What world building? Earth was evacuated because reasons. There was no world building.
I thought it referenced beast below which means solar flares destroyed the earth. The UK escaped on a whale.
What world building? Earth was evacuated because reasons. There was no world building.
I assume it's the same evacuation from The Beast Below and those episodes of classic Who where there were solar flares or whatever it was.
That's a different event. Sometime in the 30th century the Earth is rendered uninhabitable by solar flares so the population evacuates until it's safe again.Yeah we actually saw the Earth get destroyed in the second episode with the 9th Doctor and Rose.
I thought it referenced beast below which means solar flares destroyed the earth. The UK escaped on a whale.
Forgive me if this has already been mentioned, but do we know if Peter Jackson actually ended up doing anything for Who this run?
Forgive me if this has already been mentioned, but do we know if Peter Jackson actually ended up doing anything for Who this run?
My girlfriend, who admittedly is not a Doctor Who fan, thought this episode was terrible. I thought it was average, other than the resolution at the end which boiled down to "these robots murdered all your friends and family, but now they've forgotten, so don't be annoyed and also you have to pay them to live in the city you designed them to build for you, and be nice to them so they don't murder you all again".
The Doctor basically turning the last humans into an oppressed race forced to pay a bunch of murderers for shelter.
Also wiping the memories of the robots doesn't really gel with the last ep where we learnt that it kinda sucks of the Doctor to wipe memories.
That's a different event. Sometime in the 30th century the Earth is rendered uninhabitable by solar flares so the population evacuates until it's safe again.
The relevant stories are: The Ark in Space, The Beast Below and now probably Smile
Nah. Beast Below was a massive continuity fuck up. The solar flare events happened nowhere close to the 30th century; more likely somewhere between the 50th and 60th century (the Ark technology itself was from the 30th century, but it's specifically made clear that it's thousands of years old).
That's a different event. Sometime in the 30th century the Earth is rendered uninhabitable by solar flares so the population evacuates until it's safe again.
The relevant stories are: The Ark in Space, The Beast Below and now probably Smile
Right. People miss the nuance. Reseting the Vardi freed them and saved all the people. The Doctor didn't swear off ever wiping anyone's memory for any reason ever again last week.There's a possibility that's a theme for this season, particularly in the context of the end of the previous one.
Anyhow, I got the impression that it was removing their 'must be loyal to the mission' programming - which in turn removed their understanding of humanity. Releasing them from slavery, because the very nature of their slavery was what was causing them to kill people.
I hope the comparisons with The Ark weren't planned, because that serial is fucking terrible.
What I'm getting from the entirety of Doctor Who is that people never learned to properly build robots that didn't have glaring murder glitches in them.
Stands to reason. If you are on the testing team and the robot murders you, then filling in a bug report will be the last thing on your mind.
This is if you want to visit it though the new google earth (only works in chrome)
What I'm getting from the entirety of Doctor Who is that people never learned to properly build robots that didn't have glaring murder glitches in them.
Pleasantly surprised by the episode, I wouldn't say it's great by any means, but considering I hated In the Forest of the Night, this one was I'd say a solid episode. Nothing special in terms of plot, but fun just to watch the Doctor and Bill playing off each other, some great character work.
Also, Nardole wasn't in this very much, but I think he's starting to grow on me, him and the Doctor are very fun to watch with each other.
Also worth saying that the overnights for Smile were half a million higher than The Witches Familiar, despite the move away from live televisionThe Pilot's consolidated ratings are in- 6.68 million, which makes it the 10th most watched programme of the week.
Kinda puts the show within the context of Britain's changing televisual landscape- Partners in Crime was also the tenth most watched programme of the week when it debuted, despite getting two and a half million extra viewers.
The Pilot's consolidated ratings are in- 6.68 million, which makes it the 10th most watched programme of the week.
Even that would be a pretty solid, sustainable hit nowadays- remember, the BBC's target for a successful Doctor Who relaunch 12 years ago was 6 million on consolidated figures, and given the TV climate that we have today you'd be able to chop a million or two off that before you're in any real trouble.Yeah, that's actually rather better than I was fearing. I was imagining something consolidating to the mid-to-late 5s.