It could have been that the regeneration was triggered by that influx of energy rather than it actually doing fatal damage. 9 was simply content enough with his fate not to fight it, or whatever energy stayed inside him needed to be channeled into something and regeneration was the best option.Not to mention the reason for the Doctor's regeneration made little sense (Rose survives but the Doctor doesn't??).
A possible explanation that I've worked with is that when the energy first went inside Rose, it was at a low level, and raised incrementally while within her. Then when it transferred into the Doctor, it was already at a much higher level, and it was in fact the intensity of the energy rather than the energy itself the Doctor can't take. Although, I assume if it had been inside Rose a few minutes longer, she would have been past the point of safety as well.
Rose: Has power in her for a good five minutes, channels energy into Dalek fleet over a range of several hundred kilometres. Survives
The Doctor: Has the energy in him for less than 30 seconds, channels energy into the Tardis a few feet away. Forced to regenerate.
Just seems a bit silly to me, unless the Doctor was able to repair the damage to Rose at the cost of his own life, either in the Tardis or via the kiss.
Or you argue that Bad Wolf saved her in a very circular way.![]()
Not sure if I like the more hair Capaldi is showing this season but maybe that goes with the more older look.
Given that she lives in New York probably not but she's clearly going to be as major a part of Capaldi's run as Kingston was for Smith.
Moffat and Minchin talk about Maisie Williams, and say absolutely nothing about her Doctor Who character.
In a new video on the BBC's website, Steven Moffat and Brian Minchin address whether or not Missy could ever be a companion.
She appears in the two parter "The Girl Who Died"/"The Woman Who Lived". that scene could be from the second part.Moffat has to be lying. How would the Doctor know who she is ("You!") if he didn't know who she is (having been associated previously). We know the first rule, The Doctor/Moffat lies.
Moffat has to be lying. How would the Doctor know who she is ("You!") if he didn't know who she is (having been associated previously). We know the first rule, The Doctor/Moffat lies.
Moffat has to be lying. How would the Doctor know who she is ("You!") if he didn't know who she is (having been associated previously). We know the first rule, The Doctor/Moffat lies.
You mean like how Madame Vastra, Jenny Flint, and Strax were introduced to the audience? None of them were established previously to the viewers but they knew the Doctor; Vastra apparently knowing him quite well too.
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