Renée has a new rival
23 notes
·
View notes
this took me way longer then i would like to admit..
37 notes
·
View notes
David Tennant talks about filming Good Omens and Doctor Who at the Globe
David Tennant at Fan Expo Dallas 2024, 9.6.2024
Fan: Two of your most iconic roles, the Doctor and Crowley, they have scenes that span all of history, and I was just wondering, what was your favourite historical era to portray yourself in and why for both characters?
David: Well, both characters got to visit Shakespeare's Globe, and both times we got to film in Shakespeare's Globe, which exists in London - for anyone who wants to know - they rebuilt the theatre that Shakespeare would have performed in with his company of players, it's been rebuilt in the banks of the Thames, close towhere it would have been, and it's been rebuilt in as much historical detail as possible. And it now runs as a theatre. It's got a full cycle of plays. You can go to London tomorrow and se a show there. And as a set to film on it's the most extraordinary thing. It's completely realised. So you stand in this kind of circular place and you look around and you're in Elizabethan England. It's fantastic. So we got to film there on Doctor Who, which was wonderful, and we got to for Good Omens as well. So both those characters were filming those scenes which were supposed to take place in that time in the most extraordinary sense, that could never be... no production would be able to make it in such extraordinary detail. That was a real treat. So that was for both of those characters that would be... for me I'd say that was the most kind of immersive experience anyway.
2K notes
·
View notes
Doctor Who 3x02 | Staged 1x01
425 notes
·
View notes
the Carrionites from the shakespeare code are really a fascinating concept to examine in light of The Post Salt-Line Era (disclaimer: i don’t like the episode as a whole for obvious reasons). powerful witches from the before-times, applying word-magic as a science. words that rhyme or sentences constructed with a specific intent have enough power to stop one of a timelord’s hearts and potentially open a space-time portal. something to keep in mind vis a vis the repeated wordsmithing motif we’ve got going on in s14: spoor “that’s a nice word”; smelted “i’ve never used that before”; ruby was was foundled “what a funny word, foundled”; semperdistans.
if ruby really is a changeling… much as to the carrionites (who were evidently modelled after historical witchcraft folklore), words hold tremendous power to the fae. that’s why there’s all this mythology of faeries “stealing names”: to them, there is no difference between signifier and signified, between a word and the real-life object that word represents, so a name is the person’s actual identity, their personhood itself.
therefore, if ruby really is a faerie child, it makes total sense for her to accidentally be affecting reality through verbal expression in the way she’s been doing throughout the whole series. in space babies, she mentions star trek and suddenly the crew appear in star trek esque uniforms. in the devil’s chord, she mentions strictly come dancing and suddenly they’re dancing opposite two strictly judges. obviously, her word-magic comes to a head in 73 yards: she reads out “i miss you” on the clifftop and the doctor disappears. she reads out “rest in peace, mad jack” and in 20 years gwylliam’s up there on the screen calling himself mad jack (we can presume the original note wasn’t about gwylliam, but an actual villager called jack). ruby speaking messages out loud manifests them into reality. she’s got faerie blood.
237 notes
·
View notes
The Shakespeare Code
Doctor Who | Series 3, Episode 2
3K notes
·
View notes
is there any better summary of the doctor in s3 than when martha asks him what their sleeping arrangements are going to be in 'the shakespeare code' considering they only just met and the doctor replies that they'll manage...and proceeds to PLONK himself right in the MIDDLE of the bed.
318 notes
·
View notes
one moment theyre arguing on the bridge the next theyre necking in a turbolift (bickering is their foreplay.) also mckirk is peak "i married my best friend" energy
also i LOVE the idea of bones being inexplicably more flustered than spock over kissing the vulcan way,, theyre both terrible terrible tsunderes but jim thinks its so funny that they play it up sometimes when hes feeling down just to see him laugh
283 notes
·
View notes
I guess the Doctor just didn't walk around like he owned the place well enough this time around.
102 notes
·
View notes
When the Doctor is played by a Scottish actor, their companion asks about the Butterfly Effect
The Fearmonger (2000):
The Shakespeare Code (2007):
Thin Ice (2017):
Space Babies (2024):
73 notes
·
View notes
I love how Ten is obsessed with Shakespeare; a total fanboy throughout this entire episode
To the point that he's feeding the man lines left and right
Then, to bring it all together, we find out that this iconic sonnet—one he's likely read ten thousand times—was about his new mate Martha all along
And my dude is stunned
54 notes
·
View notes
"Her Death Was Doubtful" - Ophelia's Missy's death
Ophelia, 1900, Friederich Theodor Heyser // Missy's death, Doctor Who season 10 "The Doctor Falls" // Ophelia, 1852, John Everett Millais
116 notes
·
View notes