This is silly. As I said in my review, of course the newer incarnation treats the predecessor as a subordinate. A more twisted version of the multi-Doctor relationship.So after two series setting her up as this major villain she turns out to just be the snivelling lackey to the real villain.
I doff my hat to you, good sir, for that excellent outside-of-Doctor-Who reference.Well, looks like this time it really is lupus.
Oh, snap, I didn't even think about that! Yes please and thank you!Looking forward to Mel meeting the Rani again. It's always fun when companions meet old villains.
I never cared for it in the first place so I'm fine with it. I get why Davies did it, but aside from The Ninth Doctor, it never really worked for me. The Tenth Doctor was too money about it and I say that as a massive Tennant fan. I think it only ever worked for me because of Eccleston.Also, does anyone else feel “the Last of the Time Lords” has lost its gravitas in their current context, compared to what it mean pre-DotD? Every time he says it, it just reminds me, “The Master killed them all, but they can still regenerate after being cyber-converted, so how are they dead? And how did he manage to pull of single-handedly, as a casual lark, what every Dalek in history working together couldn’t do?”
Agreed! Didn't work for me either outside Eccleston.I never cared for it in the first place so I'm fine with it. I get why Davies did it, but aside from The Ninth Doctor, it never really worked for me. The Tenth Doctor was too money about it and I say that as a massive Tennant fan. I think it only ever worked for me because of Eccleston.
Indeed, under normal circumstances, the newer incarnation is the older one, with the predecessor being a younger person, so naturally the current one will have the same kind of disdain one of us might have should we ever meet ourselves from our younger more ignorant days. I imagine in the case of bigeneration, the newer Rani will still consider herself to be the older, wiser one, and would look at the Mrs. Flood incarnation as the younger, ignorant and less experienced. A sort of "you obviously screwed up and got yourself killed, otherwise I wouldn't be here."of course the newer incarnation treats the predecessor as a subordinate.
While the whole "Time Lords are extinct" thing is always a reflection of the fact that the current showrunners don't care for them, with their extinction in the Chibnall era, I always wondered, how do we know it's definite this time? We got the fact that several were turned into Cybermen, but also, are we really supposed to believe in light of what Day of the Doctor established that there weren't a few Time Lords who managed to survive by escaping into a painting?Also, does anyone else feel “the Last of the Time Lords” has lost its gravitas in their current context, compared to what it mean pre-DotD? Every time he says it, it just reminds me, “The Master killed them all, but they can still regenerate after being cyber-converted, so how are they dead? And how did he manage to pull of single-handedly, as a casual lark, what every Dalek in history working together couldn’t do?
I'm a little ashamed at how slow I was to get this
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