I didn't know Sixie wore fine Rubin Brothers suits!It was returned to Gene Rayburn’s storage unit…
I didn't know Sixie wore fine Rubin Brothers suits!It was returned to Gene Rayburn’s storage unit…
I didn't know Sixie wore fine Rubin Brothers suits!
It was returned to Gene Rayburn’s storage unit…
How is that fantasy? The TARDIS is a sentient artificial intelligence. The frequency with which the Doctor arrives exactly at the peak of a world-shaking crisis would be vanishingly improbable if his travels were random, so it actually makes things immensely more plausible and logical if the sentient A.I. in control of the TARDIS is consciously directing the travels the Doctor believes to be random. Heck, I (and no doubt many others) came to that conclusion decades before Neil Gaiman made it canonical, because it makes things more believable that way. Which is the opposite of straying into fantasy.
Although I'll agree that these framing scenes did have a sense of sentimental mysticism to them, treating the TARDIS as a magic wish-granting box that responds to feelings and nostalgia.
Because the show did say it plain out early on that the Doctor wasn't able to control it.
By 1988, it was clear he was able to control it thanks to that fan-renowned story "Silver Nemesis". Arguably earlier, with the Doctor simply forgetting to be precise in piloting the thing. Until the 80s, the show had an amazing record of keeping the Doctor from being able to pilot it for plotting sake.
The first and third Doctors both referred to the telepathic circuits far differently, and even the third in "Planet of the Daleks" citing the Time Lords piloted the TARDIS as a result of his using the telepathic circuits to contact them over the seriousness of the issue. The first also referenced the machine very distinctly in 'The Edge of Destruction" that also counters Modern Who's newfound claims, with "think not as you or I do", which quickly rules out anthropomorphizing. In-universe, it's not due to any AI magically doing shtick. There's greater plausibility. That, or the Doctor had no clue, since day one, despite having notes on how to work the machine until those were lost, that the computer apparently liking it when he calls her "Sexy" ("The Doctor's Wife") -- yup, it's fantasy and Gaiman is an accomplished writer in the Fantasy genre. "Neverwhere" is something of a classic, even the television adaptation...
Last I recall, the classic era was on Earth for about 50% of the time.
Fair points about how the TARDIS could end up taking the Doctor where civilizations needed help or when companions had to be hauled back home until the next time they're ready for another (usually offscreen, but not always, adventure)... and that's another reason to revisit the unmade season 23 (which story was it? I loved the novelizations of the first three, and there was the Bidmead audio that was okay... I know there were a couple others that I need to check out for sure...)
The new series ended up on modern day Earth so often that it became hard to tell, at least for the first few years. Especially as the Doctor grins and states he loves it there, while seven previous incarnations generally griped over "Earth, again" as budget issues meant the show had to take place on Earth for 50% of the time. Last I recall, the classic era was on Earth for about 50% of the time. The modern era was so far above that percentage for the longest time that it'd be too easy to forget, and I don't give an owl over Jack and the gang laughing in a fast food joint talking about their fun on planet Zovirax. "Show vs tell", as people kept bringing that up in Chibnall's era when it was a definite issue from previous eras all the same. But I digress - Whitaker's era started out with the notion that it couldn't, but the makers weren't consistent. Arguably couldn't be... with the new credo of how the machine can haul the Doctor around, it may as well be a write-off. The classic era was so good at not having to deal with these issues yet still come across credibly, even despite the slow pacing of the otherwise zany-and-swingin' 60s at times...
And, yes, it has always been fantasy - as well as sci-fi. But the tone has clearly been different. And that's where maybe I and other fans are conflating "fantasy" for "tone" or "content". Especially when people refer to "the brakes" regarding the TARDIS's landing procedure in the modern series, when the classic one had the Doctor chiding how "this doesn't roll along on wheels you know" - that's one fun example and without even mentioning "The Pirate Planet", back when the classic era was almost at its most tired and silliest, based on UK media articles circa 1979/80... Various producers invariably come in and change the tone and not all fans like all the changes.
And, yes, there have been improvements to the show that do transcend the annals of time. Casting is a big plus. Pacing is arguably too rapid if not rabid nowadays, but compared to some of the sloggiest episodes from the 60s, padding to extend the budget, that's a fair point.
But even Andrew Cartmel has opined against the sonic screwdriver's overuse. That magic wand was belittled in the late-70s, to the point JNT took notice and took the thing out of the show... now it's back, and used more and more, right down to stupid scripting stating "It's my swiss army sonic" to do anything right on cue. I know the show has used it before, and deus ex machina, but the last I checked, most fans who hate those things now have been equally against the classic era's overuse and/or misuse of its original intent as well. Nowadays, it's clearly a flanderized lampoon, to the point people balk at it. It'd be ironic if they are derided as having a metaphorical stick up somewhere since there's a joke about the sonic screwdriver just waiting to happen about that as well.
I'm not going to cite every last source, but here's a couple:
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/Flanderization
(yup, what works on characters can work on plotlines, props, you name it. The sonic is a flanderization and has been since 2005 if not 2006 and has only gotten a magnitude worse since.)
https://www.doctorwhotv.co.uk/andre...-depletes-the-mystery-of-doctor-who-93918.htm
I think I posted it recently anyway, but Cartmel - who did a ton of work for the show's final two years, which have aged quite well - is definitely on point. It's a timeless issue. (and, yep, I'm not as much up in arms over "the timeless children" as others, partly because Jo Martin's interpretation of the rule really hit the mark (she made a snark about the magic wand as well and that was eminently refreshing as far as scenes go), and also because as something had to be done to get rid of the regeneration limitation problem that was introduced in the 70s - for which nobody can blame JNT for killing the show in that regard when Robert Holmes put in a deliberate "use by" date of sorts, even if there was an ultimate climax that was to be built upon that plot point that never got reached. Supposedly; I've read on other issues (e.g. cyber time lords introduced for the unused script "The Six Doctors" - which isn't a bad idea either, IMHO), but not as much exists definitively for the Holmes/Hinchcliffe masterplan...
The regen limit was already explicitly fixed by Moffat. The entire finale of the Eleventh Doctor revolves around him being the thirteenth, and then getting a top up and reset. It was done and dusted, even if the Master hadn’t already blown the concept to pieces throughout that characters at . (Which is why it would work better, and definitively still would work better, if the actual Timeless Child was the Master. The only downside being that he has already been made into a tragic figure of victim turned evil both onscreen and offscreen, with marginal success. Something that probably couldn’t be allowed by someone who thought Davros was bad representation as opposed to a cautionary tale.)
The Cartmel era, and the literature that followed it, is by far the most plundered and ever-so-slightly bastardised era of Who, and to an extent the modern TV production *is still doing it* with diminishing returns.
A reset... but just handed a new set of lives to later run out of again?
Not necessarily. In "Kill the Moon," the Doctor speculated that he might've gotten more than twelve regenerations, and that he could potentially get shot over and over again and never actually run out, and in "Hell Bent," Rassilon confirmed it when he said when he said even he wasn't sure how many regenerations the Time Lords gave the Doctor, but he was more than willing to zap him over and over until he stayed dead. An ambiguously existent, but unfixed, limit, so a future writer could play with the idea of the Doctor being on their last life at some point, but wouldn't necessarily have to, or have it imposed on them. Something we avoided, since Moffat decided to get it over with as soon as the opportunity presented itself with the invention of the War Doctor, even though it suggests the Doctor himself was surprised the Tenth Doctor's abortive regeneration counted and didn't realize he was out until the first time he really tried to do it (or, alternatively, that there was another secret incarnation even he didn't remember and he assumed it was because of the abortive regeneration, if they decide to slip the Renegade Doctor in between Two and Three).
Yes, which is exactly what leads to the idea that the TARDIS was choosing where to go. Think about it. In the early years, there were no gaps between the serials. The end of one led directly into the start of another. That means that every time the TARDIS landed somewhere, it was in the middle of a dangerous and important situation. There's no way that would plausibly happen by random chance. Some guiding hand must have been taking the TARDIS to those places intentionally, and if the Doctor wasn't in control, that only left the TARDIS.
I can immediately think of an exception to that - The Romans. Yes, the TARDIS lands and topples over, but it is well-overgrown with the team settled in a villa before the 'action' begins.
But even Andrew Cartmel has opined against the sonic screwdriver's overuse. That magic wand was belittled in the late-70s, to the point JNT took notice and took the thing out of the show... now it's back, and used more and more, right down to stupid scripting stating "It's my swiss army sonic" to do anything right on cue. I know the show has used it before, and deus ex machina, but the last I checked, most fans who hate those things now have been equally against the classic era's overuse and/or misuse of its original intent as well. Cartmel - who did a ton of work for the show's final two years, which have aged quite well - is definitely on point...
It has been used to blow locks…maybe act as a remote for instruments actually mounted on the TARDIS itself, perhaps.
What puzzles me are things it hasn’t been used for…
Has it ever been used to shatter glass?
I don’t remember it having been so used—and that would seem to be the most obvious application.
Has it ever been used to shatter glass?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.