I'll be quite disappointed if Capaldi's first episode doesn't deal with the continuation of the Trenzalore standoff.
Do you seriously think Moffat would leave something like that hanging? I mean that would be like if "The Day of the Doctor" made no reference to Clara's jump into The Doctor's timeline and didn't bother to explain how Clara and The Doctor got out of there.
If I were writing the first episode, it wouldn't have anything to do with "The Time of the Doctor". It would be a standalone story set on present day Earth, where Clara has to defeat aliens while dragging along a less-than-helpful post-generation Doctor.
That's a good idea. Maybe the Doctor could sleep through 2/3rds of the episode to get better... oh wait!
Hopefully, Clara just gives him some tea off the bat. Super-heated infusion of free-radicals and tannins, just the thing for healing the synapses.
So why doesn't the doctor just say "it is not a safe location" and they leave?
The problem with the episode as presented is that there is a missing bit of dialogue where it is explained why they can't happen.
Personally, I figure he had chats with the Time Lords over the years, filling them in on everything they missed. Especially in the years after Handles malfunctioned.
Yeah, but he also said, she has been fighting the psychopath inside her all her life, so she can do it again now against the Dalek. That screams River to me, plus minor stuff like her being against aging, able to fly the TARDIS and a seemingly rich history with the Doctor.
Yeah, but he also said, she has been fighting the psychopath inside her all her life, so she can do it again now against the Dalek. That screams River to me, plus minor stuff like her being against aging, able to fly the TARDIS and a seemingly rich history with the Doctor.
I'm forced to agree. I was getting River vibes from her throughout the whole episode, especially during the psychopath line.
Maybe River's consciousness in the Library somehow becomes the Papal Mainframe or something...somewhere down the road.
Although this does become contradicted by Tesha's surprise at his "new" body.
I still say Tasha Lem is the love child of Jack and River.
I'm so tired of Moffat. I can't wait for him to be replaced. As such, I won't be watching Doctor Who again until he is.
If I had a penny everytime someone said that...
You'd have a lot of pennies. Where's the folks who've enjoyed both RTD and Moffat's tenures?
I love them both. Yes, they've both had their weaknesses and cliches, but that's part of what makes me love them so much.
That being said, I do believe, overall, Moffat was a better writer, episode-wise, when he wrote while RTD was at the helm. When the next showrunner comes, I do hope Moffat, unlike RTD, writes episodes for them.
Was there any indication how long the 7th Doctor had lived prior to falling victim of a second rate cardiologist?
Been a long time since I saw the TV movie but I recall that in the opening narrative, there's a line along the lines of 'I was coming towards the end of my 7th incarnation.' No years specified, though.
I took that to be foreshadowing more than any indication of old age (essentially, he was saying that he was about to die and regenerate).
Especially since McGann is narrating, which would make it all past-tense. He'd know that his seventh incarnation was nearing its end in the streets of San Francisco.