Howling:The End of Doctor Who?

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Revision as of 11:43, 13 June 2013 by 89.241.67.154 (talk)
The Howling → The End of Doctor Who?
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There has been a lot of speculation, and many rumors, related to the next Doctor after Matt Smith.

But today I find myself wondering whether there will be another Doctor. I wonder whether the BBC is not planning on ending the show’s run.

Trenzalore, we have learned, is the place where the Doctor DIES and is entombed, the place of “the fall of the Eleventh.” The latter could be a clever misdirection, referring to an eleventh legion, his moral fall, or even to the literal “fall” from space in “The Name of the Doctor.”

But think of what Clara said in “The Name of the Doctor”:

Clara: Who’s that?

The Doctor: Never mind. Let’s go back

Clara: But who is he?

The Doctor: He’s me. There’s only me here. That’s the point. Now let’s get back.

Clara: But I never saw that one. I saw all of you. ELEVEN faces, all of them you! You’re the ELEVENTH Doctor!

The Doctor: I said he was me. I never said he was the Doctor.

Clara: I don’t understand.

The Doctor: My name, my real name – that is not the point. The name I chose is the Doctor. The name you choose, is like… it’s like a promise you make. He’s the one who broke the promise.

The Doctor: He’s my secret.

The Man: What I did, I did without choice.

The Doctor: I know.

The Man: In the name of peace and sanity.

The Doctor: But not in the name of the Doctor!

Eleven faces. Why would Clara, scattered throughout the Doctor’s entire timeline, have seen only Eleven faces? This makes it sound as though the individual who is the same person as the Doctor, but not one who accepted and acted in accordance with the name of the Doctor, is a version of the Doctor from the future. The Valeyard, the Storm, the Beast. The one that was refereed to in “The Wedding of River Song” when he said, “You’re a man with a long and dangerous past. But your future is infinitely more terrifying. The Silence believe it must be averted.”

And so the Doctor’s future is terrifying, there is a war against the Doctor which is being fought, and which ends at Trenzalore with his death. And there is a person the Doctor becomes who is not worthy of that name.

If that future is not prevented.

But the fact that Clara only saw Eleven Doctors along the Doctor’s timeline – does that imply that he will be the last? [Unsigned but appears to be 92.15.135.24 15:22, June 11, 2013 (UTC)]

Please sign your contributions.

Your alarmist idea makes no commercial sense. It would be quite possible for the BBC to stop production of the show without killing the Doctor. It's been done before.

The BBC is, of course, capable of stupidity. However, the show has been revived once & made money (rather a lot of it). That could happen again. The only reason to kill the Doctor off would be to make it harder to mount another revival. It wouldn't even make it impossible, because an ingenious writer (i.e., almost any writer) could find a timey-wimey way to make it so that the death was undone or never really happened.

Furthermore, the BBC has had its fingers burned before when it let the public know it wanted to stop production of the show. If it did want to stop, it'd do it deceptively, like last time. It wouldn't advertise the fact that that's what it was trying to do.

It would be asking for additional trouble to announce the confirmation of Series 8 & then to retract that confirmation. Since Matt Smith is leaving before Series 8 even begins, making him the last would force the BBC into cancelling an already confirmed series. If the show is to be ended, it'll be revealed by what the Beeb doesn't say, not by what it does say. It'd be something like: "We are unable to confirm our future plans at this time..."

A big difference between now & the 1980s is the Internet. The fans could generate far more trouble for the Beeb now than they could then. And Doctor Who fans are activists. They not only could create an enormous fuss but also would do so. --89.240.242.238talk to me 17:48, June 11, 2013 (UTC)

I think there's a tendency for fans who joined the show during the Smith era to think that the show will tank without him.
There's also the fact that Moffat "killed" the Doctor at the beginning of series 6 and the show didn't end. Moffat's writing doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the future status of the show. Shambala108 20:33, June 11, 2013 (UTC)
One characteristic of Moffat's writing that has caused unfavourable comment is his habit of frequently "killing" characters only to bring them back. Any apparent or threatened death of a recurring character, even one far less central than the Doctor, in a Moffat script needs be taken with a very large sackful of salt. --89.241.64.207talk to me 21:13, June 11, 2013 (UTC)
Really, @89? I haven't seen this behavior from fans of Matt Smith's Eleventh. It's nothing like some (not all!) die-hard Tennant fans who say they stopped watching the show when he left but they still find the time to go to Doctor Who fan sites to complain how the show, as they knew it, died 3 years ago. Tennant has successfully moved on but I've seen some of his fans argue that he should be brought back! Now, how would that be explained?! It was decent enough for him to stick around for the 2008-2010 specials and is putting in an appearance on the 50th Anniversary busht his long-time work for the show is over. But for some of his fans, the show ended in 2010!
I don't think this is the end of the show for all of the practical reasons you mention. Series 7 episodes might not have had the viewing audience in the UK that earlier Series had received but the audience in other areas, like the U.S., is only growing and distributing DW episodes globally and selling merchandise probably brings in more money to the BBC than any other series. I even think Torchwood was successful and is only on hiatus until RTD wants to return as its showrunner. Badwolff 20:18, June 12, 2013 (UTC)
Badwolff: It was Shambala108 who made the comment about "fans who joined the show during the Smith era", not me. I responded to Shambala108's final paragraph (about Moffat's writing) only. Please point your guns at the right target. (I was 89 earlier.) --2.101.53.202talk to me 22:30, June 12, 2013 (UTC)
@ Badwolff, I know there are sites like you've described; one of the people I watch Doctor Who with has been on a lot of sites like that. Mostly I've seen the opposite: people who think that Matt Smith is the Doctor and what came before him is pretty much worthless, especially Tennant and RTD.
As for Tennant fans saying the show ended with him, that happened with many Tom Baker fans too, and I expect it will happen when Smith leaves. There is one type of Doctor Who fan that likes their first Doctor, and no other Doctor that follows can ever be good enough. There is another type of fan who likes all/nearly all of the Doctors, while still having favorites. I think the first type of fan is sometimes the most vocal. Shambala108 23:17, June 12, 2013 (UTC)
Contented babies don't howl. It's the ones with a belly ache that make the noise. --2.101.53.202talk to me 00:31, June 13, 2013 (UTC)

I agree it is not time to hang the crepe for the Doctor. But sorting out what Clara's statement could mean might be useful in understanding what is happening.

Going into the Doctor's timeline means going into his future as well as his past. If River Song came out saying "Spoilers", or just acting dumb regarding his future, we would not be surprised because knowing the future could change the future. But Clara is not acting like River might. She doesn't seem to be saying what she does concious of revealing to the Doctor his own mortality. She could keep quiet about what she saw without saying what she did. So why does she recall seeing no further Doctors, and not the Hurt Doctor?

Perhaps it has something to do with the Doctor going in to try to save her. That is presumed to be how she survived at all, when the GI was supposedly killed. Somehow after she was splintered she was apparently recombined, bringing the memories back to her. So either the splinters from the future did not return to her, or somehow their memories were wiped. Or the Doctor's interference only allowed her splinters to go into the past, and not the future. And the Doctor will have to deal with GI's interference himself.Phil Stone 04:02, June 13, 2013 (UTC)

Also, remember that his timeline is collapsing in on itself, which could be why she only saw the previous 11 faces. She and the GI might have only been able to go backwards and forwards to the point they entered the timestream themselves. Vohn exel 06:23, June 13, 2013 (UTC)

Bearing in mind that the "tomb TARDIS" looked like the current TARDIS, it may be that, as matters now stand, the Doctor does finally die in his current incarnation at Trenzalore & the Anniversary Special will be about how, with the help of Clara, the Tenth Doctor, Rose and the "Hurt Doctor", time gets rewritten so that that doesn't happen. Moffat keeps saying that the Anniversary Special "is about the future, not the past". Undoing the Doctor's death would certainly fit that description. It'd also fit Moffat's inclinations if the "Hurt Doctor" had been introduced so that he can somehow redeem himself &, by doing so, give the Doctor a future he'd not otherwise have had. The Name... had Clara repeatedly saying, "I was born to save the Doctor," & she's not yet finished doing that; they're still in the Doctor's timestream & changes can still be made. --89.241.67.154talk to me 11:43, June 13, 2013 (UTC)