Weird. Goofy and befuddled seem like two adjectives that fit the Tenant version pretty well. Not sure how we can have such different ideas about Tenant’s character!
(Befuddled, in Tenant’s case, only typically as a sort of pretense, though. But a well-and-often maintained pretense. I’ve interpreted the Smith version of befuddledness in the same way.)
It was established in Pyramids of Mars (waay back in 1975, fact fans!) that even though you’ve experienced the future (or the “present”) one way, that doesn’t mean it can’t be changed by subsequent (?) events in the past.
The meeting in the Library was from River Song’s past (she makes a comment about how young The Doctor looks). It was the first time in The Doctor’s personal timeline that they met, and the last time in River’s timeline that they were together.
[ol][li]Because of the Rose/Two-Universe problem there are now multiple timelines/dimensions and the Tardis is slipping between them in the Crack.[]The Doctor encountered Ellison between an event that went back and erased those other invasions and an event that went back and restored the invasions.[]Jack had already been there and used his memory pills on them.[]A writing continuity error that will not be resolved.[]All the nerds were playing an intense session of WoW and didn’t notice the invasions or the stolen earth.[/ol][/li][/QUOTE]
Just wanted to point out that Jack’s memory pills are called RetCon. Just the thing to sew up ragged holes in continuity…
C’mon - no mention of “Broadsword calling Danny Boy”? I LOL’d at that and replayed it for my wife to see if she would catch it, which she did: probably because there was recently a triple feature of The Guns of Navaronne, Ice Station Zebra, and Where Eagles Dare on cable and I was quoting lines for a week afterward.
Boy, do they. When the new candy-coated Daleks rolled out my first reaction was “They look adorable!” Skittles Daleks: Exterminate The Rainbow.
This episode did introduce the only thing scarier than a Dalek in killing mode: a Dalek in helping mode. “WOULD YOU LIKE SOME TEA?” Um, no. And don’t offer to clean the floor, either, Roomba from hell.
I thought that was pretty silly, even for a show where silly is pretty normal. I mean, these super-sophisticated robotic machines are your secret weapon against the Germans and you have them serving tea?
Having the Daleks serve tea, carry files and (perhaps) clean the floors showed how much they had become ingrained into military life. They had been accepted as soldiers, albeit mechanical, and had become completely accepted as part of the landscape. So when The Doctor starts rambling on about “alien killing machines” and “deadliest thing to hit the Earth since the Spice Girls” (OK, I made that one up), his opinions are discounted because the Daleks are so useful, so commonplace, so much like other soldiers.
Or… I could be overthinking what was perhaps a joke in a TV show targeted at children and families
I assumed the tea-serving and such was part of the Daleks’ Cunning Plan–making themselves look helpful and obedient so they would be accepted. The joke being that they can’t even say “WOULD YOU LIKE SOME TEA?” without making it sound like a threat.
I suspect that the WOULD. YOU. CARE. FOR. SOME. TEA. joke is slightly lost elsewhere, because both Daleks and tea are ingrained in British culture. Daleks represent ultimate evil, while a nice cup of tea is about as mundane as it gets. Put them together and comic juxtaposition ensues.
An American equivalent might be a Klingon asking “do you want fries with that?” in a gruff and threatening manner.
Yes. Maybe not entirely in sync - I don’t get to discuss with my American friends until the Monday - but by the end of the Sunday, both the US and Canada have had the eps, for sure.
And, yeah, this was a good’n. Amy and River have the best Companion interplay. Also: ‘I love that sound. It’s a brilliant sound.’
but he’s telling the angels that they made one mistake. Paraphrasing:
You made a mistake! When you lay a trap, there is one thing you mustn’t put into it! [This general theme repeats several times.]
There’s one thing you mustn’t put into it! [Fires the gun] Me.