Hell the freaking trailer for next week seems to be jumping up and down saying its the Doctor.
When a Trailer tries very hard to make you think one thing the opposite is probably true.
Hell the freaking trailer for next week seems to be jumping up and down saying its the Doctor.
This episode was just sort of there.
Nothing happens for most of it. The "plot twist" is given away at the beginning of the episode. Somehow the Xerox Docs manage to do the exact same thing for a couple of billion years. Then it ends with the Doctor on Gallifrey doing a CSI: Miami gag.
This episode was just sort of there.
Nothing happens for most of it. The "plot twist" is given away at the beginning of the episode. Somehow the Xerox Docs manage to do the exact same thing for a couple of billion years. Then it ends with the Doctor on Gallifrey doing a CSI: Miami gag.
Sure the twist was given at the beginning, doesn't mean you knew what it meant.
And not nothing happened in the episode.
This was a tense and tragic story showing the Doctor figuring out what was going on and then culminating in showing the extreme length he is willing to go to WIN!
This was an awesome episode. Probably the best since Day of the Doctor. Great exploration of his character.
Hell the freaking trailer for next week seems to be jumping up and down saying its the Doctor.
When a Trailer tries very hard to make you think one thing the opposite is probably true.
I like to think that in many of his cycles over those billions of years, he didn't make it to the wall of punching. In true Groundhog Day fashion, in many loops he'd have been killed before he fully realized what was happening and thus didn't move the story forward - we only saw some of the loops that did. Of course, after each time the Veil got to him, he'd make it back up to the teleport and restart things (thanks to the mind palace sequences, naturally). Makes it even more poignant, really.
Mark
^ I actually wonder if it's Missy who's behind the confession dial trap? The Doctor thought they designed it based on some telepathy ability, but perhaps it was just Missy's understanding of the Doctor, including the past where the dead lady lay under the veil? Maybe Missy wanted the information for herself?
Absolutely. I would say this is the best episode since "The God Complex."This was an awesome episode. Probably the best since Day of the Doctor. Great exploration of his character.
In many ways better than DotD.
I like to think that in many of his cycles over those billions of years, he didn't make it to the wall of punching. In true Groundhog Day fashion, in many loops he'd have been killed before he fully realized what was happening and thus didn't move the story forward - we only saw some of the loops that did. Of course, after each time the Veil got to him, he'd make it back up to the teleport and restart things (thanks to the mind palace sequences, naturally). Makes it even more poignant, really.
Mark
^ I actually wonder if it's Missy who's behind the confession dial trap? The Doctor thought they designed it based on some telepathy ability, but perhaps it was just Missy's understanding of the Doctor, including the past where the dead lady lay under the veil? Maybe Missy wanted the information for herself?
Why does everyone keep thinking Missy is behind this? There's no need for her to put the Doctor through this just to learn his secrets. The confession dial was coded specifically to her, and rather than hold onto it she chose to give it back to the Doctor. Sure, she's not the most rational person and the Master has in the past indulged in all manner of unnecessarily convoluted plans, but this really doesn't add up at all.
The only difference was that the very first Doctor must have been naked to leave his clothes where the later incarnations left them and the diamond wall at the end, which he chipped away at allowing him to recite more and more of the story before the vail got to him.
The only difference was that the very first Doctor must have been naked to leave his clothes where the later incarnations left them and the diamond wall at the end, which he chipped away at allowing him to recite more and more of the story before the vail got to him.
We may not have come in (as viewers) to the first iteration of these cycles.
I was reading the comments, when I had a realization. Mayor Me held the confession dial. The only other person who could hold the dial was Missy. Why is that?
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