AFTER THE LAKE (By Toby Whithouse)

Doctor Who S09E03 "Under The Lake" REVIEW

Doctor Who S09E03 “Under The Lake” review

AFTER THE LAKE (By Toby Whithouse)

stars 3

Airing in the UK on BBC One, Saturdays

Writer: Toby Whithouse
Director: Daniel O’Hara

Essential Plot Points:

  • The Doctor and Clara materialise on an underwater base in a deep lake which has a homicidal ghost infestation. Any crew members that the ghosts kill become ghosts too.
  • The ghosts only come out at night, they can be trapped in a Faraday cage and they keep saying the same four words over and over again.
  • The Doctor works out these words are co-ordinates, the same as some alien words written on the wall of a spaceship that the crew have recently discovered. If you see the words when you’re alive, then when you die you become some kind of spectral transmitter, sending out co-ordinates.
  • But why? As the ghosts start flooding the base, separating the Doctor and Clara, the Doctor travels back in time to when the spaceship originally arrived. Back then, there was no lake, just an abandoned army base next to a massive dam.
  • After the Doctor leaves, Clara sees a new ghost – the Doctor.

Doctor_Who_s09e03_under_the_lake_looking_up

Review:

Apart from a doozy of a cliffhanger, “Under The Lake” – from its title to its monsters to the whitewashed walls of the alien spaceship – is a disappointingly bland, yet also comfortingly cosy slice of new Who. For the kind of fans who shudder at the more outlandish excesses of the revived series this must have been a nostalgic return to a tried-and-trusted Who formula – the base under siege – free of farting aliens, Mary Poppins villains and guitar solos. There was an interesting sci-fi concept at its heart, lots of running down corridors and the Doctor was working things with his superior intellect and deflating buffoonish authority.

It was competent. It had entertaining moments. It was also worryingly generic. The irony is that the ending strongly suggests that the unique twist for this tale will come with episode two; that next week the story will surprise and shock us. Which is all well and good, but it’d be nice to have something with a bit more punch this week. It’s by no means a bad episode, but it does feel a little too much like a extended preamble for something more exciting. And some of the plot mechanics are worryingly visible; you can almost see cogs meshing as it becomes obvious why we have a deaf character. What a shame. It would have been great to have had a disabled character who wasn’t there for a reason; they just happened to be disabled.

The blame isn’t all in the script. Whithouse is clearly aiming for a really spooky, creepy vibe and if director Daniel O’Hara had pulled that off, this may have been a far more tasty hors dourves. While O’Hara can clearly frame and light shots nicely and loves a suddenly startling close-up every so often, he seems to be flailing to inject tension or terror into the story. The ghosts just plod about lethargically and pop through walls like they’re out for a Sunday stroll. A scene such as Pritchard’s death in the airlock should creep you out like the horror moments in “Waters Of Mars” and “Blink”. Instead it’s about as tense as watching your socks in a tumble drier. And the less said about five actors all failing to look scared of a plastic chair the better.

On the plus side, Capaldi and Coleman are in great form. The “duty of care” scene in the TARDIS is very sweet, while the idiot cards that Clara has prepared for the Doctor are hilarious – one of the highlights of the episode. It’s great to see Capaldi’s Doctor being clever, too – working things out with that big brain of his and encouraging others to use their noggins too.

Great special effects, some solid-looking sets and the usual smattering of great lines help. Unusually, one of the best lines doesn’t come from the Doctor: “At least if I die you know I will come back and haunt you all,” says Bennett.

The problem with reviewing “Under The Lake” is that it’s too easy to moan about what it isn’t rather than what it is. What it is, is average Doctor Who, and that’s no great tragedy. It remains an entertaining way to lose yourself for 45 minutes. It’s just that we’ve come to expect more. Hopefully, “Before The Flood” will give us more. The cliffhanger suggests that it will.

 

 

The Good:

  • The cliffhanger – you can almost forgive the episode all its faults for giving us that.
  • The ghostly effects on the eyes – especially the first reveal of “ghost” Pritchard.
  • The Doctor’s prompt cards. For the record, as well as the one that he reads out (“I’m very sorry for your loss. I’ll do all I can to solve the death of your friend slash family member slash pet”) the others we see read, “I completely understand why it was difficult not to get captured,” “It was my fault, I should have known you didn’t live in Aberdeen,” “I didn’t mean to imply that I didn’t care,” and “No one is going to get eaten/vapourised/exterminated/upgraded/possessed/mortally wounded/turned into jelly – we’ll all get out of this alive”. At least we assume that last one says “out of” because Clara’s thumb is over that bit.

Doctor_Who_s09e03_under_the_lake_cards

  • The basic idea of the ghosts being transmitters created by some kind of sci-fi earworm is a decent concept.
  • Capaldi is in top form – he’s rude and social inept but totally commanding. His reverse psychology to get the crew to stay (“Oh, no – I want you to leave”) and help him is a great moment.
  • “Clara why don’t I have a radio in the TARDIS?”
    “You took it apart and used the pieces to make a clockwork squirrel.”
  • “It’s okay, I understand, you’re an idiot.”
  • “You’re going to go back in time? How do you do that?”
    “Extremely well”

 

The Bad:

  • Limp direction that sucks all the horror and tension out of the situation.
  • Too much running around corridors.
  • Apart from Sophie Stone (and we’re not just saying that for PC reasons, she’s acting with a commitment, grit and edge a cut above the other) the other guest stars are rather bland. And what the hell is Steven Robertson’s pompous-official-in-a-’70s-sitcom accent all about?
  • The scene with the the Doctor and co looking scared of a ghost wielding a plastic chair is hilariously silly. What next? Pillow fight?
  • Some of the plot mechanics are clunkily convenient.
  • A couple of potentially good guest stars are wasted.

 

And The Random:

  • UPDATE: Between the preview version of this episode uploaded to the BBC’s site for reviewers (we just went back and double checked), and the broadcast version, the scream immediately before the theme tune has been removed: seems somebody on the production team agreed with us that it sounded wrong. So the following piece of trivia only makes sense if you saw the review copy…
  • Toby Whithouse often writes a scream at the end of his teaser sequences so that the scream segues into the sting at the start of the theme tune (he even planned this for “The Vampires Of Venice”, but the episode was slightly re-edited so that the scream fell in a different place). He does it again here but the sting in the current theme doesn’t fit with a scream so well. Also, the scream feels fake; neither of the women look like girly screamers.
  • Why is Pritchard doing an impression of Pinocchio here?

Doctor_Who_s09e03_under_the_lake_pinocchio

  • Sophie Stone, who plays Cass, is genuinely deaf. She was the first deaf person to study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (RADA) and has been seen in Casualty, Holby City, Mapp & Lucia and Marchlands.
  • For the second story in a row, a supporting character utters an SF cliché somewhat self-consciously. In “The Magician’s Apprentice” Jac says, “Pardon my sci-fi, but this is beyond any human technology.” Here, Bennett and Moran have the exchange, “I’ve not seen technology like this…” “Please don’t say that.” “…on Earth before.” Coincidence, or new running gag?
  • At the beginning of the episode the Doctor asks the TARDIS why she brought them here. For the rest of the episode the TARDIS seem desperate to get away. Simply a little inconsistency or should we read more into it?
  • Continuity minefield time: “They’re not holograms.” (Too many instances of holograms in Who to list but let’s say “Mummy On The Orient Express” – 2014); “They’re not Flesh Avatars.” (“The Rebel Flesh”, “The Almost People” – 2011); “They’re not Autons.” (“Spearhead From Space” – 1970, “Terror Of The Autons” – 1971, “Rose” – 2005); “They’re not digital copies bouncing around the Nethersphere.” (“Dark Water”, “Death In Heaven” – 2014).
  • Bennett does realise he’s controlling a sub at this point and not a dolphin, right? His fingers movements are like something out a belly dance routine suggesting the sub should be doing somersaults.

Doctor_Who_s09e03_under_the_lake_fingers

  • The Doctor says the alien ghost comes from the planet Tivoli. The last time we met someone from that planet was in “The God Complex” (2011) also written by Toby Whithouse.
  • Oh, and considering what we know of the rest of the season from the season nine trailer, should we read anything into this mural?

Doctor_Who_s09e03_under_the_lake_mural


 

• Read our previous Doctor Who reviews

 

 

 

 

 

Doctor_Who_s09e02_witchs_familiar_Davros

Doctor Who S09E02 "The Witch’s Familiar" Review

Doctor Who S09E01 “The Witch’s Familiar” Review

Doctor_Who_s09e02_witchs_familiar_Davros

stars 4

Airing in the UK on BBC One, Saturdays

Writer: Steven Moffat
Director: Hettie MacDonald

Essential Plot Points:

  • Missy adapts an idea once formulated by the Doctor to teleport her and Clara to safety nanoseconds before extermination.
  • They re-enter the Dalek city through the sewers/graveyard of Daleks (although Daleks never truly die, they just fester, apparently)
  • Missy places Clara in a Dalek casing. Clara now has a limited Dalek vocabulary.
  • The Doctor and Davros chat about centuries of animosity. A lot.
  • Davros offers the Doctor the chance to destroy all the Daleks in one fell swoop using Davros’s techno-link to every Dalek in existence. The Doctor declines. But he begins to feel pity for his old adversary who is pondering his own morality as death nears.
  • The Doctor gives Davros some regeneration energy so he can see one final sunrise on Skaro… but it’s a trick to hijack the Doctor’s regeneration energy to power-up the Daleks.
  • But the Doctor knows what he’s doing: he’s re-empowered the Daleks in the graveyard/sewers too and they set about destroying the city.
  • On his escape the Doctor bumps into a Dalek that begs for mercy – not something a Dalek should do. He realises it is Clara inside and frees her.
  • He also realises that it is he who must introduce the concept of mercy to Davros, so he pops back to the little boy in the handmine field and saves him.

Doctor_Who_s09e02_witchs_familiar_corridor

Reveiw:

For 16 minutes – a full third of the episode – “The Witch’s Familiar” is just the Doctor and Davros nattering. Not 16 minutes in a row, admittedly, but even granting that, there are still three massively long scenes of pure Doctor/Davros dialogue: two of over four minutes, another one over three minutes. While you have to wonder what less attentive younger members of the audience made of two old wrinklies droning on, for the rest of us it was a mesmerising experience, as two old adversaries rifled around each other’s psyches, digging deep to gain access to what they needed from one another: in Davros’s case, trust (albeit misplaced); in the Doctor’s, hope.

Featuring two blistering performances from Capaldi and Bleach, this was an engrossing psychological work-out. You could argue that because, ultimately, the Doctor knew he was being lead into a trap all along (and presumably had his coup de grace worked out as soon as he worked out what Davros’s gizmo was for) all that moral to-ing and fro-ing was pointless. Why didn’t the Doctor just use the gizmo to give the sewer Daleks an energy drink as soon as he had the chance? But you get the feeling that the Doctor was genuinely desperate to suss out if Davros did still contain any shreds of humanity (or Kaledity, or whatever); was there still a trace of that little boy from the handmine field; or did the Doctor actually help create this monster by not helping him back then?

It’s a bold, daring move by Moffat, taking advantage of the two-part structure as a chance to explore character rather than plot. It may well be culture shock to those used to New Who’s more fast-pace action adventure but it’s not without precedent: “Midnight”, anybody? The show can, and should, experiment like this.

Besides, if we’re talking about culture shock, there’s Missy to bring a bit of light to the darkness, in the way a fireworks display would fit into a Samuel Beckett production. Here we have some traditional New Who silliness; at times it’s fun, at others it jars. Missy can be an amusing scene stealer, sure, but you can’t help wishing there was more depth to her.

Clara has a good episode, though, as she adds a new spin to the old cliché of entering a Dalek city by pretending to be a Dalek. There’s a real sense of claustrophobia that only partly comes from being trapped in a tin can; if anything, the inability to express herself is even more alarming. It’s a great new piece of Dalek mythology, which is more than can be said for Dalek sewers. They had “This episode’s denouement!” written all over them as soon as they appeared.

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The Daleks themselves are a little underwhelming too. This is an episode where they needed to be scary – or at least taken seriously – to provide a chilling context for what’s going on in Davros’s lair; to ram home the evil devastation he has unleashed that the galaxy fears so much. Instead both the Doctor and Missy make them look like complete fools, running rings around them. They spend most of the episode looking about as dumbstruck as a Dalek can. Last week we blamed the director, Hettie MacDonald, but this week it’s definitely the script that undermines the Doctor’s oldest enemies. Besides, we don’t want to be mean about MacDonald when she does such a brilliant job in all other areas; rarely have corridors been shot so well.

The Good

  • Those great, lengthy scenes between Davros and the Doctor – two great actors, great dialogue and disturbing undercurrents.
  • The idea that a Dalek has a limited vocabulary and translates things it doesn’t understand into a few concepts that it does is a brilliant new piece of Dalek lore (even if the specifics of how it all works don’t quite bear up to scrutiny).
  • The black-and-white flashback at the beginning is huge fun, especially the brief shots of Doctors one and four – so much better achieved here than in “The Name Of The Doctor”.
  • This shot (which will surely inspire a Big Finish audio…?)

Doctor_Who_s09e02_witchs_familiar_nest

  • Murray Gold’s score for the final scene in the handmine field is wonderful, as is the final shot of the Doctor and Davros hand-in-hand.
  • There are some glorious shots of the Dalek city.
  • So many great lines including:
  • “I love killing clever clogs. They make the best faces.”
  • “Admit it – you’ve all had this exact nightmare.”
  • “I am dying, Doctor.” “You keep saying that. You keep not dying. Can you give it some welly?”
  • “You weren’t bored. No one runs the way you have run for so small a reason.”
  • “Time Lady. Some of us can afford the upgrade.”
  • “You are an enemy of the Daleks.” “Yes, well, anyone who is not a Dalek, is an enemy of the Daleks so that was an easy guess.”
  • And, of course, “Dalek Supreme, your sewers are revolting.” Classic!

The Bad:

  • It’s a shame Davros was just pretending all along – it tends to lessen some of the potency of the previous scenes.
  • Missy is still a tad one-note. She’s fun, but lacking in depth so far. And the pirouettes should be rationed.
  • The special FX shot of Colony Sarff’s eyes vanishing into a cable is poorly achieved. It looks like an afterthought.
  • The physical FX for the destruction of the city are rather humdrum as well. The Dalek goo looked likes something from Who in the ’80s.

And The Random:

  • Did anyone else desperately want Missy to call her stick “Mr Pointy” in a reference to Buffy The Vampire Slayer?
  • Sonic sunglasses? Now there’s an easy new gimmick for kids play with.
  • A Dalek has been heard begging for mercy before in the series, in the final episode of Matt Smith’s first season, “The Big Bang” (2010). The Doctor wasn’t present, though so he many not have know about it; the Dalek was asking River Song for mercy, and now we know how that could be possible. Interestingly in, the final Christopher Eccleston story, “The Parting of The Ways”, the Doctor says, “You might’ve removed all your emotions but I reckon right down deep in your DNA, there’s one little spark left, and that’s fear.” Or maybe it’s mercy?
  • The Hostile Action Displacement System (HADS) was first seen in operation in the Patrick Troughton story “The Krotons” (1968) and was last used in the Matt Smith story “The Cold War” (2013). Clara also referenced it in “Kill The Moon” (2014).
  • The “Are you ready to be God?” speech mirrors Davros’s monologue in “Genesis Of The Daleks” (1975) when the Doctor asks him what he would do if he created a virus that could wipe out all life: “That power would set me up above the gods!”
  • Hmmmm… ongoing questions, Moffat-stylee: How did Skaro return and did the fact Davros had the sonic screwdriver all those year have anything to do with it? Why did the Doctor run? Was or he bored or is this an arc plot? Will a Time Lord/Dalek hybrid ever rise from the ashes of the city?
  • “The DNA Of The Daleks” is surely one of the great lost Dalek episode titles?
  • After decades of smutty gags about “Ex-sperm-inate!” and “Ejaculate!” you have to assume that Moffat’s line about Dalek guns being triggered by emotion is dripping in innuendo.
  • And speaking of smutty humour, is the Doctor boasting here?

Doctor_Who_s09e02_witchs_familiar_whos_basting


 

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doctor_who_the_magicians_apprentice_6

Doctor Who S09E01 "The Magician’s Apprentice" Review

Doctor Who S09E01 “The Magician’s Apprentice” Review

doctor_who_the_magicians_apprentice_6

stars 4

Airing in the UK on BBC One, Saturdays

Writer: Steven Moffat
Director: Hettie MacDonald

Essential Plot Points:

  • On a planet ravaged by war, the Doctor is about to rescue a little boy from certain death in a “handmine” field, until he learns the boy’s name – Davros.
  • In the future a dying Davros sends a serpentine henchman on a search through time and space for the Doctor.
  • Missy receives a Confession Dial, the Doctor’s “last will and testament”, which will only reveal its contents when the Doctor dies. She turns to Clara and UNIT on present-day Earth to help her locate the Doctor.
  • They find him at the end of a three week party in medieval Britain to mark his imminent demise.
  • But so does the snake man, Colony Sarff, who takes the Doctor, Clara and Missy back to… Skaro! Somehow it has survived the Time War.
  • The Daleks kill Clara and Missy, then destroy the TARDIS, apparently making the Doctor reconsider his choice of action back when he met young Davros.

Doctor_Who_901_The_Magicians_Apprentice_snake_man

Review:

“Let’s kill Davros!” is what the episode should really be called, except that would have been a bloody great spoiler. “The Magician’s Apprentice” is, at heart, just that hoary old SF chestnut, “If you could go back in time and kill Hitler as a child, would you?” The Daleks have always been the show’s metaphor for the Nazis, a parallel never more explicit than in the Tom Baker story in which Davros was introduced. So even though the teaser delivers a real whammy when the little boy that the Doctor is about to save reveals that his name is Davros, you’re already thinking, “I can see where this is going,” as the opening credits roll.

But Moffat pulls it off, not just because he knows that he’s doing “Let’s Kill Davros” but because he knows most of the audience will know that’s what he’s doing as well. The result is an elaborate exercises in smoke and mirrors, where the smoke is smoking and the mirrors come from the craziest funhouse in galaxy.

So we have Missy turning up as psychotic and loopy as ever. Her escape from death is seemingly accepted by everyone as “one of those thing that the Master does” until Clara actually tackles the Doctor about it and it suddenly becomes a plot point. Missy mixes things up by claiming that she is clearly more important to the Doctor than Clara is because the Doctor sent his last will and testament to the her, not his puppy dog, so yah boo sucks to you. Clara does not look amused. (Hey – we just did an Easter egg!). Missy may be grating at times but overall her edgy relationship with Clara is fun to watch, and deliciously unpredictable.

We also have a patented Moffat location-hopping sequence, with Colony Sarff tracking the Doctor across time and space. These sequences must cost a bomb to make – even given that Neill Gorton clearly just sends along any old monsters he has hanging round his workshop to populate them – but they help give the show an epic feel, and they’re always loaded with fan pleasing-continuity nods (see below). Plus, Sarff is front-loaded with gimmicks – the way he moves like a Dalek and has nest-of-vipers nature – and Doctor Who always loves a villain with a good gimmick.

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Then we get the Doctor giving medieval Britain the delights of heavy metal and Bill and Ted vernacular. Capaldi looks like he’s having a whale of a time and his enthusiasm is infectious. And, just for the hell of it, we have aeroplanes frozen in time, UNIT, a trip abroad and random references to Jane Austen’s sexuality. If, by the end of 50 minutes, the central story may have seemed a little thin, there was, at least something fun or intriguing or emotionally engaging going on in each scene.

And when the Doctor finally meets Davros, his old arch enemy (boy did that rub with Missy), throws his whole “have I the right?” speech from “Genesis Of The Daleks” right back in his face. This is Hitler looking you in the eye and saying, “Go on, I dare you.” Quite what Davros’s endgame is here remains unclear, but the undercurrents going on between these two old nemeses are electrifying.

Interestingly, young Davros looks downwards for much of the time he’s on screen, his head drooping in a reflection of his older, dying self. It’s a lovely character touch, presumably suggested by director Hettie MacDonald, who, for the most part, does a solid job with some tight pacing, gorgeous lighting and nurturing some great performances out of the secondary characters. (There’s a blessed absence of bit-parters who look like they haven’t got a clue what their lines mean that often blight Who.) She also produces simply stunning transition from the the destruction of the TARDIS to the Doctor’s face then back to Skaro. However she struggles to make the Daleks look dynamic which is a shame after “Into The Dalek” showed how it could be done.

“The Magician’s Apprentice” isn’t perfect, but it has the feel of a show trying something a little different in terms of pace and tone. Occasionally the traditional New Who grand gestures and broad strokes seem at odd with a talkier, slower, slightly more dour approach as if the show is trying to be all things to all fans, but it’s a promising start to a new series for a show that thrives on reinvention.

Doctor_Who_901_The_Magicians_Apprentice_missy

The Good:

  • Brilliant teaser – looks amazing and has that perfect WTF? moment when the little boy reveals his name.
  • Brilliant cliffhanger. You can imagine that Moffat must have been toying with the idea of the Doctor saying “Exterminate” while holding a Dalek gun at an episode’s end for a while. It’s an almost irresistible image.
  • The idea of Davros throwing the (fourth) Doctor’s own words back in his face (it’s great to know he archives all his old CCTV footage) is a great conceit.
  • “Your chances of survival are about one in a thousand. So here’s what you do. You forget about the a thousand and concentrate on the one.”
  • “I try never to understand. It’s called an open mind.”
  • “Jane Austen… amazing writer, brilliant comic observer, and – strictly amongst ourselves – a phenomenal kisser.”
  • The reveal of Skaro – stunning.
  • The Doctor almost playing a rock version of the Doctor Who theme.
  • Missy proving she’s still bad in the most extreme way.
  • Handmines – brilliant.
  • “I approve of your new face Doctor. I like it… so much more like mine.”

The Bad:

  • Some of the aircraft shadows looked really iffy.
  • Missy  – great at times – can occasionally be just a little too much. Her speech to the Daleks could have been a chance to dial the theatrics down and deliver something more chilling; instead she’s a bit pantomime dame.
  • The ’60s style Dalek city interior is all well and good on an homage level – and, yes, Daleks wouldn’t be big in interior decoration – but it still looked suspiciously like an excuse to keep that main Dalek set cheap.
  • The Doctor’s puns at his party weren’t any funnier 900 years later.
  • Clara’s methodology for locating the Doctor is bobbins.
  • The Doctor’s begging at the end felt a little overegged. Capaldi was excellent throughout but even seemed to struggle to sell this bit.

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And The Random:

  • Kelly Hunter reprised her role as the Shadow Architect from “The Stolen Earth”.
  • So Davros is the “Dark Lord” of Skaro now? Has he been watching his Lord Of The Rings box-sets thinking, “Now there’s a guy I like!”
  • Old monster cameos included Ood and Judoon, but we think we also spotted the silhouette of Blowfish from Torchwood right at the back of Maldovarium’s bar as well.
  • When UNIT scientist Jac (Jaye Griffiths of Bugs fame) is listing various sightings of the Doctor she mentions, “three possible versions of Atlantis”. A well known continuity error from the classic series is that it gave three possible reasons for the destruction of Atlantis: in “The Underwater Menace” (1967), “The Daemons” (1971) and “The Time Monster”(1972).
  • The Doctor mentions during his party (to which all of him is invited) that, “I spent all day yesterday in a bow tie. The day before in a long scarf.” Which may explain why he also appears to be wearing the second Doctor’s trousers.
  • Soundbites from previous Davros episodes include, “If you had created a virus in your laboratory…” and the “Do I have the right…?” speech from the fourth Doctor story “Genesis Of The Daleks” (1975); “I’m not here as your prisoner, Davros, but your executioner,” from the fifth Doctor story “Resurrection Of The Daleks” (1984); “Unlimited power! Unlimited Rice pudding!” from the seventh Doctor story “Remembrance Of The Daleks” (1988); and, “Everything we saw, everything we lost…” from the tenth Doctor story “The Stolen Earth” (2008). There is also a clip of the sixth Doctor (from “Revelation Of The Daleks”, 1985) on the monitors but it’s difficult to work out if any associated quote goes with it – feel free to let us know if your hearing is better than ours!
  • Casual throwaway references to “the Cloister Wars” and “Suicide Moons” are so enticing, expect Big Finish to announce audio series based on them…
  • “Since he was a little girl.” Hornets’ nest well and truly stirred.
  • Right, so how does a Confession Dial know when somebody who travels through has died? Is there some kind of Gallifreyan Meantime?
  • The Doctor’s party is held in 1138AD which must surely be a reference to George Lucas’s film THX 1138 (which Lucas references all the time himself in subsequent projects).

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