You make a good point but it might not make a difference. As when The Doctor and Donna are in that library atrium; that shadow was in direct sunlight regardless. Good joke though.
I think what’s supposed to be the scariest thing is that they weren’t evil; they were just average scared people. And that made them capable of anything.
You misspelled Steven Moffat. He hand-picked Chibnall. They discussed exactly what was going to happen. Moffatt is the one who literally altered multiple significant moments in the doctor's history by writing Clara into a retcon of those moments to shift the best parts of the doctor as having comes directly from Clara... Moffatt is the one who decided that the next regeneration would be female, and that the history of the character should shift towards a completely female perspective. But he knew that whoever was showrunner for that was going to get a ton of criticism and if there's one thing Moffet can't stand, it's criticism.
3:23 Technically the lone angel only got Rory by surprise. Amy decided that her life wasn't worth living without Rory so she decided to let the angel take her and hope she and Rory were together
@@galenli6402 only because we first saw her as a 'companion' (of sorts?). She was the thing in the space suit when she was first introduced by her perspective (bloody timey wimey stuff, gets all confusing), and the space suit was a villian
If we followed the timeline from River’s view rather than the doctor’s, the story would have been a lot different and a lot sadder as we watch the doctor know her less and less
Ronald Marcano The Master, The Cybermen, Sontarans, Autons, Ice Warriors While it is true that the Daleks cause the most harm. I just thought that you said the Daleks always come back and that being exclusive to them.
@@MatthewsStopMotions perhaps the episodes were good, but only by comparison to 13's other ones. The idea of the timeless child makes the doctor no longer special.
I would argue that the Vasta Nerada aren't actually villains, they are a swarm of microscopic predators who got stuck in the library when their forest got turned into books. The same with the "stingrays", they are simply animals, highly armored, airborne, and voraciously predatory animals, but still animals. Neither are really evil, they simply are, and the doctor was able to reason with the Vasta Nerada, allowing him and the remaining companions to leave the library unharmed.
Sadly a detail a lot of people miss these days antagonist(an issue corporal or not that a character must surpass) is different from villain(a character with evil intentions).
Does the Vashta Nerada's sapience qualify them for evil, though? If they can read about and bargain with the Doctor, that suggests they have the capacity to understand the effects of their actions. If they still don't count as villains because they're carnivorous and predation is in their nature, what about Daleks who are genetically engineered to be driven by hatred? Where to draw the line?
@@AstraIVagabond The difference is in motivation. The Vashta Nerada usually predate small non sapient animals, as the doctor points out. Their choice was to start eating people or to starve. That is not evil, that is desperation. Had they been evil, the doctor would not been able to bargain with them as he did.
"Don't play games with me! You just killed someone I like, that is not a safe place to stand! I'm the Doctor, and you're in the biggest library in the Universe. Look me up." :)
I think the midnight entity was the villain that the doctor truly feared. He always has his voice and mind which is his greatest weapon. But it took them away while first having caused massive tension between everyone. All by just repeating. When Donna repeated after the doctor at the end you could see the horror and fear in the doctors eyes. He didn’t know what it was and it probably isn’t dead seeing as it was surviving out there before hand
I guess it died after posessing Sky and getting sucked outside. Maybe by taken over a body, it is vurnebale now, you know ? Maybe that shade of the ?Devil? who get sucked in the Satan Pit into the black hole, still lives and has now many shades across the universe, cause he was shredded to many pieces by the hole. Now he tries to become one again by searching for all of his parts. Maybe bit was cause of that resistent against the heat outside on Midnight. Maybe it was attracted cause of that by fear and used that to get the upper hand in that episode. Also when Sky smiled evil it reminded me of Toby. Something is fishy, maybe they really did this but changed afterwards the idea to reveal the entity as part of the devil from before. Maybe a cut out scene exists were it gets revealed. But if not, still maybe it died by sucking out while inside of a human body, when the posessed human dies, it dies maybe too. Why it didn't still tried to attack them again if it is still outside and living? They waited after that at the same spot until rescue arrives. Maybe it still lives and decided to let them be, cause it is planing something different as next or it died.
Preceyese Seyeght it’s a cool theory but I’m pretty sure it lives. It’s why the doctor said to move the leisure place somewhere else. If it can survive out there before hand then it can survive again. It didn’t need a physical form to enter. It’s definitely a cool mystery
The midnight entity is one of my favorite doctor who creatures, because it is one of the only things the doctor was really afraid of. The actual fear in his eyes and that he felt you could feel too, since it was an entity no one had really seen before in who. And the fact he got afraid on Donna repeating him means he knows that creature was probably still out there, meaning it could take someone again, and again, and again.
I think the Reapers from _Father's Day_ deserve to be on this list. The Doctor had no way to beat them legitimately, and they actually ended up killing him - not forcing him to regenerate, actually killing him. The only way that the day was 'saved' in the end was by Pete sacrificing himself in order to end the paradox, which reset the timeline and restored all those killed by the Reapers.
@@joshcain_ The Reapers are honestly one of my favorite _Doctor Who_ creatures. They're fascinating to look at, completely impossible to kill, and just a brilliant concept. Also, did you know that the sound they make is based on a vulture's cry? The sound team took a vulture's screech and altered it, and I think that works wonderfully for the concept of creatures that live within the time vortex and appear to cleanse paradoxes.
I love how Dalek Kahn could see the future and wanted the Doctor to end Dalek kind, but failed to mention they would show up again in just a few months.
Still can't get over the statues look when it took out Amy and Rory. Just, nothing. Not a snarl, not a look of anger. Nothing. Like a man who has lost everything. The one thing I love about this show, is even the most evil creatures are humanized in some sense. This Angel just lost it's entire race. It had just lost everything.
I watched that episode 2 days ago again. That episode is one of the best doctor who episodes. Matt Smith’s acting when Amy and Rory jumped off Winter Quay was incredible! He was just *devastated* when it happened. I would like more episodes like this. Too bad they ended the show. (In my opinion) The last episode of Doctor Who was such a disappointment. Who else agrees?
@@jameslikesstrangerthingsan37 David Tennant was my favourite doctor and for lot of other people, Matt Smith was strange at first but quckly become a very good doctor too, for Peter Capaldi i had to get used to an old doctor but i was able to and he got some good episode too,but that women........Jodie Whittaker......i watched a few episode with her then i stopped. I so badly wanted her to be at least an ok doctor, but no, for me the show ended there. I hoped we get a new doctor after 1 season, but no. Im waiting for the next doctor and i will start to watch again from there or force myself trough previous seasons, dont know yet. I hope they can get a better writer and a better doctor.
@@danthemeegs8751 Spitfires in space fighting dinosaurs on a spaceship? Fires in the near-vacuum, CO2 atmosphere of Mars? Moffat's got lazy or self-indulgent. The current series actually stopped me from watching, something that hasn't happened since Sylvester MacCoy.
@@eliberdugo3121 Ah, yes, you're right - they're Gattis and Russel. It threw me that Moffat was defending some of the quirks with "it must have somehow..."
The reapers were quite a terrifying enemy. The doctor was even eaten by one of them. The doctor himself said that nothing in the universe could stop them and only appear during a time paradox, rose saving her dad. If I remember right the only thing that could stop them was rose dad killing himself reversing the paradox. The doctor didn’t beat them though.
The Cybermen. They fall into a similar category to the Daleks, where yes, the Doctor can defeat individual encounters, but the fact that they are an inevitability where ever humans reside means that they can never be truly defeated.
I know he ended up tricking them but I always liked how the weeping angles initially defeated the doctor in blink, sending him and Martha back in time to kickstart Sally’s journey.
I’d argue Micheal Grade was worse. Putting the Show on hiatus, Halving the episode amount when it did come back and ultimately firing Colin Baker simply because he didn’t like him.
WackyWAA ! Nope. Chibnall has ruined the show And it kinda needs to go on hiatus to get a restart Also the last couple of series need to be written out of continuity
Speedy Quick Has Chris Chibnall fired Anyone just because he didn’t like them? No. Did he try to cancel Doctor who for many and many years? No Yes Chibnalls era is bad (my least favourite era of the entire show) but he is NO WHERE NEAR as bad as the Twat known as Micheal Grade
I was going to add the Master in here. He/she may never win, but they do keep returning, even when the viewer thinks they died. I mean... how did the Master survive stabbing themselves on a ship full of Cybermen? It's a conundrum.
"We are entombed, but we live on. This is only the beginning. We will prepare. We will grow stronger. When the time is right, we will emerge and take our rightful place as the supreme power of the UNIVERSE!"
A villain the doctor didn't defeat? "Harriet Jones, Former Prime Minister." "Yes, we know who you are." Not a villain but I still found that running gag hilarious.
Honourable mention to the water zombies, who you could say he defeated but not really because almost everyone died and adelaide blew up the base, killing herself.
What about the Raven from Face The Raven in Series 9? I remember the doctor saying “you could run to the end of the universe and it would still catch you” and there was also nothing he could do to stop it inevitably killing Clara. I found that episode creepy.
so the question is what is his name right? i wonder if they have an actusl plot on that. like something passed from generations of directors. that would be nice.
"Winning? Is that what you think it’s about? I’m not trying to win. I’m not doing this because I want to beat someone, or because I hate someone, or because I want to blame someone. It’s not because it’s fun. God knows it’s not because it’s easy. It’s not even because it works because it hardly ever does.. I DO WHAT I DO BECAUSE IT’S RIGHT! Because it’s decent! And above all, it’s kind! It’s just that.. Just kind. If I run away today, good people will die. If I stand and fight, some of them might live. Maybe not many, maybe not for long. Hey, you know, maybe there’s no point to any of this at all. But it’s the best I can do. So I’m going to do it. And I will stand here doing it until it kills me. And you’re going to die too! Some day.. And how will that be? Have you thought about it? What would you die for? Who I am is where I stand.. Where I stand is where I fall. Stand with me. These people are terrified. Maybe we can help a little. Why not, just at the end, just be kind?” - The Doctor
"Why not, just at the end, just be kind?" Simple, because humanity is not kind. Since we walked across the continents we have killed, for food, for sport, for pleasure, to stop others. We are the cruelest animals on this forsaken rock and in the 200,000 years modern humans have roamed we are the most vindictive and vicious.
I think only one episode of Doctor who has actually scared me which I believe is called midnight because the acting was amazing and the people panicking seemed genuinely real to me and I think the woman who played sky was amazing the way she looked at them with her creepy ass eyes and even the way it scared the doctor at the end it was really good
Bruh remember that ep when the doctor was trapped in a castle for 100s of years being chased by a shadow creature slowly and he had to dig through a diamond wall meters thick for hundreds of years dying over and over from the creature but then being brought back to life.
4. Wasn’t it said that the swarm would “start again” (meaning get faster and faster until they generate a new portal?) but the doctor said he would shift it to uninhabited worlds? Technically not defeating them but helping them
That definitely sounds like something the Doctor would do. The swarm couldn't really help it. They're just eating, so if he sends them to uninhabited planets, they can eat without hurting another species
Now I could be remembering wrong here, but I think I remember a line where the Doctor says that if they are unable to jump to the next planet they will die, because they need to keep consuming at a rapid rate. So leaving them there would kill them and hence actually would have defeated them. BUT since he's kind he did what you said and shifted it to uninhabited worlds because he didn't want them to die since they weren't technically evil. Please correct me if I'm wrong but I feel I have a distinct memory of that line.
David Troughton, Patrick's son, was the elderly scholar in Midnight. He also played soldier many years ago in the Second Doctor finale, War Games. Just throwing in a bit of trivia. I think he was also in the Peter Davison comedy "The Five Doctors Reboot."
@@tardiskeeper6 I've never played any "Doctor Who" game. I don't know anything about the expanded universe like books or comics except Torchwood, and just the TV series, not the comic. I'm afraid I'm a regular fan of several things, not a huge fan of one topic.
@LT. Simon Riley Maybe not the episode (althoug I love it), but my favorite scene ever in TV or cinema is Peter Capaldi's Doctor trying to convince a zygon not starting a war and a human not to commit a genocide in "The Zygon Inversion" episode. The whole scene is awsome. Awsome doctor too.
hot head 93 Does gaming Really? That’s surprising. A lot of people think it’s one of the weaker Missing Stories. I think it’s good but it’s not at the top of my list. Marco Polo, Mission to the Unknown, The Daleks’ Master Plan, Power of the Daleks, Evil of the Daleks & Fury from the Deep are at the top of my list
Definitely a very polarizing episode, put yourself in the place of the passengers what would you do, put yourself in the role of the Doctor what DO you do, role of the stewardess (who was in on a lot of the episode)while you know what she did could you do it, WOULD you do it?. Easily one of my favs
The Cybermen in the Season 10 finale. Despite having stopped their forces on one floor, Nardol said that the Cybermen were still at the bottom of the ship and were just waiting for a new approach. His regeneration was triggered and the fates of the humans on board the ship are sealed of either running for the rest of their lives or the Cybermen catching up with them.
Man, I really wish the weeping angels were in more episodes. They are such a great villain. They are horrifying, the music is always great, they have a great defense that is impossible to beat (cuz if they get damaged they can repair themselves), and the actors who play the angels are always amazing
Nobody hates The Doctor more than himself, it's how 11 knew who the Dream Lord was. 6 beleived The Master when he said he was an evil future Doctor but even if he didn't The Doctor could have figured it out from Valeyard's insults or did he not become self loathing until after the Time War? .
@@thisiscerysr4515 Very true in fact 9 and 10 were very obvious with the self loathing. The Dream Lord could've been considered the beginning of the Valeyard or at least a introductory manifestation. The real question is since the Master himself said that the Valeyard was an amalgam of his darkness between the 10th and final regenerations. Where does the Valeyard truly begin?
I think the biggest monster the Doctor could never defeat... is itself. It has been made apparent through several storylines during NuWho, as well as a few select storylines from Classic Who, that the Doctor himself is a Monster. Storylines like the Pandorica, the Waters of Mars, The Family of Blood, the Timeles Child, and the various court cases of the Second, Sixth (and possibly fourth but I can't remember) highlight that the Doctor itself is ruthless. While The Doctor (most of the time) has good intentions, very bad things have resulted from it. The Doctor has been responsible for several other monsters as well - notably the Toclofane and the Master in Utopia/Sound of Drums/Last of the Time Lords (in helping the rocket to fly and his part in reawakening the Master); the Gelth (in allowing them through the rift); and the Daleks (by not leaving Davros when he was a child, even with full knowledge not only of the Daleks, but of his own actions with the usage of the moment - which he still partly believed happened at the time - and yes, leaving Davros to die would also have made him a bit of a Monster). The most notable monstrous event of the Doctor's however, is the Timeless Child. The Doctor/Timeless Child is responsible for the Time Lords of Gallifrey, who really, up until their defeat, were essentially dictators. They 'ruled' the universe by watching over the timelines, vowed not to intefere yet broke this promise to keep their version of the ideal amount of peace. The Time Lords - and all Gallifreyans - have been responsible for a number of calamitous events, including driving the Master insane by sending a signal through the Time Vortex through the Untempered Schism when the Master was 8, and with their oligarchal-at-best high court, which doesn't seem to ever have any of a say, and it is solely up to the Lord President to decide due to his magic gauntlet. Now, yes, the Doctor didn't intentionally create Time Lords (as far as we know but there's still time for Chibnall to make this worse), but the Doctor was directly responsible for them.
Oh, so when you say "Defeat," you actually mean "Didn't completely obliterate." By that logic, there are no winners in football until they've executed the other teams...
К тому же, Доктор никогда не убивал их полностью в том числе из-за ненависти к геноциду In addition, the Doctor never killed them completely, including because of hatred of genocide
Only if his redefinition of "villain" is as loose as his personal interpretation of "defeat." Which it is, seeing as survival instinct is such a heinous crime. Silver medalists are toast.
Something I've never understood with the Weeping Angles, is why no-one ever even tries to destroy them a sledgehammer. Like you can kill basically everything if you take a sledgehammer and just smash it to bits. Unless they can somehow piece themselves back together, they're gone, especially because when you're looking at them they're stone.
I love things like this as I always think that the doctor doesn't kill some of his enemies because he is being kind. Like how he gave the family of blood a chance but eventually they pushed him to far and he had no choice but to "get rid" of them
Theres one more villain: The Master Edit: Also!!! In the Episode The Almost People, he died saving everyone from The Flesh and his copy "became" him and was seen to be the original thing
The master keeps on coming back. The third doctor defeated him every time for his first season, but he kept on escaping and coming back. Again and again.
They don't starve, they eat everything. People, buildings, flora... they didn't need inhabited planets to feed on, just planets in general. So in the end he didn't starve them, he just re-routed them to where they could survive whilst doing the least amount of damage.
id argue that the vasta nerada were just as scared of the doctor as he was of them. the moment he said look me up they backed off. oh shit this guy could possibly kill us. ok truce.
This is my favorite 2-parter and top 3 stories of doctor who. That said, it has always hit a weird spot for me. I don't think The Doctor should have tried to destroy the Vashta Nerada. They are a necessary part of the life cycle on any planet. And as he said, they normally live off of roadkill- already dead meat. Being trapped in the library against their will, they came in the books, of course they were going to eat whatever meat they could get- River's team on the planet. If The Doctor had time to think, he wonder if he could have had the Vashta Nerada stay in a body suit, and transfer them back to a forest on an inhabited planet where they would go back to their natural lifestyle. Obviously that wouldn't have translated the same way and would completely change the impact of the story. Still, I never saw the Vashta Nerada as villainous. More a creature of circumstance like many of the others on Doctor Who
I don't think he can. He mentions that the Cybermen will always be part of humanity's evolution and they will always show up (something like that). He would have to kill off the human race to stop them. But you are right as well.
@@aaronwackenhut2216 Yeah. Even if he would kill every cyberman in the Galaxy. Someday a human race would create something similar to upgrade their human bodys. He could spend all of his remaining regenerations just killing of cyberman in every timeline possible and there would be still some left who would replicate themselves. He can defend the humans against the aliens but not the humans against the humans .
The one villain he can never beat is the Master, although thought to be dead after her defeat at her own hands, she reappears 2 seasons later and causes more problems for the Doctor, due to the dynamics of their relationship, they may still be friends but she is still none the less a villain and the Doctor would never directly kill his oldest friend
Honorable mentions: The Reapers The Flood, The Beast, The Cybermen as they always survive, the 456, Sutekh, Rassilon in many ways despite him being defeated in convenient circumstances a couple times
I'd debate adding the 456 since the Doctor never encountered them, that was all TW. If we include all parts of the Whoniverse, we'd also have to include the Families (thwarted sure, but you know they'd be back if there was more TW) and the Trickster from SJA, another case of foiled but never truly defeated.
I didn't watch doctor who in ages but remember watching that shadow episode when I was a kid (10yo or something like that) at the time it was the scariest episode I've watched
I liked it too! :D It was one of the many Dr Who episodes that there isn't always good and evil, just opposite sides... and the warrior was fine with peace because there was no reason to kill them all. He had gotten what he wanted... a ride home.
The Mandragora Helix from "The Masque of Mandragora" comes to mind. The Fourth Doctor manages to send it back to its own constellation but mentions it will be in position again for another attack on Earth in 500 years' time.
DanTheMeegs he probably threw in his own opinion. There is something called ad libbing. He isn’t going to just say someone else’s opinion, the list will be scripted but his opinions probably aren’t lol
5) The Doctor didn't panic when it saw the creature that always hides come a little bit out of hiding. He knew Danny and Clara had forced it into a position where it could no longer completely hide, and that they were fixing to force a confrontation with it that was entirely avoidable. The creature wasn't interested in fighting anyone, and the Doctor knew that. It simply wanted to go back to a place where it could hide completely. So what did the Doctor do? He talked up the problem to Danny in a way a child would understand it-- perhaps knowing a creature which does everything it can to hide from all the world around it would have only a childlike understanding of things itself-- and in a way that would convince Danny to do the one thing that would terrify him the most. Because he might be tempted to lash out, and he might be tempted to try and run away. He might find himself paralyzed with fear, but what's the one thing you never want to do when faced with a threat? You don't want to turn around and simply stand there and wait for it to do whatever it's going to do... And this plays on a fear that, unless I miss my guess, I'm not the only person in the world who's ever endured. Haven't you had that time... you know the time. The time when you were sure you were alone in a room that was completely quiet, when you were facing away from the door, and suddenly you could feel it. You could feel that someone else was in the room with you. You could hear it-- the quiet, steady sound of their breathing-- and you were so, so scared. You were more scared than anything to turn around because somehow the idea that it might not be a monster, that it might just be your mom or dad standing there, staring impassively at you, not doing anything but stare at you and breathe... I mean, it was crazy, right? You knew your mind had to be playing tricks, but that didn't stop the hair on the back of your neck from standing up, the chilly tingle of goosebumps over your arms... that crawling feeling in your nethers. It didn't stop the fear, and the panic. Doesn't something deep down in your mind, even now that you're an adult, a part you don't show the world and laugh off and say doesn't really exist... doesn't it still fear finding itself in that position? Doesn't it tell you to do whatever it takes not to be in it? So what does it take to get you to willingly submit to it when you can catch just enough of a glimpse to see there's something real there, but not enough to show you the kind of monster it is? No, the Doctor did not panic in that scene. Not every confrontation is won by fighting. The Doctor didn't lose to the creature in that episode. The enemy in the episode wasn't the creature; it was fear, and it was fear every bit as much for the creature as it was for everything else. The Doctor was able to get Danny and Clara through that situation with no fight, with minimal fright, simply by reassuring the creature who didn't want to be seen that they would never look as long as that's what it wanted. They promised it that it could hide... What did the creature do? It gave Danny his blanket back-- it no longer needed it-- and went back to hiding. And in the end, the Doctor was even able to directly face his fears while helping the creature face its fears, because they both endured to the end of the Universe, and once the Doctor made sure they were alone, that no one but the two of them were there, the creature chose to come out of hiding at last, and the Doctor chose to finally see it for what it was, keeping the details of their interaction private. It was a great episode, with a villain a lot of people didn't really seem to notice, but one which the Doctor was able to help everyone-- not just the people he usually helps, but the creature he knew was suffering, too-- defeat along with him.
Just a statement; 10. I wasn't really sure about Skaldak's status as a bad guy in Cold War and I kinda felt some sympathy over how he had a daughter and is never going to see her again (since the time they were together was about five thousand years ago and she is supposedly dead now). 9. I've been online somewhat and I've heard that the "Midnight Monster" was thought to have been either the Mara (a sort of giant snake that fed off the fear of others and faced of against the Fifth Doctor a couple of times, in case you didn't know), the Beast (a.k.a. the Devil from The Impossible Planet/The Saturn Pit) or the ghost of the Master, since they dabbled quite a bit in mind control (which the Midnight Monster was kinda doing with Sky Silvestry) and they were all old enemies of the Doctor (which may explain why they latched onto the Doctor and tried to drain him). 7. The Valeyard has faced off against the Doctor in off-screen stories, doing so against the Doctor's sixth incarnation and also his seventh and eighth selves (the last off-screen story the Valeyard has appeared in was set during the Time War, during which he ended up believing he was actually the Doctor and was last seen fighting against several Daleks). 6. When the Doctor had that Pting sucked out, I somewhat believed that that had killed it. 5. It is rather creepy we don't know what that thing in Listen was. 4. The Doctor had actually sent those Stingray creatures to some uninhabited planet. 3. I think if you recall, the Sontarans' weak spot is the probic vent on the back of their necks. 2. The Black Guardian has appeared in a couple of off-screen stories set after Enlightenment; one also involving the Fifth Doctor (and again being in a deadlock with the White Guardian) and the other in which he did not interact with the Doctor (who was in his seventh incarnation by then). Also, when you said that he couldn't defeat them, I took it in the respect that they won in their plans. He has stopped the Daleks, Cybermen, Silence and the Master in their plans, but they have always survived.
The sleep-sand people in Sleep No More beat The Doctor, to the point where he still didn't know what was happening. That episode could use a follow up!
@@Noah_Composer Doctor Who was good. Now the plots go nowhere, the opponents pose no real threat half the time or just done in way that comes off poorly, the speeches come off flat and Jodie talks like a schoolteacher not a thousands of years old Time Lord. Where's the Oncoming Storm? "mates, gang" cringe. Contrast the 9th Doctor meeting the lone Dalek in S1, the pain and anger, the war mindset "you would make a good Dalek", chilling. "The Doctor: Your race is dead! You all burnt, all of you! Ten million ships on fire! The entire Dalek race wiped out in one second! Dalek: You lie! The Doctor: I watched it happen! I made it happen! Dalek: You destroyed us?! The Doctor: [somber] I had no choice. Dalek: And what of the Time Lords? The Doctor: Dead. They burnt with you. The end of the last great Time War. Everyone lost." Then the Dalek "humanity is weak" speech with "well, I'm not human", comes off flat. And the Zygon speech about war: "This is a scale model of war. Every war ever fought, right there in front of you. Because it’s always the same. When you fire that first shot, no matter how right you feel, you have no idea who’s going to die! You don’t know who’s children are going to scream and burn. How many hearts will be broken. How many lives shattered. How much blood will spill until everybody does what they were always going to have do from the very beginning. Sit down and talk!" now that's a speech. The video reviews give specifics about where things went wrong and, in cases, how it could have been written better.
John Smith sure, cause hating terrible writing, bad jokes and retcons makes you toxic. Ryan and Yaz could be the same character and nothing would change. Everything’s been done better by other doctors and Jodie hasn’t been given anything to work with as the doctor to be a good doctor. She hasn’t been bad either...just lukewarm
@@samsmith4242 Just because you don't like the current style of writing doesn't mean you can be horrible about the writers and say oh I don't like this era doctor who is dead which is plain and obviously wrong as it's clearly not dead. In my opinion Ryan and Yaz feel more human than any companions from the RTD era and series 12 is my favourite series, Jodie is very relatable and the stories are memrable. I don't like RTD era doesn't mean I can call him a villain and the worst showrunner in history just because he's my least favourite showrunner.
John Smith wait, you think that RTD era is bad but Chibnall is good? Right. You’ve just compared the hagia Sophia to a 1950s council house and said the council house is better. Either your an SJW who loves the Chibnall eras preachy, obvious not clever way of pointing out issues (meanwhile the Moffat and RTD eras slip things like that in all the time and it was done well. If you didn’t notice it that’s on you). From an objective writing standpoint the RTD era handled things better than the last two show runners did, and Moffat wasn’t bad but he had some issues setting up his overarching season finale compared to RTD. Planets in the sky and journeys end were teased from the start of the season with references to missing planets throughout the season and a cameo of rose Tyler at the start. Moffat made it a lot more obvious as all things and the doctor a bit too big in my opinion. But, he made it work for him and his doctors. Despite the stories narrative style changing and changing the lore in annoying ways, but at least it still made sense! Chibnall does none of that. He drops a hint doesn’t address it for half the season. Then tries to tie it into some other story with nostalgia thrown in so you have too watch it and then it doesn’t make sense and ruins the entire franchises continuity. All of it. Considering this is doctor who that’s actually impressive. Then again, this season is better than the last one. Introduce big bad in the first episode. Don’t address him or tie in Graham’s grief very well at all. Then have him the big bad show up with no explanation as a galactic level threat because space wizards who have made him a God...for no reason...at all...The doctors also meant to funny or she doesn’t work. The Master is supposed to be clever and his relation to the doctor complicated and nuanced after being friends for over a thousand years. A relationship so long and complicated no else understands it. And companions are to do something and something to the show other than ‘I’m a black British person’ and ‘I’m an Asian British person’. Chibnall is a terrible writer and show runner
Victory of the Daleks sums up Matt Smith's Doctor for me - he could have destroyed those Daleks (and supposedly finished them off for good) if he took Bracewell to their ship. Instead, he let them go, same again in Asylum - he just leaves.
Cybermen. Technically in Death in Heaven, the doctor didn't defeat the Cybermen. It was Danny Pink with the controller who defeated both Missy and the Cybermen.
@@julieeverett7442 True, but equally they did kill anything they could see and reach, instead of specifically targeting Rose's dad. All about perspective I suppose
@@nicholashart1298 Well no one told them, who, or what caused the paradox, only that a paradox happened, like a cut wound, that invited them into the world. Just like the white cells, they attacked everything, that they thought was the cause for the paradox. There are cases, when someone's immunity system doesn't work correctly and the white cells do attack even stuff, that should help your body, just because it's something that doesn't belong there. You're right about perspective, but we should adapt the Doctor's perspective, or his companions, as they represent the hero and the audience. The Doctor himself gave an explanation of what these Reapers are and what they do. So his perspective should apply here. He didn't describe them as anything evil, just things, that use the situation and clear the wound.
Uh, the Cybermen. Like the Darleks they ALWAYS come back, and it kinda makes sense. humanity itself will eventually end up with implants and augments, so going full on Cyberman isnt exactly stretching things too far XD