I started writing this post a week or so back, and pretty much had it mostly finished when yesterday morning I found out that they’d discovered two missing episodes!
For those who are unaware, the two episodes for were Galaxy 4 episode 3, and The Underwater Menace episode 2.
The amusing thing is, they are both episodes that I don’t think are very good. It’s the universe testing the true fans – ‘let’s see who is happy when they find out it’s these two that have been found.’
I suspect I’m a real fan, because nothing could take the shine off the fangasm I’d had from this find. For me, any episode found is akin to winning the lottery in it’s likelihood. Finding two is unbelievable.
Anyway, I’ve made the appropriate edits needed below. This is basically a run down of the resources available to you if you’re curious about experiencing old Who, but aren’t quite sure how to get around the gaps caused by so many episodes being destroyed or lost.
Okay, so I suppose the first place to start is telling you what you probably already know – lots of early Doctor Who is missing. Oh, it exists on audio, and some even have telesnaps [1], but if you listen to some fans, the loss of these episodes was as bad as any disaster in human history. Titanic? Piffle! The total deathtoll of all the wars in recorded history? Don’t waste my time. The Boston Molasses Disaster of 1919? A close second, but no.
Don’t you understand? Some episodes of a television show I like were destroyed! Who cares about all those other classic or important shows that no longer exist at all because of the cull, this is a show I liked!
Too cynical? Maybe, but if you’re one of the folks new to the fandom, you’ve probably already come across some of these people. But don’t worry, you don’t need to have your sense of perspective surgically removed to be a Doctor Who fan.
Snarkiness aside, it is a shame about the lost episodes, and possibly the best way to appreciate it is this –
William Hartnell made 134 episodes in his original run, and 44 are still missing. That’s about 33%.
Patrick Troughton made 119 episodes, and 62 are still missing, or around 52% of his run.
So for the New Who fans, here’s the Eccleston and Tennant runs with those equivalent percentages gone. Just try to imagine that you can never, ever, ever watch the crossed out stories again. Oh, and that you only ever got to see them once the first time around. Continue reading