As I watched "The Doctor's Wife" a few times, something struck me about the cage in which Uncle had placed Idris. While she is trapped inside the cage talking to the Doctor, her hands grasp the metalwork of the cage, metalwork which forms a hexagonal framework.
We have all recently learned how much the Doctor(s) love "the round things" in the walls of the Console Room (although they have no idea what they do!), but there is another design element that we see repeated in the Console Rooms and corridors of the Tardis during the times of the most recent Doctors.
Hexagons!
Does anyone else think that the set designers for the episode "The Doctor's Wife" intended the hexagonal patterns of the cage grid work to be an allusion(?) to the interior design of the Tardis? The cage with the hexagonal pattern imprisoned Idris, just as the physical structure of this Type 40 TT capsule had held the soul of the Tardis, until she was released, enabling her to interact directly with the Doctor.
This may have just been a coincidence, but if this was intentional, I think it was a clever, subtle visual reference back to the Tardis. (Or maybe it is just very, very late here as I type this!)
We have all recently learned how much the Doctor(s) love "the round things" in the walls of the Console Room (although they have no idea what they do!), but there is another design element that we see repeated in the Console Rooms and corridors of the Tardis during the times of the most recent Doctors.
Hexagons!
Does anyone else think that the set designers for the episode "The Doctor's Wife" intended the hexagonal patterns of the cage grid work to be an allusion(?) to the interior design of the Tardis? The cage with the hexagonal pattern imprisoned Idris, just as the physical structure of this Type 40 TT capsule had held the soul of the Tardis, until she was released, enabling her to interact directly with the Doctor.
This may have just been a coincidence, but if this was intentional, I think it was a clever, subtle visual reference back to the Tardis. (Or maybe it is just very, very late here as I type this!)