Exactly. Saying Capaldi was the first would make more sense, since he was the first of the new cycle, not that that's saying much.Then what happens the first time the cybermen or daleks comment about the doctor's appearance having changed again?
And in Lets Kill Hitler! the Tardis clearly says "Regeneration is not possible." Or maybe the doctor miscounted and thought he had another regeneration in him, only realising later that he didn't? Or maybe he thought "You know what this isn't going to work but what's the harm in trying?" Even Taking the Impossible Astronaut into account and the Teleselecta, the fake Doctor appeared to regenerate because that's what River et al would have expected to see.
The Doctor was perfectly able to lie to Mr. Clever - the whole point was that he was keeping Time Lord secrets in his half of the shared brain, including how regeneration works... so Clever wouldn't know enough to notice the shared body lacked that capability.
River's total number of regenerations was never established to be 12 either - Vastra wasn't even sure she COULD regenerate. Maybe she only got a few?
Like I've mentioned before, an alternate Doctor or a future Doctor (ala the Curator) are both real Doctors. That satisfies #2 and explains #3. So, no, not really complex.All these theories rely on ignoring the really simple mystery that is set up in the episode:
1) The dilemma set up is easy for a casual viewer to follow (see 2 and 3)
2) This is a real Doctor
2) Why does the 13th Doctor not remember this real doctor?
So most of the complex theories fall to pieces at 2 and a few fall to pieces because of 1 (Season 6b).
Like I've mentioned before, an alternate Doctor or a future Doctor (ala the Curator) are both real Doctors.
Ruled out by the Mirror. As I mentioned in the other thread, there's reason to doubt that the usually tight lipped Chibnall would go to the Mirror, and only the Mirror, to set the record straight. I'm taking the Mirror's report with a grain of salt for now.Well it's not an alternative Doctor but that has been ruled out. as for it being a future Doctor - the whole of the scene with the two doctors and Gat is to signal to the reader that this is not the case - this is reinforced by the scene with the Doctor at the end with the companions. That is the narrative purpose of both scenes.
Forget the in-universe stuff - to the casual viewer this to signal and then reinforce - "this Doctor is clearly from the past and that is the mystery we are setting up". Sure you could ignore it but then you might as well ignore all of the episode...
And in Lets Kill Hitler! the Tardis clearly says "Regeneration is not possible." Or maybe the doctor miscounted and thought he had another regeneration in him, only realising later that he didn't? Or maybe he thought "You know what this isn't going to work but what's the harm in trying?" Even Taking the Impossible Astronaut into account and the Teleselecta, the fake Doctor appeared to regenerate because that's what River et al would have expected to see.
Mind you, the part I never got was in Let's Kill Hitler, River transfers all her regeneration energy to the Doctor, it's even stated she can't regenerate anymore as a result. Since she's only on her third life, that should mean the Doctor received enough regeneration energy for ten extra lives.
And then there's the whole "I can regenerate right now" bit from Nightmare in Silver, told to someone the Doctor shouldn't be able to lie to. But of course, Neil Gaiman didn't know a whole new former Doctor was going to be introduced in the very next episode.
I don't know the answer to that, Mr. Awe. There's obviously no issue with British ex-pats (Neil Gaiman) writing for the television series, nor British ex-pats (Michael Moorcock, Lance Parkin) writing novels for BBC Books. On the flip side, Americans have written for Big Finish and comics. It does seem that a distinction is being drawn, though.
They don't buy spec scripts from anyone, for one thing. For another, the name Joe Hill won't mean anything to most people, so I wonder if they just thought, "Here's another deluded fan sending in a script thinking we'll buy it off them."
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