Monday, July 19, 2021

From MadCap's Couch - "Doctor Who: Journey's End"

This is really kind of stupid.

Rose Tyler is Awful Count: 10,111,272,618

What's that?

Oh, I'm just making sure everyone knows where the tally is. This is it, everybody. The first finale on the Russell T. Davies era entire. 

Yeah, we're getting to The End of Time, but that is a while off and we do actually have...something good between here and there.

This isn't it, but we do have it.

We start off with our "previously on" segment, catching us up to the moment in the TARDIS where the Doctor bursts into CGI light and fire. We get our lengthened, but speedy title sequence before leading into the TARDIS again...the Doctor sticks out his hand to the one in the jar at the floor of the TARDIS. This, somehow, transfers the regeneration energy into the hand...and the Doctor is still David Tennant.

I have waited since I started this retrospective to make the following statement.

GO TO HELL, RUSSELL!

. . .okay, I know I've said that before, but this is one to this specific instance. Namely, as we find out later, the Doctor wasted one of his incarnations. This means that this a Doctor that we will never see, never know. All they could have been, all that they could have done and seen and everything...gone on a whim, in the blink of an eye.

And yes, I know that the scripts for the 2009 specials were already written if not in development by the time this episode aired, but it hardly matters.

Now, normally, this wouldn't be a problem...and thanks to Chris Chibnall and his Timeless Child crap, it might no longer be a problem anyway. However, as established in The Deadly Assassin, a Time Lord is only able to regenerate twelve times for a total of thirteen incarnations. That's a full regeneration cycle. When the Master first appeared in Terror of the Autons, he was on his thirteenth and final life and that led to his appearances through most of the classic series either trying to restore his body or steal a new one.

The Doctor, at this point in his life, is on his eleventh incarnation. Yes, we don't know about the War Doctor yet, but that does get established and so is carried on as canon going forward with nothing contradicting it yet, so the Tenth Doctor played by David Tennant is technically the Eleventh Doctor, or rather, the eleventh incarnation. That means the Doctor has a grand total of two lives left at this point...so he wastes one doing this.

He robs himself of one of his lives...because of vanity issues, as the Doctor will later put it when he's a far, far better character than the one that Russell is writing.

I say again, GO TO HELL, RUSSELL!

By the way, Moffat also (potentially) later pulls this with Capaldi for an even stupider reason...more on that later, but let's carry on. The Doctor, same old face, gets to work as Jack, Donna, and Rose look on in confusion.

*dismissive vomiting noise*

Sarah Jane Smith is about to be exterminated, but is saved at the last minute by the actual heroes from the parallel Earth - namely Mickey Smith and Jackie Tyler.

In the Torchwood Hub, Gwen goes full Rambo on a Dalek...to no avail. Not because of the Dalek, but rather Torchwood's defense system. The Dalek, and all the bullets they fired at it, are frozen in time - a defense system set up by one of their coworkers, Tosh. Y'know, the one we met way earlier.

Also, nope. Still no plans to review Torchwood at this time.

In the TARDIS, the Doctor explains he healed himself with the regeneration energy and channeled it into his hand. And, while the Earth is being turned into an engine part...Rose and the Doctor hug and we're supposed to think this is a wonderful moment.

It's not.

Donna trying to get Jack to hug her and being denied is funny, but does not make it better.

The Daleks grab the TARDIS and bring it aboard the Death Sta-I mean, the Crucible. This kills the power to the TARDIS so that the Doctor can't escape. Mickey, Sarah Jane, and Jackie are witness to this...and Sarah Jane gets them to surrender so that they can be taken to the Crucible as well.

Martha gets Project Indigo going and tells her mother to stay in doors. She has to do her job...teleporting away before her mother can get an answer about what the Osterhagen key is...and she is teleported to Germany. We get a somewhat amusing scene where the Daleks shout orders in German...really driving home that Nazi parallel.

In the TARDIS, Rose explains that her Earth has been building a Dimension Cannon to travel through other universes...but the dimensions started to collapse without that. It apparently can also measure timelines...somehow...and they've determined that everyone's timelines converge on Donna for reasons unknown.

They arrive on the Crucible, the Dalek Supreme ordering the Doctor to face him or die. The Doctor declares his intention to do so, both Rose and Jack mentioning that he once said nothing could get through those doors and that the TARDIS has extrapolator shielding. The Doctor tells them that before, they were just fighting insane scavenger Daleks...this, though, a force of Daleks that can move planets into a new orbit, are a Dalek Empire at the height of its power. Right now, the wooden doors of the TARDIS...are just wood.

If you want an explanation for how these are any different than the Daleks in 200,100...so do I.

But, alas, we don't get one.

"Would you mind closing my tank? It's cold in here..."

As Rose, the Doctor, and Jack talk, Donna stares off into space...hearing a heartbeat in a steady rhythm. When the Doctor snaps her out of it, the noise vanishes. The Dalek Supreme taunts the Doctor again, and we get a "It's been an honor." moment between the Doctor and the gathered companions. The Doctor, Jack, and Rose leave. When Donna tries to, though, she stops...hearing the heartbeat. She turns back to the console and the doors of the TARDIS close. The Doctor demands that the Daleks stop, but the Dalek Supreme insists that it was not of Dalek origin...and then declares the TARDIS a weapon and that it should be destroyed.

The TARDIS is being dropped into the core of the Crucible and, without defenses, it will be torn apart...or so the Doctor says. Onboard, as everything is going to Hell, Donna happens upon the hand in the jar...which is glowing and bubbling violently...and Donna hears the heartbeat again, drawn to the hand. Touching the jar...she is enveloped by what looks like regeneration energy.

The Dalek Supreme taunts the Doctor, telling him that he will feel the TARDIS die due to their connection.

Onboard, the hand bursts from the jar...and forms into...David Tennant!

Naked!

The fangirls cry that he's from the abdomen up only.

The TARDIS disappears, the Daleks believe it destroyed...

Jack gets shot and killed by the Daleks after pulling a revolver on him. Rose freaks out, but the Doctor pulls her away...insisting that there's nothing they can do. As the Doctor and Rose are led away, Jack winks at the Doctor.

See? It's funny because the fangirls don't get to see his junk.
On the TARDIS, Donna freaks out because the new new Doctor is completely off his rocker. He explains that he's the result of a biological Metacrisis...and that he is the Doctor and isn't the Doctor. He is, as we find out after a quick exchange with Donna...

"Oi! Watch it, spaceman!"

"Oi! Watch it, Earth girl!"

. . .that he exhibits some her traits as well. He is half-Doctor, half-Donna. The New Doctor also notes that he has only one heart...he's human. Ish. Handy Spare Hand Doctor psychoanalyzes Donna, realizing that her rough, brash attitude is largely a product of her having no sense of self-worth. She literally believes she's not worth it, and screams at the world because no one is listening. Handy, which I'm now going to call him to differentiate him from the Doctor, realizes that Donna and the Doctor have been drawn together for a reason, so many changes they wouldn't have except that they did...twist. Donna thinks there's no such thing as destiny.

Unfortunately, she's in the Russell T. Davies era, where everything is a prophecy.

Back in Germany, Martha comes to a UNIT base and finds only a woman left as the caretaker of it. They enter into what looks like an old castle, Martha opening a secret passageway. The caretaker tells her that she knows of what she's going to do...and puts her at gunpoint to keep her from going. She knows about the key, what it does...and speaks to Martha in German about it, threatening her life. Martha tells her to do...and she can't bring herself to do it. Martha descends in the lift.

The Daleks incinerate Jack...and he not only somehow gets out, but his clothing survives the burning process.

. . .not 100% on how that works, but never mind.

Martha gets into a control center and calls up other Osterhagen stations, hoping to find someone there.

Back on the Crucible, the Smiths and Jackie are taken in for testing of the Crucible's weapon.

The Doctor and Rose are put into containment fields and left at the mercy of Davros. The Doctor immediately ruins Davros' attempt at small talk, realizing that Davros isn't the one in charge. It eventually comes out that the Daleks are running by the prophecies of Dalek Caan...who is jibberingly insane. More than going into the Time War, though, Caan saw time...all of time. And that is why the Doctor and his companions haven't been killed.

The Doctor and his Children of Time must be present for the end of everything.

. . .and one of them will die.

Julian Bleach does a great job as Davros.
Kind of confused as to how he got his humanoid body back, though.

The Doctor angrily shouts at Caan about Donna's death, and Davros utterly delights in it. Caan proclaims that the Doctor's soul will be revealed at the opportune moment. While neither he nor Davros has any idea what that means, Davros tells the Doctor that they will discover it together. For now...the testing of a new weapon begins.

While Sarah Jane and Mickey escape into a side room, Jackie and the other humans taken from Earth are stuck under a glowing green light - the Reality Bomb. Thus, we realize what the planets are an engine for - a weapon that could wipe out all of reality. Both the Doctor and Handy work out what it is, but they're too late to stop it. 

Jackie uses her teleport device to escape...but the rest of the people are reduced to atoms as she, Mickey, and Sarah Jane watch on it horror. As do the Doctor, Rose, Handy, and Donna.

Davros explains that that was merely a test on those people...but a full transmission would destroy everything. All matter in the universe, snuffed out of existence in mere fractions of a second. From the Medusa Cascade, it will travel through every parallel dimension until all of Reality is destroyed.

On Earth, Sylvia and Wilf note the Daleks are leaving. While Sylvia's optimistic, Wilf points out that Donna isn't back...this isn't over yet.

Jack catches up to Mickey, Jackie, and Sarah Jane Smith. Reunions are had and Sarah Jane pulls out an alien device called a warp star - basically an explosion waiting to happen.

Back on Earth, Martha makes contact with a UNIT agent from China and one from Liberia. They only need three keys to activate Osterhagen, but Martha doesn't want to do it yet. There's one more thing the Doctor would do in her shoes...

On the TARDIS, Handy makes a device that's going to kill Davros and the other Daleks (being created from him) as well.

As the Daleks prepare to attack, Martha hails them and declares her intention to use the Osterhagen Key. Just as Dalek Caan foretold, according to Davros. The Osterhagen Key is one of many that controls a chain of nuclear warheads. When used, it will destroy the Earth.

. . .this is stupid for a variety of reasons, but that gets into real world science and we've seen that Doctor Who has a dim view of reality when it comes to the plot.

Jack Harkness wants to talk to the manager, and he's no longer fucking around.

Another transmission comes through, this one being Jack, the Smiths, and Jackie with the warp star tied into the Crucible's systems. They make a move, Jack activates it and the Crucible will go up as well. Davros and Sarah Jane come face to face again, recognizing one another...and Davros gleefully speaks of the circle of time closing. With this, it seems that the heroes have the Daleks on the ropes. With a weapon to destroy the Earth and a weapon to destroy the Crucible, even Rose points out that that's one hell of a ransom. The Doctor, though...is heartbroken.

The Doctor's soul is revealed. The Doctor is a man who abhors violence but, as Davros says, he takes ordinary people and fashions them into weapons...the Children of Time, murderers all. Davros mentions, too, having already seen sacrifice for their beloved Doctor...and the Doctor is told about the death of Harriet Jones, who gave her life to open the subwave network and get the Doctor to Earth.

Davros gives the Doctor the armor piercing question:

"How many more? Just think...how many people have died in your name?"

As the Doctor hits that sweet, sweet angst high, we get stock footage of not only Harriet but also...

Davros ends by proclaiming the Doctor, "The man who keeps running...never looking back because he dare not, out of shame". This, he declares, is his final victory: he has shown the Doctor himself.

. . .also, c'mon, Russell. You couldn't have brought a little bit of Classic footage into there? Adric? I mean, I know nobody liked Adric...but he's also dead because of the Doctor's shenanigans. C'mon! I joke, and I do understand what Russell was going for with this montage...but not all of those were done out of devotion to the Doctor, particularly Sir Robert, the members of LINDA, and Chantho. They died as a consequence of the Doctor futzing about. Big difference.

The Dalek Supreme ends the pity party...and while Martha tries to give a tough act, the Daleks transmat her to the Vault along with Jack, Jackie, and the Smiths. Now, everyone's there...except for Handy and Donna, but wait a moment.

Davros declares it is time...to DETONATE! THE REALITY! BOOOOOOOOOMB! in that glorious, glorious ham.

Julian Bleach plays an absolutely fantastic Davros, by the way. Perfect amount of ham. Utterly. PERFECT.

While the Doctor tries to talk Davros out of it...the TARDIS materializes in the Vault to the confusion and awe of everyone. Handy rushes out with his MacGuyver tool...and gets zapped by Davros for his trouble in a sudden anti-climax.

Oops.

Donna rushes out, trying to use it...and Davros zaps her as well, leaving her seemingly dead or unconscious against a console.

UNLIMITED POWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!!!

Davros calls the Doctor and his companions pathetic...declaring his strategies having failed, his weapons useless, and the end of the universe having come. The timer runs out...and alarms start going off. Donna is up, she's talking like the Doctor, and she's single-handedly turned off the Reality Bomb. After ruining Davros' lightning hands, she deactivates the Dalek weapons and releases the Doctor, Handy, and Rose from the force fields.

The Doctor realizes...the DoctorDonna, the Ood saw it coming!

Now, three Doctors are at work and the Daleks are unable to even move much less defend themselves. Donna is able to think of strategies that the Doctor would never think of, due to having that little bit of humanity in her. With the three working in concert, they work out a plan to send all the planets back to where they came from. As the other companions handle Davros and the Daleks, the Doctors Three send the planets back home one by one.

Donna explains the Meta-Crisis to the other companions, that Davros shocking her did a technobabble thing and now she has the Time Lord in her as well. Davros cries betrayal to Dalek Caan...who cackles evilly. Caan tells Davros that this would have happened no matter what, his machinations merely sped it up. When he entered in the Time War, Caan saw time...all that the Daleks had done and he declared "no more".

. . .keep that in mind for much later in a much better episode.

Jack kills off the Dalek Supreme, but not before destroying the machine that would transport the planets home...and only one left, the Earth. The Doctor rushes into the TARDIS to get it ready to tow the Earth back to where it belongs. Caan cackles about the end of all things, telling Handy that the Doctor must bring it about. He prepares to do so, telling Donna "I am the Doctor" as he does so. With the flip of a switch, Handy kills the Daleks. All of them.

At once.

Because the Davies Masterplan is and has always been: stuff as many Daleks as you can into a room and then get rid of them in the most over the top fashion.

The Doctor comes out, horrified by this, and Handy declares that he's simply fulfilling the prophecy.

The Crucible starts falling apart and the Doctor ushers everyone inside. The Doctor tries to save Davros, but the Kaled scientist refuses him.

"Never forget, Doctor...you did this! I name you...forever: You are the Destroyer of Worlds!"

He then, seemingly, burns to death. Rather like the Master, if you believe that Davros is actually dead, you haven't been paying attention. Before the Doctor leaves, he hears Caan's last words, declaring that "one will still die".

In the TARDIS, the Doctor sends them off flying. The Crucible is destroyed and the Doctor calls up the Torchwood Hub. The Doctor and Rose recognize Gwen. They work out a plan, using the Torchwood Hub (or, rather, the Rift) as a tow rope and Mr. Smith (and K-9) as anchor to fly the Earth back to its proper coordinates in time and space.

BING BANG DALEKS BOOM!
As the Doctor puts everyone in position, he reveals something that's been headcanon for a while - a TARDIS is meant to be flown by six pilots. Hence why the Doctor is always running around like a chicken with its head cut off trying to fly it.

We get an admittedly glorious scene as the Earth is hauled out of the Medusa Cascade by the TARDIS, drawing it right back to where it was before: the third planet in the Sol system once again.

The battle's done, and the heroes won, so let's sound the vict'ry cheer!

Yes, it's a joyous scene as they all celebrate both in the TARDIS and back on Earth. The day is saved and all is well. The TARDIS lands in a park to bells ringing. The first to leave is Sarah Jane, telling the Doctor that for such a lonely man, he has the biggest family on Earth.

In the TARDIS, we get a short scene where Mickey tells Jackie that he's not coming back to the parallel world with them, and they embrace.

Outside, Martha and Jack leave next. The Doctor deactivates Jack's vortex manipulator - again - and tells Martha to get rid of the Osterhagen key. Mickey tells the Doctor that his grandmother on the parallel world passed away, so there's nothing there for him now. He declares his desire to live a new life, sharing a fist bump with the Doctor before leaving with Martha and Jack.

Going back into the TARDIS, the Doctor tells Rose and Jackie that they're going back to Bad Wolf Bay...and they do arrive. After some back and forth about Jackie's new baby (named Tony), the Doctor tells Rose that he's leaving her there...because of Handy. He's too dangerous to be left on his own, born out of blood and anger and revenge...the Doctor declares him to be just like him when he first met Rose, and now wants her to make him better just as she once did for him so long ago.

"But he's not you."

"He needs you...that's very me."

. . .yep. Yep. That one might have actually killed me.

But yes, Handy will eventually grow old and die and never regenerate. He offers Rose a chance to spend their lives together. The TARDIS groans, the Doctor and Donna needing to leave before the walls of reality seal. Rose, however, stops them...because priorities...

 Rose Tyler is Awful Count: 10,111,272,619

. . .and demands that both the Doctor and Handy tell her what the Doctor said to her on that day long ago, the worst day of her life.

This, despite knowing that the Doctor and Donna will be trapped if they stay here much longer.

Rose Tyler is Awful Count: 10,111,272,620

"I said 'Rose Tyler'."

"Yeah...and how was that sentence gonna end?"

"Does it need saying?"

No. No, it really, really doesn't. Not unless the two words at the end were "Fuck off".

But Handy whispers to her...and they passionately kiss, the Doctor and Donna excusing themselves back to the TARDIS.

. . .Jesus fuck.

Rose Tyler is Awful Count: FATAL ERROR INCURRED. PLEASE REBOOT SYSTEM.

I mean, Jesus...if it weren't for the existence of Father's Day, this would actually be the worst thing that Rose Tyler has ever done. It is an act of pure, unadulterated selfishness that should be punished rather than praised or rewarded.

🎶 TALE AS OLD AS TIIIIIIIIIME!
HOLY FUCKING SHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIT!!!!! ðŸŽ¶

She has this man, who she's sworn her love for so many times. Crossed universes to find him. Literally helped abort an entire timeline just to bring him back to life...and the moment she gets a clone replacement of him, she starts making out with him in front of the actual guy. Not even waiting until he leaves, but just locking lips with his clone right there in front of him!

Giving no consideration to how the actual Doctor feels and indeed, her last words towards him before he leaves being demanding in nature.

The counter has broken. The truth should be revealed her if it hasn't been already in so many reviews.

ROSE TYLER SUUUUUUUUUUUCKS!

Rose Tyler is an absolutely arrogant, selfish, spoiled, whiny little piece of human garbage...but hey...we have more episode to cover. We can come back to this later.

On the TARDIS, Donna talks about other places to go and new things to see. The Doctor, through it all, looking like a child who has been told that his dog is about to be put down. Donna chatters on and on...but then suddenly gets stuck on a word that she repeats again and again like a broken record before she corrects herself. She goes on for a bit more...but does it again.

The Doctor tells her what's going on...a Time Lord brain isn't supposed to be shoved into a human body. She can't sustain it...it's going to kill her. At first, she declares that she wants to stay...saying that she was going to travel with him forever, the DoctorDonna in the TARDIS. The Doctor, tearful, tells her that he's sorry...but that they had the best of times. With his hands to her head, the Doctor's Time Lord telepathy kicks in and he erases her memories of all of it: running into him when she teleported onto the TARDIS during her wedding...traveling the universe...saving the universe...everything. Gone in only seconds.

You wept when Rose was trapped in a parallel universe.
I wept for this.
We are not the same.

Wilf opens the front door to find the Doctor carrying in an unconscious Donna. The Doctor explains to Sylvia and Wilf what had happened. He explains what he did to save her. If she remembers anything, any of it at all, Donna's mind will burn and she will die. 

. . .remember this. It's going to hurt later.

The Doctor tells them that, no matter what else, there are worlds in the sky and people in the universe who are alive and happy because Donna saved their lives. And that, for one moment, she was the most important person in creation.

Sylvia says that Donna still is, she's her daughter.

The Doctor gives a rather razor-sharp and pointed rebuttal:

"Then maybe you should tell her that once in a while."

Donna pokes in, being stupid Donna as she was in The Runaway Bride, vapid and shallow. Sylvia tells the Doctor pointedly to leave, which the Doctor does...after testing Donna one last bit. She shows no recognition of him...just as intended. In the rain, Wilf sees the Doctor off.

Wilf worries about the Doctor, telling him that while he won't tell Donna, he'll look up at the stars every night and think of him...if only on Donna's behalf.

The Doctor gives him thanks and goes back to the TARDIS, Wilfred Mott giving him one last salute as he does so.

The Doctor, the last child of Gallifrey, the Lonely God, and the Destroyer of Worlds, sits alone in his TARDIS...

. . .and that's where we end this episode.

The meme is so much sadder in context

Yeah, no cliffhanger set up for the Christmas special.

Yes, one was filmed, but they very wisely chose not to use it and I think that's wonderful (although there is a trailer at the end on the DVD).

So...Journey's End.

Let me get through the things there are to like. David Tennant does a great Catherine Tate and vice-versa, so the scenes between Handy and Donna are an absolute joy to watch. Seeing the companions back, yes even Billie Piper playing Rose, is fun to see and it's a neat way to have their cake and eat it too, as far as continuity goes. This episode is a big send up to everything that the Russell T. Davies era has been...namely flash with no real substance behind it.

. . .oh, right. Sorry, sticking with positives.

Julian Bleach does a fantastic job as Davros, right up there with Michael Wisher and Terry Molloy. He is the perfect blend of over the top insanity and calculating menace...it's just kind of a shame that he doesn't get to do much besides smarm.

And now we get into the bad. Namely...yet another Dalek finale that has a decent build up, but the resolution is way, way too easily gotten to and achieved. Deus ex machina comes to mind. At least twice, Russell managed to fit in something of consequence in order to stop it - that being the Ninth Doctor's death way back in The Parting of the Ways and Donna's "death" here in Journey's End.

. . .no, I don't count Rose getting trapped on Pete's World in Doomsday. Sue me. Also, in that instance, it wasn't quite a deus ex machina.

How It Could Have (and Thankfully Didn't) Ended

The DoctorDonna thing is fine and, as I said before, Catherine Tate does a good David Tennant as the character. As the last remaining companion in Russell's era (Wilf in The End of Time counts as a one-off, but not a recurring), she did very well. I'm not really fond of Handy being the Doctor's clone, or a clone at all as a matter of fact, as it does feel like Russell just trying to appease the shippers. Personally, Rose's story and her involvement in the Doctor's life should have ended with Doomsday. She's not a good influence on him - particularly in his Tenth incarnation more than Nine, though I imagine he would have gotten worse if Christopher Eccleston had had more time on the show - and brings out the absolute worst in him on many occasions.

Speaking of none of that, final words on Donna: someone who was brash and rude and combative against a world that she thought she meant nothing in, but she became the most important one of them all if only for that one moment...but her tragedy being that she can never remember it at all. Ever. And it's heartbreaking...until Russell uses it as a cheap bait and switch in The End of Time.

Catherine Tate infused so much compassion and exuberance into Donna. Donna also had no qualms about telling the Doctor when he was wrong, such as The Fires of Pompeii. She also kept close to home and didn't treat her family like garbage, her first thought after realizing the depth of the situation in The Sontaran Stratagem (admittedly with a little coaxing from Martha) was to go home and check in on her mother and grandfather. This, unlike certain other companions who are just...absolutely awful sociopaths.

I already went into Rose both in the Doomsday review and this one, and the counter is finally broken. I'm pretty sure that over 10 billion is a high enough number to quantify my point...and that was me taking things away when she actually did some good.

Imagine if I hadn't been that generous!

Seriously!

The episode's biggest problems come to exposition dumps that really don't try to explain anything. Rose with the whole Dimension Cannon is a plot point that just wants to scoot by unnoticed...and it can't, really, because it's the whole reason that she's there. It's also sad that she's there to be an exposition dump and then not do anything of consequence in this two-parter.

Yeah, I don't like Rose...but if Donna's existence shows us anything, it's that characters can improve. Russell seems to know that with everyone...except for Rose.

We also don't really get an explanation for what was going on in Turn Left. If what the Daleks were doing had any adverse affects on Pete's World, then they didn't bother showing any of it. Granted, we only saw Bad Wolf Bay, but you'd imagine there'd be something.

Now the Doctor is truly, for the first time in a while, alone...but he won't be forever. As Ood Sigma once said on Ood Sphere so long ago, the Doctor's song will be ending soon. Four stories now separate us from the end of the David Tennant era and the beginning of Matt Smith's era on the show. One of them is really good...it's not the one we're about to see.

Or the one after that.

We'll get there, though. If I survived Journey's End, I can survive...anything...

. . .anything...

. . .anything...

. . .anything...

The Next Doctor is next...as we march toward The End of Time, and the end of the Russell T. Davies era. And god am I gonna be glad when this crap is finally, finally over...

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