Do you think the Doctor will tell Rory and Amy about River's future death (at least the physical kind) which he saw happen in Forest of the Dead? Or will he kept that to himself for Rory and Amy's peace of mind?
My guess would be neither and that barring a scenario that'll somehow make it changeable or circumventable he'll keep it to himself for the purpose of preserving the causal nexus. I can easily see Rory taking a damn-the-consequences approach if he somehow finds out. As for the Doctor, I think that his resignation in relation to his own fate was partly a means of proving to himself that he was doing the right thing in relation to River's.Do you think the Doctor will tell Rory and Amy about River's future death (at least the physical kind) which he saw happen in Forest of the Dead? Or will he kept that to himself for Rory and Amy's peace of mind?
We don't know how long River lived after regenerating from Mels. For all we know, she may had 500 years of adventures before going to the Library.^That didn't seem to comfort Amy much. She was pretty upset when everything snapped back in "Wedding" and she remembered the lead-up to 1103's death, even though there was nothing to say she wouldn't ever see 909 again. Telling them River died would definitely a buzzkill.
Still, they are her parents. They deserve to know what happened. I'd imagine he'd only tell them later, after he's run through his time with River, and when they themselves are older.
^ In Let's Kill Hitler, the newly-regenerated Mels/River talks about taking the age down a bit just to confuse people, so she can presumably look a little younger by the time of Silence In The Library. That ability might also help to explain that middle-aged guy from Time Crash.
Still, they are her parents. They deserve to know what happened. I'd imagine he'd only tell them later, after he's run through his time with River, and when they themselves are older.
Still, they are her parents. They deserve to know what happened. I'd imagine he'd only tell them later, after he's run through his time with River, and when they themselves are older.
I don't think any parent wants to know how or when their child dies. In fact, isn't it generally considered one of the greatest tragedies a parent can endure to live long enough to know exactly when their child dies?
Honestly, I really hope Moffatt decides to leave that final encounter off-screen. Like the Time War, any deception of it won't be nearly as amazing as it is in our minds.I think this is one of the reasons why Amy and Rory have to come back (Karen Gillan just reaffirmed on a radio interview with Graham Norton that she is coming back, btw: http://tardisnewsroom.blogspot.com/2011/10/karen-gillan-graham-norton-interview.html ) - because there is that whole question of will the Doctor tell them that he witnessed River's death?
And when will he tell them? Forest of the Dead described the vivid scenario in which the Doctor met River for the last time (in his chronology) and gave her the sonic screwdriver. Did he give Amy and Rory a chance to say goodbye to her as well? Interesting stuff.
Of course there's no way to tell if they'll actually chronicle this on screen. Moffat may decide to leave this (along with Jim the Fish, etc) off-screen for us to fill in with our imaginations. It'll be interesting to see how it will be handled, though, if they go there.
Alex
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