Who and whose daughter rush off to watch "The Walking Dead"?
Who and whose daughter rush off to watch "The Walking Dead"?
Okay, yes. I should have said "from the same dimension that Morty Prime is from".
I don't think she's still working for Mr. Needful, but it does sound like she's found a new job.
Neither the Zigerions (sp?) or the Devil ended their respective episodes in such a "setting things up for a sequel" way. Having said that, I wouldn't be opposed to seeing either return again.
So, here's my theory: Rick Prime (the one whose exploits the show follows) is not from this dimension, but is (as posited earlier) from one where Summer, Jerry, and Beth died. Rick Prime was left to raise the Morty of that dimension (the baby seen in Rick's brief flashback in "Close Rick-counters of the Rick Kind,"…
Agreed. Here's my assertion in a nutshell:
Genesys: Crap
Exodus: Stellar Target novelization
Apocalypse: Decent, middling Target novelization
Revelation: Groundbreaking, arguably the first real New Adventure
Time's Crucible - Cat's Cradle: "Damn, Cornell beat me to it."
*thinks* Yeah, I'd say it's the best one of which I've ever seen/heard/read. It's really a shame they didn't use it as more of an inspiration for Age of Steel/Rise of the Cybermen. I get that RTD didn't think the "planet wandering through interstellar space" angle would withstand modern scrutiny, but there are a lot…
I think you're misremembering. The TV Movie opens with the Seventh Doctor coming back from Skaro after picking up the Master's remains post-Dalek trial. He's en route to Gallifrey when he regenerates.
I've always imagined that Nigel Robinson, having submitted the final draft of Apocalypse, picked up and read Revelation, and responded with "Crap, I could've been *that* ambitious? Is it too late for a rewrite? It is? Damn." It's a book that suffers horribly from being third in a series that, starting with the…
To be fair, the Boneless would also be a bit trickier to depict on a graphic like this than the Skovox Blitzer was.
*nods* Yeah, good point. The best explanation/description of the Cyber Legion might be "Cybermen who've discovered (or become flexible enough to be willing to employ) consciousness uploading and storage." In which case, they're not always using humanoid bodies anymore, but still using humanoid minds.
I would probably say that any wholly robotic Cybermen wouldn't qualify *as* Cybermen, at least not in their eyes.
Probably not. Nor the Sensorites, really. And shouldn't 12 get credit for meeting the Sontarans and the Silurians, what with Deep Breath and all?
I think I'm most impressed by the fact that the Terileptil entry includes the information that the Master destroyed their planet by using the Darkheart. That's a pretty deep cut.
And Star Trek: The Next Generation with Kieran MacDuff.
I don't know that that proves anything. After all, Nicky was demonstrably a parasite, and appeared in the Nazi memory from the get-go. And like the elevator memory, it too was bad until Beaurigard showed up.
I suggest you hold on to something.
Surely "The Peacekeeper Wars" could be considered Season 5.
I am a bit disappointed that we didn't get a chance to see tiny previews of what the other goblets contained. I'm imagining a bit where the 8th Doctor touches one, and gets a psychic flash of a pencil drawing resembling Rowan Atkinson with long hair, and then another of someone who looks like Richard E. Grant.
I've got to say, as much as I loved this webisode, I am disappointed that it gave a shout-out to the audios without also giving one to the books.