Wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey, remember? Time is constantly in flux.Dahak wrote: We know she won't die, and she'll meet the Doctor later in her life, so it doesn't feel as bad when the Doctor gets locked up. If it was some random Character of the week, then there might be a tad more suspense there.
A few points that occurred to me while reading the thread...
Why the Pandorica instead of just killing the Doctor? Well, because killing the Doctor doesn't exactly have a great track record of success. Heck, last time the daleks took a shot at him, they hit him with their 100% lethal weapons and he didn't even need to fully regenerate. In fact, the one thing that's tended to keep him out of action most effectively throughout the series' run has been...imprisoning him. The Alliance is just getting genre savvy, that's all.
Also, every mention of resolving this with a deus ex machina - that's what this series is about. The Doctor has been referred to on more than one occasion as a God, the Lonely God, etc. He emerges from his machine and fixes everything - meaning he literally is...a God from the Machine
As to what's going to fix it, we've got the big hint that hasn't yet paid off, about Amy's life not making any sense. I'm pretty sure we're going to be going back to Little Girl Amy. My mild pet theory is that the Doctor will be able to make some kind of psychic contact with her and guide her life to where she needs to be to rescue him from the Pandorica, thus accounting for her life not making sense as well as her, um...obsession is too mild a word, really, but you know what I mean