If nothing else, it is ever so clever a bit of marketing to make the season a puzzler with clues buried in the shows web pages.
Plus to have buried clues in the past season virtually guarantees sales of the DVDs to find them, or at least good ratings for the rebroadcasts of the reruns.
Well, I do not feel good about that stuff. They did this kind of crap with Lost as well - little clues that you had to solve online puzzles to find, or call telephone numbers, or whatever. If the show creators want to do that stuff, I guess that’s OK, but I don’t really have the time or motivation for it, so I hope that all of the “extras” are just that: Extras, that are not necessary for understanding or figuring out the mysteries in the show.
To be honest, the time travel stuff so far in this season has sort of made my head hurt, and I’m looking forward to a break from it (maybe) next week with a MOTW episode. I mean, I feel confident that Moffatt is going to pull it together and I’m not really complaining, I’m just saying, I’m having sort of a tough time with it and am hoping that we start to get more answers and fewer additional mysteries as the season progresses.
“TARDIS Blue”, Is that an actual color (colour) now? I loved it. I really enjoyed the pair of episodes. The time stuff and hints are fine, I don’t get caught up in it I guess. I’ll let others do the digging and read it here.
They’ve done this stuff with Who since the first series with Eccleston, and it’s always been just little extras, not anything required for watching the show. I doubt very much if Moffat has anything to do with the hidden messages on the website. If he did, they’d be more interesting.
Of course, Lost didn’t rely on those on-line extras, did it? Are you saying that if I spend the next six months downloading old ABC websites, the final episode will make sense?
I watched both episodes, but I’m coming at this as something of a Doctor Who virgin. (I have tried to watch episodes from time to time but found the show kind of childish and the special effects cheesy. Although I did like Torchwood.) But I enjoyed both episodes (they seemed darker and more mature than what I’ve sampled previously). I did gather from watching these two episodes and reading about them here and elsewhere that there’s an enormous amount of back story that I’m not familiar with but it was well-written enough that I was able to follow along. So I’ll stick with it, and perhaps go back and watch the last series or two.
The second episode showed us that mankind only went to the moon so The Silence could get hold of a space suit. The Silence have been influencing humans for a very long time (how long?). If that’s the case then isn’t it possible that if The Silence fall then Human technological advancement could stagnate? That sounds like a serious threat.
A bit like the parasitic symbiotic relationship used in a few other science fiction shows (Stargate Goa’uld or Star Trek Trill symbiont).
I fell like I should stop watching Doctor Who and then pick up the box-set later and watch it all in one go.
Perhaps because of newbies like me, for whom UNIT would be unfamiliar? (I mean, I could easily figure out what’s meant via a simple Google search, but I think some viewers would be turned off if the show requires too much advance knowledge.)
You may know that Doctor Who ran from 1963 to 1989; it was revived in 2005. The seasons of New Who that starred Christopher Eccleston & David Tennant are all available on Netflix Streaming. The previous year with Matt Smith as the Doctor are On Demand on my cable system. So you could catch up on all the recent stuff pretty easily. (Many Older Who adventures are also on Netflix Streaming, too.)
Or you could just continue watching & ask questions! Or check outThe Internet.
It’s not really hard. It is still a children’s show. A scary children’s show that appeals to adults, too.
They probably didn’t want to open up the UNIT dating controversey. Or Moffat actually has a position on it, and that’s that ‘the original intent of having the stories in the 80s holds’, meaning that the Doctor wasn’t attached to UNIT in 1969, and in fact, wouldn’t encounter UNIT itself for something like another year (although he’d met the Brigadier in 1966).
BTW, I am seriously considering getting back into Doctor who fanvidding, because I have a great tune for a sweet Rory/Amy vid after his “She can always hear me” speech to the Doctor.
It’s by Amanda Stott, called “You can always reach me.”
Do you mean like twelve people walking on the moon by 1972 but no more since? Concorde being the only supersonic passenger jet?
As to the last two episodes, I liked them but I get the feeling I’ll like them more when the whole story is complete by the end of the season. At the moment my brain is all full of theories , and reading the spoilers full of peoples thoughts about who’s the mother and who River is isn’t helping.