That was awesome.
Not awesome in the modern sense of wonderful and fantastic but in the older sense of the word, something that inspires awe, beautiful and terrifying all at the same time, like watching an avalanche roll down a hill towards you.
Genuinely one of the few episodes, old or new, that I have actually found frightening. I've been a grown up for decades but I was still, so to speak, watching from behind the sofa.
Parallax wrote:AKA Moping About Clara
Yeah, it's normal to “mope” after a friend dies. That's not moping, it's
grieving.
Parallax wrote:AKA The Doctor's Mind Palace
No, it's his Confession Dial. I figured that out the second time the castle started moving. Leave it to the Time Lords to have a mechanism for
extracting one's last will and testament, willing or no.
Parallax wrote:AKA What ^&*%(* is wrong with the Time Lords?!
They're dicks. They've always been dicks.
Parallax wrote:The purpose of the tower? It certainly wasn't to kill the Doctor, even the Time Lords don't design things that badly. To imprison him? That certainly would never work. To make him confess certain things? Possible but to what end?
It's all in the name – it's a confession dial, a mechanism to cause you to confess.
Parallax wrote:Regardless of the purpose, the Doctor was in the tower for BILLIONS OF YEARS, dying painfully over and over and over and over. We can assume that the Time Lords knew of this and were probably even watching it all unfold ... which makes them pure, undiluted sadists. You have to be pretty screwed up to even allow such a thing to happen, let alone monitor it.
Well... yes and no. Yes, within the pocket universe (if that's what it was – let's face it, none of us really understand Time Lord technology) billions of years passed, but if not on the outside then in a sense it was “subjective” time... except subjectively the Doctor only experienced one day. Because of the reset you could argue that he only actually aged one day (or whatever the interval was) and that was all the time he spent in the castle, even if that one day repeated hundreds of billions of times.
Each iteration of the Doctor only died
once – and the final one didn't die at all, so that's probably how the Time
Dicks Lords would justify it.
Parallax wrote:The nature of the tower is weird.
So is the TARDIS, we're just more used to it, that's all. And no, it wasn't just sitting out in the sand, anymore than when the Doctor saved Gallifrey the planet was “just sitting” somewhere in the present universe. I suspect that the confession dial was outside regular space and time – we know the Time Lords have that level of magictech.
So, really, the Doctor was teleported into the Confession Dial, which might well have been delivered to Gallifrey by some means or other, or teleported itself to an outside-universe location, or... well, it's Time Lord technology, like a TARDIS.
Parallax wrote:The monster ... good concept but not once in the billions of encounters did the Doctor think of a physical attack against it? It turned out to be a bunch of cogs in a cloak and fell apart pretty easily at the end.
Except for the little detail that, apparently, touching the creature would result in severe burns and fatal damage. That does make it hard to physically attack it.
How was that painting of Clara so old if the tower reset itself? How come the damage to the wall wasn't reset?
The painting was entered into the castle as an old object, just as the flowers were present as a fresh-cut, and there was the loop involving the Doctor's clothes drying by the fire.
Parallax wrote:The Doctor talks to doors. And said "back when I was telepathic" ... so he's lost any trace of that ability now?
Different regenerations seem to have varying telepathic abilities. It could be his current one isn't very telepathic, which may also account for some of his social awkwardness.
Parallax wrote:I am curious, however, in the physics of the Doctor's escape. The wall to home was said to be considerably harder than diamond and twenty feet thick and the Doctor spent billions of years punching his way through it, wearing it down micron by micron. Is that even possible?
Have you seen the Grand Canyon? That only took a few million.
Parallax wrote:If one punch does excactly zero damage, then what would three billion punches do?
“Hard” is not the same thing as “invulnerable”. Perhaps, indeed, billions of years of eroding just a few atoms from each punch would do it.
Anyhow, the rules in the Confesion Dial aren't exactly the same as the ones in the real world, are they?
Tribble wrote:Maybe the Timelords just wanted to see hum suffer a bit (well, a lot)? After all, he almost used the Moment on them (or used it the first time around and chose to retcon it the 2nd, depending on your PoV). He stopped the Time Lord Council from ripping apart the Time Vortex and ascending in godhood, and I could see Rassilion wanting to punish him for it. Plus the Doctor shuffled them into a bottle-universe for who knows how long from their perspective, and refused to bring them back through the crack in the universe (both of which was for their own good, but they wouldn't really know that). They (or someone else) could even be punishing him for his various crimes over the years. Remember that by the end of the Time War the Doctor already had committed more crimes and had more blood on his hands than anyone else in history, and that was before using the Moment! Sure, the Time Lords gave him a new regeneration cycle because at the end of the day he's needed, but they have no reason to like him. The Time Lords were never known for being good guys, and by the end of the Time War they were considered as bad as the Daleks. At this point "sadists" is probably too kind a term to describe some of them.
^ All of this.
Also, remember the Time Lords are
aliens – they are, in general, more like the Master/Missy than the Doctor.
The Romulan Republic wrote:Interesting start, but it got really strange and creepy as it went on.
I think that was sort of the point.
The Romulan Republic wrote:And I am so, so tired of Moffat having vast periods of time pass by off-camera.
On the other hand, it sort of was important to this particular story.
The Romulan Republic wrote:Still, seeing the Doctor finally break through the wall was pretty cool.
I kept thinking
how goddamned STUBBORN! At the end of each cycle realizing anew that the only way out is to punch a nigh-impenetrable wall until you
erode the fucking thing... and to keep doing it, over and over... Granted, the guy on the last cycle only experiences one day of it, but all the others punch it,
knowing they can't get through, get mortally injured, drag their asses up to the teleport room, and
kill themselves to give the next iteration a chance to punch a few more atoms off that goddamned wall.
The Romulan Republic wrote:But now we're going to forever have people arguing over weather the Doctor is the real Doctor or just a duplicate.
If the Doctor is a duplicate then ANYONE who has gone through a teleport is “just” a duplicate.
The Romulan Republic wrote:Not to mention the whole hybrid thing.
People have been arguing about that since 1996.
Still, Gallifrey's back. It wasn't really a surprise to me. What's a surprise is that the Doctor didn't figure it out sooner.
Well, he
was having a bad day.... several billion times over.
SpottedKitty wrote:Parallax wrote:The monster ... good concept but not once in the billions of encounters did the Doctor think of a physical attack against it?
That depends; what kind of Groundhog Day loop was this? Did the Doctor remember anything from one loop to the next, or did he work everything out from the beginning every time?
I think he had to figure everything out each time. No carry-over memories because each time the teleporter made an iteration it was working from the same saved template, which was only current to the first time he stepped out of the machine.
Parallax wrote:I did have to laugh at that "Time Lords take a long time to die" line, though. The series is chock full of Time Lords dying really, really quickly.
Except, of course, for when they regenerate, or stagger on as a crispy corpse until they can steal a new body, or... Actually, they're pretty tough sons of bitches, or they can be. There's also the issue of subjective time – clearly, the Doctor can immensely slow down his perception of time passing. Do that just before you check out, yeah, you take a long time to die, at least from your viewpoint.
But, boy, howdy, did that episode have some genuine nightmare fuel in it!
Rasillon would be my vote for Big Bad, but we'll find out next week.