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Takin Over The Asylum - Blog Posts

4 months ago

Campbell Bain x GN! Reader: Sneaking Out with the Cute Boy

Campbell convinces Y/n to sneak out with him. Finally... some alone time with the cute boy from the Asylum. ;)

https://archiveofourown.org/works/62742694


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3 months ago
They Are Lucky It's Not Alive.

They are lucky it's not alive.

Fourteen and Campbell found an alien laboratory. Property dressed for constant swimming

1. The arrival 2. An island


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4 months ago
Reposting, Because Silly Me Forgot To Fix Colours A Little And Also I Experimented With Blur To Add Some

Reposting, because silly me forgot to fix colours a little and also I experimented with blur to add some in depth effect ~

How long ago this island raised from the bottom?

Fourteen and Campbell discovering the place where they landed

1. The arrival

Close-ups are under the cut!

Reposting, Because Silly Me Forgot To Fix Colours A Little And Also I Experimented With Blur To Add Some
Reposting, Because Silly Me Forgot To Fix Colours A Little And Also I Experimented With Blur To Add Some
Reposting, Because Silly Me Forgot To Fix Colours A Little And Also I Experimented With Blur To Add Some
Reposting, Because Silly Me Forgot To Fix Colours A Little And Also I Experimented With Blur To Add Some

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4 months ago
How Long Ago This Island Raised From The Bottom?

How long ago this island raised from the bottom?

Fourteen and Campbell discovering the place where they landed

1. The arrival

Close-ups under the cut!

How Long Ago This Island Raised From The Bottom?
How Long Ago This Island Raised From The Bottom?
How Long Ago This Island Raised From The Bottom?

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4 months ago
Adding Some Stuff From Work In Progress!
Adding Some Stuff From Work In Progress!
Adding Some Stuff From Work In Progress!

Adding some stuff from work in progress!

And remember

Keep calm

😉

- Oi, Doc, Where Are We? Doesn’t Look Like A Martian Music Shop, You Know.

- Oi, Doc, where are we? Doesn’t look like a Martian music shop, you know.

- Planet 4546B. Was quarantined. There have never been any humanoid inhabitants here, so whose base that could possibly be…?

Not the kind of adventures Campbell and Fourteen thought about! Close-ups for ambiance are under the cut, check them out!

- Oi, Doc, Where Are We? Doesn’t Look Like A Martian Music Shop, You Know.
- Oi, Doc, Where Are We? Doesn’t Look Like A Martian Music Shop, You Know.
- Oi, Doc, Where Are We? Doesn’t Look Like A Martian Music Shop, You Know.

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4 months ago
- Oi, Doc, Where Are We? Doesn’t Look Like A Martian Music Shop, You Know.

- Oi, Doc, where are we? Doesn’t look like a Martian music shop, you know.

- Planet 4546B. Was quarantined. There have never been any humanoid inhabitants here, so whose base that could possibly be…?

Not the kind of adventures Campbell and Fourteen thought about! Close-ups for ambiance are under the cut, check them out!

- Oi, Doc, Where Are We? Doesn’t Look Like A Martian Music Shop, You Know.
- Oi, Doc, Where Are We? Doesn’t Look Like A Martian Music Shop, You Know.
- Oi, Doc, Where Are We? Doesn’t Look Like A Martian Music Shop, You Know.

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The David Tennant Pub.

The David. Tennant. Pub.

The possibilities are endless. You could write a book with just conversations like this one!

Meanwhile, at the David Tennant Pub

TEN, is upset: “I just wanna be ginger :’( “

CROWLEY: “That’s kinda sad.”

GINGER LITTLEJOHN: “Too bad.”

GIACOMO CASANOVA: “I’m so sorry for you.”

CAMPBELL BAIN: “Can I have yer cocoa?”

TEN:

EVERYONE:

TEN, yeets cocoa across the room: “i swEAR, iF I SAW A GINGER BULL thEN I AM GOING TO-”

ANGUS: :)

TEN:

EVERYONE: 

CAMPBELL: “Ye shouldn’t ‘ave thrown that cocoa! I want that cocoa!”


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1 year ago

join the club!

i've discovered the spiral of falling in love with david tennant is not a spiral. its a 60 foot hole in the ground and i can't get out


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1 year ago

every day i fight the pinterest battle of “hey here’s a pin about david tennant! want to add this to your good omens board, your takin’ over the asylum board or your doctor who board?”

anyways happy birthday to my fav. u are unmatched.

Every Day I Fight The Pinterest Battle Of “hey Here’s A Pin About David Tennant! Want To Add This
Every Day I Fight The Pinterest Battle Of “hey Here’s A Pin About David Tennant! Want To Add This
Every Day I Fight The Pinterest Battle Of “hey Here’s A Pin About David Tennant! Want To Add This

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1 year ago

campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain

campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain campbell bain


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1 year ago
Hi Sorry For Not Posting Like AT ALL Since… October??? I’ve Been So Busy With School Asjdjrjskfgl

hi sorry for not posting like AT ALL since… october??? i’ve been so busy with school asjdjrjskfgl i hate being an advanced placement kid… anyways here’s a campbell. enjoy


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1 year ago

currently thinking about how the last thing fergus ever heard in his life was campbell crying out for him


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3 years ago

oi, oi! se estiver aceitando pedidos, pode fazer uns icons do campbell de takin' over the asylum? 🥺👉🏻👈🏻 obrigado desde já!

claro, aqui amg. Espero que goste, obg pelo pedido 💕

Oi, Oi! Se Estiver Aceitando Pedidos, Pode Fazer Uns Icons Do Campbell De Takin' Over The Asylum? 🥺👉🏻👈🏻
Oi, Oi! Se Estiver Aceitando Pedidos, Pode Fazer Uns Icons Do Campbell De Takin' Over The Asylum? 🥺👉🏻👈🏻
Oi, Oi! Se Estiver Aceitando Pedidos, Pode Fazer Uns Icons Do Campbell De Takin' Over The Asylum? 🥺👉🏻👈🏻
Oi, Oi! Se Estiver Aceitando Pedidos, Pode Fazer Uns Icons Do Campbell De Takin' Over The Asylum? 🥺👉🏻👈🏻
Oi, Oi! Se Estiver Aceitando Pedidos, Pode Fazer Uns Icons Do Campbell De Takin' Over The Asylum? 🥺👉🏻👈🏻
Oi, Oi! Se Estiver Aceitando Pedidos, Pode Fazer Uns Icons Do Campbell De Takin' Over The Asylum? 🥺👉🏻👈🏻

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Why is it that young David Tennant has taken over my life after only 6 episodes of a tv show from the 90s


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4 months ago
He Was Helping With The TARDIS Maintenance And Fell Asleep. Probably To The Music He's Listening

He was helping with The TARDIS maintenance and fell asleep. Probably to the music he's listening


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8 months ago

I love tvtropes.org’s entry on Campbell Bain from Takin’ Over the Asylum:

“Chivalrous Pervert: Campbell Bain wants to lose his virginity and has never had a girlfriend….despite being a lovable, idealistic, kindhearted, funny, playful Pretty Boy in the highest order. Either his condition without psychiatric care/medication is a billion times worse or he grew up surrounded by either girls who preferred jocks or blind lesbians.“

I Love Tvtropes.org’s Entry On Campbell Bain From Takin’ Over The Asylum:

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8 months ago

Takin' Over the Asylum is 30 today!

Campbell!! 🥰🎧🎙️🎛️🎚️

Campbell!! 🥰🎧🎙️🎛️🎚️


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1 year ago

DT talk throwback: my interview w/David Blair, director of Takin' Over The Asylum

Over half a decade ago now I was a writer for David Tennant News/DT Forum, one of the bigger unofficial fan sites of DT's at the time (now sadly defunct). During my time there, I got the chance in Jan 2016 to interview David Blair - most notably the director of Takin' Over The Asylum, though he worked with DT in three other shows - about those projects, and what he remembered about David. I didn't want this interview to sink into the depths of the Wayback Machine and I thought y'all might enjoy reading it, so here is that interview in its entirety:

DT Talk Throwback: My Interview W/David Blair, Director Of Takin' Over The Asylum
DT Talk Throwback: My Interview W/David Blair, Director Of Takin' Over The Asylum

David Blair, Director / Front Cover of BBC DVD for Takin' Over The Asylum (UK)

Hello Mr. Blair! From 1992-1996 you worked with David Tennant on four separate television shows:  Strathblair in 1992, The Brown Man in 1993, Takin' Over The Asylum in 1994 and A Mug's Game in 1996.   Were you at all involved in the casting process for Strathblair, the first project you worked with David on... If so what did you see in the young actor that won him the role?  And how did that translate into choosing him as Campbell Bain?

I was a Producer at the BBC before I started directing. David was a student at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music & Drama in Glasgow. He asked if he could meet me just to talk through procedure for TV, interviews, etc., as the college appeared more interested in theatre than camera. Indeed, frowned on the latter! He’d be about 18 then. I certainly knew from the outset that he ‘had something,’ and I gave him a few minor opportunities as soon as I embarked on my directing career. To be clear, I only work with actors I want and believe in – still do. Some might say my own career has been stifled by this obduracy but I don’t care. My need of working with great actors is paramount and David’s a shining example of what makes it all worthwhile. I commissioned Takin’ Over The Asylum for the BBC and worked closely with the writer throughout the creative process. I knew as soon as I read the screenplay, David was going to be perfect for Campbell. But I’m not a fascist about this kind of decision-making, so I mentioned to the writer and Casting Director I had a boy ‘in mind’ for the role. I didn’t oversell; I knew he would make it work for himself. There may have been some minor scepticism at first, but when he did his audition, he blew them away.

David's audition tape for Takin' Over The Asylum

Many of David's fans have seen Takin' Over The Asylum and are well-versed with it. Can you talk more about Strathblair, The Brown Man and A Mug's Game, and David's roles in each?  Little is known about the roles he played in those productions. Can you give us any insight into the stories behind all three of the projects themselves, and what was it about David in those years that made you want to cast him in all of them?

In truth, Strathblair and The Brown Man were merely cogs in my directing wheel. They weren’t aesthetically of great merit but gave me a few credits to kick-start my career. What I needed was a ‘signature piece’ and that came along with Takin’ Over The Asylum. In many ways, I regard that as the start of my directing career. In those days, without a high-profile production on your CV, you would more than likely be destined for a treadmill of soaps and ‘continuing drama’. Before Asylum I was picking up scraps; after it, I was being asked what I wanted to do. Thus A Mug’s Game became my second collaboration with Donna Franceschild, who’d written Asylum. Ken Stott, Katy Murphy and others from Asylum were already on board - and really? We just wanted David to ‘be in it’. It wasn’t a huge role but he kindly agreed to come in and do it for us. Played a music student (at the Scottish Academy, as it happens), as I recall but, again, hugely professional and accomplished. In one scene, he had to throw up over the railway tracks at Partick train station in Glasgow.... ah, an enduring memory.....

DT Talk Throwback: My Interview W/David Blair, Director Of Takin' Over The Asylum

Did David do anything on set of any of the productions he worked on with you that totally took you by surprise or that was unexpected?  What did he do?

I think in those days, more than anything, it was important to keep in mind just how young he was. This boy of 21, was commanding the space, displaying an extraordinary ability to create laughter and tears; sometimes both at the same time! He had natural charm and wit and that, combined with this wonderfully spontaneous joie de vivre, made him a joy to be around both on the set and off.

What do you feel David's most unique/valuable attributes as an actor are?  What do you think separates him from his peers as he has matured into the career he has today?

When I look at him now I still largely see the same lad I met all those years ago. Still bursting with enthusiasm and an absolute desire to come out on top – which he’s done consistently. He’s retained his appetite, clearly, and devoured a huge range of roles – never seeking a ‘comfort zone’ in the process. It’s also struck me that he’s never attempted to be somebody he’s not and that truth, integrity, diligence – some might say, ‘Scottishness’ (!) – defines the man we see today.

David has said he considers Takin' Over The Asylum a career-defining project for him. What is your reaction so many years down the line to that comment?

I’ve always been rather humbled by David’s regard for myself and Takin’ Over The Asylum. I genuinely never felt I did anything out of the ordinary. I picked the best man for the job which, God knows, he underlined in spades once he played the role. He gave me as much as I gave him. Of course, there are occasions in my own career where I look back at defining moments and say “if it hadn’t been for so-and-so”.... but, I guess, the reason why we can reflect in that way, is because we didn’t let anybody down. David didn’t – and I hope I didn’t.   Looking back at Takin' Over The Asylum all these years later, do you feel it still holds up as well as it did?  In retrospect do you feel it helped shed as much needed light on the mental health industry as you'd hoped?

Funnily enough, somebody called me the other day to say he’d sat down and watched all six episodes and couldn’t believe how well it’s stood the test of time. I think I agree. I suppose because it’s a subject matter nobody would touch with a bargepole these days – that’s keeps it fresh somehow. All the scripts were vetted by the Association For Mental Health before we signed off on them. The writer had had mental health issues and wanted it to be authentic and in no way derisory. In fact, I remember many of the extras I cast all had had mental issues – one in particular having been institutionalised for 37 years!

I'd like to explore your decision to cast institutionalized patients as extras in Takin' Over The Asylum in a bit more detail. Was this related to filming the series at Gartloch Hospital, and if not, how was the idea first presented and eventually implemented?  Was this something you and Donna discussed as part of your intention to make the show as sensitive to the subject matter and as authentic as you could?  And did you run into any problems with compensating the extras, or any other issues relating to their Sectioned status?

It was simply an idea I had not just to add authenticity, but to have these guys make a worthwhile contribution to the film – and also make them feel good about it, if you like. I wanted to dispel the notion that all mentally ill people were screaming banshees – the story alludes to this anyway – by whose definition are we mad? I also thought it would help the non-mad actors (if there is such a thing!!!) to be surrounded by the ‘real’ rather than the ‘made up’ and thereby enrich their own performances.

Speaking of Gartloch Hospital, how did you choose that particular hospital for the filming location?

Gartloch was one of several mental hospitals around Glasgow being run down at the time, as part of the government’s controversial ‘care in the community’ programme. In other words, ‘we don’t want to pay to look after them any more, so you do it’. Of all the ones I looked at, Gartloch – not least with its huge tower – seemed to provide the best ambience; most suitable for the story and visually rewarding also.

Exploratory views of the interior and exterior of (now abandoned) Gartloch Hospital

As you mentioned, you do certainly seem to gravitate towards actors and writers that inspire you. Years ago you spotted a certain something in David -- so if given an opportunity, would you be willing to work with David again and if you could choose your own ideal role for him, what would that role entail?

Nothing would give me more pleasure than finding a project that both David and I could work on. David, creatively, is a bit of chameleon, so I don’t think there’s an ‘ideal role’ for him as such. A brilliant piece of writing and a character that takes him a place he hasn’t been before would be the simple remit.

Over the years many fans of Takin' Over The Asylum have expressed their desire to know what happened to Campbell and Eddie after we left them. If you were to continue their story, where do you think Campbell and Eddie would be today?

My hunch is that Campbell would have gone on to be a success in the music industry and Eddie would have tumbled into an even darker place, fueled by alcohol and self-doubt. I’ve often imagined Campbell inadvertently bumping into Eddie while he was sleeping in a cardboard box and Campbell doing for Eddie what Eddie had done for Nana in the very first episode.

Lore is - from Donna amongst others -- that you asked her to take a minor character from a play she'd written and make a drama around him. Of course that character is Ready Eddie McKenna. Could you tell us what the name of that play was?  And what was there about Eddie in the framework of that play that made you see him as the kind of character that could carry an entire series - and that Donna was the woman to write it?

With regard to the question below, it’s strange how little fateful moments define what we are and what we do. In my early days as a Producer, I commissioned Donna to write one of four monologues I was overseeing – I didn’t direct it, as it happens, but it was a sterling piece performed by Katy Murphy. The BBC – not myself – then commissioned Donna to adapt a stage play she’d written called And The Cow Jumped Over The Moon to fit a play strand we were doing at the time.

On the day of the studio, the Producer overseeing the project, was taken ill and they asked me to fill in for her ‘in the gallery’. (This was an old TV play where you worked in a rehearsal room for, say, three weeks then shot the whole thing – multi-camera – in a matter of days). Of course, as a result, I became familiar with the material and was indeed taken by this minor character – Eddie – who was a hospital radio DJ. After that, I asked Donna if she felt there might be mileage in creating a serial based around this character. I’d love to go into great and meaningful depth about why I thought that but, in truth, it was just a hunch – although it was one relative to how Donna was writing at that time; I believed she could deliver something unique with wide appeal. She hadn’t done any original TV work at that time (apart from the monologue) and had worries.

It took her some time to finally come up with a first draft – the breakthrough, she told me, came when she switched from just a hospital to a mental hospital. After that, we worked the episodes one at a time getting precisely where we wanted to be on one, before moving on to the next. Not an option that’s often available these days. During this process both Donna and I were supported hugely by the then Head of The Department, Bill Bryden. And that support manifested most clearly in simply leaving us to our own devices. No script executives, story editors or any other distractions. The work we ended up with had the footprint of nobody but ourselves.

And that's that! I hope you all enjoyed this unique insight into Takin' Over The Asylum and DT's work with David Blair.


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