Twice Upon a Time (TV story): Difference between revisions

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* The Captain would turn out to be Gilbert MacKenzie-Trench, the man who created the iconic police box design. ''The Captain was revealed to be [[Archibald Hamish Lethbridge-Stewart]], an ancestor of [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|the Brigadier]].''
* The Captain would turn out to be Gilbert MacKenzie-Trench, the man who created the iconic police box design. ''The Captain was revealed to be [[Archibald Hamish Lethbridge-Stewart]], an ancestor of [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|the Brigadier]].''
* The Doctor would regenerate while falling. ''The Doctor fell out of the TARDIS after regenerating instead.''
* The Doctor would regenerate while falling. ''The Doctor fell out of the TARDIS after regenerating instead.''
* According to the ''[[Daily Mirror]]'', this story would see the last day of the [[Time War]] from the perspective of the [[First Doctor]] and the [[Twelfth Doctor]]. ''This was proven false.''
* According to the ''[[Daily Mirror]]'', this story would see the last day of the [[Last Great Time War|Time War]] from the perspective of the [[First Doctor]] and the [[Twelfth Doctor]]. ''This was proven false.''
* [[Matt Smith]] would return as the [[Eleventh Doctor]]. ''This was proven false, although archive footage was used of all of the Doctor's incarnations up to the Twelfth by the Testimony to prove to the First Doctor that the Twelfth Doctor was indeed his future incarnation.''
* [[Matt Smith]] would return as the [[Eleventh Doctor]]. ''This was proven false, although archive footage was used of all of the Doctor's incarnations up to the Twelfth by the Testimony to prove to the First Doctor that the Twelfth Doctor was indeed his future incarnation.''
* The videotape prop of "The Daleks' Master Plan 1-12" was a real domestic videotape recording of all twelve episodes loaned to the crew by a film collector. ''While it is possible missing episodes could exist on off-air videotape cassette recordings, this simply isn't the case. It is highly unlikely a private collector would loan such a rare item without realising the BBC would most likely return it to their archives and make it publicly available. Furthermore, a domestic tape of 1965/66 quality could not contain more than roughly 120-160 minutes, while all twelve episodes are a total of 300 minutes.''
* The videotape prop of "The Daleks' Master Plan 1-12" was a real domestic videotape recording of all twelve episodes loaned to the crew by a film collector. ''While it is possible missing episodes could exist on off-air videotape cassette recordings, this simply isn't the case. It is highly unlikely a private collector would loan such a rare item without realising the BBC would most likely return it to their archives and make it publicly available. Furthermore, a domestic tape of 1965/66 quality could not contain more than roughly 120-160 minutes, while all twelve episodes are a total of 300 minutes.''
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