^ i agree. this is something that would be better off referenced but not seen.
like admiral cain and the pegasus actions in battlestar galactica.
like admiral cain and the pegasus actions in battlestar galactica.
Better to avoid seeing the whole last great time war on screen, no matter what they do they could never do it justice and it would dissapoiint. Better to leave it to the imagination.
Wait a minute! so let me get this straight.. the entire time war happened in the vortex?? What?
That is just about the stupidest thing I have ever heard of! What kind of bolluxed shite is that!
There is a reason I take RTD with a grain of salt..
Now what about classic who? I watched The Three Doctors the other day. Any suggestions on which I should watch next? I can't seem to find them on netflix by season, or I'd just start at the very beginning.
Is McGann still doing the Audio series? If so, couldn't they try and lead into the Time War from that route?
Here's the talked about essay.
"Meet The Doctor" © Russell T Davies
When the Doctor came to Earth – to track down the Nestene Consciousness and its plastic servants, the Autons – he had no intention of finding a human companion. He’d had fellow travellers alongside him before, of course, and most of them human. His favourite species! But that was in the old days, when the universe seemed young and fresh and more inclined to friendly gestures.
The universe, since then, had changed. At least for the Doctor.
There had been a War, the Great Time War between the Daleks and the Time Lords. There had been two Time Wars before this – the skirmish between the Halldons and the Eternals, and then the brutal slaughter of the Omnicraven Uprising – and on both occasions, the Doctor’s people had stepped in to settle the matter. The Time Lords had a policy of non-interference in the affairs of the universe, but on a higher level, in affairs of the Time Vortex, they assumed discreetly the role of protectors. They were the self-appointed keepers of the peace. Until forced to fight.
Now, the story of the Great (and final) Time War is hard to piece together, because so little survived. Certainly, both had been testing each others strength for many, many years. The Daleks had threatened the Time Lord High Council before, by trying to replace its members with Dalek duplicates. And one of the Dalek Puppet Emperors had openly declared his hostility. Though perhaps the Daleks’ wrath was justifiable – they had been provoked! At one point in their history, the Time Lords had actually sent the Doctor back in time, to prevent the creation of the Daleks. An act of genocide! The Time Lords fired the first shot – though in their defence, they took this course of action because they had foreseen a time when the Daleks would overrun all civilized life and become the dominant life-form in the universe.
Some tried to find a peaceful solution. While it’s hard to find precise records of these events, it’s said that under the Act of Master Restitution, President Romana opened a peace treaty with the Daleks. Others claim that the Etra Prime Incident began the escalation of events. But whatever the cause – and its almost certain that the full story has yet to be uncovered – the terrible War began. The Time Lords reached back into their own history, to assemble a fleet of Bowships, Black Hole Carriers and N-Forms; the Daleks unleashed the full might of the Deathsmiths of Goth, and launched an awesome fleet into the Vortex, led by the Emperor himself.
The War raged, but for most species in the universe, life continued as normal. The War was fought in the Vortex, and beyond that, in the Ultimate Void, beyond the eyes and ears of ordinary creatures. The Lesser Species lived in ignorance. If a planet found its history subtle changing – perhaps distorting and rewriting itself under the pressures of the rupturing Vortex – then its people were part of that change, and perceived nothing to be wrong. Only the Higher Species – those further up the evolutionary ladder – saw what was happening. The Forest of Cheem gazed upon the bloodshed, and wept. The Nestene Consciousness lost all of its planets, and found itself mutating under temporal stress. The Greater Animus perished and its Carsenome Walls fell into dust. And it is said that the Eternals themselves watched, and despaired of this reality, and fled their hallowed halls, never to be seen again…
Years passed, as the mighty armies clashed. And then, silence. No one knows exactly what happened in the final battle. And no one knows how it came to end. All that is known is that one man strode from the wreckage, one man walked free from the ruins of Gallifrey and Skaro. The Time Lord called the Doctor. And his hearts were heavy as he boarded his ship once more, and took to the skies, to escape everything he had just seen; everything he had just done…
He is alone and thinks, somehow, that he deserves this. And as he wanders on, he decides that no one should stand beside him. He’s got no room, on board his TARDIS. He is a traveler, and needs no other.
But then he finds himself in the cellar of a London shop at closing time, and he grabs the hand of an Earthling called Rose Tyler, and looks into her eyes, and all those resolutions go out of the window! The journey goes on, with a human at his side, and who knows where it will end…
And far away, across the universe, on the planet Crafe Tec Heydra, one side of a mountain carries carvings and hieroglyphs, crude representations of an invisible War. The artwork shows two races clashing, one metal, one flesh; a fearsome explosion; and a solitary survivor walking from the wreckage. Solitary? Perhaps not. Under this figure, a phrase has been scratched in the stone, which translates as: you are not alone…![]()
Now what about classic who? I watched The Three Doctors the other day. Any suggestions on which I should watch next? I can't seem to find them on netflix by season, or I'd just start at the very beginning.
Better to avoid seeing the whole last great time war on screen, no matter what they do they could never do it justice and it would dissapoiint. Better to leave it to the imagination.
This, the Nightmare Child could never ever be as cool as it actually sounds!
All those weapons are just names and can be whatever we imagine them to be. The only specific thing we know about any of them beyond their names is that the Nightmare Child had jaws which must have been pretty huge, given Davros's command ship flew into them.
All those weapons are just names and can be whatever we imagine them to be. The only specific thing we know about any of them beyond their names is that the Nightmare Child had jaws which must have been pretty huge, given Davros's command ship flew into them.
or the nightmare child was a space time event, or something akin to a massive explosion or wave of energy and "jaws" is just a figure of speech..
I believe all of the things mentioned in the Time War were meant to be a take on the mythological and epic nature of Doctor Who in general as well as touch on the epic scale of the Time War it's self. Indeed, I'm sure RTD intended the reader's imagination to make up whatever it is that he was talking about.
The nightmare child was a young Macauley Caulkin taken out of his time stream to fight against the Timelords where he caused them constant problems with his every day object based booby traps....
That RTD essay was published during the first season, IIRC.
Judging both by the essay and by the events depicted on-screen, I'd say that the war was fought primarily in the Vortex, but caused rifts and holes or things like that which decimated historical events and that at several times the forces of both sides "fell" out of the Vortex or intentionally took the fight to normal space.
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