I am 100% here for Low-Rent Batman and the rest of the Sense of Right Alliance
I am 100% here for Low-Rent Batman and the rest of the Sense of Right Alliance
Just like the moving walkways at the airport like the article mentioned.
Hal was never going to be in the series, he was being held back along with John because of the potential movie that was going to involve the two. That’s probably off the table now, but not sure what that means for Hal. The series was Scott, Gardner, Cruz, and Baz. I’m disappointed about losing the last two, who I…
As someone who didn’t watch the episode on the night it aired I’d be annoyed too but this level of spoiler doesn’t come close to the BB f’ckin C who managed to spoil the ending immediately after airing in the Radio Times which Google dropped right into my feed, then during the headline news at 7am the following day…
No...it really doesn’t feel ominous, I don’t know why it would. Seeing it on a reliable streaming service without the constant repeating commercials on BBC America? Count me in.
Oh thank god. I mean it could’ve been any other streaming service, but at least it’ll reliably come to SOME streaming subscription service.
Hope it’s not just the new episodes
High-speed summary of the entire MCU to date or we riot!
fuck around and find out
the show doesn’t air until 2023, plenty of time for you to get a lobotomy between now and then
Arent ads based on your browsing habits?
yes, there should be five... if it was edited to say four that’s not on me lmao
Yeah, as weird as that whole thing was, it certainly did seem perfectly in character for The Master. I know a lot of people don’t like Simm’s Master, but I always enjoyed the campiness of it, and even kind of liked Dhawan’s return to that batshit crazy energy. It’s only in comparison to the incomparable Missy that…
Why do you hate the Scissor Sisters, blue?
As with most other people who generally hated the Chibnall era, I’m also in the camp that this one practically counted as good. But again, that bar has been set so execrably low by the past three seasons that it’s almost impossible to fail anywhere but up.
I don’t even think it’s that incomprehesible. He gifted the Cybermen with their own regenerative abilities, so he has value to them; he gifted both them and the Daleks with Earth (a particular source of resistance) for whatever they want to do; with all that, why wouldn’t they take a shot at helping him take The…
Chibnall’s big episodes always just threw a bunch of spaghetti at the wall. But if you ignore the utterly nonsensical batshit plan of the Master and the idea he could get the Cybermen to cooperate on a plan that would render Earth uninhabitable (and therefore none of its inhabitants convertible)—that’s just silly—this…
Remember when David Tennant got turned into Dobby but then got better because Martha Jones traveled the world to convince people to believe in Fairies- er, the Doctor, and when they all clap at the same time he turns back into a normal Doctor and the day is saved?
And yet it’s within character for The Master to do such a thing. How soon James forgot. (This should show Harry Saxon’s “HERE COMES THE DRUM” outbursts, in case the link is obscured.)
While I understand the complaints here, I’m kind of the mindset of Who’s Really Watching For The Plot? Most of the problems on Doctor Who are solved with some handwaving, technobabble and judicious use of the sonic screwdriver. In this case, the energy needed to under to the forced regeneration was provided by having…
Loved that part. I may have yelled at the TV a little. Loved seeing all of them. Great to see McGann’s Doctor get more screen time of any sort.