#whouniverse
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
bestmothertournament · 1 month ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Propaganda Under Cut:
Gwen Cooper (Mother of Anwyn Williams): Protective mother desperate to keep her daughter safe from the horrors she has seen.
Camila Noceda (Mother of Luz): Recommended by Januscorner. Loves her daughter and wants the best for her. Finds out her daughter has a doppleganger and just goes "I have two daughter nows" - Humankk
24 notes · View notes
marlagraysonn · 1 year ago
Text
WHOUNIVERSE 🔷♥️♥️
8 notes · View notes
whatdoyoudoieat · 1 year ago
Text
‘You're not Shade Vassily,’ the Doctor said. ‘You just think you are.’ And he reached up and took off Repple’s face. ‘Sorry.’ He stepped aside, allowing Repple to see his own reflection in the glass wall behind. ‘Really, I am.’  Repple just stared. Stared at the mass of cogwheels that clicked round rhythmically.  ‘It took me a while,’ the Doctor admitted. Tiny gears and levers worked furiously. ‘But I realised I've never seen you smile. Or frown. Or laugh.’ He folded up the artificial face and pushed it into his pocket.
1 note · View note
misscryptidart · 1 year ago
Photo
"A massive collection of Doctor Who episodes. Condensed. And do you know what they called it? The Whoniverse. They called it the fucking Who-Niverse."
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
DOCTOR WHO | introducing THE WHONIVERSE Welcome to the #Whoniverse! The TARDIS doors are open… BBC iPlayer welcomes the biggest collection of #DoctorWho, with over 800 episodes of Doctor Who and its vast worlds beyond, available from 1st November 💫
288 notes · View notes
denimbex1986 · 1 year ago
Text
'Review at a glance *****
So it’s goodbye David Tennant again, and over to you Ncuti Gatwa! Except, no! The big twist in this twistiest of episodes – one that may well be the best hour of Who ever – is that the three-episode reprise of Tennant’s Doctor is not quite the end for him at all.
What seemed to be simply a canny way for Russell T Davies to bring some goodwill back to the Whouniverse, using a Tennant as a drum-roll for Ncuti Gatwa’s new reign, was not merely that, not just cynicism: it was a chance to crowd please a crowd in need of a damn good pleasing.
What a rare delight to watch prime time Saturday night TV delivered with such aplomb. This short run has echoed Marvel’s accomplishment with the Avengers films, matching drama with humour, and never taking itself too seriously even as it brings you to tears.
The Giggle topped it all off with a genuinely brilliant and thrillingly unpredictable episode that started off as a fun satire for all the family before turning into a Carnival of Horrors, by way of a murderous Spice Girls set piece by the lead villain that would make the Joker frown in envy. This was pop culture hitting some kind of high-on-itself high.
Last week the Doctor and Donna landed back in present day London to find Wilf waiting (sadly Davies revealed on a post this week that Bernard Cribbins died before he could film any more scenes so he does not appear in this episode). He told them humans had turned on each other and were fighting in the street and the world was basically ending.
Turns out that back in the day, 1925 in Soho to be precise, when John Logie Baird invented the TV, the first image he recorded was the head of a ventriloquist’s dummy (actually true, Stooky Bill, was his name, and yes Stooky was as spooky looking in real life; what was Baird thinking? Sick man, with all due respect).
A dummy which happened to be a magical evil puppet that was sold to him by a German-accented, racist Toymaker (played by a sensational Neil Patrick Harris having the time of his life here). And the image has sat hidden within every screen since then, not just TVs but phones too.
Back to ‘Today���, where Bonnie Langford is back as Melanie Bush after her companion stints with Colin Baker and Sylvester McCoy (incidentally, I wonder how many near-misses they had in Who writing rooms over the years, with character names veering close to Bond-esque smut) to help out because a satellite launched by South Korea has made the world 100% online – “For the first time in history everyone has access to a screen,” the Doctor frets, and our skinny hero does do a lot of fretting here – which triggered the hidden puppet into doing an evil laugh, that in turn sent everyone’s brains crazy.
Pilots are landing wherever they want, people are fighting for their right of way on the road, insulting the infirm and different, seeking angry justice for the mildest of questioning, and everyone is basically turning into a conspiracy theory loon. It’s described as so: “Basically, every single person on earth now thinks they’re right and everyone else is wrong.” Sound familiar?
OK, yes the first half is a very bludgeoning satire of social media-infused life today, which includes a red-faced buffoonish Prime Minister addressing the nation by saying, “Why should I care about you?” But as I keep saying, Doctor Who is family viewing and making sure the kids get it without making the adults groan is a line which Davies navigates masterfully here.
Assessing the imploding world, the Doctor rants about “humans hating each other,” suggesting the “anger and lies and righteousness,” was always there waiting to take over. Tennant has always channeled rage in his Doctor but here he gives it his full ‘den of thieves’ moment, and orders the UNIT agents to shoot the Korean satellite out of the sky, since all of the world leaders have gone crazy too. The Doctor making decisions on behalf of the earth? Treating it as his kingdom? It feels like he’s overstepped a mark and he knows it.
Anyway, while humanity is on a precipice the Doctor and Donna take a trip back to Frith Street in 1925 to confront The Toymaker.
Cue a sequence of surrealist delight reminiscent of classic carnivalesque horrors like Dead of Night and Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice in which Harris revels like Gambit meets Dr Strange meets the Joker. The scary puppets that attack Donna hit some great old notes, bringing flashbacks to Trainspotting and Poltergeist.
The climax comes with the Toymaker dealing out death to ‘Spice Up Your Life’, and bringing an end to Tennant, who almost seems relieved by it.
This proves to be one of the most moving narratives related to the Doctor. Donna took him to one side earlier and said that when she saw inside his mind, “You’re busy every minute of the day… it’s like you’re staggering along… is that why your old face came back? Because you’re wearing yourself out.”
That skinniness that has been joked about throughout the specials is recast as evidence of a man coming undone, not taking care of himself, consumed by self-loathing as he’s haunted by his past failures. “I’m always so certain,” The Doctor cries in full tortured Tennant mode, “Take away the toys and what am I now? Lost and broken.” (“You big idiot,” Donna retorts).
So when the Toymaker takes his life, the Doctor almost want it. Except, he’s not given it. He doesn’t die and regenerate into Gatwa, rather he splits in two. Two Doctors! He’s Tennant and Gatwa. One can remain on earth with Donna, while the new Doctor is free to roam the universe on the new Disney funding.
I loved this explanation for Tennant’s return, the haunted figure that he became post-Rose and post-Donna taken to the logical extreme, his mental health disintegrating after too much death and loss and destruction.
Doctor Who has always been about loss. Companions leaving people on earth behind or never having them at all (like Melanie Bush), the loss of time, loss of life. The Doctor is a kind of charismatic god of life, taking on death always, trying to save everyone, everywhere, all at once. Exhaustion was coming…
But so was regeneration – or rather bi-regeneration, which is a first for Doctor Who, and is portrayed as rehab: to save himself, he has to become a new person entirely. He splits in two! Tennant is still here, but so is Gatwa’s Doctor. And lo, parents across the land are spared the tears of a million children.
Gatwa is immediately a new kind of Doctor, not falling apart – “thin as a pin and running on fumes” he observes – but so sure of himself that he gives Tennant a hug and a kiss, the younger man like a father, and when Tennant says, “You can’t save everyone,” he replies, “Why not?”
It sets up Gatwa’s new Doctor deliciously as a capable, flamboyant, winner, a very ‘out’ figure who will continue to annoy the anti-wokies/anti-BBC/anti-vaxxers/anti-youths but who will deliver the thrills. The Errol Flynn moustache he sports can be no accident, given how swashbuckling the trailer of the Christmas Day episode is.
Will Tennant keep a presence in the Whoniverse? Not sure if the new guy is going to need him…'
8 notes · View notes
unabashedartisancat · 5 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Digital Art Attempt 10: The 9th Doctor
My first Doctor.
10 notes · View notes
indigobleu9 · 6 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
#silencewillfall #doctorwho #whovian #dreadgirl #tuesdayvibes #latinawithlocs #latinawithdreads #medicalprofessional #rheumatology #tattooedandemployed #thesilence #doctorwhouniverse #whouniverse (at New York, New York) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bwmsk3snYvD/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=6u4p7xbm7mfy
0 notes
spicyvampire · 5 years ago
Text
I already said this in tags beneath some post but I'm so mad I'm gonna make a whole post about it
why did they change the master from a white woman to a brown man to make him play a nazi seconds later???
At first I was mad because I felt like they were cowering from both the master and the doctor being a woman but now I'm mad they changed the white woman master only to make the brown man master a goddamn nazi like of all the goddamn plot that could lead to Gallifrey being destroyed for the hundredth time in the whouniverse WHY THIS ONE???? Can't they see how incredibly stupid it is to give pocs a brown master only to immediately turn him into a goddamn Nazi and for the white woman doctor to save the goddamn day?????? Like did they have at least ONE braincell at all present in the room while writting this whole plot????
This makes me as mad as Bill the first black lesbian companion "dying but not really" cuz she is "immortal" cuz "her girlfriend saved her" like fuck you couldn't she just NOT DIE AT ALL
7 notes · View notes
elizakursky · 5 years ago
Text
0 notes
ladyvendettaangel · 10 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Somebody make a cell phone case like Missy's, please. I'd buy it for my iPhone 6 plus in a heartbeat.
2 notes · View notes
bestmothertournament · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Propaganda Under Cut:
Marge Simpson (Mother of Bart, Lisa + Maggie): Marge is the moral voice of the family doing her best to maintain order in her chaotic family. She acknowledges her son is a troublemaker and does her best to try and stop him and is moved to tears when he shows his caring side. Marge provides and support to Lisa. Marge is Maggie's primary care giver.
Jackie Tyler (Mother of Rose + Anthony): Jackie raised Rose on her own after her husband died in the council estate whilst working to provide for her daughter. She was concerned for her daughter after her job was blown up and Rose looked to be in shock. Then shortly afterwards Rose went missing she spent the next year fighting to raise awareness and to campaign to have her found. Despite her own reservations she accepted the Doctor, aliens and danger he brought with him. When Rose and the Doctor were seperated she helped Rose get back to him.
22 notes · View notes
bazarbizar · 13 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
During school, how to recognize mad Whouniverse people ;)
0 notes
bestmothertournament · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Propaganda Under Cut:
Rio Morales (Mother of Miles): Always acted as a mediator between her son and husband who bickered. Is understanding of her son's failing grades even if she does try to be a bit more strict.
Donna Noble (Mother of Rose): Supportive of Rose and her endeavours. Will fight for Rose against alien invasions and bullies. Is proud of Rose's artistic properties.
22 notes · View notes
bestmothertournament · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Propaganda Under Cut:
Gwen Cooper (Mother of Anwen Williams): Protective mother desperate to keep her daughter safe from the horrors she has seen.
Delilah McGee (Mother of Morgan and John): Delilah balances being a mother, her career and her disability even with her husband's long work hours and unpredictable life.
19 notes · View notes
bestmothertournament · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Propaganda Under Cut:
Gwen Cooper (Mother of Anwyn Williams): Protective mother desperate to keep her daughter safe from the horrors she has seen.
Wendy Torrance (Mother of Danny): Protects her son from her husband's insanity and the ghosts that haunt the hotel she finds herself in.
13 notes · View notes
bestmothertournament · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Propaganda Under Cut:
Beverly Crusher (Mother of Wesley + Jack): Recommended by evie7common. Loving, supportive and protective of her sons.
Gwen Cooper (Mother of Anwyn Williams): Protective mother desperate to keep her daughter safe from the horrors she has seen.
14 notes · View notes