We're just a few weeks away from the return of Doctor Who, in which we'll see the Eleventh Doctor (Matt Smith) return with new companion Clara (Jenna-Louise Coleman), a fancy new Tardis and a dashing new outfit to boot.
So, it seems only appropriate that we celebrate all this newness with a bunch of new stills from the series' first episode, The Bells of St John, in which we'll meet a brand new monster - the Spoonheads.
It's all very new.
So, it seems only appropriate that we celebrate all this newness with a bunch of new stills from the series' first episode, The Bells of St John, in which we'll meet a brand new monster - the Spoonheads.
It's all very new.
Meanwhile, Jenna-Louise Coleman has revealed the inspiration behind her performance was the films of Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy.
She told SFX: "When I started on Doctor Who, Matt said to me, 'Watch Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy films!' - we were talking about our dynamic and trying to figure it out, realising we were a double act.
"It's trying to find each other's rhythm... so watching things like Spencer Tracy films really fed into that."
Coleman went on to explain that the relationship between 'impossible girl' Clara and Smith's Time Lord is "like a dance".
"Matt always said it's about physically finding our rhythm," she continued. "In a way the whole thing is like a dance, and the moment we started dancing together and finding that rhythm is when it worked."
Doctor Who returns to BBC One and BBC America on Saturday, March 30.
She told SFX: "When I started on Doctor Who, Matt said to me, 'Watch Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy films!' - we were talking about our dynamic and trying to figure it out, realising we were a double act.
"It's trying to find each other's rhythm... so watching things like Spencer Tracy films really fed into that."
Coleman went on to explain that the relationship between 'impossible girl' Clara and Smith's Time Lord is "like a dance".
"Matt always said it's about physically finding our rhythm," she continued. "In a way the whole thing is like a dance, and the moment we started dancing together and finding that rhythm is when it worked."
Doctor Who returns to BBC One and BBC America on Saturday, March 30.
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