The RTD explanation would fit that bill just as nice.I don't suppose they need to explain why Amy looked like the soothsayer or whatever she was in Fires of Pompeii like they are making something of the Doctor looking like Caecilius.
The RTD explanation would fit that bill just as nice.I don't suppose they need to explain why Amy looked like the soothsayer or whatever she was in Fires of Pompeii like they are making something of the Doctor looking like Caecilius.
The RTD explanation would fit that bill just as nice.I don't suppose they need to explain why Amy looked like the soothsayer or whatever she was in Fires of Pompeii like they are making something of the Doctor looking like Caecilius.
What was the RTD explanation?
Explain. Explain.
Well, actually I was thinking of that throwaway line in Journey's End where Ten and Rose comment on how the female lead from Torchwood looks like the the maid in The Unquiet Dead. I can't quite remember what it was.What was the RTD explanation?
Explain. Explain.
RTD had an explanation for why John Frobisher looked like Cacaelius (or however it's spelled). Cacaelius was supposed to die at Pompeii but he didn't, so the universe recreated him and snuffed out his bloodline two millennia later.
Moffat apparently saw a way of tying this into the Doctor.
Yeah, he no longer flails like a fish. I think "Last Christmas" marked the change. He's not going to quibble over stupid stuff when he gets a second chance to travel with his best friend.This trailer and the last one had a huge revelation. The twelfth doctor is finally accepting hugs from Clara.
What was the RTD explanation?
Explain. Explain.
RTD had an explanation for why John Frobisher looked like Cacaelius (or however it's spelled). Cacaelius was supposed to die at Pompeii but he didn't, so the universe recreated him and snuffed out his bloodline two millennia later.
Moffat apparently saw a way of tying this into the Doctor.
The putative RTD explanation doesn't exactly inspire confidence; it sounds like pointless fan service at best. Hopefully there'll be some decent explanation of why the Doctor's face is familiar to him and why he chose it, but really I say that because of the scene in Deep Breath. Frobisher was on an adults-only TV show and Caecilius appeared briefly in DW about seven years ago. Other than the fact that the Doctor seemed to recognise his new face, it seems that the proposed solution lacks a problem as far as Doctor Who's core viewership is concerned.
I don't suppose they need to explain why Amy looked like the soothsayer or whatever she was in Fires of Pompeii like they are making something of the Doctor looking like Caecilius.
What was the RTD explanation?
Explain. Explain.
RTD had an explanation for why John Frobisher looked like Cacaelius (or however it's spelled). Cacaelius was supposed to die at Pompeii but he didn't, so the universe recreated him and snuffed out his bloodline two millennia later.
Moffat apparently saw a way of tying this into the Doctor.
Which really doesn't make much sense. If Cacaelius and his family were supposed to die at Pompeii couldn't the universe arranged an accident for them on their trip back to Rome as opposed to waiting two thousand years and eliminating his descendants?
With the Doctor, it given then story potential, if nothing else.
With the Doctor, it given then story potential, if nothing else.
Meh, we've lasted thirty years without an explanation for why the Sixth Doctor looks like Maxil, or why the Fifth looks like one of the faces optioned in The War Games. Or nearly fifty years for why the Second looks like Salamander. It's debatable whether we really need to learn why the Twelfth looks like these two guys.
What's next, an actual explanation regarding who the Curator is?
Ep 1/2:
"This is the opening two-parter. It features lots of Daleks and this time we mean it! Clara receives a mysterious summons and has to team up with Missy to search for the Doctor in a very, very old place."
Ep 3/4:
"This two parter is written by Toby Whithouse and features an underwater base plagued by creeping ghosts and an island that is about to be submerged in water. But who or what is doing this and how can the Doctor stop it? It's very scary, atmospheric and claustrophobic, much like some Classic episodes."
Ep 5/6:
"Those two are exceptional! Doctor Who meets Game of Thrones! Well, only because Maisie Williams is in them. The first part features Vikings fighting mercenary robots (and a dragon!) and the second one sees a group of Highwaymen dealing with a norse God".
Ep 7/8:
"This one is written by Peter Harness and Day of the Doctor acted as a prologue to it. In it, the Zygons made peace with the Humans, but not every Zygon decided it was okay so they'be been raising an army, silently and now they're rising against UNIT! We've been planning this forever and Osgood is in it! But how is that possible you'd ask? Missy killed her! Who knows? Well, we know."
Ep 9:
"This is a very unique Doctor Who story from Mark Gatiss. It wasn't possible to do such an episode ten years ago, when the show came back and Mark has been rewriting it over and over again to make it perfect. It's a beautiful story, very eerie and special, I think it's going to be an instant Classic."
Ep 10:
"An episode which leapt out as "why haven't we done this already? This is so Doctor Who we should be doing this immediately". And when Sarah Dollard walked in with the finalised script, it was even better! Really, this is going to be a fan-favorite, everyone will want to rewatch it."
Ep 11/12:
"A challenge. I won't say anything else because it would be too spoilery, but when you'll watch it, you're going to ask how exactly the Doctor and Clara are going to pull it off."
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