Gender: Male Location: Dreaming...Or am I living...
My only complaint with this episode is that it was two short. I thought that there was so much more that could have been done, so much more character development, more planet involvement. Why did the planet exist? why was the professor studying it so much? More depth, and the ending felt rather rushed.
But I enjoyed it, I wish it was a 2 parter though...
I don't know what the fuss is about, I enjoyed Midnight. Unlike most people it seems, I enjoy not knowing absolutely everything, just as the Doctor enjoys it, though for different reasons, mine being that sometimes things are just better off not being known. Whatever the creature from Midnight was, it would have been less interesting if suddenly the Doctor goes "Aha! It's the Telepathosaurus that lives off of extonic sunlight! Brilliant!"
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Last edited by REXXXX on Jun 16th, 2008 at 08:13 AM
im a fan that in the movies sometimes maybe its best not to reveal the monster
Cloverfield being an example
and talking about not knowing everything im staying spoiler free for the last two episodes
i know the basics for next weeks ep but after that pretty much not a lot other than the return of you know who and poss someone else
Finally saw some Season 4 episodes, and I'm not very impressed. And I also saw the first part of the Master storyline from Season 3, and I loved it. My only question is why does the Doctor constantly apologize to his enemies, especially one as evil as the Master? And how is the Master regenerated once, and even twice? He already wasted all of his regenerations ten years ago, not to mention his essence was eliminated.
[SPOILER - highlight to read]:Doctor Who's arch enemy Davros is to return to television screens for the first time in twenty years in the culmination of the current series.
The Timelord must face the megalomaniac scientist, last seen entering an escape pod in 1988, in the final two episode of the long-running BBC1 show.
Now played by the Shakespearian actor Julian Bleach, the character plans to use his creations, the Daleks, to become the supreme ruler of the universe.
Created by screenwriter Terry Nation, he was first introduced in Genesis of the Daleks in 1975, and last appeared thirteen years later in Remembrance of the Daleks.
Horribly scarred and crippled after an explosion on his planet, Skaro, he had only one functioning arm and a robotic "eye" mounted on his forehead.
A master of robotics, the villain depended completely upon a self-designed mobile life-support chair which enclosed the lower half of his body.
This became the inspiration for his deadliest creation, and Dr Who's nemesis, the Daleks.
The return of his old enemy is not the only shock for the time-travelling Doctor, played in the current series by David Tennant.
Dr Who and his sidekick Rose, played by Billie Piper, are also faced with a new and deadly red Dalek.
i think you should have changed the name of the link like i did on friday methinks
some people on here and god knows how they manage it remain spoiler free until transmission
true
i also thought the first version of the character who should not be named until anytime now looked like one of those featherless dead baby birds you used to see on your doorstep now and then
Just watched Midnight and I would say it's my favourite this series so far. Really well written and acted and the feeling you get is just so... wow! Creepy and marvelous!