I do hope that the RTD-era "Doctor's Theme" comes back. Not that I don't love the Eleventh Doctor theme -- does it have a proper name yet? -- but because I think that using "The Doctor's Theme" as a leitmotif for the character of the Doctor, no matter his incarnation, really captures a sense of continuity and mystery about him that gets lost if you only use a different motif for each incarnation. I'm hoping the Eleventh Doctor theme ends up being like "All the Strange, Strange Creatures" -- an incarnation-specific motif that gets used in conjunction with an over-all Doctor motif.
I don't think WHO used electronic soundtracks until the 80s, with a few exceptions. Also most of the 60s music was stock music, with a few exceptions like the theme tune.
Have you listened to a Pertwee story?
So, in other words, the last time the regeneration limit was in a story, Margaret Thatcher was Prime Minister, Ronald Reagan was President, the Soviet Union still existed and the Cold War was still going on, Mikhail Gorbachev wasn't even the Soviet Premier yet, M*A*S*H was still on the air, the Nintendo Entertainment System had only just launched in Japan, the Falkland Islands War had just finished and the military junta in Argentina was being dissolved, Return of the Jedi was in theaters, McDonalds had only just introduced the McNugget, Issac Asimov was still alive, Michael Jackson's "Thriller" and Nintendo's Mario Bros. were new, Tom Cruise was dancing in his underwear in Risky Business, and Roger Moore was still James Bond.
Yeah, I think it's safe to say the regeneration limit isn't central to the Doctor Who mythos.![]()
So, in other words, the last time the regeneration limit was in a story, Margaret Thatcher was Prime Minister, Ronald Reagan was President, the Soviet Union still existed and the Cold War was still going on, Mikhail Gorbachev wasn't even the Soviet Premier yet, M*A*S*H was still on the air, the Nintendo Entertainment System had only just launched in Japan, the Falkland Islands War had just finished and the military junta in Argentina was being dissolved, Return of the Jedi was in theaters, McDonalds had only just introduced the McNugget, Issac Asimov was still alive, Michael Jackson's "Thriller" and Nintendo's Mario Bros. were new, Tom Cruise was dancing in his underwear in Risky Business, and Roger Moore was still James Bond.
Yeah, I think it's safe to say the regeneration limit isn't central to the Doctor Who mythos.![]()
No, you pulled all those Wikipedia facts for nothing.It was 1996 with Paul McGann. So, you need to revise your timeline. As I said, it's been a relative ten years of Doctor Who (1984-1989, 2005-2010) since it's been explicitly mentioned...
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Oh, I understood your point. I just don't agree. William Hartnell's Doctor smoking a pipe is an example of something that happened so long ago as to not matter to the current character. The Regeneration Limit is a key piece of show history that supports an entire era. Is it so important that RTD can't joke about it? No. But, is it an important enough concept within the mythos to demand a proper dismissal story or concept? Yes.
No one here is saying it shouldn't happen. The way it takes place, and the amount of respect they give the source material, is where (most) fans have issue. I for one would love for The Doctor to make the same kind of joke IN Doctor Who, BUT turn around and then admit it was a joke and go on to explain/show/plot the details of how/when/why this fundamental aspect of Gallifreyan biology shifted. The less imaginative would expect Trek-like technobabble in dealing with it. I don't care the amount of "science" they want to shove in, really. I could even see a quick flashback to Paul McGann getting a Trek-like hypo-shot, and some old Time Lord says, "...there, we've just given you another set of thirteen lives..." The overall point is, just deal with it head-on...![]()
The thing is, by the time they do there may be a whole generation of Whovians who treat the "limt of 507" as gospel!The overall point is, just deal with it head-on...![]()
Personally, I think the best suggestion I've ever heard is Gore-tho's.
The thing is, by the time they do there may be a whole generation of Whovians who treat the "limt of 507" as gospel!The overall point is, just deal with it head-on...![]()
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The thing is, by the time they do there may be a whole generation of Whovians who treat the "limt of 507" as gospel!The overall point is, just deal with it head-on...![]()
![]()
The thing is, by the time they do there may be a whole generation of Whovians who treat the "limt of 507" as gospel!The overall point is, just deal with it head-on...![]()
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Why not? It exists on the same basis as the previous, outdated one.
I think in every episode of the new series, the question should be raised and a different answer given every time.
Actually...Oh, I understood your point. I just don't agree. William Hartnell's Doctor smoking a pipe is an example of something that happened so long ago as to not matter to the current character. The Regeneration Limit is a key piece of show history that supports an entire era. Is it so important that RTD can't joke about it? No. But, is it an important enough concept within the mythos to demand a proper dismissal story or concept? Yes.
No one here is saying it shouldn't happen.
Actually...Oh, I understood your point. I just don't agree. William Hartnell's Doctor smoking a pipe is an example of something that happened so long ago as to not matter to the current character. The Regeneration Limit is a key piece of show history that supports an entire era. Is it so important that RTD can't joke about it? No. But, is it an important enough concept within the mythos to demand a proper dismissal story or concept? Yes.
No one here is saying it shouldn't happen.
I haven't said it in this thread yet (because I know I'm in the vast minority) but I've mentioned my personal take on this in previous threads. I want to see The Doctor face his mortality when he's on his final regeneration and see how that affects him. When he dies, he stays dead. No last minute fixes.
I suspect the same but this is my hope nonetheless.I'm at least partially with ya EMH, but somehow I don't think the BBC will let it die a noble death...
You misunderstand me. I don't mean how it will physically effect him (I suspect The Master looked the way he did because resisted death). I mean how The Doctor views his life at the final incarnation.Actually...Oh, I understood your point. I just don't agree. William Hartnell's Doctor smoking a pipe is an example of something that happened so long ago as to not matter to the current character. The Regeneration Limit is a key piece of show history that supports an entire era. Is it so important that RTD can't joke about it? No. But, is it an important enough concept within the mythos to demand a proper dismissal story or concept? Yes.
No one here is saying it shouldn't happen.
I haven't said it in this thread yet (because I know I'm in the vast minority) but I've mentioned my personal take on this in previous threads. I want to see The Doctor face his mortality when he's on his final regeneration and see how that affects him. When he dies, he stays dead. No last minute fixes.
I have no desire to see the Doctor's body deteriorate like the Master's did in The Deadly Assassin.
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