We can argue semantics all day but my point still stands: the Doctor mentioned it pretty often for something he was trying so hard to forget and he stated more than once that he was the one who ended it and killed the Timelords. To my mind, this behaviour clashes with having an incarnation who did all this that he hides away. It seemed that Ten had come to terms with his role in the Time War in "The End of Time". That's why I thought at first (i.e. after the last series' finale) that the incarnation he wouldn't want to acknowledge was not the Time War one but another, possibly before he became the Doctor.
I only brought it up to show that I understood where Emperor Tiberius was coming from.
The Doctor wants to avoid talking or thinking about the Time War, but there have been occasions that have forced him to face those unwelcome memories, and it's those occasions that the show focuses on disproportionately, because they're the most dramatic parts.
My own little thought on this is that maybe 10 seemed more comfortable talking about it because until Donna was able to snap himself out of it, he was becoming more comfortable with violence in general, against anyone threatening earth. He was becoming more reckless and "War Doctor-like" in his attitudes..
Donna was able to bring him around and back to square a little, I think..
Hell, Eleven even used that as something of a boast in one episode (I forget which one).
Eleven is much more removed from the consequences of the Time War, probably was coming to terms with it.
I think there's a huge difference between wanting to avoid thinking or talking about the Time War and hiding away the incarnation that fought it and seeing it as not quite himself.
"I've been really, really quite careful about the numbering of the Doctors," insists Steven. "He's very specific that, the John Hurt Doctor, that he doesn't take the name of the Doctor. He doesn't call himself that. He's the same Time Lord, the same being as either Doctors either side of him, but he's the one who says 'I'm not the Doctor.' So the Eleventh Doctor is still the Eleventh Doctor, the Tenth Doctor is still the Tenth.... Technically, if you really counted it, the David Tennant Doctor is two Doctors, on account of the Meta-Crisis Doctor. It's not a matter of counting the regenerations, but of counting the faces of the Time Lord that calls himself the Doctor."
Just to further complicate matters, this is Steven Moffat's take on the regenerations.
"I've been really, really quite careful about the numbering of the Doctors," insists Steven. "He's very specific that, the John Hurt Doctor, that he doesn't take the name of the Doctor. He doesn't call himself that. He's the same Time Lord, the same being as either Doctors either side of him, but he's the one who says 'I'm not the Doctor.' So the Eleventh Doctor is still the Eleventh Doctor, the Tenth Doctor is still the Tenth.... Technically, if you really counted it, the David Tennant Doctor is two Doctors, on account of the Meta-Crisis Doctor. It's not a matter of counting the regenerations, but of counting the faces of the Time Lord that calls himself the Doctor."
The regeneration effect is really quite simple. Compared to the rest of the effects in the minisode it wouldn't even register on the budget.
That would work better if in both episodes where he appears the credits don't say "Introducing John Hurt as THE DOCTOR/THE WAR DOCTOR".
Whilst I've no problem with the Doctor shunniing this incarnation, I hope there's at least a semi-decent explanation (even if its throwaway) as to why the rest of the Universe seems to have gone along with it (well, except for Timothy Dalton who was all "Doctor" this and "Doctor" that when it seems he was talking about TWD). Especially as Hurt seems to have been around for ages and took part in a war that ranged all over the Universe.
I was wondering about the Tardis. For all we know the War Doctor left it somewhere and didn't return until he'd regenerated into Nine?
I know it won't happen, but a cool scene I thought up involved the War Doctor finding the Moment, and then instantly being betrayed by an accompanying Time Lord who tries to kill him. War Doctor kills that Time Lord but is injured severely enough and regenerates into Eccleston, who upon regenerating has an epiphany. He then storms into the Lord President's chamber, furious, and declares to Rassilon that he's bringing an end to things. Rassilon, trying to persuade him addresses him as "Valeyard" (which I had assumed the War Doctor would be addressed as). Conversation then goes as follows:
Doctor: "You can stop calling me that. I am not the Valeyard any longer."
Rassilon: "Then how do you wish to be addressed?"
Doctor: "I am the Doctor."
An epic and over the top variation of theme "I am the Doctor" plays as the Doctor turns leaves the chamber, heads to a Gallifreyan scrap yard where the TARDIS sits. We can have a brief shot of the Ninth Doctor standing outside the TARDIS within a scrap yard before he enters and the TARDIS takes off, kind of showing the nu era began in a similar manner to the classic era.
I thought it would have been cool.
Whereas both "Rose" and "Journey's End" made it seem to me that 9 was freshly regenerated - 10's talk of how 9 had been "born in fire" sounded to me like talk of the circumstances of regeneration, not something he did afterwards.I'd always had the feeling all along that it was a new Nine, rather than an old Eight, who did whatever 'it' was. That seemed to fit better both with 'Parting of the Ways' and 'Journey's End.'
Whereas both "Rose" and "Journey's End" made it seem to me that 9 was freshly regenerated - 10's talk of how 9 had been "born in fire" sounded to me like talk of the circumstances of regeneration, not something he did afterwards.
That's been some folks interpretation of the mirror scene, but it's also possible that after the events of the Time War, and his actions as Hurt, that he couldn't bear to look at himself for a long while, maybe fearing that he'd see some trace of Hurt's Doctor sill there.
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