Subject: Some facts.
Author:
Posted on: 2013-11-17 23:50:00 UTC

During the initial approach sequence, we see two shots of the gunship approaching the planet. There's about six seconds between them, with no indication that we've jumped in time. In those six seconds, the planet's apparent size roughly doubles. That means the distance to the planet has halved. Since the episode goes on longer than another six seconds, either we did jump a bit, or the ship slows down somehow.

But... I really don't think it's enough. That final crash trajectory? That's really fast. It takes less than a second to go from 'dot on the screen' to impact. Given that the-- actually, wait.

The ship was trailing smoke in space. The only way for it to be doing that is for it to be accelerating on the way down - otherwise the smoke would be moving at the same velocity as the ship, and would just jet outwards. The engines were still working - and without being able to reference the dialogue, I'm betting they were jammed on. That ship hit atmo - and hit the ground - under significant thrust. The explosion when it hit expands to at least three or four times the size of the ship itself - and is big enough to light up the faces of the Sisterhood at what seems to be a fairly large distance. There are multiple bursts of light - at least three major fireballs in the space of two seconds. We then cut to a pan through the ship, which has been torn apart. There are broken ribs everywhere. That impact was not survivable.

My guess? The Doctor was in the TARDIS when the impact came, trying to do something clever (put the gunship on tow?). He was thrown out of the doors, much like Eleven had to be in Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS. That means it's the TARDIS' dampers, buffers and shields which protected him from the impact, not the gunship's.

And yet, he was still genuinely dead - at least according to the clearly unreliable Sisterhood. To kill someone through TARDIS shielding - which has been shown to fall from orbit with little more than a bump before - that must have been one heck of a crash.

Given the former Frankenstein-flavoured shenanigans on Karn, I'm going to guess that Cass wasn't just dead - she was a complete ruin. Only their experience with Morbius - and the technology which resurrected him - allowed the Sisterhood to piece her back together for the Doctor to look at. Whether they needed that technology to bring the Doctor back to life, or whether their Elixir sufficed, is an open question.

hS

Reply Return to messages