Another thought just occurred to me. Was there a real Bracewell that the Daleks replaced with their robot, or did they actually fabricate those memories themselves?
The Doctor speculated they stole the memories. They likely killed the original, probably in the process of scanning his brain (it wasn't the safest of procedures back in "Doomsday"). Macabre as it is, that's probably better for the Bracewell-Bot. He wouldn't have another man already living his life.
That's a good point. But I'm sure if the answer was shown on screen, it'd amount to the Doctor holding his sonic screwdriver to the receiver for three seconds and saying "Give me a bell if you need anything Winnie...". Lets just imagine he built a something instead.Don't know if this has already been asked or not, but how was Churchill able to contact the Doctor so easily? After all, telephones in the 1930s-40s weren't anything like mobile phones of the 21st century.
Don't know if this has already been asked or not, but how was Churchill able to contact the Doctor so easily? After all, telephones in the 1930s-40s weren't anything like mobile phones of the 21st century.
That's a good point. But I'm sure if the answer was shown on screen, it'd amount to the Doctor holding his sonic screwdriver to the receiver for three seconds and saying "Give me a bell if you need anything Winnie...". Lets just imagine he built a something instead.Don't know if this has already been asked or not, but how was Churchill able to contact the Doctor so easily? After all, telephones in the 1930s-40s weren't anything like mobile phones of the 21st century.
That's a good point. But I'm sure if the answer was shown on screen, it'd amount to the Doctor holding his sonic screwdriver to the receiver for three seconds and saying "Give me a bell if you need anything Winnie...". Lets just imagine he built a something instead.Don't know if this has already been asked or not, but how was Churchill able to contact the Doctor so easily? After all, telephones in the 1930s-40s weren't anything like mobile phones of the 21st century.
Modern cellphones aren't sophisticated enough to reach through time either. Sure, they're vastly more complicated than the phones of the 1940s, but you would still have to add in some "sonic-created magic component" to make it work that way.
I thought the episode was pretty good. Even those new Daleks didn't look too bad in action (looking forward to the action figures). I wasn't thrilled with the actor who portrayed Churchill, and wasn't the robot actor previously seen back in Series 2 as the right-hand man of the Cybus guy? Hm, associating with both Cybermen and Daleks, hmm.oh, and I liked Amy's new outfit too.
What if the TARDIS, wherever and whenever it is, constantly scans the Earth phone networks of the 20th and 21st centuries for anyone dialing a certain number?
The caller stays relative to the Doctor within the causal nexus?That makes some sense, but then how would the 11th Doctor pick up Churchill's call while the 10's got Martha's?
So how come River doesn't stay relative to the Doctor?
Because she's not ringing him up on the phone.So how come River doesn't stay relative to the Doctor?
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