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And somehow, I don't want to know what Cass said to Clara (the untranslated part). Something tells me it was not very polite. BTW, Sophie Stone is going to be the next Marlee Matlin, and from me, that's high praise indeed.
1. Under the Lake
2. The Magician's Apprentice
3. The Witch's Familiar
4. Before the Flood
1. Under The Lake
2. Before The Flood
3. The Witch's Familiar
4. The Magician's Apprentice
Capaldi is a great Doctor and let's hope the rest of the season plays out as good. Next week we find out (or do we?) who Maisie Williams' character is. Love her in GoT, great little actress.
BTW : Ashildr and Jack Harkness ? Good idea for a team-up, no?
1. Under The Lake
2. The Girl Who Died
3. Before The Flood
4. The Witch's Familiar
5. The Magician's Apprentice
Aside from having a syntactically dubious choice of relative pronoun in the title, this episode disappointed me for the following reasons:
1. We have the Doctor and Clara land in Viking Britain -- okay, no problem with that. The Doctor and Clara defeat invading alien forces by using Ashildr, the village's storyteller, to deceive them into leaving -- okay, roger that, except why didn't the Doctor do this himself, rather than put a member of the village at risk? After all, the Doctor seems to have a more sturdy constitution than humans -- a fact he often points out.
2. As it turns out, this manoeuvre kills Ashildr and the Doctor then happens to have handy not one, but two devices that will miraculously bring her back to life and grant her immortality. This device was not foreshadowed in any way (sloppy plotting) and as such, shatters credibility by being a blatant piece of deus ex machina storytelling.
3. The Doctor's reference to Caecilus in the "Fires of Pompeii" was not needed and came over as highly contrived. The similarity between the Doctor and Caecilus should just have been ignored. There was no reason to make this connection as it belies the fifth Doctor's comment: "That's the trouble with regeneration... you're never sure what you're going to get." The Doctor doesn't choose a face upon regeneration -- he gets what he's given! For goodness sake, Moffat, stop reinventing the series at a whim just to make sense of things that are better left alone!
I have to say, I've been somewhat disappointed in Steven Moffat's tenure of Series Director. Whilst the Twelfth Doctor is easily one of the best, if not the best, the story lines tend to veer from the outrageously and ridiculously bizarre to little gems of genius (such as the first two episodes of this season).
Despite some very good Moffat-led stories, I sometimes find myself thinking: "Come back Russell T. Davies, all is forgiven."
Having just watched this evening's episode, which is a continuation of last week's, I felt the material was better, but I was somewhat disappointed by Maisie Williams' performance. I must be one of the few people in the western world that hasn't seen a single episode of Game of Thrones, so I wasn't familiar with her work until now and I found her performance in "The Woman Who lived" to be lacklustre in the extreme. The delivery of her lines was wooden and without feeling and I couldn't help thinking that someone from my village amateur dramatics company could have done better. This is a shame really because a she had a very good and well-written part that really deserved a better performance than this. The phrase "phoning it in" springs to mind.
http://www.doctorwhotv.co.uk/k9-to-battle-omega-in-movie-timequake-77281.htm
Oh no, please no!
Honestly, Dr Who has been crying out for a full feature movie treatment for so long now and this annoying little toe-rag gets the gig instead!
So let me get this straight...
A movie for a non-canon, not to mention critically panned Doctor Who spinoff about the tin dog can get made. A spin off about a school that appeared in less than 10 stories can get made. But a Doctor who has had only 93 minutes of screen time can't get a miniseries...
:-? I just don't get it...
Itv's latest attempt for a Dr Who type show with " Jekyll & Hyde" has had over 500
Complaints.
The 10th Doctor and Donna join Big Finish! :D
I've seen the first episode in Cardiff. Not bad. Not bad at all. BTW, we'll see the actress who plays the love interest in the "Sherlock" Christmas special.
Oh, and I liked "The Woman Who Lived".