home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!decwrl!sun-barr!olivea!spool.mu.edu!agate!doc.ic.ac.uk!uknet!newcastle.ac.uk!newton!n03mo
- From: G.M.Suddes@newcastle.ac.uk (Gareth Suddes)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.drwho
- Subject: Re: daemons.
- Message-ID: <Bxt43J.GvK@newcastle.ac.uk>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 11:33:18 GMT
- References: <1992Nov12.4153.14050@dosgate>
- Distribution: rec
- Organization: University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, NE1 7RU
- Lines: 75
- Nntp-Posting-Host: newton
-
- dale.clayton@canrem.com (dale clayton) writes:
-
- >Graeme Nattress wrote:
- >---------------------
-
- >-> There is an article in the New Radio Times about the colourisation of
- >-> the Daemons ....
-
- > Would anyone that has a copy of that article be ambitious enough to
- >type up a copy for this newsgroup?
- > Yes, I know that that is asking alot.
-
- I did actually post that last week, but here it is again for those who missed
- it...
-
- Return of THE DAEMON.
- ---------------------
-
- How one fan's forethought saved a classic Doctor Who adventure - and an evil
- foe - from black-and-white oblivion. By Richard Jobson.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Technology was always a Time Lord's saving grace. Whether it was a sonic
- screwdriver or a time control unit to project an intergalactic jackanapes into
- his own time-loop, Doctor Who has had the appropraiate device since he first
- materialised in 1963. Now technology has come to the Doctor's rescue once
- again, by restoring The Daemons - a classic 1971 story starring Jon Pertwee.
- During the 70s it was common practice to make two copies of television series
- - a colour version on videotape and a black-and-white version for sale to
- countries not yet broadcasting in colour. With the rise of the Doctor Who cult
- in the late 70s, it was discovered that the tape-lords at the BBC drama
- department had junked the colour original of The Daemons.
- According to Adam Lee, archive selector at the BBC's film and videotape
- library, "Video was never looked upon as a long term preservation format. And
- television itself was seen as ephemeral, so some programmes weren't kept. Who
- would have predicted that The Flowerpot Men would be a number one video 40
- years later? Or, come to think of it, Doctor Who?"
- Former Doctor Who script consultant Ian Levine was one of the first to
- realise what was being lost. "In 1978 I got wind of a Los Angeles TV station
- that was going to transmit a two-hour version of The Daemons. I wired a fan the
- money to hire a Betamax machine and buy two one-hour tapes- tapes only played
- for an hour in those days. He changed tapes in the middle and did a compilation
- for me. I went to the TV station a few weeks later to try to buy the original
- but they had already wiped it."
- Levine, as it turned out, owned the only colour tape left in the world. But
- the picture wasn't sharp enough to be broadcast. The black-and-white masters
- were, but fans wanted to see The Daemons as nature had intended. Then, earlier
- this year, BBC graphics designer Ralph Montagu worked out a way to restore the
- series to it's full glory. He joined forces with James Russell, a videotape
- systems designer, and used the American recording as a colour key for the
- black-and-white original.
- "The problem was making the two versions line up exactly", says Montagu.
- "Without computers it would have looked like a piece of rather bad printing."
- By adapting existing technology, Montagu re-coloured the series. Where scenes
- had been edited out of the American version, the pair coloured the
- black-and-white film by hand. Taking 30 seconds over each frame, and with 25
- frames in every television second, the five part series was a labour of love.
- For the BBC there are considerable financial rewards. Just ask Adam Lee. "We
- rececntly recovered some missing film recordings of the Tomb of the Cybermen
- from Hong Kong, and when they were released they went to the top of the home
- video chart - selling more than 25,000 in ten days." So it's no surprise to
- learn that the library is now busy restoring several series.
- With 110 episodes still missing, Ian Levine's work is far from done. He is
- still chasing possible leads. "My phone bills are a good few thousand quid." He
- has tried writing to television stations, but most don't even reply. "Iran
- actually said, 'In the name of Allah, what are you talking about?' Then you
- discover an episode in the basement of a Mormon church, or in a television
- relay hut in the middle of the Nigerian outback, and it's all worth it."
-
-
- Gareth
- ________________________________________________________________________________
- \ "You are now entering the Justice Zone. Beyond this point it is impossible /
- \ to commit any act of injustice." /
- \__________________________________________G.M.Suddes@newcastle.ac.uk______/
-