Seventh Doctor fans high five!Rawne1980 said:There is only one Doctor.
That man is Sylvester McCoy.........
Rawne1980 said:There is only one Doctor.
That man is Sylvester McCoy.........
And it DID work out - but it was kinda creepy in a way how well he did it. Like, he WAS redeeming himself, but he was still the same guy that did it, and that he could do the exact same things but for a different cause, but keep that winning smile and cheerful demeanour was...more sinister than anything the villains could conjure up. That said, though I prefer Matt's Doctor, Tennant's acting is phenomenal.Abandon4093 said:Wasn't that the point of Tennant's character though?Thyunda said:I started with Eccleston when the reboot premiered in the UK and I found him remarkably dull. Tennant's episodes were, for the most part, nothing short of excellent, but he was too attractive for the role. He made the crazy, the intelligence, and the anger all...well, likeable. Matt Smith puts his feet further across both sides of the line - well until the last season, but let's pretend that one never happened, and while his eccentric nature is certainly more obvious and less socially acceptable, he also makes a far smaller deal about killing people who cross him. If anything, Matt Smith's my favourite Doctor purely because he embodies the Doctor's true self, and his own fierce denial of who he is.FEichinger said:Let's face it. Nearly everyone's favorite New Who Doctor is the one they watched first.
That's why people don't like Smith, and that's why Eccleston should've had another series.
I personally don't like Smith either. Partially because Tennant got killed off a bit too ... radically, what with the new companions and TARDIS. However, I also still can't quite wrap my head around his Doctor. 9 and 10 had very defining personalities ... 11? Entirely different and ... rather bland (oh, and kinda douchey, as opposed to crazy-intelligent)
Let's be honest. He's not a nice man. He can, and has, responded to military movements with far more collateral damage than they'd have caused, and justified it with "They were the aggressors." He's a madman and a killer, and where David Tennant made it charming, Matt Smith makes it frightening. Like babysitting a loveable child who murdered their parents.
Wasn't he seeking redemption for his part in the Time War. Trying to be a better person. That's what I got from it.
Oh, by no means was I criticising the actor, or even his character. He just toed the line that Tennant straddled and that Smith jumps either side of depending on which idiot wrote his script. I mean really. Demon's Run was a great episode. The Atraxi in the first episode were a good vehicle to introduce Smith's quiet intimidation. But what the bollocks is going on with the current season? My creative side is telling me that it's to show the Doctor has decided to rid himself of his intrinsically warlike nature and allow Amy and Rory to be serious while he indulges his curious side and has the wacky adventures he always promised.Chris Mosher said:I can understand what you are saying about Eccleston, but I thought that he was intentionally subdued given that he was the personality who did the dead that ended the Time War. His character seemed to be in the grip of PTSD. I also really liked the episodes after Fathers Day.
Yeah, that's pretty much it. And they went out of their way to find things to complain about.dtgenshiken7 said:What I got out of it was that the fans really don't like change.
I don't think they'll stop until Smith is replaced. And even then, they'll probably ***** about the new choice.Hazy992 said:Are people still taking issue with Matt Smith as The Doctor? That's news to me.
I echo this. Although this past season/series/whatever I missed that look he'd get on his face when he was being awesome, but then I imagine that can be blamed on writing again.TimeLord said:I'm a Tennant fan forever but I don't have any issues with Smith. He's an excellent Doctor let down by some shoddy writting.