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This is either going to be brilliant or awful. I want it to be the former but I've got a feeling that it could very well be the latter. Still, I'll give it the benefit of the doubt until I actually see the film.

I'm amazed by the absences of Worf and Jadzia Dax on the one hand and John Sheridan and Delenn on the other hand, frankly.

For a second there, I thought that this said that Gagarin died in 1967 as opposed to 1968. My mistake!

Though I'm opposed to the idea of a female Doctor, if you put a gun to my head and asked me that question, the answer would definitely be Miranda Richardson.

I, for one, am looking forward to this. Despite a few reservations, I'm willing to give it the benefit of the doubt until I see the finished product.

"Richard Nixon is probably up to no good."

You got there before me!

I think that that's a false nose actually.

I knew about all of them except the God one. I'm glad that never came to pass.

That was actually a mistake as it was a much younger, American actor named Michael Gough who was in "All-Star Superman".

Classic Steven Moffat wibbly wobbly timey wimey goodness. His use of time travel and paradoxes is peerless.

If the very first "Doctor Who" serial taught us nothing else, it was this.

I now use "Quiet, you!" at every opportunity, though I am not a talking dog.

I want a snake-head cane, irrespective of time travel capability.

The first two are the obvious choices and I heartily approve of them but, honestly, how could you leave out the machine from the 1960 version of "The Time Machine"? It trounces all of the other entries on the list (bar the first two, naturally).

I believe that there was a novel in the 1990s where the Eighth Doctor encounters him but that's about it.

I hope that they adapt this into an episode at some stage like they did with "The Lodger" (in that case, I wish that they hadn't but that's beside the point).

Retrofuturism is the best kind of futurism, boy howdy.

I can't wait. I've been starved for more Eleventh Doctor / Amy / Rory goodness since Christmas, as has everyone else naturally enough. I'm fairly sure that this is the first Comic Relief "Doctor Who" special since "The Curse of Fatal Death" in 1999, which was also written by Steven Moffat incidentally.