Well, Omega did appear in the tenth anniversary special and the twentieth season, so maybe he'll return in 2013.^^ I especially LOVED that part about the question...I giggled like a school girl after smacking myself in the head. Hidden in plain sight indeed. Am I the only one still who is deluded enough to think Omega is still returning? I ask in all seriousness since there hasn't been much discussion. I still think the Brotherhood and the Order of Silence are serving him...even if they don't know it. Too many clues.
no Sherlock to fill the gap, the latest news is early 2012, maybe even as early as Jan.So a bit of Sherlock to fill the gap until the Christmas special.
Yes, I loved this ending as well, hopefully Moffat will keep to it next year, getting back to quieter, smaller adventures, not involving blowing up armies, or planets, or spacefleets. He might have to, considering he probably has less budget to play with (especially if he wants to save up some for the anniversary), which I think shows he's quite clever by steering the show towards smaller stories, planning it from the very beginning of this season.The ending was great though. The Doctor 'stepping back into the shadows' is, if it's going to be reflected in the show, an excellent move. Everything's been getting way too big, everyone knows the Doctor, and stories become predictable. If he's just exploring time and space from now on, with a much lower profile, I can see better stories arising from it. Just a feeling.
Yes, I loved this ending as well, hopefully Moffat will keep to it next year, getting back to quieter, smaller adventures, not involving blowing up armies, or planets, or spacefleets. He might have to, considering he probably has less budget to play with (especially if he wants to save up some for the anniversary), which I think shows he's quite clever by steering the show towards smaller stories, planning it from the very beginning of this season.
Moffat said: "For me, Doctor Who literally is a fairytale. It's not really science fiction. It's not set in space, it's set under your bed. It's at its best when it's related to you, no matter what planet it's set on. Every time it cleaves towards that, it's very strong.
Although it is watched by far more adults than children, there's something fundamental in its DNA that makes it a children's programme and it makes children of everyone who watches it. If you're still a grown up by the end of that opening music, you've not been paying attention."
Anyway, I look forward to the fields of Trenzalore. Part of me thinks this might be a bit meta. It's certainly the oldest question asked on the show.
The whole River kills the Doctor thing, for which she even does time (jailed by the people who had her do it!) when in fact she didn't. She was a passenger in the Silence-programmed suit.
And the Pond/Song family now think the Doctor's part of the family because river married the vehicle the Doctor was piloting. Is there a brain cell between them?
Lest anybody think I didn't love it - cos I do have a lot of complaints - I don't think I've ever been so entertained by something so randomly hashed together.
Moffat may call his approach a fairytale, but it actually comes over more as a Looney Tunes cartoon. (This is not specifically a bad thing! though it can be.)
Firstly, I love the options in this poll.
I'll tell you something else that annoyed me. The Doctor managed to overpower and capture a Dalek somehow offscreen. It's not inconceiveable, but like in The Abomination where he blows up all those Cybusships, he does something fantastically difficult magically offscreen because he's the Doctor. And wasn't the magic floaty shark in A Christmas Cunt beaten offscreen? Fookin' cheating that is.
Having slept on it, a couple of other bits where what the finale tells us is totally nonsensical, even by fairytale rules.
The whole River kills the Doctor thing, for which she even does time (jailed by the people who had her do it!) when in fact she didn't. She was a passenger in the Silence-programmed suit.
And the Pond/Song family now think the Doctor's part of the family because river married the vehicle the Doctor was piloting. Is there a brain cell between them?
Of course, presumably the actual fixed point in time was that the Tesselecta had to be shot and burnt at Lake Silencio - which means they could have just done it in LKH and saved a lot of bother. It still means Moffat cheated the audience, though, by not playing within the boundaries he'd set up for them in TIA and the pre-season publicity.
Lest anybody think I didn't love it - cos I do have a lot of complaints - I don't think I've ever been so entertained by something so randomly hashed together.
Moffat may call his approach a fairytale, but it actually comes over more as a Looney Tunes cartoon. (This is not specifically a bad thing! though it can be.)
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