
PS: Have I got thread title and voting system right this time?

Moderator: NecronLord
I really liked that part. We've seen hints throughout about how coldhearted he can be when lives are lost plus the description hutchensen gave him.NecronLord wrote:I choose to assume Hutchinson and the kid were running away from the Germans in that scene.
Anyway... Since when did the Doctor torture his defeated enemies with eternal sensory deprivation?
Something about that whole montage seemed very... weird.NecronLord wrote:I choose to assume Hutchinson and the kid were running away from the Germans in that scene.
Anyway... Since when did the Doctor torture his defeated enemies with eternal sensory deprivation?
Since Doomsday? That's pretty much what being banished into the Void means as far as I can tell. It's not Daleks or Cybermen will suffocate or anything like that. Daleks, for one, seem to be able to last for a very, very long time without refuelling or anything.NecronLord wrote:Anyway... Since when did the Doctor torture his defeated enemies with eternal sensory deprivation?
That, at least, was a byproduct of saving the World from this. This episode however was: I've defeated you. Now I'm going to punish you for all eternity just becuase I can.Crazy_Vasey wrote:Since Doomsday? That's pretty much what being banished into the Void means as far as I can tell. It's not Daleks or Cybermen will suffocate or anything like that. Daleks, for one, seem to be able to last for a very, very long time without refuelling or anything.NecronLord wrote:Anyway... Since when did the Doctor torture his defeated enemies with eternal sensory deprivation?
Nothing. Absolutely nothing, in comparison. And that's discounting that she survived.Lost Soal wrote:I really liked that part. We've seen hints throughout about how coldhearted he can be when lives are lost plus the description hutchensen gave him.
This is the man who let Cassandra burst from the heat in The End Of The World,
Why are you capitalising 'dalek'? What's more, again, kill not delibrately render immortal and leave imprisoned forever. That's the morality of Jehovah.tried to torture to death what he thought was the last DALEK and of course wiped out both the DALEKS and his own people in order to end the Time War.
Err, yes they will. Cybermen have never been immune to suffocation - they've been able to move through space briefly in The Wheel in Space, under the influence of some gravitational field between two ships, but the fact that clogging their cyber-lungs up with gold suffocates them indicates that they generally need air. While cybusmen are radically different, there's nothing that indicates that they are capable of living forever without air when their cousins could not. And all daleks have, at the very least, a means to kill themselves.Crazy_Vasey wrote:Since Doomsday? That's pretty much what being banished into the Void means as far as I can tell. It's not Daleks or Cybermen will suffocate or anything like that. Daleks, for one, seem to be able to last for a very, very long time without refuelling or anything.
Either he's into threesomes, or he just doesn't think of Martha that way.Crazedwraith wrote:All so the Doctor must know by now Martha fancies him and yet... Was it just me or did he seem to imply to the Matron that he'd so ditch Martha in a second if she'd hook up with him? He doesn't seem to care about Martha in the slightest.
Correction: His absolutely black, sadistic, completely evil, Valeyard side.Lord Woodlouse wrote:Meh, I loved it. I like seeing the Doctor's darker side.
Well, I assumed the new Cybermen don't need air as they don't seem to transfer the respiratory system over at all. Far as I could tell, they were just transferring the brain and the nervous system over into the pre-made shell. I expect that'd be different for the ones that were transformed piecemeal, as in the Torchwood episode, though.NecronLord wrote:Err, yes they will. Cybermen have never been immune to suffocation - they've been able to move through space briefly in The Wheel in Space, under the influence of some gravitational field between two ships, but the fact that clogging their cyber-lungs up with gold suffocates them indicates that they generally need air. While cybusmen are radically different, there's nothing that indicates that they are capable of living forever without air when their cousins could not. And all daleks have, at the very least, a means to kill themselves.
Nor did the old ones. They outright say they're just brains in The Tenth Planet. The cyber-lungs that get clogged by gold dust are some mechanical devices.Crazy_Vasey wrote:Well, I assumed the new Cybermen don't need air as they don't seem to transfer the respiratory system over at all.
... Not entirely what I meant. It just seemed like if the Matron was gonna tag along the first stop would be the 2007 to give Martha the boot out the door. So long and don't let the door smack you on the arse on your way out.NecronLord wrote:Either he's into threesomes, or he just doesn't think of Martha that way.Crazedwraith wrote:All so the Doctor must know by now Martha fancies him and yet... Was it just me or did he seem to imply to the Matron that he'd so ditch Martha in a second if she'd hook up with him? He doesn't seem to care about Martha in the slightest.
True, but that was genuinely designed to shock people into realising what the horror of the Trench charge was. of course they ruined that by brining Eddie and Balders back for Back and Fourth[/ i]Blackadder did it better
You're probably thinking of Attack of the Cybermen where they show various characters with cybernetic augments, part way through transformation. The new cybernisation process is a lot more brutal and direct, ripping the brain out and plunking it in a shell, the old cybermen appeared to start with limbs, and work their way in until only the brain was left.Crazy_Vasey wrote:Fair enough. Seems I need to go back and rewatch some of the old Who.
Maybe he sees them all the time.Dartzap wrote:Really liked it, especially at the War Memorial in the end, although I thought the old boy (hur hur) would have had an heart attack at seeing some one appear in front of him, having not changed (other than one's clothing) from when he last saw 'em ninety odd years ago.
He knew he was a time travellor, it wouldn't be that much of a surprise to see they haven't aged in probably one dayDartzap wrote:Really liked it, especially at the War Memorial in the end, although I thought the old boy (hur hur) would have had an heart attack at seeing some one appear in front of him, having not changed (other than one's clothing) from when he last saw 'em ninety odd years ago.
Completely evil? I'd not go that far. There was a certain justice in what he did, for all it was much worse than we normally see him. But I felt it was something the Doctor could very well do if angered enough.NecronLord wrote:Correction: His absolutely black, sadistic, completely evil, Valeyard side.Lord Woodlouse wrote:Meh, I loved it. I like seeing the Doctor's darker side.