Don't know about that last one, ian. Like I say, she's acting her cotton socks off but she's hit the glass ceiling of being Catherine Tate, which was most painfully obvious as the node turned to face the Doctor at the end of last week's episode. What should have been a supremely disturbing moment was rendered completely ineffectual because it had Catherine Tate's face.
Hmm, I did find that moment a little irksome, but her histrionics seemed a bit toned down for this episode and she wasn't as grating as she usually is. Normally, when any episode's over, the residual discomfort borne by Tate's semi-comic gurning is a major irritant, but, I'll give her her due, she wasn't that bad in 'Forest of the Dead'.
I tell you one thing - if the trailer was anything to go by, then next week's episode could be a bit of a dark horse.
QUOTE: The Doctor is trapped, alone, powerless and terrified, on the planet Midnight. Soon, the knocking on the wall begins. Only a woman called Sky seems to know the truth – but as paranoia turns into a witch-hunt, Sky turns the Doctor's greatest strengths against him, and a sacrifice must be made...
I'm actually quite looking forward to another RTD story.
Well, I've caught up now and I have to say that the last two episodes were the first in ages to genuinely make me wonder what the hell was going on and give me the creeps at the same time. Mostly it's one or the other.
QUOTE: I tell you one thing - if the trailer was anything to go by, then next week's episode could be a bit of a dark horse.
QUOTE: The Doctor is trapped, alone, powerless and terrified, on the planet Midnight. Soon, the knocking on the wall begins. Only a woman called Sky seems to know the truth – but as paranoia turns into a witch-hunt, Sky turns the Doctor's greatest strengths against him, and a sacrifice must be made...
I'm actually quite looking forward to another RTD story.
So am I for a different reason - apparently, it's a companion-lite story.
Four RTD stories in a row? That's a bit much isn't it? Anyway was that Alexei Sayle I saw in the trailer for the next episode? It's kind of interesting as he once appeared in the "Old" series.
So, the twelfth episode, which they withheld the name of to keep us in suspense has had it's title officially revealed as 'THE STOLEN EARTH'. And it's about a battle for the fate of the Earth.
So, thankfully, a completely new idea, and nothing we've seen in previous series. Phew.
Was it just me who heard The Doctor say to the River Song character something along the lines of "How did you know that?, you would only know that if i told you my real name!" I never realised he had another name! Think will have to watch this again on the BBC iplayer to see if he did say it and get it verbatim, unless somebody else can verify it.
I thought he said that there was only reason he'd tell her his real name. I took it as meaning they were married/siblings/she was actually the doctor in a womans body... they've a big connection of some kind.
Neither, really, according to Moffat: the Doctor's name has always been a bit of a mystery, and he thought it would be fun to make it a lot of a mystery.
There are a number of different explanations about the Doctor's real name.
1. In the 1979 story "The Armageddon Factor", the Time Lord Drax calls the Doctor "Theta Sigma" or "Thete". Although there is nothing in the story to suggest this isn't the Doctor's real name, fans don't normally accept it as such, possibly because Drax only appears in Parts Five and Six of "The Armageddon Factor", and the story is so shit and long that few fans have ever got to the scenes with Drax in before they turn it off. Even Peter Haining switched off during the five minute silent conversation between K9 and the computer Mentalis.
2. In the early 70s Piccolo book "The Making Of Doctor Who", authors Malcolm Hulke and Terrance Dicks suggest that the Doctor's real name is a collection of hieroglyphic symbols. While this theory is attractive, in that it creates the possibility of Prince being a Time Lord (or maybe even a future incarnation of the Doctor, somewhere between his twelfth and final regeneration), the decision of Hulke and Dicks to give over a whole chapter of their book to a vicar to talk about the Doctor and Christianity casts doubt on their credibility.
3. In The New Adventures novel "Lovecraft's Tits", acclaimed author Dave Herbert* definitively revealed that the Doctor's real name was "Adrian".
*Also author of "Semiotics and Silver Nemesis: The Cult of Cartmel", now available as a PDF.
Everyone knows that Doctor is the Doctor's surname. And loads of monsters and villains have called the Doctor by his first name, too. It's Neil. Most of them also use his middle name, Biformi.