that it was he who recorded the audio track heard in Doctor Who: Flux. So imagine my surprise when I learned that was actually Nicholas Courtney's voice, which is some nice respect to the past.
It's so close it's difficult to tell the difference between him and the original actor at times.
@@AudioSirens Yes. Big Finish's impersonators are getting better and better every day.
Am so gutted that Culshaw chose to disregard Kamelions voice (Gerald Flood). His explanation of how the Robots voice would revert to a 'default setting' after 'The King's Demons' is nonsense, as he still spoke like Gerald Flood in 'Planet of Fire'.
Kamelions voice made his character and to throw that away and replace with a blank, bland and boring cadence is a tragedy.
I don't agree with your view but I appreciate you sharing it.
@@AudioSirens I am amazed that Kamelion can be made into a bland character and nothing like how we met him in the stories and no one cares!
I agree. The voice doesn't bring anything to Kamelion and just doesn't evoke him. He should have stuck with Gerald Flood like Planet of Fire showed us.