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Is Amy Unhealthily Obsessed With The Doctor?

yep I am worried about Amys mental health as well, clues are littered though out the episode, first she has written comics, told everyone in the village about him, then she has had Rory dress up as him, has seen four psychiatrists, the dolls at the end are pretty creepy, I dont think its a good idea her being with the Doctor at all.

Maybe that's the direction they're going.
 
She abandons her finace on the eve of her wedding to go travelling in time and space with a man who has demonstrated to her (twice!) that he can't return her to the exact time she left.

And while some of those home-made dolls of herself and the Doctor were made when she was a child she's still making them as an adult too.

Discuss.

I don't think she was making them as an adult -- but I do think that there's a strong possibility that her fixation on the Doctor is very unhealthy.
 
Davros also said he flew into the timelock again and again, trying to get through.

Side note: some people still don't get that Caan engineered the Dalek's downfall, that the Doctor was a pawn in his plan. When that clicked with me, it was a bit of a "wow" moment.
 
Amy is clearly madly attracted to the Doctor.

She's very smart, and she flat-out asks to be lied to when she demands and then accepts his assurance that he can return her before the morning - she has seen him operate the TARDIS precisely twice, and precisely twice has he missed the planned moment of return by years.

The final shot of Amy waiting on her suitcase for the Doctor's return is simply a dream she's having as an adult, from which she wakens.
 
Amy's "obsession" is just to make her a surrogate for members of the audience who grew up with Doctor Who as their favorite TV series - among whom, of course, seem to number the majoritiy of the creative staff on the revival. If Moffet goes on to suggest that she's emotionally whacked out as a result, it'll be a dim commentary on the fanbase. :lol:
 
She's very smart, and she flat-out asks to be lied to when she demands and then accepts his assurance that he can return her before the morning - she has seen him operate the TARDIS precisely twice, and precisely twice has he missed the planned moment of return by years.[/QUOTE]

Exactly what I was thinking.
 
Why can we not have a companion like Donna, who just got on with the Doctor and wasn't fawning over him while pretending to be a young, independent modern woman?

Because that wouldn't make for a very good fairytale. And really it only makes sense that Amy WOULD be enchanted with this mysterious alien time traveler who visited her as a child.
 
the last time we saw the Master he had a change of heart and with the drumbeat finally gone was no longer insane.


Remember Dalek Caan? When you leave the timelock you go insane.........

The Master was never in the Time Lock, was he?


And Caan went insane because he broke through the time lock to rescue Davros.


Now he is and if The Master is the never-ending equal to the Doctor he'll meet him again.

The Master will get out one way or another and I'm betting it won't be easy
 
An interesting statement from Steven Moffat:

I would say of the old show that there's always that sort of latent romance going on. It's never expressed, but when Jon Pertwee says goodbye to Jo Grant, he doesn't look too pleased about it. He doesn't look too pleased that she's run off with someone she haplessly describes as a "younger version" of him. He's clearly cheesed off and it's not the reaction of a proud parent. So the element is there, but as to how we do it this time, that is really centrally and importantly part of the story of this series - so it's unwise to tell a story before you start.
 
An interesting statement from Steven Moffat:

I would say of the old show that there's always that sort of latent romance going on. It's never expressed, but when Jon Pertwee says goodbye to Jo Grant, he doesn't look too pleased about it. He doesn't look too pleased that she's run off with someone she haplessly describes as a "younger version" of him. He's clearly cheesed off and it's not the reaction of a proud parent. So the element is there, but as to how we do it this time, that is really centrally and importantly part of the story of this series - so it's unwise to tell a story before you start.

Interesting that Moffet cited that particular Doctor-comapnion relationship, especially considering what both Moffet and the young actor playing Rory (Mickey 2.0) said about the "sorta boyfriend" character on Doctor Who Confidential.

In a peanut shell, Moffet said Rory was Amy's pale substitute for the "Raggedy Doctor" who dressed up like her imaginary friend since they were kids, who tried to be a doctor only to become a nurse, and who slightly resembles the Doctor.

Arthur Darvill said Rory has always tried to be the Doctor for Amy.
 
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Well, that's interesting.

It's also a pretty direct acknowledgment that there will be a romantic element in Amy's relationship with the Doctor - as if it's not obvious from The Eleventh Hour that there already is.

I just hope they don't do the "unrequited" storyline they did with Martha Jones, which pretty much assassinated that character. The mutual attraction between Nine and Ten and Rose was always appealing, but Martha moping over Ten just made her dreary - and for Eleven to ignore or push off Amy would cause him to come across as clueless or a jerk. It's different for him than for Ten becaue they're establishing his character at the same time that they're establishing the relationship between the two of them.

Here's an interesting quote along the same lines from Piers Wenger:


Italics mine. ;)
 
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An interesting statement from Steven Moffat:

I would say of the old show that there's always that sort of latent romance going on. It's never expressed, but when Jon Pertwee says goodbye to Jo Grant, he doesn't look too pleased about it. He doesn't look too pleased that she's run off with someone she haplessly describes as a "younger version" of him. He's clearly cheesed off and it's not the reaction of a proud parent. So the element is there, but as to how we do it this time, that is really centrally and importantly part of the story of this series - so it's unwise to tell a story before you start.

Interesting that Moffet cited that particular Doctor-comapnion relationship, especially considering what both Moffet and the young actor playing Rory (Mickey 2.0) said about the "sorta boyfriend" character on Doctor Who Confidential.

In a peanut shell, Moffet said Rory was Amy's pale substitute for the "Raggedy Doctor" who dressed up like her imaginary friend since they were kids, who tried to be a doctor only to become a nurse, and who slightly resembles the Doctor.

Arthur Darvill said Rory has always tried to be the Doctor for Amy.

Huh...
I'm thinking that maybe Amy will find that having the Doctor is not nearly so pleasing a thing as wanting Raggedy Doctor.
Perhaps, as with many disillusionments, Amy may find some way to Stonn him...
 
They don't say who those two men are, though, and we've already seen that Amy knows a lot of men in her village. Rory and porn boy (likely elevated to a position of power courtesy of the Doctor) being likely candidates. We also have no idea who she was due to marry.
 
Well, that's interesting.

It's also a pretty direct acknowledgment that there will be a romantic element in Amy's relationship with the Doctor - as if it's not obvious from The Eleventh Hour that there already is.

I just hope they don't do the "unrequited" storyline they did with Martha Jones, which pretty much assassinated that character. The mutual attraction between Nine and Ten and Rose was always appealing, but Martha moping over Ten just made her dreary - and for Eleven to ignore or push off Amy would cause him to come across as clueless or a jerk. It's different for him than for Ten becaue they're establishing his character at the same time that they're establishing the relationship between the two of them.

Here's an interesting quote along the same lines from Piers Wenger:


Italics mine. ;)

It would be interesting to see her using Rory (or whoever) for the benefit of the physical/need for security and stability side and the Doctor for the emotional/adventurous side...
 

She ran away with the Doctor in the middle of the night before her wedding after waking up in a room full of openly-displayed Doctor figures she made, after having had a dream about waiting for the Doctor.

It's pretty obvious who one of those two men are. :vulcan:

and we've already seen that Amy knows a lot of men in her village. Rory and porn boy (likely elevated to a position of power courtesy of the Doctor) being likely candidates.

Rory and Geoff being the only known candidates.

And there's not actually any evidence she was involved with Geoff.

We also have no idea who she was due to marry.

Um, yes, we do. There's a high probability it was Rory.
 
Who exactly is Geoff, anyway? Just some dude who happened to be in the right place at the right time? And was the elderly lady the aunt that young Amelia refers to or just someone else in the village?
 
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