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{{discontinuity}} | {{discontinuity}} | ||
*At the end of this story, the Borad is thrown back in time (to [[12th century]] [[Scotland]]); the Doctor speculates that the Borad will become the [[Loch Ness Monster]]. This would appear to contradict ''[[Terror of the Zygons]]'', which established the legendary creature as a [[cyborg]] weapon of the [[Zygon]]s. | *At the end of this story, the Borad is thrown back in time (to [[12th century]] [[Scotland]]); the Doctor speculates that the Borad will become the [[Loch Ness Monster]]. This would appear to contradict ''[[Terror of the Zygons]]'', which established the legendary creature as a [[cyborg]] weapon of the [[Zygon]]s. | ||
::This is possibly not what the Doctor is implying, as he only mentions that the Borad will be seen "from time to time". | ::This is possibly not what the Doctor is implying, as he only mentions that the Borad will be seen "from time to time". | ||
::And even if both the Borad and the [[Skarasen]] were seen on rare | |||
::And even if both the Borad and the [[Skarasen]] were seen on rare occasions, it seems reasonable that they could have been mistaken for the same monster by different people. | |||
*The sudden re-appearance of the Borad, and it's attribution to 'cloning' seems very tacked-on and unconvincing. It would still mean there are/were two distinct Borads running things to begin with. What happened if they disagreed about something? How do we know there were only two?' | *The sudden re-appearance of the Borad, and it's attribution to 'cloning' seems very tacked-on and unconvincing. It would still mean there are/were two distinct Borads running things to begin with. What happened if they disagreed about something? How do we know there were only two?' | ||
::Perhaps, but it's not outside the realm of possibility. Beings clones in terms of personality as well, disagreements would have been unlikely. | ::Perhaps, but it's not outside the realm of possibility. Beings clones in terms of personality as well, disagreements would have been unlikely. | ||
*The ruthless tyrant Borad being 'jeered' into falling into the Timelash seems vaguely ridiculous. | *The ruthless tyrant Borad being 'jeered' into falling into the Timelash seems vaguely ridiculous. | ||
: Granted, but the Borad is vain, self-loathing (to the extent of spending years cowering behind the robot "spokesman"), and insane, and the Doctor chooses to exploit his psychological weaknesses rather than simply kill him (which, considering he has recently been forced into blasting Cybermen, poisoning Varosians, and suffocating Shockeye, is an understandable choice). | |||
:: Granted, but the Borad is vain, self-loathing (to the extent of spending years cowering behind the robot "spokesman"), and insane, and the Doctor chooses to exploit his psychological weaknesses rather than simply kill him (which, considering he has recently been forced into blasting Cybermen, poisoning Varosians, and suffocating Shockeye, is an understandable choice). | |||
*The way the Doctor dismisses his miraculous re-appearance for the climax after being moments away from death at the hands of the alien missile by simply saying it's a 'little trick' and that he'll 'explain later', is a total cop-out. | *The way the Doctor dismisses his miraculous re-appearance for the climax after being moments away from death at the hands of the alien missile by simply saying it's a 'little trick' and that he'll 'explain later', is a total cop-out. | ||
: Not that it is any excuse for forcing the audience to do the writer's job for him, but long-term fans of the show could have spotted a precedent in "The Armageddon Factor" (episode one), where the TARDIS dematerialises at the very moment that a missile detonates. Presumably, the missile either detonates in close proximity, or on impact with the TARDIS force field rather than the actual outer shell. | |||
:: Not that it is any excuse for forcing the audience to do the writer's job for him, but long-term fans of the show could have spotted a precedent in "The Armageddon Factor" (episode one), where the TARDIS dematerialises at the very moment that a missile detonates. Presumably, the missile either detonates in close proximity, or on impact with the TARDIS force field rather than the actual outer shell. | |||
*When the Doctor tells Peri that the Kontron tunnel is a 'time corridor in space' she asks 'Didn't the [[Dalek]]s have one of those?', a reference to ''[[Resurrection of the Daleks]]''. However, she wasn't around at the time, and in ''[[Revelation of the Daleks]]'' she doesn't recognise a Dalek by its appearance, indicating that the Doctor may have told her a tiny detail of a previous adventure but neglected to describe what the main adversary actually looked like. | *When the Doctor tells Peri that the Kontron tunnel is a 'time corridor in space' she asks 'Didn't the [[Dalek]]s have one of those?', a reference to ''[[Resurrection of the Daleks]]''. However, she wasn't around at the time, and in ''[[Revelation of the Daleks]]'' she doesn't recognise a Dalek by its appearance, indicating that the Doctor may have told her a tiny detail of a previous adventure but neglected to describe what the main adversary actually looked like. | ||
::That doesn't really seem out of character for the 6th Doctor. He could start telling her a story about Resurrection, then digress, or just cut himself off. Or he could just throw that fact in as an aside or even a total non-sequitur in a conversation. "Do humans ever invent time travel?" "Sure, Peri, but not until the 51st century. Other races got there much faster--the Daleks had time corridors less than 100 years after they went into space--but it took you humans 3000 years to even invent primitive time rings, and blah blah blah." | ::That doesn't really seem out of character for the 6th Doctor. He could start telling her a story about Resurrection, then digress, or just cut himself off. Or he could just throw that fact in as an aside or even a total non-sequitur in a conversation. "Do humans ever invent time travel?" "Sure, Peri, but not until the 51st century. Other races got there much faster--the Daleks had time corridors less than 100 years after they went into space--but it took you humans 3000 years to even invent primitive time rings, and blah blah blah." | ||
[[Category:DW TV discontinuity]] | [[Category:DW TV discontinuity]] |
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