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回复:【资讯+图楼】DW第八季相关,不定期更新

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  • vangaaardian
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4.第八季走向问题的分析 来自den of geek 觉得蛮有意思 还没看完
原文:
http://www.denofgeek.com/tv/doctor-who/29509/are-we-returning-to-a-1970s-doctor-who#ixzz2vLfkjLYG
Are we returning to a 1970s Doctor Who?
Feature Robert Mclaughlin 4 Mar 2014 - 07:03
Is Doctor Who taking a turn towards 70s era-style horror? Rob thinks so...
Britain in the 1970s conjures up some cheery images. General strikes, NHS glasses and Austin Allegros for a start, and that's before you get to haircuts. Looking back, there's a sense of a sombre air taking hold of the country. But also, this was the decade where British television brought us some really innovative, often quite terrifying shows.
I must admit I got the tail end of the decade, and am left with hazy memories of Chorlton And The Wheelies, Jamie and The Magic Torch and Bagpuss, although the repeats of many of those shows that debuted in the 70s were commonplace in the 1980s schedules.
No matter when you caught up with 70s television however, the line between TV and cinema was blurring a little even then. Makers of television at the time were borrowing heavily from films and novels, and in doing so, they created a selection of programmes that would scare any child out of their block-a-boots and make them spill their arctic roll in terror.
Which brings is to Doctor Who, which was showcasing so much of the innovation I'm talking about. Boundaries were being pushed and chances taken with the show, which was in top form for a good deal of the 1970s. The old cliche with Doctor Who was that it had people cowering behind the sofa, but revisiting some of the Jon Pertwee/Tom Baker era stories, there's clearly something to it.
Take a look at The Green Death, with its eco-horror slant that mirrors Quatermass. Or the more obvious Hammer overtones evident in The Brain Of Morbius or The Talons Of Weng Chiang. 1970s Doctor Who may not have been outright terrifying to some, but it was really effectively creepy at times, finding interesting, clever ways to get under your skin.
In fact, Tom Baker's last series or two felt like an accumulation of a decade's worth of death, frights, nightmares and haunting images. From the drooling Zygons (which were far slimier than the version seen in The Day Of The Doctor) and the calculating Robots Of Death through to the cactus creatures of Meglos and the first appearance of Davros, Doctor Who worked hard to inject fear, and to unnerve its audience, with plenty of success.
Whilst the show's production team deserve credit for realising so much of it given the limitations they were facing, the writers of Doctor Who at the time were the cornerstone of the creativity. The slate of sinister stories from Who writers such as Chris Boucher, Robert Stewart, and, of course, Terry Nation seemed to take influence from prevalent films of the era, such as Rosemary’s Baby, The Exorcist and The Omen. That influence followed through on the small screen elsewhere too, with Children Of The Stones, Doomwatch (which itself felt like it had influenced subsequent Who), and the early 80s adaptation of Day Of The Triffids. Each of these, in their own way, gave some of the younger members of their audience a few uncomfortable dreams.
Ben Wheatley, best known for the likes of Kill List and Sightseers, has already directed the first two episodes of the next series of Doctor Who, which will see Peter Capaldi stepping into the TARDIS. And Wheatley, delivering music to the ears of many a Doctor Who fan, has already teased that he feels this next run of Doctor Who will have more of a 1970s flavour to it (Austin Allegros aside). It's a wise era to look to for television as a whole - heck, I've not even touched on Hammer House Of Horror, Sapphire And Steel and Tales Of The Unexpected, each of which had plenty of creepier moments of their own.
Doctor Who's tone would alter, inevitably, as it went into the 1980s, not least with the regeneration from Tom Baker into Peter Davison at the end of Logopolis. Logopolis still had quite a tone to it though, with the TARDIS' cloister bell clanging, the malevolence of The Master and the far more sinister Watcher (who had a tinge of the Thin Man from educational show Look And Read about him - anyone else remember watching that at school?).
If what Wheatley is saying is correct then, and he's far more likely to know than us, then the move back to a darker, edgier Doctor Who isn't really that unexpected (acknowledging that the last decade has had a fair bit of darkness and edge to it in Who already). It was interesting seeing the weary take on the Doctor put across by John Hurt in The Day Of The Doctor, and how that contrasted with the more youthful energy of David Tennant and Matt Smith in that particular episode. With few words and plenty of acting skill, Hurt conveyed an awful lot with a large dose of restraint that's not been required of the Doctor for some time. If Peter Capaldi is going down a different road, as is very likely, then a further tonal shift is inevitable.
Yet it's the ability to reinvent itself, to draw influence and to take chances that has kept Doctor Who fresh and interesting for so long. And thus particularly the younger watchers of the show, who know it only of the 2005 revival onwards, might be in for a few surprises. The ties to Jon Pertwee's costume have already been noted in the pictures of Peter Capaldi in character that we've seen so far. And I can't help but wonder if the return to the 70s style that's being mooted isn't just about Who itself, but the influences of the era in which it found itself.
Certainly from comments made both by Wheatley and Mark Gatiss, they are taking direct influence from the more adult tones of the 70s Who, intending to make as terrifying television as feasible (within the parameters afforded by a Saturday teatime slot), harking back to the nightmares and sinister overtones of the stories of the time.
While we may not get such horrific scenes of people being gunned down by Autons or the fascist-like dictatorship of Genesis Of The Daleks, we may be in for some more macabre Saturday nights. Even if we're more likely to sit on the sofa than hide behind it these days...
Read more: http://www.denofgeek.com/tv/doctor-who/29509/are-we-returning-to-a-1970s-doctor-who#ixzz2vLgusn7C


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七爷爷说马斯特第八季会回归而且很可怕
暂且当作辱没
等到证实了再刷yooooo


2025-12-08 05:07:56
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有关第八季master演员的推测
原文:http://whatculture.com/tv/doctor-series-8-10-actors-play-master.php#DFXxJeMEGC3MCKME.99
Doctor Who Series 8: 10 Actors Who Could Play The Master
by William Sterling
Well, the cat is officially out of the bag. Former 7th Doctor Sylvester McCoy himself announced, at Newcastle’s Film and Comic Con this past weekend, that the Master will make his triumphant return in Series 8 of Doctor Who. He says he knows who’s playing the role, but mum’s the word from him. So, does he REALLY know the identity of the, likely, soon to be announced actor, or is he just stirring up the controversy pot at the request (or permission) of the intensely secretive (and misleading) Steven Moffat?
According to McCoy, this time around the character will be “very, very scary”. Whatever that means. “Aah” and “Boo” and a lot of “creeeeeeepy”. But hasn’t that sort of been his M.O. since Davies reboot of him only a few years back? John Simm did a great job with the character and helped evolve him more into an eerily tormented and sinister monster from the more classically mischievous, but often foolish, Anthony Ainley type.
Given that it seems the actor has already been cast, the following stands as fun speculation, both practical and an outlandish wishlist of actors who could (or should) play the part. And no, Eric Roberts, in some sort of revival of the part, is not on this list. I know, I know, a shame. He was your dream choice all along.
Allons-y!
10. Steve John Shepherd
We’ll get this guy out of the way right off the bat. Currently, the rumor mill is swirling most about him being cast in the part. After posting some vague picture of himself standing near the ocean, coincidentally just after McCoy’s announcement, people have run with the theory that he’s the man for the job. I guess any time someone posts obscure images of themselves standing in exotic locations looking aloof and it happens RIGHT ON THE HEELS of a former Doctor actor making a statement…it means they’re bound to end up on the show.
Considering that’s enough of an argument to hold a little water (except not really), it doesn’t seem far fetched really (yes it does). The former EastEnders actor has a huge following all of his own and many of his fans have lobbied Who’s writers with pictures and posters of the actor in the hypothetical role of the Master. He certainly has a bit of a throwback look to him, something a bit more classic, and is a far cry to Simm’s past appearance, especially in his weird beach photo. And now that we know Series 8 will be more of a throwback to classic Who stories, Shepherd’s appearance fits alongside Capaldi’s. And teaming a slightly younger Master to a slightly older Doctor could make for a great rapport.
So take throwback looks and stories and tie them with a “very, very scary” performance and voila! You’ve got a Moffat style Master.
9. Paterson Joseph
Continuing on the practical train, Joseph tested well for the role of the Doctor alongside Matt Smith a few years back. Take that knowledge along with author Neil Gaiman stating that they did, in fact, approach a black actor to play the role this time around but he declined, and you’ve got another potential candidate for the role of his nemesis.
Is it likely an actor they potentially approached to play the Doctor himself, which he turned down, would then turn around and play the character’s villain? Unlikely. But the interwebs sure does love to speculate. And the show has, aside from Mickey Smith, Martha Jones, and the recently cast Sam Anderson as Danny Pink in series 8, for the most part, lacked color. I think it’s high time they broke that trend and started embracing some change.
Joseph has had a long career and it’s safe to assume that anyone who tests well to play the Doctor might not have such a hard time turning that character on its head in order to play its antithesis. He’s even recently said he’s a little glad he wasn’t cast in the titular role as it would mean the inevitable fame and the inability to walk down a street without being recognized. Now he doesn’t have to deal with that and is allowed to live in anonymity. However, even though he may have turned down the role of the hero in order to avoid the fame, playing the role of the Master wouldn’t be too thin of a theory since it means a significant part on a significant show without the droves of public recognizing you. Maybe it was all part of his plan?
8.Idris Elba
Because why not?
Even if you’ve only seen ten minutes of Luther you know tha Idris Elba is a forced to be reckoned with. I mean, he cancelled the apocalypse for God’s sake. If he can do that, surely he could change his mind and play a character who brings about the end of days instead.
As mentioned up top, the wishlist of who SHOULD play the Master could go on forever. And it fills me with a lot of girlish “SQUEE!” to think of Elba going toe to toe with all of space and time’s greatest hero. As an actor he’s incredibly intense and very, very powerful. Any frame of film (or frame of…digital?) containing him just vibrates with awesomeness. It’s impossible to take your eyes off of him. And since he’s been playing good guys for the past several years, and recently the ultimate good guy as Nelson Mandela, why not change things up and play a bad guy? That’s what all actors do when they’re afraid of being typecast right? They play crazy people! “See? I’m not one note. I can do bad all by myself!” (A Film by Tyler Perry)
What’s so impossible about a currently in demand movie star making the move back to TV when he’s probably worked so hard to get out of it? Exactly. But in the immortal words of the Andrew’s Sisters, “I can dream, can’t I?”
7. Benedict Cumberbatch
Talk about the girlish “SQUEE!” heard round the world. If I had a nickel for the amount of times I’ve listened to people say they wanted this man in the lead role, I’d be rich. Once they announced Capaldi and all of those SQUEE’ers wept, they shifted their hopes and dreams onto him playing the Master instead. And while it’s wildly impractical, no one can deny that he’d make a damn fine bad guy, let alone one of pop culture’s greatest villains ever.
Considering how popular Moffat’s other series, Sherlock, is, fans have been clamoring for a crossover. And while the idea of Sherlock and the Doctor teaming up to solve a case is so incredible it could end the world, it’s very unlikely. One exists in reality and the other exists in…all the rest of it. Though, if Cumberbatch could clear a few weeks on his schedule, it’s not impossible to think he could play the Master. And boy could he play it.
Though some had issue with (spoilers) the re-hashing of the Khan storyline in J.J. Abrams’ second Star Trek, it’s undeniable what a hauntingly moving and villainous character he’s capable of portraying. Transpose that onto a timelord who despises his counterpart and feels betrayed by his people and you’ve got a recipe for a great Master.
6. Andrew Scott
Let’s keep this Sherlock/Who crossover train going, shall we? Andrew Scott could essentially just play the exact same character as he does with Moriarty, change the name to “the Master”, and call it a day. When I first saw him on Sherlock I couldn’t help but think how much he reminded by of John Simm’s Master, a villain who was primarily interested in the joy, mayhem, and insanity that comes from causing other people incredible amounts of pain and anguish, especially your arch nemesis.
Of course I wouldn’t want him simply to copy his performance from Sherlock, but part of me wonders if Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss intended Scott’s Moriarty to be Master-like. At the time Moffat’s Who stories had no intention of getting to the Doctor’s rival and every story teller needs an outlet for their crazy people characters.
If we were casting the Master based on wicked insanity alone, Adam Scott would take the cake. When I think, “very, very scary”, this is the type of character that comes to mind. Wait a minute…maybe this has been the plan all along. Maybe this is the ultimate twist…Moriarty IS the Master. Einhorn IS Finkel. FINKEL IS EINHORN!
ls继续


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5.Lars Mikkelsen
Last Sherlock connection, I promise!
Anyone who’s seen Series 3 of the show knows how awesome Mikkelsen was in its final episode. He was almost like Hannibal Lecter in his precision and his intelligence, in the way he carried himself and executed his plans. Funny enough, Lars is the older brother of actor Mads Mikkelsen who is currently playing that character on NBC’s Hannibal. So why not have Lars play the Hannibal of the Who-niverse?
Even through Simm’s rendition of the charatcer, the Master has always been this huge, extravagant mastermind. When I think of classic Who, I always recall him being the villain at the end of ALL of Davison’s series. Some way or another, the Master was always behind whatever it was leading up the those final episodes, and since then it’s always been this sort of mustache twirling, Snidley Whiplash mischief, even with Simm. Considering we’ve seen crazy with all of these actors, what’s been lacking in the character is the cold and calculated attributes. That’s something I’d love to see in the Master that I feel I haven’t, or at least haven’t seen it on a modern level.
Mikkelsen, along with the rest of the world’s Danish actors, looks cold and calculating just being alive. I bet watching him eat breakfast and read the newspaper looks like he’s plotting to take over the world. Even if he were playing Pokemon on his Nintendo DS you’d think, “What’s he up too…? There’s no way he could catch ‘em all.”
Precisely because he represents the thing the character has been lacking makes him a great choice, not to mention he already has a relationship with Moffat.
4. Ralph Fiennes
I don’t really need to write anything here. Just by reading or hearing his name you think, “YES!” And I’m not talking about him only as the Master. If they said Ralph Fiennes was cast as Rainbow Dash in the live action My Little Pony film you’d think, “SHUT UP AND TAKE MY MONEY!”
Whatever role he takes on, he truly takes on. And he’s made a great name for himself playing bad guys. From the serious, academy award worthy performances in things like Schindler’s List to the campy and stereotypical like Voldemort and Hades, he’s always the best thing on screen. (His character in Red Dragon is a personal favorite. Thanks for peaking there Brett Ratner.) So why not the Master?
He’s always seemed an actor who likes to do whatever he wants whenever he wants to. His body of work is extensive and eclectic, and, based on early reviews, he’s very funny in Wes Anderson’s latest, The Grand Budapest Hotel. He is truly and actor’s actor, someone anyone in the profession should admire and hope one day to have a career resembling even a shred of his. Given that he seems pretty open to all projects without discrimination, a few episodes on Doctor Who could be right up his alley.
3. Anthony Stewart Head
Giles as the Master. Need I say more?
Okay, I’ll say more. After his great role on Merlin and even an episode on Series 2 of Who, whenever I think of Head I think to myself, “He needs to do more stuff.” I just like seeing him in things. If he was in every film and television show from now until the end of time, I think I’d be so okay with that.
He’s an incredible actor with an incredible range who I feel has never truly been given the opportunity to let loose. And what better role to do that with than the Master, the very definition of madness? As an actor who’s very familiar to being a part of a show with tremendous fan base, I can see few other actors taking the part as seriously as he would in order to ensure he makes it his own but also ensures the fans get what they want. There’s a lot to live up to with the Master and he undoubtedly could not only live up to it, but raise the bar.
2. Bill Nighy
An older Doctor goes up against an even older Master. But this Master is a stone cold killer. And even though Nighy has an incredibly diverse background and can be very funny, I think that dark, wicked sense of humor combined with the motivation of destroying the Doctor and controlling the Universe you’ve got a recipe for wonderfully epic disaster.
I love Bill Nighy more than I love most things. More than I love cats. And the idea of him as the Master is enough to make me soil myself. And it would be so worth it. The man is a legend in my book and there hasn’t been a single role in which I thought to myself, “Boy, Bill was really miscast here.” Simply stated, he knocks it out of the park no matter the film or the part. Even in films like I, Frankenstein and Underworld: Rise of the Lycans you might think, “Man what wasted films. But hey, Bill Nighy was awesome and I wish he would give me a hug and tell him I make him proud.”
His brief part in Vincent and the Doctor got us all excited to see our uncle Bill in the Who-niverse. But his time on screen was so brief it was a little heartbreaking. Having him face off against the Doctor, imagining him piloting his own Tardis and blowing up planets and laughing at the Doctor and just being Bill Nighy as the Master is the greatest idea anyone could ever have. Time to put on fresh underpants.
1.Rupert Grint
Take a moment to get the giggles out, kids.
I know, I know. That sounds like a ridiculous choice for the Master, but wait! Remember my earlier theory, which is actually science, about actors proving their range by playing crazy people? Well what better way for this famously innocuous ginger to break the mold and play a famously nocuous one? The Master.
We’re working entirely in hypothetical here, but let yourself embrace a kind of change you’re not accustomed to. Sometimes, what seems like terrible casting turns out to be the best part of the film or show. And how much fun would it be to pit an older, more seasoned Doctor against a younger, more wild and mischievous Master? Though it’s been the cause of much fan fervor, think of it like Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luther. It’s an off the wall choice that inspires initial reactions like, “What?”, “Why God?”, “Lame”, and my favorite, “You ruined my childhood.”
Grint is the sort of random, weird, absurd choice that, when you think about it, might make a great fit for a weird and absurd character. If you disagree and I’ve just lost all credibility in your eyes and you’re never going to read another article of mine again, I’m anticipating your inevitable outrage in the comments section below.
还没看完就看了个人选 贴到后来觉得有点荒唐 觉得10到1可能性从大到小这样看比较合理。头叔叔和billy爷爷都出来过了 要是以马斯特的身份再出来可能还蛮恐怖的。。


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昨天的片场消息
这个rebel timelord穿起了黑衬衫。。。够屌!三爷爷也一直会换衬衫外套和披风,就是款式一样颜色不同的那种,所以基本可以确定三爷就是皮卡叔的doctor…
原文:http://www.doctorwhotv.co.uk/series-8-filming-the-suits-61701.htm
Series 8 Filming: The Suits
PUBLISHED MARCH 13, 2014
Filming on Series 8 of Doctor Who continued this week.
Peter Capaldi and Jenna Coleman were both briefly spotted earlier today filming scenes for the fifth episode of the run written by Steve Thompson.
Mild spoilers follow. Spoilerphobes may want to avoid.


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Intriguingly, guest star Jonathan Bailey looks to be playing a cyborg of some sort…


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Extras strike a pose.
(能吐槽一下群众演员穿得像八十年代的吗。。


  • vangaaardian
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新加盟的演员和第五集的一点消息
NEWS
Keeley Hawes to star in Doctor Who alongside Peter Capaldi and Jenna Coleman
A A A
Hawes will make cameo appearance as mysterious character Ms Delphox
Friday 14 March 2014
Ashes to Ashes star Keeley Hawes will be making a guest appearance as a mysterious character with a dark secret in the new series of Doctor Who.
The actress, who is best known for her roles in the Life on Mars spin-off and more recently Line of Duty, will be starring as the powerful and otherworldly figure Ms Delphox.
The twelfth Doctor and Clara will encounter the enigmatic Ms Delphox when they venture onto a strange and puzzling planet.
The episode has been penned by Sherlock writer Steve Thompson, who also wrote the Doctor Who adventures The Curse of the Black Spot and last year’s Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS.
Hawes said “I am delighted to join Doctor Who and to be working with this incredible team. Ms Delphox is a great character and someone I've had a lot of fun playing.”
Hawes is one of a long line of famous stars who have appeared on the show, including Dougray Scott, Kylie Minogue and John Hurt.
She will be following in the footsteps of her Tipping the Velvet co-star Rachael Stirling who appeared alongside her mother Dame Diana Rigg last year.
Doctor Who celebrated its 50th anniversary last year and filming is underway in Wales on Capaldi’s first-ever series as the Time Lord.
原文:http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/news/keeley-hawes-to-star-in-doctor-who-alongside-peter-capaldi-and-jenna-coleman-9190507.html
所以皮卡叔和jenna会跑到一个陌生又奇怪的星球上探险 并和这位有着黑暗秘密的女教师一起发生一段故事。。。
虽然看过火星生活但孤陋寡闻如我。。不知道这位姐姐本人的资料OTZ应该是相当有名的演员…


2025-12-08 05:01:56
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另外还有一条泡叔的采访
Published Mar 13 2014, 7:41pm EDT | By Justin Harp
Paul McGann has said that he still has hopes of returning to Doctor Who.
The actor took part in Doctor Who's 50th anniversary celebration last year by appearing in the mini-episode 'The Night of the Doctor'.
McGann later said it was a "real privilege" to play The Doctor again, and has now revealed that he would be open to reprising the role.
He told Yahoo: "If the same thing were to happen again and [showrunner Steven] Moffat were to say, 'Would you come back and do it and I'll write it?'
"Why wouldn't I want to do it? If it's going to be that quality, why wouldn't you want to do it?"
McGann added that the focus of the series should remain on Peter Capaldi, who plays the latest incarnation of the Time Lord.
The actor said: "There's always all kinds of rumors. Doctor Who is like a rumor mill, isn't it? 'Yeah, McGann is gonna do this, Matt is gonna do that, there's going to be a spin-off, blah blah blah'. Of course it's all bollocks because it's Moffat who decides what they're going to do next.
"And of course, now you've got a new Doctor in Peter Capaldi - I think it's only fair that he gets a decent run on his own without any distractions so he gets his feet under the table."
Capaldi's first full series of Doctor Who will air on BBC One in the UK and BBC America in the US in late 2014.
More
原文:http://m.digitalspy.com/british-tv/s7/doctor-who/news/a557555/paul-mcgann-id-be-up-for-doctor-who-return.html
好像和第八季没太大关系。。但是是八叔啊QAQ
他说要是魔法特请他回归什么的他肯定满口答应 又说辱没都是bollocks因为都是魔法特说了算【不要这么犀利啊。。
他还说到既然现在已经是皮卡叔演刀克特对他来说最公平的就是让他不受外界影响好好地演戏,a decent run of his own without distractions什么的个人理解为八叔的小怨念…


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截至目前已知12th的所有服饰!红衬才是本命!

友情提示:度娘缩图,点击图片显大图。
献给皮卡叔的贴吧么么哒
http://tieba.baidu.com/p/2920370634
http://tieba.baidu.com/p/2920293949


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诶keeley阿姨演的不是教师是银行家。。为啥之前眼掐误以为是老师了。。
镜报提到了魔法特的一段话
Keeley's character Ms Delphox may well clash with the Time Lord on screen as she is described as “a powerful out of this world character with a dark secret”.
Doctor Who lead writer and executive producer, Steven Moffat, is delighted to get Keeley on the show.
He added: “Anyone watching Jed Mercurio's amazing Line Of Duty will know that Keeley Hawes is having one hell of year. And now it's about to get even better as she achieves the greatest villainy yet attempted on Doctor Who: she plays a banker.”


  • vangaaardian
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希望这两张图稍微清楚一点。。
来自radiotimes的网站


  • vangaaardian
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http://fuckyeahpetercapaldi.tumblr.com/post/79964366722/filming-doctor-who-at-the-hadyn-ellis-building-of


  • vangaaardian
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http://kidneysagain.tumblr.com/post/79965345479/doctor-who-filming-in-cardiff-18-3-2014-x
"给我加两块糖谢谢."
"Matt is cool, I'm Matt now."


2025-12-08 04:55:56
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  • vangaaardian
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更正 地点是"outside Cardiff Uni's Hadyn Ellis building in Maindy Road, Cardiff"
再贴张clara 帅哭
图还在更新中明天一起发上来
https://twitter.com/ryanfarrr/status/445960092186574849


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