No wonder he was so nonchalant about facing a WWI execution squad in The War Games.Well, accept the Second Doctor clearly remembered Omega and the Third Doctor in The Five Doctors. Perhaps in some cases the memory loss is gradual?
I think it was the TARDIS that was running those calculations. (Maybe it commandeered the chameleon circuit's processing ability to do it.)And if the Doctor had been working on the calculations to save Gallifrey since his first incarnation, he would have to have remembered it all up to his current self....except he didn't appear to, as it was clearly new to him.
It also explains why he is aware in The Five Doctors (itself thirty years old around now) that an older Jamie and Zoe shouldn't remember their travels with him, their memories having been wiped at the end of The War Games.There is the theory the Second Doctor was used for secret missions by the Time Lords before he was forced to regenerate. This explains why he told the Brig in the 5 Doctors he shouldn't be visiting him and how he ran into number 6 when doing work for the Time Lords.
How?
That wasn't the fourth Doctor, it was the Nth Doctor.
What about the Valeyard? Technically also a "Doctor" according to the Master. Or we have to wait for Smith to become Capaldi before we talk about him? Lol jk
I thought the episode was great. However that Zygon subplot though.... Uh a resolution would've been nice. Or was it just filler to pad out the episode?
Who Knows?
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So the timeline I worked out is.
Eight becomes Warrior
Warrior end the Time War alone using The Moment
Regens into 9th (Eccleston) for series 1
9th becomes 10th(Tennant) for series 2 -specials that ended in 2010.
10th and the Master prevent Rassilon and the Timelords from escaping the timelocked events of the Timewar. This includes preventing the Timelords from carrying out their mad plan to extinguish all life in the universe and become pure energy/conscience.
But since the earlier Doctors' memories of the crossover were erased, the last memory the Doctor has is of himself standing over the Moment with his hand on the button. And then he would've come back to himself and found himself in a universe where Gallifrey and the Daleks were assumed to have mutually destroyed each other. So he would've assumed he'd pressed the button and blacked out from the effects of the Moment.
Well, accept the Second Doctor clearly remembered Omega and the Third Doctor in The Five Doctors. Perhaps in some cases the memory loss is gradual?
I think it was the TARDIS that was running those calculations.And if the Doctor had been working on the calculations to save Gallifrey since his first incarnation, he would have to have remembered it all up to his current self....except he didn't appear to, as it was clearly new to him.
(Maybe it commandeered the chameleon circuit's processing ability to do it.)
Actually, Ten is obviously from between Waters Of Mars and End Of Time Part 1 - he talks about Queen Elizabeth in the latter, and is travelling alone - which means that by End Of Time he knows that Gallifrey wasn't destroyed, but locked into the last day of the war for all eternity.
Which in turn retroactively makes that episode make sense, since prior to it Gallifrey had been referred to as destroyed.
Whether the War Doctor ever actually did destroy it originally, or whether the Moment's conscience always did this to avoid it, we can never know - but in either case Nine thinks he did destroy it, until Ten finds out otherwise between Waters Of Mars and End Of Time. Eleven then "half remembers" bits of the events, but only really the bits interacting with Ten - partly because of the timey wimey mindey wipey effect, partly because Nine and Ten spent time trying to forget, and partly because Ten regenerated so soon after learning the truth, which always scrambles him a bit.
[Ugh, no. This should be a celebration, not a funeral dirge. Doctor Who is about fun and adventure, not endless war and death and anguish. The problem with genre fans -- and creators -- today is that we've become so obsessed with getting the genre taken seriously that we're no longer willing to just have fun. Even Superman gets a grim, depressing movie where he never really gets to be a hero.
Something else which has been getting me about this. We're told the War Doctor is a darker incarnation, the darkest in fact. What he did is so shameful that the other Doctors shun him and suppress the memory of being him. But we don't really see that. Throughout the episode he acts essentially the same as any other Doctor, just older and worn out. Sure, we see him wield a gun, but that's only to carve graffiti on a wall. Other than that the darkest and most un-Doctor thing he did was contemplate genocide. Which we had already been lead to believe the Doctor had already done so it's hardly all that shocking.
It's nice that there's now a way for The Master to appear again, though what are the chances he's now Lord President of the High Council of Time Lords by now?
No, this doesn't allow the Master to reappear again -- at least, not in the sense you're suggesting. Gallifrey was frozen at the final moment of the Time War. This does not change any of the events of the Time War itself. It merely reveals that at the final moment, Gallifrey wasn't destroyed but was actually shunted off to a pocket universe. Everything that happened in the Time War is in Gallifrey's past at this point, so none of it was affected. So the Master would already have fled and disguised himself as Professor Yana.
I wonder if they are going to do something with Susan or if that was just a way to feature Susan in the special while also doing a wink at those who thought Clara was Susan?
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