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Moriarty: “I’m told you rely heavily on consultants.”

In which episode does he do this?

Here's hoping "someone high up in command knows about Skye's past and wants her contained and on sight". Did that help? :P

I doubt he planned to survive that, it didn't seem like he made that reasoning at all. But it was that or what else?

I agree wholeheartedly :)

I think Eleven's regeneration line should go down as *takes off his bowtie, lets it drop*, because just that action in and of itself speaks volumes about who he was and what regeneration means to him.

I was so sure Chloe was the killer.. I mean, she was acting suspicious in every scene IMO, telling Joan not to mention her….

It's more evident and has more place inside the episode in ATCM; while there is absolutely no mention of what he did after he does it from anyone in Dinosaurs. I wouldn't necessarily say one it is better handled than the other because they occupy different places in their respective episodes. I didn't feel it was

It falling is the reason I like The Snowmen so much. But you're probably right in that it was a mask all along, it's just that getting to see that raw side of him is heart-breaking, to me, but also rings true. It's like there's honesty in his actions and personality. Honesty to himself.

I liked it for you

Thanks!! XD

Please tell me where to find these!! (If at all possible)

He's more reserved and there's a general sadness about him that wasn't there before. Even though he does a sort of reborn-thing in Bells he never goes back to being who he was; not entirely. It's reflected in the episodes also. I don't mean he's frowning all the time, but he's certainly not the loose torpedo he once

But it's really sort of brushed over in the episode, at least I felt it was. He's darker in A Town Called Mercy I would say.

Yes, I know. It's just not so in-your-face as in the previous era and it's even mentioned only a few times.

I watched 2005-2013 in about two weeks back in March this year (so, not long ago) and when I re-watched Rose about three weeks ago I couldn't believe I didn't notice a) how false the NC looked, b) how ridiculous moving mannequins are as vilains, when there's so much more plastic than that i our lives, and c) how…ngh

I would pick the Fires of Pompeii or the Girl in the Fireplace for Tennant; the first because it really shows how conflicted his Doctor is and has a lot of his human and having-fun-with-being-himself moments ("it's just us girls") and the second because it really shows his really prominent human aspect and his

I love Waters of Mars, though only when I was reminded it existed. Now I think it's a great episode to show the Doctor in his not-a-hero scenario and where the writers can go with his character and everything that can be explored of it. It also has a solid monster and is what I believe to be the culmination of

I think there was nowhere else to go with that storyline (as I think you may be implying..) so Moffat just started with something different. That said, the Time War is present in Moffat's era, but not so episode-to-episode like before.

I don't think I could've done that… the way the show progressed from season to season was really the right way to go for me, as the special effects and certain aspects of the storytelling somewhat improved (other appeared, but oh well). Or maybe it's because I'm more of a Moffat fan than RTD (not looking to start a