My favorite episode included Vincent van Gogh. I admire his work, and we get to see smatterings of it in the museum, and in Vincent's flat. Vincent can see a monster others, including the Doctor, cannot see. The monster has been killing innocents. It looks like a big chicken. In the end it is defeated. In an effort to change Van Gogh's imminent suicide, they show him his legacy. However it does not prevent his suicide.
The weeping angels are back in a two part episode. Only this time there are hundreds of them, and they are out to get them. However the angels are scared of the crack through which if anything passes they are forgotten and never existed.
Rory, played by Arthur Darvill, Amy's fiance, joins her on the Tardis. They face off against vampires, an evil dream keeper and they have to choose between two dream sets and pick the real one so as to not die. There is a less serious one where The Doctor takes on as a human and rents a room. He plays soccer and eats biscuits and tries to be human to fool the entity upstairs, where there really is not an upstairs, but through the powers of a space vehicle one was been created in everyone's mind.
The show then turns serious as the Tardis blows up, and it is actually this event seeping through time and universes, which has caused the crack. The Doctor has to close the crack, leaving himself on the other side, and can only be brought back if someone remembers him. This happens at Rory's and Amy's wedding when remembers something blue.
No comments:
Post a Comment