Meera Syal makes for a very good temporary companion-substitute alongside Matt’s Doctor. Almost makes you wish she’d joined the TARDIS team at the end. #DoctorWho
The script (and narration) is aiming for deep and epic and significant but god, those “diplomatic negotiations” scenes are boring as hell and utterly devoid of any drama. Amy slumped half-asleep over the table must be how most viewers felt. #DoctorWho
But at least it suddenly gets interesting again at the end as poor Rory dies (for the second episode in a row!) and the simmering season arc comes out of nowhere and slaps the Doctor round the face with a piece of exploding TARDIS. #DoctorWho
Vincent And The Doctor: hmm, I’m afraid I’m always a bit ‘Emperor’s new clothes’ about this one. It’s undoubtedly a decent episode, but I don’t find it anywhere near as affecting as everyone else seems to. #DoctorWho
Tony Curran does make an excellent Vincent, and it’s always a plus in any kind of biographical drama when the actor really does look a lot like the subject. #DoctorWho
It’s only in the emotionally charged scene near the end, where they take Vincent to the museum, where I feel it lives up to the reputation that the rest of the episode has. #DoctorWho
So, Bill Nighy’s character… what do we reckon? Another Timeless Child incarnation or a far-future ‘Curator’ version like Tom? 🤡 #DoctorWho
The Lodger: easily the funniest Eleventh Doctor story so far. The plot about the alien upstairs is almost incidental as it’s just so much fun watching Matt’s incarnation trying to act like a normal human being. #DoctorWho
I never thought I’d enjoy a #DoctorWho episode so much that has a lengthy segment focusing on the Doctor playing football. 😄
This episode also manages to pull off some kind of miracle by making James Corden come across as funny and likeable. #DoctorWho
The scenes of the Doctor clumsily getting in the way of Craig and Sophie’s romance wouldn’t have worked half as well with most other incarnations, despite this originating from a comic strip with Tennant. Only Jodie’s Doctor could I imagine being similarly awkward. #DoctorWho
The Pandorica Opens / The Big Bang: I don’t think Moffat ever topped this as a season finale, a brilliant expression of all his favourite timey-wimey tricks and familiar writing quirks. This whole season has been planned out immaculately to lead to here. #DoctorWho
As epic and iconic as Matt’s speech at Stonehenge may be, it’s… yep… another example of the Doctor cheating his way out of a tricky situation by quoting his notoriety to the assembled aliens, and telling them all to “let somebody else try first”. Hmmm. 😐 #DoctorWho
I love how the Hoix from Love & Monsters is randomly there amongst the massed ranks of the Doctor’ greatest enemies. “Yeah, you embarrassed me by chucking a bucket of foamy water over me. Into the Pandorica with you, you bastard!” #DoctorWho
You can’t deny they went big with the cliffhanger - the companion dead, the Doctor imprisoned, and the entire universe erased from existence. Crikey. #DoctorWho

The Fez-and-mop timehopping is Moffat at his most bonkers, but deftly done so that it’s clear what’s happening.

It does raise the question though of why the Doctor doesn’t always do this. I guess we can infer the normal rules don’t apply with the universe collapsing. #DoctorWho

Did we ever find out who exactly that voice was in the TARDIS saying ‘Silence will fall’? #DoctorWho
A Christmas Carol: from the off we get a very different type of Christmas special under Moffat. RTD’s tended to be bright, cheerful, daylight affairs, often with Slade playing in the background somewhere. Moffat prefers dark, gothic, Victorian-style Christmas settings. #DoctorWho
And it’s very much in keeping with the whole ‘fairytale’ theme of the previous season, with the Doctor being an almost magical figure in the way he drops into young Kazran’s life. Moffat’s usual trick of the Doctor zipping back & forth in time is used to great effect. #DoctorWho

Shame Amy and Rory are reduced to just a few brief appearances, but the story of Kazran is good enough that you don’t really miss them.

And given how much they travel with the Doctor, shouldn’t Kazran and Abigail really be added to the roster of ‘official’ companions? #DoctorWho

The Doctor thinks ‘isomorphic controls’ is something that’s completely made up. Um, did he forget about how he wasn’t able to operate the Master’s laser screwdriver for that very reason? #DoctorWho
And to bring in another bit of classic series technobabble, there’s no sign of the Blinovitch Limitation Effect when the two Kazrans meet at the end, despite the *previous episode* showing the two versions of the sonic screwdriver creating sparks when they touch. #DoctorWho

Space / Time: yikes, these minisodes have aged badly. 😬The whole TARDIS-inside-itself stuff is fun, but Christ I’d forgotten how much of this is crude jokes about seeing up Amy’s skirt. Oh, and her fancying herself. Calm the hell down Moffat.

Right, moving on! 🫤#DoctorWho

The Impossible Astronaut / Day Of The Moon: love this two-parter, a contender for my favourite season opener ever. Peak Moffat, with the show looking better than ever and really revelling in the American location filming. #DoctorWho
The Silence are a fantastic creation, both in concept and appearance, and I wish we could have seen a lot more done with them afterwards. #DoctorWho
So the Tenth Doctor’s incarnation only lasted a few years then, but Eleven’s will be around for at least 200 years according to this story alone, with a lot more to come on Trenzalore. Must make him one of the longest lasting of them all. #DoctorWho

The Doctor and River going in *exactly* opposite directions to each other doesn’t make sense when you think about it, as they’d have no shared experiences and ‘syncing their diaries’ would be pointless.

Moffat soon realised this and did backtrack a lot afterwards! #DoctorWho

Lucky for Amy and Rory that it was Canton who fake-shoots them, not any of the other agents. And that nobody checked them too thoroughly when putting them in the body bags or transporting them, to notice they were still alive… #DoctorWho
Moffat was at the height of his ‘puzzle box’ writing this season. We’re left with the dangling threads of the Doctor’s death, the regenerating girl, and the random first appearance of Madame Kovarian. The closest #DoctorWho’s come to Twin Peaks or Lost at their most opaque.
The Curse Of The Black Spot: I always feel this one suffers from being a distinctly average episode trying to follow that blockbuster opening two-parter. Still, it all looks very glossy and the Siren is well-realised. #DoctorWho
Amazingly, it’s another ‘it all turns out to be a piece of malfunctioning technology’ episode but one that’s not written by Moffat himself. #DoctorWho
The point where Toby is apparently killed by the Siren is when you go “Oh well, *nobody’s* dead then. They all have to be alive somewhere.” because they’re obviously not gonna kill off a kid like that. #DoctorWho
And Rory’s “death” is really just one too far for him. Absolutely nobody was going to buy it after all the previous times. No wonder this was the source of so much mickey-taking in fandom at the time. “Oh my God they killed Rory! You Bastards!” #DoctorWho
Is it really a good idea to let this ruthless bunch of pirates loose on the galaxy at the end in a stolen spaceship? #DoctorWho
The Doctor’s Wife: justice at last for JNT’s joke episode title! This is very interesting to see Moffat and Gaiman’s take on the whole area of the Time Lords and post-Time War guilt. Something the Eleventh Doctor seems to have been consciously running away from so far. #DoctorWho
The main Time Lord voice we hear coming from the white cubes sounds very like Paul McGann, which had a lot of people’s heads spinning when this was first broadcast! #DoctorWho
Suzanne Jones is very good as Idris (Gaiman out-Moffats Moffat with her non-linear, timey-wimey dialogue that jumps about all over the place) but her whole look and character is a bit of a giveaway that they were really aiming to get Helena Bonham-Carter for the role. #DoctorWho

Finally the modern series gives us an extensive look at the TARDIS interior… and it’s just a bunch of boring repetitive corridors… 🫤

And Rory really should’ve been able to keep up with Amy and not pointlessly fall behind and get separated by a sliding door… twice! #DoctorWho

Idris’ death scene and the Doctor’s final moments talking to her is one of the strongest performances from Matt in his time in the show. #DoctorWho
“The only water in the foreshadowing is the River… sorry, I meant forest…” #DoctorWho
The Rebel Flesh / The Almost People: a different take on the ‘base under siege’ story where they’re under siege from… themselves. Sort of. Plus this was clearly intended as a bit of misdirection to make people think a Ganger Doctor had died in the season opener. #DoctorWho
I think the audience is meant to be shocked to see Buzzer die at the start then appear in the corridor seconds later, but there hasn’t been enough time to establish characters/faces so you think it’s a separate guy until the dialogue clarifies what’s happened. #DoctorWho
It’s quite funny to see poor Rory so easily manipulated by Jennifer making him feel manly and masculine, and by showing him some appreciation. Something he doesn’t seem to get very often from Amy! #DoctorWho
I’m still not clear on why exactly there were three Jennifers - the original who’s found dead, and two Gangers. Why/when was the extra one created? #DoctorWho

(Forgot to add this final one yesterday re: Rebel Flesh/ Almost People)

The only time the Doctors could’ve swapped shoes is very early on, when they’re both behind the computer console - which means it’s the *real* Doctor who slams Amy against a wall and yells in her face… and he then judges her attitude to the Flesh after he did that? #DoctorWho

A Good Man Goes To War: this is hugely ambitious and aiming high in the ‘epic space battle’ stakes, and was massively exciting at the time. It’s just slightly let down by the budget only allowing for most of it to take place in what looks like a huge warehouse. #DoctorWho
Rory gets to have one of the best ‘cool guys don’t look at explosions’ moments. #DoctorWho
Moffat LOVES the trick of carefully-phrased dialogue so someone *appears* to say one thing but cryptically means something else. Now, he’s very very good at it and finds endless ways to do it, but it does get exhausting having to analyse every line for hidden meanings. #DoctorWho
And it reaches a peak here, with constant dialogue misdirections to throw us off the scent - Amy’s speech (to her baby!) about the Dad ‘looking young, but he’s lived for hundreds of years’ and so on, to make us think she means the Doctor. Not exactly naturalistic. #DoctorWho

But anyway I commend Moffat for managing to slip in the filthiest gag in #DoctorWho so far, following Vastra’s line to Jenny: “I don’t know why you put up with me…”

*demonstrates incredibly long lizard-tongue*

*knowing look between the two*

Shame the River reveal was widely spoiled beforehand, would’ve been great to see that without knowing, but it still works well.

And the one-two punch of that, followed seconds later by the title of the next episode being LET’S KILL HITLER was a laugh-out-loud moment. #DoctorWho

Let’s Kill Hitler: mad, bonkers, wild, funny. It seems to rub some people up the wrong way but personally I always loved it when Moffat turned his Moffat-iness up to 11 and just wrote the craziest episode possible. #DoctorWho

Having Mels grow up with Amy and Rory so they therefore ‘raised’ her after all is a slightly awkward fudge to gloss over the fact they lost their baby.

Plus the timeline is left a bit unclear - was she a toddler for years until somehow making her way to Leadworth? #DoctorWho

Excellent transition. 🙂 #DoctorWho
The robot antibodies on the ship being prepared to straight up murder someone if they don’t have the right clearance seems a ridiculously over-the-top security system to have! #DoctorWho
And the plans/reasoning of the Tesselecta crew are a bit vague. Why do they only realise as they’re about to torture Hitler that they’re in the wrong year and 1938 is too early? Surely they knew what year they’d arrived in? #DoctorWho
Night Terrors: I always think this is a very underrated episode, certainly amongst Gatiss’ output. For me it’s one of his best contributions to the show. And without being in one of his usual favourite settings like the Victorian era or the mid-20th century. #DoctorWho
Daniel Mays is always bloody brilliant in anything he’s in, and the young kid playing George is very good too. #DoctorWho
Interesting to see this era show a council estate for the first time, and the very different view it gets. RTD’s Powell Estate was assumed to represent the common, everyman, home environment of most of the viewers. Here it’s looked at with a slight sense of detachment. #DoctorWho
The Peg Dolls are a brilliantly creepy invention, with their whole look and movement and their weird gurgling laughter. Must have been the cause of a few nightmares for the kids watching. #DoctorWho
The Girl Who Waited: another highlight of season 6, and a great character piece for Karen Gillan as Amy, who makes the older, bitter version of the character very distinct from the regular version. #DoctorWho