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Thread: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
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2021-09-28, 05:55 AM (ISO 8601)
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2021-09-28, 06:23 AM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
To add to what's already been said, I feel like bringing The Master back so soon* after Moffat gave them what may be the most fitting end for their character ever (literally stopped by her own past from becoming a better person, ending in them backstabbing themself twice), especially since the new Master just brushes away all the character development that happened.
Also, the whole thing of having Gallifrey be destroyed, off-screen and casually by the Master. At least when RTD took the toybox away he justified it with an epic war and made the consequences of that be integral to the Doctor's character. This just feels mean. Especially since the relevant episode keep referencing older, Gallifrey-centric episodes.
And the whole Timeless Child thing. IT adds nothing to the Doctor's character except making her that god-like figure that's the basis for Time Lord society. She's no longer a run-of-the mill Time Lord that rebelled against the corruption they saw in their own people and does good for the sake of it, passing through. She's now someone who fled the people who exploited her and saves-the-universe because she's super-duper special. Chibnall is hardly the first show-runner to give the Doctor this kind of dimension to their character, but it's especially grating this time. In particular because I feel this was done to definitely remove the 12 regeneration limit (even though both the Doctor and Rassilon stated that the Doctor had received an unknown number of new regenerations, possibly infinite like Rassilon, so there was no need) and to validate the Morbius Doctor theory which I never liked**.
And to beat a dead horse, Thirteen ended up feeling very bland, like Five or movie-Eight (I am told he gets much better in Big Finish and assorted expanded universe stuff) did.
And the companions were handled very weirdly despite all of them being good on paper. Except Graham. Graham's great.
Agreed. Also, Fyraltari.
*We all knew The Master would come back but I think a longer wait was necessary to lait the character "rest" so to speak.
**Yes, I know that one is highly subjective, and hypocritical of me since I thought they were going to validate the "Season 6B" theory, which I like. Sue me.
Edit:
they're underrated.
I fear you are correct. I ahd hoped we'd get like two-three female Doctors to establish firmly this was not a one off before some sort of (ir)regular flip-flopping.
Not directed at you in particular, but why is Whittaker the only actor to play the Doctor people refer to with her first name rather than last? Like, people go "Eccleston, Tennant, Smith and Capaldi" not "Christopher, David, Matt and Peter".
Okay, I tell a lie, people tend to give Matt Smith his full name. Why is that?
EDIT2:
No, she was confirmed to be playing a previously-unknown past incarnation of the Doctor, not a future one.Last edited by Fyraltari; 2021-09-28 at 06:29 AM.
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2021-09-28, 08:13 AM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
About the next doctor:
https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-r...ext-doctor-who
What makes it more credible is RTD's return.
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2021-09-28, 09:23 AM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
Explanation 1: Outside of standard mild misogynist standard where many people (including the media) treat women with less respect than men and therefore will default to more casual way to approach, I'd argue Whittaker is hard to spell?
Explanation 2: Matt Smith is literally 2 syllables. Eccleston's surname is literally longer to say than Matt Smith's entire name.
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2021-09-28, 09:43 AM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
Bad RTD can be really bad (Love & Monsters, Fear Her, Aliens in London) but good RTD is near the pinnacle of NuWho - Midnight, Turn Left, Partners in Crime, Gridlock etc. More importantly however and very unlike Chibnall, RTD has proven he can do overarching plots very well - Bad Wolf, Utopia, and Doomsday all proved that. Three major plots to Chibnall's one, that have remained beloved staples of the modern era to this day, meanwhile the one Chibnall is working on we don't even know will be any good yet.
Whoops, sorry
For starters, because there are multiple who-adjacent folks with most of those names. "Chris" could be Eccleston or Chibnall, "Peter" could be Capaldi or Davison, "Matt" usually gets his full name anyway and Tennant is how he's referred to everywhere. Second, most of the famous "Whittakers" up till now like Forest and Robert have been male, so using her first name makes it clearer who we're talking about. Jodie is also shorter to type and she's the only one.
I also think people use solo family names for actresses less often in general. A lot of family names also just end up sounding more masculine, probably because wives and children have been taking their husbands' for centuries. You'll come across a ton more last names in English that end with "-son" than "-datter" etc as a result. Consider ScarJo - "Johannson" is a pretty masculine name, so calling her just that would be weird.Plague Doctor by Crimmy
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2021-09-28, 10:23 AM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
First, I have to say I am very much not a fan of Whittaker's run. I realize this might not be a popular take.
Spoiler: Griping about Thirteen's eraThere's really nothing I've found that worked right, and the entire two seasons/series have been a gigantic middle finger to the franchise, either by virtue of the sheer lack of effort or the flagrant dismissal or mockery of what came before.
Whittaker herself is probably the least of the problems. She could almost work in a well-written show, if it weren't for the fact that she has no personal investment in it. She refused to watch the seasons that came before her, and, to my knowledge, never settled on a personality of her own besides "quirky Ten/Eleven mishmash". Some traits carry on between Doctors, yes, but they are always distinct - Ten is war-weary socialite who wants to be part of the universe he's saved so often, while Eleven is rebellious man-child who realizes he's on his last regeneration and clings to his youthful energy to resist the anger and frustration that's been building up in him for so long.
The writing is the main problem. They brought in people with no sci-fi (much less Who-adjacent) writing experience who were far more interested in making statements than constructing a cohesive and entertaining plot. You make statements FAR more effectively when these statements are couched in an engaging presentation. The volume on the subtext cannot be louder than the text itself, if you will. Beyond this, they were inconsistent with Thirteen to an almost comical degree, one episode claiming in disgust that she hates conspiracies, only to (not long after) declare she loves conspiracies. I mean, I wouldn't have had a problem if she'd connected the two opinions (i.e. "You know, I hate conspiracies. But I do love cracking them open. So satisfying!"), but they just didn't care enough to maintain consistency.
I'm very against the Timeless Child twist. It ruins the very core of the Doctor. Not that they've always been male, but rather that they've never been "Special". What made the Doctor compelling, in my opinion, was that they were extremely intelligent, brave, compassionate, and relentless, but never special. They were just someone who looked at the world around them and said "This isn't who I want to be", and then (and this is the what makes them unique) did something about it. Ten wasn't the "Lonely God" because forty sages foretold his birth or because two divine entities got affectionate one day, he was just the one that survived - if you could even call it that.
I'm very conflicted about Davies coming back, mainly because I don't know if this is a PR move or an attempt to genuinely get the show back on the right track. If it's a PR stunt, Davies will be nothing more than a face to flash at critics and he'll be forced to follow the same path that has led here. If he's shackled by network notes and directives, this will do nothing but cast an unfortunate light on the Nine and Ten's runs, making a genuinely impressive achievement of resurrecting a deprecated franchise look trite by demonstrating how limited the show-runner's input actually might be.
If it's a genuine effort, well, then I have some hope. If I had my druthers, we'd pretend 13 never happened just to do the one thing I desperately wished they had done: Give 12 (Peter Capaldi) the quality of writing to match the quality of his acting. The man gave 120% in his entire run, but the writing was generally so lackluster he tended do drown in the mediocrity around him. Look at Heaven Sent to see what Capaldi was capable of with a good script. Even with bad scripts he tended to be the saving grace of otherwise weak episodes. I would be overjoyed if he had a chance to really show what he could do. I mean, I doubt they'll just retcon three seasons, but I'd be happy if they even brought him back as an arc character. Capaldi nailed the chemistry when working with Tennant and Smith, as well as David Bradley.
Honestly, though, I'd just be happy if they started telling compelling stories again, maybe recast some previous events in a more coherent light. The Timeless Child story, for example, would be far better with one alteration. The child in question was Susan, not the Doctor. Maybe the Doctor was Tecteun, and regret for her cruelty is why the Doctor became what they did. Maybe Hartnell really was the first, and saw what was being done to Susan and simply said "No More." Either would be extremely compelling, I believe, and would do wonders for salvaging the Doctor from the wreck that story turned them into. Hell, if Tecteun was the Doctor's original incarnation, maybe that could explain why Thirteen is so... inconsistent, an incarnation pulling from non-Doctor aspects of their history, and the internal conflict making it hard to find her center. Or they could say she's just been out of practice being female - it has been over two thousand years, after all.
As for the next Doctor, I think it'll probably be a white male, yes. Not because that's the only thing that people will accept, but because they need to tag back to past stability and familiarity before stepping back out into new territory. Kind of like how people suspect that the Force Awakens was a retread of the original trilogy as an effort to rebuild the faith of the fanbase that they understood the legacy. Gender and skin color should not matter for the Doctor, they are supposed to be alien - wrapped in a familiar skin, yes, but absolutely alien. If a good actor/actress is supported by good writing, they could excel at it. Jo Grant, for example, would make a fine Doctor if given clean starting point. This era, however, had a weak actress and horrible writing, and then doubled and tripled down by making franchise-changing retcons to the story that make it impossible to neatly clean up if it wasn't well received.
Me, I'm not charging back to watch the show again, but I will pay attention. If they manage to salvage this mess, I'll buy the season later and catch up on it. But if it's true that they're bringing Michelle Gomez back in the Thirteen's last season, maybe they can start to find a way back.Spoiler: My inventory:
1 Sentient Sword
1 Jammy Dodger (I was promised tea)
1 Godwin Point.
Originally Posted by Kairos Theodosian
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2021-09-28, 10:40 AM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
Warning: This posting may contain wit, wisdom, pathos, irony, satire, sarcasm and puns. And traces of nut.
"The main skill of a good ruler seems to be not preventing the conflagrations but rather keeping them contained enough they rate more as campfires." Rogar Demonblud
"Hold on just a d*** second. UK has spam callers that try to get you to buy conservatories?!? Even y'alls spammers are higher class than ours!" Peelee
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2021-09-28, 10:46 AM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
Didn't Chibnall run a big chunk of Torchwood? I agree with most of your other complaints, but that show is definitely both sci-fi and Who-adjacent.
(I think a big problem is that it was also ensemble-cast, which Doctor Who very much is not, and Chibnall tried his damndest to jam that square peg into the round hole.)
I'm going to reserve judgment on this until I see how it plays out. I don't think it's realistic to say there should be nothing at all special about the Doctor relative to other Time Lords (the Bad Wolf entity picked him/her during the War after all). But above all I don't think everything we're being told about this twist is going to end up being the true, or at least not the whole truth.
With that said, Chibnall will now have had three seasons to take it somewhere interesting, so if he fails to do so it'll be a pretty big misstep.
I disagree, I think another female doctor is just what the show needs. This would show that the BBC isn't going to rush back to their comfort zone at the first sign of turbulence. It would also vindicate Jodie by helping to prove that her performance wasn't this incarnation's main issue.
More Missy would be amazing.Last edited by Psyren; 2021-09-28 at 10:53 AM.
Plague Doctor by Crimmy
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2021-09-28, 10:51 AM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
Missy has been my favourite Master.
she had.. nuances that are often missing from the Master. I prefer the Master to be a scheming machiavellian genious, not a ranting madman who happens to have done EVILLLLLLLL
Missy had great plans, but also she had her low moments when she had to cooperate. Her teaming up with Clara was great on Skarros. Great and scary, WHICH IS WHAT SHOULD BE WHEN YOU TEAM UP WITH THE MASTER
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2021-09-28, 11:54 AM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
It's not, though. It's "White" and "taker" mashed together
Explanation 2: Matt Smith is literally 2 syllables. Eccleston's surname is literally longer to say than Matt Smith's entire name.
No, problem.
For starters, because there are multiple who-adjacent folks with most of those names. "Chris" could be Eccleston or Chibnall, "Peter" could be Capaldi or Davison, "Matt" usually gets his full name anyway and Tennant is how he's referred to everywhere. Second, most of the famous "Whittakers" up till now like Forest and Robert have been male, so using her first name makes it clearer who we're talking about. Jodie is also shorter to type and she's the only one.
I also think people use solo family names for actresses less often in general. A lot of family names also just end up sounding more masculine, probably because wives and children have been taking their husbands' for centuries. You'll come across a ton more last names in English that end with "-son" than "-datter" etc as a result. Consider ScarJo - "Johannson" is a pretty masculine name, so calling her just that would be weird.
I have yet to find someone calling themselves a fan of those seasons.
She refused to watch the seasons that came before her
I'm very against the Timeless Child twist. It ruins the very core of the Doctor. Not that they've always been male, but rather that they've never been "Special". What made the Doctor compelling, in my opinion, was that they were extremely intelligent, brave, compassionate, and relentless, but never special. They were just someone who looked at the world around them and said "This isn't who I want to be", and then (and this is the what makes them unique) did something about it.
Ten wasn't the "Lonely God" because forty sages foretold his birth or because two divine entities got affectionate one day, he was just the one that survived - if you could even call it that.
If it's a genuine effort, well, then I have some hope. If I had my druthers, we'd pretend 13 never happened
Capaldi nailed the chemistry when working with Tennant and Smith, as well as David Bradley.
Honestly, though, I'd just be happy if they started telling compelling stories again, maybe recast some previous events in a more coherent light. The Timeless Child story, for example, would be far better with one alteration. The child in question was Susan, not the Doctor. Maybe the Doctor was Tecteun, and regret for her cruelty is why the Doctor became what they did. Maybe Hartnell really was the first, and saw what was being done to Susan and simply said "No More." Either would be extremely compelling, I believe, and would do wonders for salvaging the Doctor from the wreck that story turned them into. Hell, if Tecteun was the Doctor's original incarnation, maybe that could explain why Thirteen is so... inconsistent, an incarnation pulling from non-Doctor aspects of their history, and the internal conflict making it hard to find her center. Or they could say she's just been out of practice being female - it has been over two thousand years, after all.
The Timeless Child could work if it were anybody but the Doctor, because it would mean that the Doctor has, unwittingly, been profiting from the exploitation of a sentient being this entire time. Now, every time they regenerate they are tacitly condoning what happened. How could they make it right? This could make for great stoeytelling. Hell, imagine if the Timeless Child were the Master! The Master already has an overinflated ego and the Doctor has a deep personal connection to them. Though, then it would raise questions as to why "Crispy Master" couldn't regenerate.
The Doctor left Gallifrey because he was bored and wanted to see the universe. Because he disagreed with the Time Lord's non-interference policy. Because he was disgusted by the Time Lord's hypocrisy. To hide the Hand of Omega. Because of the Hybrid Prophecy. To find out why good prevailed over evil in the universe. Because they were afraid looking into the Untempered Schism. To run away with the Lord President's daughter. Because of a family tragedy. Because of a scandal. And for a myriad other reason other authors have come up.
Ian, Barbara and Susan, the UNIT family, and Tegan, Nyssa and Adric say hello.
I'm going to reserve judgment on this until I see how it plays out. I don't think it's realistic to say there should be nothing at all special about the Doctor relative to other Time Lords (the Bad Wolf entity picked him/her during the War after all).
More Missy would be amazing.
I think the Master is best when their plans relate to the Doctor. Like her original scheme turned out to be to... Give the Doctor an army and a travelling companion as a co-dependent pet. That was brilliant! I really like it when they play up the Master being the Doctor's oldest friend and "best enemy".Forum Wisdom
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2021-09-28, 11:59 AM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
Chibnall is the Showrunner. He wrote a couple of the episodes, but the showrunner isn't the writer for the most part. They look over the scripts, enforce consistency and make suggestions to thread episodes into one another, pick the actors, writers, and artists, and are generally in charge of the look and feel of the series more than the nitty-gritty of individual episodes.
Past seasons of Who used sci-fi and comedy writers for episodes, or returning writers such as Steven Moffat for most of Davies most famous episodes, but Chibnall hasn't (to my imperfect knowledge) used a single writer with a single writing credit to either genre. Instead, they've been primarily credited with political and social works. That's not to say this can't work, but in this case I strongly believe it didn't.
Bad Wolf picked him because he was the one who stole her from the vaults and attempted to use her to destroy both sides of a war. The fact that she didn't want to commit double genocide and thus would happily twist time into a pretzel to give him the chance to reconsider was a side effect of his actions, not because the Doctor was picked out of a crowd because he was special.
[QUOTE=Psyren;25212816]I disagree, I think another female doctor is just what the show needs. This would show that the BBC isn't going to rush back to their comfort zone at the first sign of turbulence. It would also vindicate Jodie by helping to prove that her performance wasn't this incarnation's main issue.
Doctor 15? Oh, yes. Give us Jo. Oh, please, give us a female Doctor I can root for. I would love that. Doctor 14, however? They are starting with a shattered fanbase, heavy socio-political conflict, little to no merchandise movement, a network that is hemorrhaging paying subscribers and not getting bailed out by their government, and a return to an old reputation of being subpar schlock. Honestly, I don't know how you fix that. Go "old white man" and half the world will revolt. Use anything else and the other half will accuse them of doubling down and revolt. It's a bad situation to be in.
Like I said by comparing it to Force Awakens, however, touching back to the classic formula after a misstep is generally a good idea. People are more willing to accept branching out into new territory once they're satisfied the story is still grounded. Although it hasn't been explicitly said, it's suggested by the wording that Davies is going to be a one-season Showrunner and that likely means his Doctor will be as well. They'll be the equivalent of Christopher Eccleston. Actually, Eccleston is also served a similar role as the Force Awakens: an already respected and talented actor taking a budget role in a generally disregarded series to resurrect it and give it some passion and chops so that people don't instantly equate it to "that campy show with monsters made of cardboard, bubble wrap, and tin foil". The level of success he achieved at this can only be described with one word: "Fantastic!".
When Fourteen steps off the stage, assuming they do their job properly, the stage will effectively be reset and right for experimentation. In walks Jo, or someone else. The palette will be cleansed and a well done female doctor could go down a treat.
Personally, however, I would rather have genuine female leads than a female Doctor. The Rani, Romana, even a reformed Missy*, or some other newly introduced Time Lord, preferably one that gets a season or two to cook in the Doctor Who stew before being spun off.
* Yes, I recognize the hypocrisy in this particular suggestion, as she's also a gender-bent Time Lord, but Missy is too good not to want a show starring her. If hypocrisy might give me that, it's just a badge I'll have to wear.
Absolutely agreed. I love Capaldi, the man was awesome in the role, but Gomez stole the show with Missy, casting her as a natural villain forced to face the fact that her villainy never got her much in the end and cost her the friendship of the only peer she has left.
I am really hoping we find out that the current "Oh" Master is actually a previous one whose playing things out of sync, and Missy managed to survive her... temporally dislocated suicide via some shenanigans and remains the modern Missy. As long as third season Chibnall plays Missy as Missy, at least. If he bungles her as bad as most of the past two seasons, I'd rather save that for Fourteen's season.Spoiler: My inventory:
1 Sentient Sword
1 Jammy Dodger (I was promised tea)
1 Godwin Point.
Originally Posted by Kairos Theodosian
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2021-09-28, 12:16 PM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
You're free to call her Whittaker if you'd prefer
Hello right back, Old-Who-That-Isn't-Relevant-To-The-Current-Era. (format-wise, anyway.)
And anyone else who did that would have gotten the exact same result?
As the TARDIS itself shows us, thinking you are the one to have stolen something does not necessarily end up being the case.
Wikipedia lists him as co-lead-writer for the bulk of series 1 and 2 alongside RTD, not "a couple of episodes." It even goes on to say that in the first series, RTD only wrote the premiere, meaning that Chibnall was lead writer for almost that whole season.
Regarding #14, I'm okay agreeing to disagree on that one. You're right about one thing, no matter what they do someone is going to be upset, but that was true before Jodie's announcement too.Plague Doctor by Crimmy
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2021-09-28, 12:27 PM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
Now you've mentioned this I like the idea he can only regenerate when he has fully died which means the Master was dragging himself around crippled and in agony for god knows how many years when all he had to do was give himself the final push and he'd be back in a fully healthy body.
Particularly as he is absolutely going to blame this on the Time Lords for not telling him about his unique ability to regenerate without limit. Decades of existing in constant pain is REALLY going to motivate him !All Comicshorse's posts come with the advisor : This is just my opinion any difficulties arising from implementing my ideas are your own problem
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2021-09-28, 12:32 PM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
One of her interviews before her shows started airing. She was asked if she'd watched previous seasons of the show and, if she did, which were her favorite. Her response was that she didn't consider doing this to be useful and she'd rather do her own thing without being influenced by the past. I'll try to find a clip of it after work.
A fair statement, but not the point. He was the Lonely God because he had the powers of a Time Lord without any of the oversight that was supposed to keep them in check or the comradery that a species like their relied on. None of this was because he was special, it was all because he was the only one that didn't die (or go AWOL).
In the 50th Ann- Crap. That was the War Doctor, not 12. He just made a thrilling cameo at the climax. My bad. Suggesting charismatic old men can blend together over time is my only excuse.
The Doctor was long proposed to be (or at least descend from) the third great architect of the Time Lords, next to Rassilon and Omega (referred to only as "The Other"), with the Doctor's part in history being buried along with Omega's by a Rassilon who wanted the history of "his" race to be pure. This was part of the "Cartnell Master Plan" that had been in the works with the Seventh Doctor before the series got cancelled. Tecteun, being the source of Gallifrey's regeneration abilities and not natural superiority, would certainly explain the Doctor's expulsion - and possible memory editing.
Aside from Memory Editing, however, there's already a mechanic Eleven introduced that could explain it. When he was talking to Rory (post Auton phase), Rory asks him if he remembers every day of his life. He acknowledges he does. When asked how he copes, Eleven goes on to say he puts his past lives behind doors in his mind and doesn't go back to dredge up ghosts unless he needs to.
Being Tecteun, being responsible for finding and repeatedly murdering an alien child for her own curiosity, of creating the Time Lords and then being betrayed and removed from history, would be enough to cause anyone to slam the door on those memories tight, put locks on the door and locks on the locks, and then move so far beyond it that the memory of the memory fades. The Doctor's over two millennia old now using Hartnell as the starting point. That much time would make it easy to forget, especially if you wanted to. Still, the shame leaks through. Why do you think the Doctor insists so hard on being kind, on saving children, on being everything Tecteun wasn't? The War Doctor reminds them of her, and they shun him because of it.
That's just the extension of a theory, of course.
All of which is currently invalidated without a major retcon, anyway. It's good to hide the Doctor's past behind a mess of lies and misdirections, but right now we have too many established facts that do not jive together.
True. Large parties do not drag Doctor Who down. Bad writing that cannot give multiple individuals identities beyond a couple surface cliff notes is.
Is it? Missy did, in the end, choose the Doctor's cause, but only at the last second and didn't have time to live with the consequences. An arc with Missy actively believing it's the right thing to do while still struggling with her instinct instead of just humoring her only friend would be a fitting follow-up. Missy ultimately deriving her own unique identity as a dangerously unpredictable maverick on the side of the angels (while not being one of them) would be a worthy premise in and of itself.Spoiler: My inventory:
1 Sentient Sword
1 Jammy Dodger (I was promised tea)
1 Godwin Point.
Originally Posted by Kairos Theodosian
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2021-09-28, 12:38 PM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
I do.
Hello right back, Old-Who-That-Isn't-Relevant-To-The-Current-Era. (format-wise, anyway.)
And anyone else who did that would have gotten the exact same result?
As the TARDIS itself shows us, thinking you are the one to have stolen something does not necessarily end up being the case.
This goes against the one constant thing about how regeneration is portrayed (you have to be near-death but not actually dead yet for it to kick in).Forum Wisdom
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2021-09-28, 12:47 PM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
It's less "doesn't allow" and more "isn't well-suited." NuWho is Doctor + Companion. Occasionally you get two companions (Amy+Rory) or you get primary+secondary (Rose+Mickey.) And even for the former Amy was more primary. That's not a true ensemble.
You do get a broader cast of secondary characters from time to time, like Rose and Martha's families, or Wilfred Mott, but the important thing is that they only have to be around when needed and can be left at home when not. By putting three other people in the TARDIS permanently, that wasn't an option, and Chibnall ended up spreading all of them thin as a result.
Old Who had different formats - sometimes radically different, in the 3rd Doctor's case. And that is fine for what the show was - back then.
He had a lesson he needed to learn (all of him, from War to Current.) Taking the Moment, and actually having his finger poised over that button, was essential. Seeing who he became from having pressed it (to quote the Moment - "The One who Regrets, and The One who Forgets") were also essential. He couldn't have evolved otherwise, and she(?) knew it.
Moreover, you're forgetting that he did press that button before, which is where 9 and 10 and 11 came from. So it was already out of the box and could thus manipulate his timeline.Plague Doctor by Crimmy
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2021-09-28, 01:20 PM (ISO 8601)
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
That's be nice, thank you. It sounds interesting.
In the 50th Ann- Crap. That was the War Doctor, not 12. He just made a thrilling cameo at the climax. My bad. Suggesting charismatic old men can blend together over time is my only excuse.
The Doctor was long proposed to be (or at least descend from) the third great architect of the Time Lords, next to Rassilon and Omega (referred to only as "The Other"), with the Doctor's part in history being buried along with Omega's by a Rassilon who wanted the history of "his" race to be pure. This was part of the "Cartnell Master Plan" that had been in the works with the Seventh Doctor before the series got cancelled. Tecteun, being the source of Gallifrey's regeneration abilities and not natural superiority, would certainly explain the Doctor's expulsion - and possible memory editing.
Aside from Memory Editing, however, there's already a mechanic Eleven introduced that could explain it. When he was talking to Rory (post Auton phase), Rory asks him if he remembers every day of his life. He acknowledges he does. When asked how he copes, Eleven goes on to say he puts his past lives behind doors in his mind and doesn't go back to dredge up ghosts unless he needs to.
Being Tecteun, being responsible for finding and repeatedly murdering an alien child for her own curiosity, of creating the Time Lords and then being betrayed and removed from history, would be enough to cause anyone to slam the door on those memories tight, put locks on the door and locks on the locks, and then move so far beyond it that the memory of the memory fades. The Doctor's over two millennia old now using Hartnell as the starting point. That much time would make it easy to forget, especially if you wanted to. Still, the shame leaks through. Why do you think the Doctor insists so hard on being kind, on saving children, on being everything Tecteun wasn't? The War Doctor reminds them of her, and they shun him because of it.
That's just the extension of a theory, of course.
Is it? Missy did, in the end, choose the Doctor's cause, but only at the last second and didn't have time to live with the consequences. An arc with Missy actively believing it's the right thing to do while still struggling with her instinct instead of just humoring her only friend would be a fitting follow-up. Missy ultimately deriving her own unique identity as a dangerously unpredictable maverick on the side of the angels (while not being one of them) would be a worthy premise in and of itself.
Again, ensemble casts do work in this format. Just because the revival mostly focused on one companion at a time doesn't mean it has to always be like that.
He had a lesson he needed to learn (all of him, from War to Current.) Taking the Moment, and actually having his finger poised over that button, was essential. Seeing who he became from having pressed it (to quote the Moment - "The One who Regrets, and The One who Forgets") were also essential. He couldn't have evolved otherwise, and she(?) knew it.
Moreover, you're forgetting that he did press that button before, which is where 9 and 10 and 11 came from. So it was already out of the box and could thus manipulate his timeline.
If the timeline were changed during the episode then Nine, Ten and Eleven would have been retconned out of existence and that is not what happened.Forum Wisdom
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
I will grant you that they've done far better with one or two companions. That much is absolutely true. I don't agree that it's not suitable for larger casts, however. I would instead suggest that Chibnall's run is just fantastically incapable of handling its characters in general. Ignoring Thirteen's own utter lack of identity, I would submit that not any character (major or minor) in Chibnall's era is as well defined as even many bit characters in previous eras. Graham comes close, closer than anyone else, but even he is poorly defined compared to previous characters. Personal details only crop up when they are relevant to the plot ("My late wife originally was worried I was like the driver from Rosa Parks' time" during the episode regarding Parks herself. Reasonable, yes, but no characterisation that doesn't serve the specific episode). And they treat Graham like crap. He genuinely opened up to Thirteen about his fear of his cancer returning without Grace to help him through it, and the Doctor just says "I'd like to help, but I'm socially awkward, so... bye."
That is a fair argument, and an intriguing interpretation, but it is a stretch in the sense that it requires more unfounded assumptions to reach than the standard conclusion.
As for the end of the Time War... I really have no idea what to say about of that. The franchise's comedically incoherent relationship with ontology and timeline consistency really makes it hard to say anything with even the vaguest delusion of authority. All I can say is that the established memory-effecting nature of time loops means that it's very hard to tell what War and Ten remember from the events of the special. It's fairly strongly suggested that Nine only remembers his intention with the Moment and the fact that both races vanished shortly after, naturally assuming he was guilty of a double-genocide. It then follows that a timeline where the Moment did the genocides is unnecessary. The memories and facts don't change.
Right now, we have a canon that is so <REDACTED> up that there is no way to make something consistent of the over-all narrative without either a) completely striking a section of it from canon, or b) creating one hell of a large pill to swallow.
Personally, I greatly prefer that Hartnell is the first and stole the Timeless Child from her imprisonment, and that the Master (who has already shown a talent for modifying the "inviolable" Matrix as well as a novel approach to curating history) simply lied to screw up an already unstable Doctor. Doctor and Master remain peers, Doctor doesn't have the memories she doesn't remember, all past canon still works, new canon is dismissed as a lie by a known liar.
But some people are going to be very insistent that the Doctor's initial form be female, and Tecteun is a... passable compromise. I don't like it, but it's better than the Doctor being a holy baby from another reality who gets the worst possible parental figure possible.
Yes, Missy as a spinoff would be my ideal path for that. Otherwise, making her an inconsistent ally like Captain Jack, River Song, or Rose, showing up at odd times to bail the Doctor out or drag them into problems that need the Doctor's unique brand of "fixing". As a guest star, though, she would need to remain a very unstable force, very at home with ruthless solutions and never patient with the hand-wringing of heroes.Last edited by Calemyr; 2021-09-28 at 02:19 PM.
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Originally Posted by Kairos Theodosian
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
My favourite Capaldi moment was when he just decided he wanted to rock an electric guitar as the Doctor, and they let him.
his summary of the Beethoven paradox is awesome
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
They certainly can but the deck is stacked against them. It works for a show like Torchwood or Buffy because they have various constants - new monsters might pop up week to week, but the main locations, tertiary cast, and what the characters do in their downtime (work or school) are fairly consistent and straightforward. For a more madcap show that relies on vastly different locations and tertiary cast every episode, you don't have a lot of time to be thinking "Ok, here's what the Doctor and Graham are doing, now we need to figure out Ryan and Yaz, plus the 2-3 new characters we introduced, along with the monster, while we're also introducing the new place, and planting seeds for the finale."
I'm not saying it's impossible, rather I'm saying it was a bad idea for Chibnall to try, but with his background in Torchwood and Broadchurch he gravitated back towards what he knew, and his run suffered for it.
Yes, exactly, it was a giant paradox. Doctor Who has never had those.
I have a LOT of favorite Capaldi moments (he supplanted 9 as my favorite doctor overall) and that one is definitely up there.Last edited by Psyren; 2021-09-28 at 02:07 PM.
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
Personal favorites:
1) To the Teller: "How do you like my outfit? I was going for 'minimalist' but I think I came up with 'stage magician'."
2) Brandishing an electric guitar in a duel with a medieval warrior: "You told me to bring an axe."
3) As Clara and Missy are wondering if he noticed them, he answers by playing "Pretty Woman".
4) To Clara shortly after regeneration: "These are ATTACK EYEBROWS!"
5) Regarding shrinking technology for medicine: "Ah, yes. Excellent idea for a movie. Horrible idea for a proctologist."
6) Time Lord Victorious: "You might say that's one hell of a long time, I say that's one hell of a bird!"
7) Regarding Ravens: "Of course they can talk, they just refuse to. They're just having one big sulk!"
8) Twelve's perfect gambit in Chess: "I flip the board over!"
9) Protecting Missy from the Executioners: "Nobody said she had to be dead!"
10) Intimidating the Executioners: "Look me up under 'Cause of Death'."
11) Anything regarding his paranoia regarding his "browser history".Last edited by Calemyr; 2021-09-28 at 03:21 PM.
Spoiler: My inventory:
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Originally Posted by Kairos Theodosian
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
^ Yes to all, but basically everything in Heaven Sent and Zygon Inversion and Thin Ice and...
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Just the whole sonic sunglasses thing.
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
Honestly the more I see if Classic Who, with all it's jankiness, the less enthused about Nu Who I get. Part of it is the shorter stories formed into ten episode arcs every single season. Part of it is how 10, 11, and 12 all seemed to be attracted to humans. Post of it is that I actually like having the Time Lords around to Mrs things up. And a large part is how much the sonic screwdriver gets used, and yet now seems to be incapable of driving a access.
As far as I'm concerned RYD was responsible for the best and the worst modern Doctor, so I'm just on a wait and see pattern.
The weird thing is that I was somewhat excited for 13, but lost interest when I discovered she got her TARDIS back by the second episode. I was actually hoping we'd get a brief second period of her being stuck on Earth spending the series trying to track the TARDIS down and roped into stuff by UNIT.
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
13 separated from her TARDIS and forced to work with UNIT for a bit could have been fun, except (a) 12 had just done a bunch of UNIT stuff (e.g. Zygon Invasion/Inversion) but more importantly (b) that would exacerbate the problem of her "fam"/the cast already being stuffed with people imo, as now you'd have UNIT regulars in multiple episodes too.
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
In theory you'd begin with 13 and UNIT and then introduce the Fam doesn't over the series. But I get your point.
Although modern Who has booked me for years. I stopped watching near the end of 11, tried to rejoin with 12 but hard the stories, then have it another go with 13. Then left because they'd introduced an interesting plot thread for at least half a season and resolved it after two stories for a format I wasn't interested in.
On the plus side, I believe Chibnall finally ditched the romantic elements, especially the Doctor X Companion ones. This series already has one true hinge, and that's TARDIS-Doctor-Master.
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2021-09-28, 05:43 PM (ISO 8601)
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Doctor X Companion ended with Capaldi. But there was still some companion romance stuff with Clara x Danny and Bill x ...uh... weird water alien chick?
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
Agreed. One of Twelve's lines in the first episode is "Clara, I'm not your boyfriend." "I know that." "You're not the one that needed reminding." Despite the Doctor-standard tendency to flirt with everyone and everything, Twelve only has one romantic interest and that is River. He rarely had anything positive to say about anyone human's appearance. (Remember, River is effectively a Time Lord despite her parentage.) Heck, I think he displayed more attraction to the Tyrannosaur to any of the humans.
For the most part, however, the Doctors are not easily attracted to humans. They're attractive to humans. Human ladies tend to quickly develop a romantic interest in the Doctors, but they're not usually inclined to reciprocate, often times actively trying distance himself from his pursuer. Even Ten, the most romance-oriented of the bunch, was thrilled to travel with Donna because she was more interested in the adventure than the adventurer. Rose works because she met Nine when he was broken and aimless, and even then it took semi-clone of Ten to actually acknowledge the attraction.
The romantic angle is way too common, absolutely. I do get tired of it quickly when it just keeps getting brought up. Rose and River are the only ones I consider worth the time. Rose saved him when he desperately needed it, and River was the closest thing to an equal that he had - at least that wasn't completely evil.Spoiler: My inventory:
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Originally Posted by Kairos Theodosian
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Re: New Showrunner for Doctor Who
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