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Images from "The Eleventh Hour" of a young Amelia Pond going to the garden and awaiting the Doctor are shown at the episode's conclusion. [1] Amy's afterword contains several references to her adventures with the Doctor: fighting pirates; falling in love with "a man who will wait two thousand years to keep her safe"]]; giving hope to "the greatest painter who ever lived"; and saving "a whale ...
BBC America created a series of four specials prior to the seventh series premiere of Doctor Who, including one entitled "The Timey-Wimey Stuff of Doctor Who". [ 63 ] British " Timelord rock " band Chameleon Circuit , composed of YouTube bloggers Alex Day and Charlotte McDonnell (formerly Charlie McDonnell) among others, wrote a song about the ...
Doctor Who follows the adventures of the title character, a rogue Time Lord with somewhat unknown origins who goes by the name "the Doctor".The Doctor fled Gallifrey, the planet of the Time Lords, in a stolen TARDIS ("Time and Relative Dimension(s) in Space"), a time machine that travels by materialising into, and dematerialising out of, the time vortex.
The Tenth Doctor also mentioned the Fall of Arcadia in "Doomsday" (2006). When the Eleventh Doctor tells Clara that the situation is "timey-wimey", and the War Doctor ridicules him for it, the Tenth Doctor remarks, "I've no idea where he picks that stuff up"; the Tenth Doctor originally used the phrase in "Blink" (2007). [22]
Dan Martin, writing for The Guardian, was more pleased with "Let's Kill Hitler" as an opener than "A Good Man Goes to War" as a finale, and said it was "an energetic, timey-wimey tour de force with gags and flourishes like the car and the crop circles that still maintained a strong sense of what it was about".
The Doctor tells himself "Assume you're going to survive. Always assume that." This is what Clara says of the Doctor in "The Witch's Familiar": "he always assumes he's going to win. He always knows there's a way to survive". [3] The Doctor confesses that he ran from Gallifrey because he was scared, and that the pretense of being bored was a lie.
Future Quinn blames all his life's misfortunes on Summer and her group of friends. So when he invented a time machine, and with nothing left to lose, he decides to go back in time and get his revenge.
[16] In a review for The Daily Telegraph, Michael Hogan praised the expanded roles of Graham, Ryan and Yaz, but felt the revelation was as confusing for the Doctor as it was for audiences, writing it was "the sort of "timey-wimey, wibbly-wobbly" narrative tricksiness" that former showrunner Steven Moffat had been criticised for. [17]