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Death of the Doctor Spoilers

This is being over-thought. It's RTD. It will be one line of Sarah or The Doc mentioning he can regen perpetually or something and that's it. I doubt it will be a sit-down discussion and analysis of the properties and manipulations of regeneration....

And well it should be. The Doctor, Sarah Jane, and Jo sitting down at the table over a cuppa to talk about how regeneration works is not a good story to tell on TV.
 
Its only the Doctors that sarah jane met.

She met 5 at the same time she met 1-5. She also met 6 and 7 in Dimensions in Time. She's not met 8 or 9, as far as we now know.

She never met 5, he was in a different room. Dimenstions in Time is not canon.

I'll have to watch again, but I do see to recall Sarah Jane being in Rasillon's room at the end, when alt-1, 2, 3, and 5 all meet up, and she's with the Brig and the others.

And since there is no such thing as "canon" in Doctor Who, your argument is invalid. It's the only time Six and the Brig teamed up on-screen, so it absolutely happened. If we're going to do away with things just because they're silly, why do we have The Mind Robber on dvd? :guffaw:
 
Yep, Sarah shook hands with Five, but she didn't seem to understand that he was The Doctor. Three said he would "explain later" to her as they left.

But, I think it's evident from School Reunion that Rassilon erased the events of The Five Doctors from the memories of all the past companions (and possibly the earlier Doctors, as well).

I also believe that the Paul McGann TV movie would be better enhanced if, when he's at the party with Grace and he's about to drop the H-H-Bomb on us, it instead swiftly cuts to "MEANWHILE, ACROSS THE OCEAN..." and we see the scene of the Brigadier and Sixth Doctor's encounter. Then, the moment that's done, we switch back to Paul, Grace, and the clock-scientist dude all laughing about some joke The Doctor told.

See? One piece brought in, the other cut out. Two birds with one stone and the universe smiles. :angel: :lol:
 
I think it was Moffat who said it best: Regeneration is nothing more than a plot device to deal with casting issues. Whenever the time comes, they can adapt or change the plot device to suit the needs of the show.

The hints I've seen are that any "revelations" about the regeneration limit will be in a single (and probably rather vague) throwaway line, so I don't expect anything earth shattering.

I'm just going to sit back and enjoy the episode when it airs.
 
If they go with "No Timelords, No Limit" I can buy that; it'd make sense that they'd want to keep their kind on a "leash" as well as encourage "turn over" to keep one guy from becoming, even more so than they could be, a "God"

Has anyone actually thought that the Timelords themselves actually suspened the regeneration limit in light of the Last Great Time War? They have been able to grant extra regenerations, why not just suspend the limit? Just think even though the Timelords were one of the 'higher' species, they still resurrected Timelords that were long since dead, The Master and Rassilon. There may have only been a finite number of Timelords to fight in the war as it's intensity grew and we've seen ow the Daleks are able to survive and have an endless supply of drones, even if they do keep creating Emperors and Supremes.
 
Has anyone actually thought that the Timelords themselves actually suspened the regeneration limit in light of the Last Great Time War?
Yep.

Exidence?

1. The Doc has apparently burned through four regenerations in fewer than ten years (8 to 9, 9 to 10, 10 to 10, 10 to 11). Perhaps a bit careless of him if he's only got a few left.

2. At one point, Martha describes the Master as "immortal". This suggests that she's aware that Time Lords can regenrate indefinitely.
 
Still, that would require Martha to be unaware that Time Lords can be killed for realsies by traditional, if thorough, means. Considering she said it in the context of explaining her massively implausible anti-Doctor gun, I wouldn't trust her 100%. Especially since she only found out about regeneration when they got back to Earth from the end of the Universe and she was asking what was up with Professor Yana's voice changing.

Still, doesn't mean that they couldn't or didn't remove the limit for the War. And they could still die, it'd just make it harder for the older or more careless members of their society.
 
^The Doc first mentioned regeneration to Martha when he thought he was going to die in 42. Personally, I really loved that moment. It showed that he was genuinely scared because he was trying to warn her about his imminent pseudo-death. I don't remember him ever reaching that point in a crisis where it wasn't his final stand, save the cop-out-regen in Stolen Earth. :techman:
 
Has anyone actually thought that the Timelords themselves actually suspened the regeneration limit in light of the Last Great Time War?
Yep.

Exidence?

1. The Doc has apparently burned through four regenerations in fewer than ten years (8 to 9, 9 to 10, 10 to 10, 10 to 11). Perhaps a bit careless of him if he's only got a few left.

Slight problem with your math ... There's at least 100 years between Waters of Mars and End of Time. As the Doctor steps out of the Tardis, he says so to Ood Sigma.

Additionally, we still have no idea just how much time passed in the episode "Rose." At the end, the Doctor flies off in the Tardis. Then, seconds later - from Rose's perspective - the Tardis reappears. While it's possible Nine took off and came right back, it's equally possible he went off and had hundreds of adventures with dozens of companions before deciding to come back for Rose. We already know he was around for JFK's assassination, the Titanic, and other events, thanks to the same episode.
 
in The five doctors the timelords proved they could grant more regenerations when they offered the Master another full cycle for his help

Assuming they were telling the truth when they told the Master that. Who's to say they weren't just BSing him?

^ Occam and his razor.

Why? What's not simple about suggesting that the Time Lords were lying to the Master? Remember who actually TOLD the Master that. Borusa! And we all know how reliable he was...
 
^The Doc first mentioned regeneration to Martha when he thought he was going to die in 42. Personally, I really loved that moment. It showed that he was genuinely scared because he was trying to warn her about his imminent pseudo-death. I don't remember him ever reaching that point in a crisis where it wasn't his final stand, save the cop-out-regen in Stolen Earth. :techman:

It was actually one of the only things I really enjoyed in that episode. If only it had been used to sell a threat in a better story.

But, still, all he had the chance to say was that "something" happens if he's about to die. He didn't really described it... well, on screen, he didn't really describe it at all as a means of avoiding death, but either way, Martha's reaction in "Drums" indicated she didn't know about it.

MARTHA:
Who is he, anyway? And that voice at the end, that wasn’t the professor.

JACK:
If the Master’s a Time Lord, he must have regenerated.

MARTHA:
What does that mean?

JACK:
Means he’s changed his face, voice, body, everything. New man.
 
Has anyone actually thought that the Timelords themselves actually suspened the regeneration limit in light of the Last Great Time War?
Yep.

Exidence?

1. The Doc has apparently burned through four regenerations in fewer than ten years (8 to 9, 9 to 10, 10 to 10, 10 to 11). Perhaps a bit careless of him if he's only got a few left.

Slight problem with your math ... There's at least 100 years between Waters of Mars and End of Time. As the Doctor steps out of the Tardis, he says so to Ood Sigma.

It was 100 years for the rest of time, not the Doctor. He was still only 906 when he was speaking to Wilf later, and was 907 in Flesh and Stone.
 
There some claims that the limit mentioned in Death of the Doctor is
507
. I'll laugh if it is, the chronics will go mad trying to come up for a rational reason for the number. :guffaw:
 
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