This episode seems a bit tight on budget, with lots of austere empty spaces, but it actually works quite well. For once, blank white corridors effectively convey the idea of a very alien environment without looking cheap. #DoctorWho
This is essentially a Doctor-lite episode, with most of Matt’s scenes being in the TARDIS, but he pops up frequently enough that the Doctor’s absence is not as noticeable as previous episodes of that type. #DoctorWho
The blink-and-you-miss-it reference to there being a Disneyland on the planet Clom(!!) is one of the most boggling concepts ever brought up in #DoctorWho. Please let us see it one day…
The ending is brutal with the Doctor betraying older Amy and locking her out of the TARDIS. But there were no easy answers to the problem of her existence. #DoctorWho
The God Complex: another strong episode in a solid run across the latter half of this season, and one that starts to see the beginning of the end for the Doctor and the Ponds… #DoctorWho
And the Doctor’s right - Rita would make a good replacement companion, the best candidate we’ve seen in the Matt Smith years. 🤙🏻 #DoctorWho
The Minotaur is a very impressive monster costume. We’ve come a long way since the one in the Time Monster. (And how funny that both were played by future Darth Vaders). #DoctorWho
The Doctor having to destroy Amy’s faith in him is very reminiscent of The Curse Of Fenric. #DoctorWho
What should have been in the Doctor’s room… #DoctorWho
On second thoughts try this one… #DoctorWho

Modern #DoctorWho’s always struggled slightly with how to convincingly show someone abandoning their whole life to go travelling with the Doctor.

RTD’s solution was to have the families involved and know what was going on, but Moffat seemed to have little interest in doing that.

(I’m sure that’s why Amy’s family were swallowed by the crack, so he didn’t have to deal with them!)

Here he finally hits upon his own solution: have the companions only travel part-time, an idea which lasts from now all the way into Chibnall’s era. #DoctorWho

Closing Time: this is not quite as good as The Lodger but still very funny, with the Cybermen as a mere token background irritation while we get to watch more of the Doctor and Craig’s comic misadventures. (Lynda Baron thinking they’re a couple is hilarious) #DoctorWho
The sonic screwdriver seems to have become a bit of a laser gun this season, with the odd zap of green energy. I mean, I suppose it always emitted something, but visualising it in that way makes it seem more of a weapon than a tool. #DoctorWho

This main flaw here is how the ending just basically repeats The Lodger: ‘Craig’s love for Sophie solves the plot’ becomes ‘Craig’s love for his baby solves the plot’.

The moment he starts to turn into a Cyberman the entire resolution of the episode becomes obvious. #DoctorWho

Moffat really, really loves to do the story of ‘the hero having one final adventure before facing his death’. He’ll return to variations on that idea in future #DoctorWho episodes, as well as doing it in Sherlock.
The Wedding Of River Song: for his second finale Moffat rehashes parts of his first - basically having history jumbled up and all time happening at once, which does at least give us some wacky visuals of Romans, Pterodactyls and hot air balloons all existing together. #DoctorWho
Just as well that in this jumbled up timeline each country gets back its most famous leader (Churchill… Kennedy… Cleopatra). I’m trying to imagine a version of this in which the Doctor has to battle the Silence with help from Liz Truss… 🫤 #DoctorWho
Simon Callow’s little cameo as Dickens was truly unexpected. I don’t think anyone saw that coming. #DoctorWho
How much you enjoy this (and season 6 in general) depends very much on how in sync you are with Moffat’s vision of #DoctorWho. He’s perhaps slightly less in tune with what the general public likes than RTD was, but for those who click with his style, it works like gangbusters.
The Doctor, The Widow And The Wardrobe: this always seems to have a bit of a reputation as one of the worst Christmas specials, but I think that’s very unfair. It’s a perfectly acceptable festive episode, just with a lot more influence from the fantasy genre than usual #DoctorWho
I know we’ve occasionally seen the Doctor survive unprotected in space for a brief period, but the opening scene with the spacesuit is really pushing it, especially when you consider what happens later to Capaldi in Oxygen… #DoctorWho
Judging by the goofiness of the ones we see here, the quality of soldiers from Androzani Major has really declined since General Chellak’s day! #DoctorWho
Say what you like about this episode, but for me the ending with Madge lighting the way home for Reg and reuniting the family is one of my top moments in all the Christmas specials. #DoctorWho
But what happened to the other airmen on Reg’s plane? I presume they’re still on board at the end, otherwise it’d be a very dark twist that he was pulled through the time vortex while they were left to die! #DoctorWho
Asylum Of The Daleks: some stylish ‘horror movie with Daleks’ type moments but otherwise this is only a moderately successful opener to a moderately successful season, easily the weakest of the Matt Smith years. Not keen on those murky new titles either. #DoctorWho
Oh look, it’s the New Paradigm Daleks. Quick let’s just hide them amongst gazillions of RTD’s bronze ones and hope no one notices! #DoctorWho
The possessed crewman who introduces the Doctor and Amy to his skeletal, long-dead colleagues is reminiscent of the original Kryten in Red Dwarf: “I was only away two minutes!” #DoctorWho

Ah. Clara (okay, Oswin).😐

Moffat gets a lot of stick for writing characters (especially women) as nothing but quippy, wisecracking and sex-obsessed… but Christ I don’t think any were ever written like that as much as Clara’s debut here. #DoctorWho

The nanogene infected people turning into Dalek slaves with eyestalks in their foreheads is an effective update to the old Robomen, and the zombie versions are great, but it gets a bit overused subsequent to this. #DoctorWho
Moffat clearly wanted to reset the entire continuity of the show with first the Doctor erasing himself from history and pretending to be dead, and now the Daleks knowledge of him being wiped, but both inevitably went nowhere and had to be undone pretty quickly. #DoctorWho

Dinosaurs On A Spaceship: a fun little episode, with the most ‘does exactly what it says on the tin’ title ever (I’d love to hear Samuel L. Jackson saying the sweary version).

Chibnall getting in some practice for writing a packed TARDIS crew, with lots of characters. #DoctorWho

The problem with retconning the Silurians so they were a space-faring race capable of building a giant space ark… is if they were that far advanced couldn’t they tell that the moon wasn’t really going to hit the earth and there was no need for their hibernation? #DoctorWho
A big game hunter from the early 1900s who delights in killing animals is an odd choice of friend for the Doctor to have, let alone want to bring along on an adventure. #DoctorWho
While Solomon is undoubtedly an evil bastard (poor Tricey!), him being deliberately left to get blown up is an unusually callous choice for the Doctor. #DoctorWho
A Town Called Mercy: a fairly straightforward tale with a moral dilemma for the Doctor, basically similar to what happened with Margaret Slitheen back in Boom Town. And especially interesting following his own actions in killing Solomon in the previous episode. #DoctorWho
The cinematography on location shoots like this continues to come on in leaps and bounds. They could have only dreamed of making a Western of this quality back in the days of The Gunfighters. #DoctorWho
Lol at Rory’s reaction to “Sheriff… Ma’am… fella…?”#DoctorWho
The main big American guest star is killed off half way through, presumably as a money-saving exercise! #DoctorWho
The Power Of Three: Kate Stewart arrives! Funny how a character from an unofficial spinoff ended up being adapted into the main show in such a major way. And strange to think she’s now been appearing as the head of UNIT for longer than the Brig’s original 1968-75 run. #DoctorWho
Chris Chibnall has started his little trick of having characters sit down for a mid-episode heart-to-heart chat, something that’ll become very familiar in his own era. Except here it’s *massively* helped by Murray Gold’s music. #DoctorWho