If the Doctor can speak dinosaur, shouldn't Vastra be able to as well?
Can you speak Horse?
If the Doctor can speak dinosaur, shouldn't Vastra be able to as well?
If the Doctor can speak dinosaur, shouldn't Vastra be able to as well?
Can you speak Horse?
She interrupted her studies to become a nanny for a while, and resumed them after that.However, the issue I'm having is that this means Clara somehow got an education degree and steady teaching job in three years, which seems a ridiculously short time. Thoughts?
Were these robots actually supposed to be the same ones from The Girl in the Fireplace? Some people have been saying they are, but besides a few slight design similarities, they don't seem that similar. I just assumed it was another set of clockwork robots, its not like Doctor Who would be unwilling to do something like that. Even considering the fact that they've been harvesting humans, they just don't seem all that similar to the robots the 10th Doctor met.
They were explicitly said to be the sister ship.
The reason the robots looked different is all elements biological and mechanical had been replaced over and over again over the centuries. That was also explicitly said in the episode.
Watch it a third time, it's there.But, i've seen the episode twice, and I didn't hear any reference to The Girl in The Fireplace.
Watch it a third time, it's there.But, i've seen the episode twice, and I didn't hear any reference to The Girl in The Fireplace.
Frau BlucherBleucheIf the Doctor can speak dinosaur, shouldn't Vastra be able to as well?
Can you speak Horse?
He definitely did.Unless he directly says it, and he definitely didn't, it makes more sense for them to be separate.
Huh? The Doctor reads "sister ship of the Madame d'Pompadour" (or however it's spelled) off of those little glass containers. At approx 59min30secs. Pretty much directly says it.
"Vague" works much better than the long winded, our audience must be stupid, type exposition you suggested.Huh? The Doctor reads "sister ship of the Madame d'Pompadour" (or however it's spelled) off of those little glass containers. At approx 59min30secs. Pretty much directly says it.
I remember that line. It didn't strike me as a reference at the time, but I guess its a vague one. Still, he wasn't really definitive. I figured he just guessed at it (why would an item have that written directly on it? It sounded like he just guessed), and one line of vague dialog isn't enough for me. I prefer my idea, and unless a version of the episode comes about with him saying something much more definitive (like "I haven't seen robots like you since I fought your compatriots and stopped them from stalking a woman years ago in my 10th incarnation"), it still doesn't make much sense to connect the two very different sets of robots. If that was Moffat's intention, he should have been more clear.
Its not a big deal, I'm not going to get into an argument about it. I don't consider them to be the same, or that there was any good evidence of them being the same in the episode. You're welcome to believe what you want. To me, its a minor point not worth spending too much time on![]()
Plus there was nothing vague about it. It was the Doctor's best guess, yes, but it was a straightforward reference."Vague" works much better than the long winded, our audience must be stupid, type exposition you suggested.
Huh? The Doctor reads "sister ship of the Madame d'Pompadour" (or however it's spelled) off of those little glass containers. At approx 59min30secs. Pretty much directly says it.
It references an episode in which the Doctor encountered the same kind of Droids.I remember that line. It didn't strike me as a reference at the time, but I guess its a vague one.
He looks at a piece of tech he pulls from their ship and seems to read "sister ship of the Madame de Pompadour".Still, he wasn't really definitive.
The Doctor is 2000 years old and it's shortly after his regeneration where his brain is all fuzzy. He confuses Strax for Clara so obviously he can't pull out the facts easily."I haven't seen robots like you since I fought your compatriots and stopped them from stalking a woman years ago in my 10th incarnation"), it still doesn't make much sense to connect the two very different sets of robots. If that was Moffat's intention, he should have been more clear.
Well technically they aren't since the Doctor gave the whole changing the Broom stick speech. But for all intents and purposes they are.Its not a big deal, I'm not going to get into an argument about it. I don't consider them to be the same,
Huh? The Doctor reads "sister ship of the Madame d'Pompadour" (or however it's spelled) off of those little glass containers. At approx 59min30secs. Pretty much directly says it.
I remember that line. It didn't strike me as a reference at the time, but I guess its a vague one. Still, he wasn't really definitive. I figured he just guessed at it (why would an item have that written directly on it? It sounded like he just guessed), and one line of vague dialog isn't enough for me. I prefer my idea, and unless a version of the episode comes about with him saying something much more definitive (like "I haven't seen robots like you since I fought your compatriots and stopped them from stalking a woman years ago in my 10th incarnation"), it still doesn't make much sense to connect the two very different sets of robots. If that was Moffat's intention, he should have been more clear.
Its not a big deal, I'm not going to get into an argument about it. I don't consider them to be the same, or that there was any good evidence of them being the same in the episode. You're welcome to believe what you want. To me, its a minor point not worth spending too much time on![]()
It was an honest reaction on my part. Your reaction is merely a bonus.I couldn't miss it.![]()
Here's something of an issue I picked up on in the episode. When Strax is performing a medical scan on Clara, his device indicates her age is 27. Which means she's aged since The Bells of St John. So far this is actually surprisingly consistent, since The Bells of St John does take place in 2013, this would mean she's now from 2016, which does place Day of the Doctor after The Power of Three thereby explaining how the Doctor and Kate Stewart know each other. How ever, the issue I'm having is that this means Clara somehow got an education degree and steady teaching job in three years, which seems a ridiculously short time. Thoughts?
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