Re: Does the Doctor think of his earlier incarnations as different peo
Well, it's explicit that Nine and Rose had adventures between episodes. "Boom Town" and others had Rose talking about visits to planets we didn't see onscreen. I believe RTD did this deliberately to leave room for tie-in novels; in fact, one episode (maybe "Boom Town" again) directly references a planet visited in a tie-in.
And Titan Comics will likewise present an adventure set in that time period. Can't wait!
Although I guess if you're trying to rationalize inserting extra decades into Nine's life, then it has to be when he's not traveling with Rose. And that's why I just don't buy it. The Doctor latched onto Rose because she was the one who brought him out of his post-Time War PTSD -- and probably because he subconsciously remembered her face and voice as that of the Moment, his salvation from his great crime, even though he'd consciously forgotten those events. It makes sense that he met her relatively soon after his regeneration -- not immediately after, maybe a few subjective months or so, but not decades after.
Thats your opinion. Its not a fact that his adventure in
Rose was his first after
Day of the Doctor's events. Likewise, he could very easily have had myriad adventures just before he came to Rose in the end of that episode. And why couldn't he meet Rose decades later? Whats prohibiting it?
Absolutely nothing. Cause he clearly had spent time without her. Really, the evidence is there to support the case that Nine could have lived for longer than the one series. You just don't seem enamored with the idea.
That is, if you don't want to consider the implication of the dungeon conversation that clearly infered to Nine being (or will be) several decades old. And besides, he was not the Doctor for a LONG time. And he just destroyed his species, along with the Daleks. You don't think he immediately became the Doctor again? A process of mourning and acceptance, not unlike what he went through in
Snowmen, ought to have occured for him, before he could decide that he was the Doctor again.
I don't recall any comments from RTD about greying Tennant's hair.
I did hear something like that, though. Would've been cool to add some age to that Doctor. But I'm not complaining.
And it is hard to judge Eccleston's era.
Thats the double-edge sword of having an actor unwilling to portray the Doctor for more than a series, and when that said Doctor was never introduced like the rest of the Doctors have (with a post-regeneration scene, that is).
In an ironic sense, he's the most mysterious of the Doctors since the first. And no, the Warrior wasn't mysterious - he was the Warrior, and thats that. The mystery was in his non-canonicity by the Doctor himself.
EDIT: There is a novel written for the 50th anniversary, called The Beast of Babylon, that infers to the Ninth going into the events of
Rose shortly after regenerating... but I call BS on that, personally. Mostly because it was clearly written before
Day of the Doctor stipulated that the Doctor wasn't the Doctor for a LONG time before Ninth.