jove
Brigadier
Posts: 106
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Post by jove on May 7, 2007 14:13:20 GMT -5
Simon Pegg stars in "Shaun of the Dead" and the new movie, "Hot Fuzz". He was the villain in the Doctor Who episode, "The Long Game". He's done other British television as well, mostly comedy, I think.
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horg
Brigadier
Posts: 119
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Post by horg on May 9, 2007 9:14:58 GMT -5
I have another idea!!!! How about the 11th doctor to be.... The Shalka Doctor:Richard E. Grant. Simon Pegg would be a brilliant doctor + The Doctor always wanted to be Ginger.
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Post by captaingloval on May 13, 2007 13:30:52 GMT -5
I know I'm a bit late on this but the 13 incarnation limit set in The Deadly Assasin also noted that after the 13th the time Lords body begins to breakdown. It is a biological function therefore 13 is it. The Master was attempting to get around it by absorbing energy directly from the Eye of Harmony, aluding to an experiment preformed by Rassilon, to extend the 13th and final incarnation of his body.
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Post by ladymara on May 28, 2007 7:26:51 GMT -5
k here's MY oppinion The third incarnation was a forced regeneration and may not actually be counted, we won't know till the end. Also, if we consider some of the books, the doctor may NOT be completely Galifreyan?
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Post by The Thinker on May 28, 2007 14:04:47 GMT -5
The third incarnation was a forced regeneration and may not actually be counted, we won't know till the end. Also, if we consider some of the books, the doctor may NOT be completely Galifreyan? Going by that, a forced regeneration is still a regeneration, if you see what I mean. Also, spin-off media may not be canon, and as for the TV movie, it could just only be the Eighth Doctor who's half-Gallifreyan, as he was given human blood.
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Post by Dalek on Jun 4, 2007 5:39:23 GMT -5
It's a very difficult arguement. It all depends on how well it's doing by that time so i say wait and see.
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Post by Mark Senior on Jan 14, 2008 16:49:40 GMT -5
As a few of you have noted, the answer (when it comes) will be determined by events outside the fictional world and not by rules from old episodes and novels. I can't help but feel that there will still be Doctor Who, in some medium or other, in 50 years from now, as this generation's 8 year olds will still be nostalgically rehashing their hero's adventures/history.
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