The Baby Dinosaur used to like to smack him in the head with a pot and shout, "Not The Doctor, Not The Doctor"Doctor No?
Honestly, this entire discussion makes obvious the fact that the idea behind the War Doctor was, at best, not a bright one. Handled well enough for a time, I suppose, but whats apparent from this is that, it REALLY should've been either Eight or Nine interacting with the Moment there, and not a made-up-for-no-good-reason Doctor.
Agreed. A full circle of unhappiness, brought by the Time War.While I thought John Hurt was awesome, I'll always think that it could have worked with McGann. Rather than a regeneration, it could have been a case of the Eighth abandoning his original costume and long locks in lieu of the more soldiery costume and shorter hair he had in "Night of the Doctor" anyway. The angst of the Time War would still be there, but there also could have been a point of how the once dashing and optimistic Eighth Doctor we saw in the '96 movie eventually became the exact opposite of that during the conflict, IMO.
While I thought John Hurt was awesome, I'll always think that it could have worked with McGann. Rather than a regeneration, it could have been a case of the Eighth abandoning his original costume and long locks in lieu of the more soldiery costume and shorter hair he had in "Night of the Doctor" anyway. The angst of the Time War would still be there, but there also could have been a point of how the once dashing and optimistic Eighth Doctor we saw in the '96 movie eventually became the exact opposite of that during the conflict, IMO.
I totally agree. And the irony is that in Moffat's "Night of the Doctor," we see the beginnings of how the Eighth Doctor could have gone that route.While I thought John Hurt was awesome, I'll always think that it could have worked with McGann. Rather than a regeneration, it could have been a case of the Eighth abandoning his original costume and long locks in lieu of the more soldiery costume and shorter hair he had in "Night of the Doctor" anyway. The angst of the Time War would still be there, but there also could have been a point of how the once dashing and optimistic Eighth Doctor we saw in the '96 movie eventually became the exact opposite of that during the conflict, IMO.
Reminds me of an interview Moffat did at the time Night of the Doctor went online in which he says that he couldn't imagine the Eighth Doctor as depicted in the telemovie fighting the Time War which was why it was a plot point that the Doctor wasn't involved with the Time War prior to regenerating and becoming the War Doctor. Which I think is a missed opportunity to have shown Paul McGann play a Doctor worn out by constant stress and fighting and show just how war can change people.
I'm inclined to think that "Day of the Doctor" would have been left largely unchanged except that Eccleston would have played perhaps a newly-regenerated Doctor about to make the fateful decision to end the Time War.I do wonder how things would have turned out if Eccleston had agreed to do it.
I think that would have only pertained to the final moments of "The Name of the Doctor" and the revelation of a lost incarnation.Even if the story isn't much different plot-wise, it would change dramatically theme-wise if it were Eccleston. The idea of a secret Doctor and a past he considers shameful is quite different than what it would be if the 9th Doctor we've seen did it.
I think that would have only pertained to the final moments of "The Name of the Doctor" and the revelation of a lost incarnation.Even if the story isn't much different plot-wise, it would change dramatically theme-wise if it were Eccleston. The idea of a secret Doctor and a past he considers shameful is quite different than what it would be if the 9th Doctor we've seen did it.
As far as "The Day of the Doctor," though, it really would have been not that much different theme-wise with Eccleston, IMO, as it was primarily about the Doctor(s) facing what he did during the Time War.
And yet, McGann in it might have been an even better idea, and I say this as a Ninth Doctor fan mostly. Because the scorned/rejected Doctor card could've still been played with him - and in a meta way, it would've reflected many Who fans' own rejection of the Eighth due to the TV film's failure and such. Plus, his last appearence would essentially be a special, and a movie event, similarly but quite unlike the TV Movie. I would have loved that.
What would've been different, though, would probably be Time of the Doctor. With Smith only the second-to-last Doctor, I can't imagine the story would actually carry the same weight as it does with that being the Doctor's last stand. But, personally, I'd trade that to have either Eccleston or McGann back for The Day of the Doctor.
and by acknowledging the aborted regeneration in Journey's End
I think if Eccelston had agreed to do "The Day of the Doctor," it just would have been him stepping out of the shadows in "The Name of the Doctor" instead of Hurt. Not as a forgotten Doctor, but one who still "broke the promise" by what he did to end the Time War.I think that would have only pertained to the final moments of "The Name of the Doctor" and the revelation of a lost incarnation.Even if the story isn't much different plot-wise, it would change dramatically theme-wise if it were Eccleston. The idea of a secret Doctor and a past he considers shameful is quite different than what it would be if the 9th Doctor we've seen did it.
As far as "The Day of the Doctor," though, it really would have been not that much different theme-wise with Eccleston, IMO, as it was primarily about the Doctor(s) facing what he did during the Time War.
Yeah, Day of the Doctor really didn't do anything with the "forgotten Doctor" concept, and had it been Eccleston or even McGann I don't see the end result being too different from what we got. Name of the Doctor would have had the greater impact since revealing a forgotten Doctor is the plot twist that served as the cliffhanger.
Actually, that is an interesting thought, what would the original ending to Name of the Doctor have been had Eccleston agreed to Day? Obviously, you can't sell Eccleston as a forgotten Doctor and there's no real reason Clara wouldn't have recognized him. Or would it have just been an Eccleston cameo, him and Smith exchange dialogue as a means of getting the fans' blood pumping in anticipation of the 50th?
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