Theory:Doctor Who television discontinuity and plot holes/The Pandorica Opens

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This page is for discussing the ways in which The Pandorica Opens doesn't fit well with other DWU narratives. You can also talk about the plot holes that render its own, internal narrative confusing.

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... and so on. 
River meets Liz 10 in 5145. Liz 10 is clearly older, as Sophie Okonedo's hair was greyed in her appearance, but since The Beast Below was said to take place in the 29th century, the passing of around 2,300 years would make her around 2,600 years old, as she was said to be 300 previously.
  • While scanning Stonehenge, how did River Song miss the Cyberman head?
The head was shown to be able to move.
There is an image on the BBC website for this episode that shows River holding up the Cyberman head in front of the Doctor and Amy. This suggests she did find the head, but it was cut from the episode.
  • How is the Cyberman able to function without a head inside his "helmet"?
The Doctor explained that it was the robotics taking over to find a new head, it is likely that the cybernetic suits are given some form of self-preserving AI when they are created.
  • Where had the Auton-Roman Officer been for a whole week?
It is implied he was some other place, where he gained the knowledge of Cleopatra's death.
Yes, but WHERE had he been and WHY had he been there for a week? Visiting another Roman camp? It would make sense if he had been a real Roman officer, but since they were all Autons it makes no sense.
It is possible they have been around for years. Since the Alliance is made up of many alien species which are able to manipulate human events, it seems very likely that they were able to involve the Auton army into Human affairs. His absence however, is not a discontinuity. Also the Nestene were not in control of the Romans until the Pandorica opened, as the Doctor hypothesised earlier; they were the perfect disguise, they believed their own cover up story, which meant the leader may have actually gone somewhere with human intentions.
  • How is a Roman Gladius able to penetrate a Cyberman's armour when 21st century firearms cannot?
It was very rusty and already very damaged.
It was not Roman but Auton in nature, so it had had greater strength, just as shown in Rose.
  • If the trap involving Romans, Pandorica and Stonehenge was built from Amy Pond's memories, why are there pieces of Cyberman scattered around?
They were guarding the place from the Cybermen's point of view, the trap was organised by the alliance and the Cybermen were acting as sentry.
But why was the one, rusty and nearly-destroyed Cyberman needed if the place was already guarded by the Auton-Romans?
Trust issues. Cybermen could have been used under Stone Henge because the Romans supposedly wouldn't know about Under Henge and thus would look suspicious to the Doctor if Romans were in the cave on guard duty, also the Romans were not Nestene influence unless 'activated' meaning they wouldn't be reliable and might have ended up fighting the other Romans, again appearing suspicious to the Doctor.
That still does not explain why the one Cyberman guarding beneath Stonehenge would be rusty, old and scattered everywhere, including the surface.
Perhaps there was a battle many years ago. The Pandorica seems to have been created years earlier given its state, so the Cyberman would probably have been down there just as long. Also, Rory attacked the Cyberman with definate intentions to kill it, implying the Romans were enemies (prior to 'activation') may have attacked it and mutilated it earlier, considering The Doctor noticed scorch marks in Stone Henge presumably from the struggle and its body retreated underground withouts its head ( which followed the Doctor after his group wen't down there.
This may also be part of the trap; the remains may even have been artificially degraded to give the appearance of having been there a long time. It may have all been intentionally contrived to keep the Doctor distracted and help "sell" the illusion that the approaching fleet were all vying for control of the Pandorica.
  • How can there be a photo of Rory with Amy in the present if he was erased from time?
The Doctor explained that certain things still lived on. He even mentioned a face in a photograph.
  • If the trap is made out of Amys memories, how can the Auton-Rory remember his death? If the memories were taken before he was sucked into the Crack, he would not have been dead in her memories. If the memories were taken after Rory hade been sucked into the Crack then Amy would not have remembered him at all.
Psychic residue was mentioned. Perhaps it has a psychic link to Amy, no matter where and when she was.
There's also the possibility that Rory's consciousness somehow survived the Crack and is floating about the the multiverse, coming to the Auton Romans on its own -- drawn by the presence of Amy. In other words, he's not a planned part of the trap, but a flaw in it to be exploited in the next episode.
It is possible that Rory was put there by the alliance as part of the trap. Trying to squeeze Rory into the explaination of the site could potentailly throw the Doctor off course. All this gives them more time to spring the trap.
  • Why were the Judoon among the Doctor's enemies?
They all teamed up because they believed that the Doctor was going to destroy the universe, so it doesn't matter if they like him or not, they all want him gone so that they can and everyone else can survive.
But surely not all these species are needed to form an alliance? Some might not even have time travel technology. In fact, why don't the Daleks disintegrate the Doctor instead of imprisoning him. They do not even need such an elaborate trap.
If you watch every Doctor Who story that has ever featured the Daleks, they never just shoot him, and reason is that by this point they must have cottoned on to the fact, if the enemy tries to kill the Doctor, he always wins, it might be from a plan, from a trick or its just luck, but he always wins. The only times that the bad guy gets close to winning is when they don't try and kill, but instead trap him somewhere, of course always gets out, but they get close to winning, and pressumably they have relised this, so thats why lock him in an unescaperble box.
  • Can't the species make their own trap instead of using Amy's memories. They have conquered galaxies, they can make their own stupid trap.
Yes, but if you watch previous storys the Doctor always breaks out of their traps, so properly they didn't want to risk it
Either that or perhaps they couldn't decide on one.
  • Whose love is it "that lasts a thousand years"? If it's talking about Amy and Rory, they're two thousand years away from Rory's "death", and in the wrong direction.
It is not of Rory and Amy's love but the Doctor and River because even though River won't live a thousand years, she time travels along with the Doctor (separately) and they meet up in the wrong order and it could have been hundreds of years since the doctor last saw River but it could be four weeks since she saw the Doctor.
  • Despite what she said in DW: The Time of Angels, when River pilots the TARDIS here it does make the dematerialization sound.
River says, "Doctor, there's something wrong with the TARDIS, like something else is controling it." So she may not have caused it to make the dematerialization sound. But in this episode, she also says the Doctor taught her how to fly the TARDIS which directly contradicts her statement in DW: The Time of Angels. So it's also possible she learned the incorrect way from the Doctor and sometime later, she "had lessons from the very best."
In The Time of Angels, it was pretty clear to me that River was just teasing the Doctor, and had in fact learned from him.
The River Song you see in The Pandorica Opens has not yet been to the Byzantium, meaning she has not yet learned to properly pilot the TARDIS.
There was no indication that she has not learned yet, but there is substantial evidence that she has.
  • Why are the Weevils, Uvodni and Blowfish against the Doctor, they have never met him so why do they have anything against him?
He probably encountered them in off-screen adventures. Also they may not nescessarily be his enemies, they like the Judoon may merely want to stop him destroying the Universe.
  • The Doctor says the cliff-face with Hello Sweetie written on it was made of diamond, however the cliff-face was brown and mud-like.
It could be a different type of diamond.
If you look closely, the part River Song wrote on was rock, but diamond seemed to be crystallising on the rock's surface above and below the graffiti.
  • River Song was imprisoned in Stormcage before the crash of the Byzantium (from her point of view), so if she had killed the Doctor this would of had to occurred before the Pandorica Opens from her point of view, meaning she can't of killed him, because she was already in.
It was never stated that river killed the doctor but even if she did the pandorica opens is not the first time river has met the doctor, infact she seems very familiar with him, so she could have killed an older doctor (later in the doctors timeline, but earlier in her).
  • At the very end of the episode, everything in space fades away quickly followed slowly by the Earth. How is the Earth visible if the stars have all gone? There should be no light, so we would not see anything at all.
Artistic/dramatic license?
There is energy stored on Earth, as the stars Supernova-ed on the 26/6/2010, so we will have still had electric lights. When faced with darkness, solar-activated street lanps will have illuminated across the globe, creating a dim light pollutionny haze around our atmosphere. The question you should be asking is why was the Earth not destroyed when every star in the universe (inc. our sun) supernava-ed.
Is it clearly shown that our sun is destroyed? The way the Earth is lit suggests that the sun is behind the camera, and may not have supernova-ed yet. Also, the light from the sun takes about 8 minutes to reach the Earth, so it's correct that it is still visible even if the sun has just been destroyed.
Best not to expect realism. Realistically, none of the supernovas would have been visible from Earth for several years, and even if every star blew up at the same time, from Earth it would appear that they went out one-at-a-time, over a course of several thousands of years. That's lightspeed, for you!
The Doctor cautions that when the TARDIS explodes, "Every sun will supernova at every moment in history." We might understand that to suggest that from any point in space and time, it would appear as if every star exploded simultaneously, entirely in spite of the fact that it oughtnt't to be possible (For every star to explode at every moment would require each star to explode an infinite number of times). As time itself is being destroyed, the normal rules are pretty much right out.
  • If a Cyberman can walk, talk and fight without the need of a human head, why do any of them need human heads?
    The Cybus Cybermen seem to have a back-up system designed for self-preservation in the event that their organic components become compromised (such as the head being severed completely). They don't NEED a head - they want one in order to reach perfection. It has already been established that the Cybermen desire to be the ultimate species, combining the organic with the artificial and "upgrading" until they reach (in their mind) that point. They can function without a head/brain in a limited capacity, a sort of "back-up" system until they can find a new one.
  • Julius Caesar was murdered in 44 BC, Cleopatra died in 30 BC, and the story takes place in 102 AD. It is absurd that the Roman soldiers believed they were being visited by Cleopatra and Julius Caesar. It would be like Abraham and Mary Todd Lincoln turning up to inspect a modern US military base!


This is more of a character error than anything - we don't know how long the Auton Romans have been in Scotland for and whether or not they have any contact with the rest of the Empire. Add to that the fact that their very existence was due to the Nestene Consciousness interpreting a children's book from Amy's memories, which they were constructed from. They may have very limited knowledge of the events around them at the time, and although they are "genuine" in the sense that they believe they are the Roman army it's impossible to determine how detailed their perception of their "lives" were. Also, at least one of the soldiers were subjected to River's hallucinogenic lipstick; who knows how many more she "convinced"?
Maybe the programming used specifically looked for potential Doctor behaviours. When found they would them subtly work towards getting him to the trap. Bad name dropping like this is within the character of the doctor. The Autons would then overlook the absurdity of the claims, and instead help the Doctor and his companions get to the Pandorica.
The Doctor is called "Caesar", not "Julius Caesar"; Caesar was the title given to the Emperor, or Dictator for Life. When the Auton-Roman General arrived, he makes a point of pointing out that Cleopatra has been dead for a long time.
  • Because I'm a giant history wonk I went "Ooooo, I wonder what Roman horse tackle looked like?" when the Doctor and crew were galloping towards Stonehenge...only to be disappointed when they passed camera view with jingling metal stirrups. Metal stirrups are at least six hundred years in Britain's future from this time, and I don't even think they even had old-style rope ones either. Given the fake nature of the Romans in the episode, I suppose we could consider that a clue that the Alliance didn't have all the details right, though I would presume the meta-reason is so the actors could ride the horses properly (or the Doctor Who production team just forgot!)
well, the stuntdoubles riding anyways. The actors were actually on mechanical devices on the back of trucks looking quite silly if you see the whole thing in Confidential :P
The Doctor probably grabbed some stuff out of the TARDIS. Gixander 00:15, June 21, 2010 (UTC)
  • In order for an Auton duplicate of a real human being to continue to function, that person must be kept alive. It may be easily understandable that the rest of the Autons are generic Romans and their officers pulled from a children's book; but we have a problem when it comes to Rory. If indeed this is an Auton Rory, how is it functioning? Duplicates of real people use the telepathic link to have access to all of their memories and such, and Rory no longer "exists", or, as I believe the Doctor's words were, he's "outside the universe". I know this is stretching to be more than a simple plot hole (leading into a better description of the cracks, perhaps), but it's a glaring one from what I can tell. Gixander 00:15, June 21, 2010 (UTC)
I'm not sure how the Romans being pulled out out of a kids book is any more understandable than Rory-Auton being made from Amy's memories of him they got from her house. Which in itself sounds crazy to me but this is Doctor Who and these are supposedly beings who's abilities and technology are far beyond my limited understanding :p Carnivius Prime 15:03, June 21, 2010 (UTC)
  • Is the unmaking of the universe the normal result of a TARDIS exploding? It seems like this would have made the Time War rather short.
It is never stated that any TARDISes explode during the Time War. Plus, the creepy voice that said "Silence Will Fall" before the TARDIS explodes could cause a larger explosion than usual - destroying the heart of the TARDIS and "unmaking" the universe. Also its possible that the TARDIS exploding on 26/06/2010 in Leadworth creates a bigger explosion than a Tardis would normally make due to whatever weird stuff has happened/is happening at that date and time.
  • If the universe is destroyed, surely Earth should be gone as well?
It probably is as it 'fades' at the end of the episode.
  • If the planets are "gone" and destroyed, shouldn't the enemies (e.g. Slitheen) be gone, as their planet, where they are created, has been destroyed?
Yes. They may well be gone. We may start the next eposode outside of reality and work back to it.