Howling:The Alliance

ehouse

So, an Alliance.

Will have to watch again, but did not see any Weevils.

Only the Sontarans seemed to be there to save the universe, and said so after the Doctor was in the Pandorica, so were under no obligation to mislead.

Maybe I'm just cynical, but I can't see any alliance involving the daleks or cybermen lasting too long, but that said, the capability of the Nestene Consciousness to run something way more sophisticated than shop mannikins and rubberised dopplegangers (remember imposter Mickey in Season One?) has me wondering if any of the members of the Alliance are really plastic imposters that believe their own cover story?!

'(Response to the above comment)I thought much the same when I watched the programme, could this just be a continuity error or are these 'autons' something more, even morre threatening I think is that if this is the work of the Nestene consciousness (and fine work it is!) then how have they returned from the Time War? What else could have returned? It just does not add up to me, this whole 'alliance' and I am starting to think you are right about something else being behind all of the 'villains', if they are even what they appear to be. Remember Prisoner Zero could 'morph' into whatever it had consciousness of?! Could it be something similar to that (although I am not suggesting that Prisoner ZERO is behind all of this!!!)======Sontar HA========'

The Nestene lost ALL their protein planets in the Time War, which was being conducted equally by the daleks and Time Lords, so I cannot see those two genuinely joining forces.

Disappointed to see the Judoon present, as really enjoyed them as intergalactic police. Slightly mollified, as in the same instance of them beaming in, a case was being made that calculations put the Doctor as being responsible for the cracks.'' Torchwood Five'' 188.28.46.153 22:41, June 19, 2010 (UTC)


 * Lots more creatures were there for the filming than ended up on-screen, as shown by Confidential. In addition to the Daleks, Cybermen, Sontarans, Autons, and Judoon, there were Weevils, Sycorax, Roboforms, Hoix, Blowfish, Silurians, and possibly others. Rob T Firefly 23:25, June 19, 2010 (UTC)

They did all just join together even with the Daleks because they could all be destroyed by the cracks, though they did hate the Daleks the Daleks are one of the most advanced races ever who knows more about a threat to every universe than the Daleks. Still good point about the nestenes having a grudge they might duke it out in part two because of all their differences after they think the doctor has been contained, who knows maybe the doc will be able to escape that way. Winehousefan, 23:54, June 19, 2010 [UTC]

The Daleks had the Doctor in their sights, why didn't they just exterminate him instead of locking him up? THe other Daleks would have killed him and all the other races instead of working with them. They are no longer Daleks to me. (although I think they look awsome in pretty colours) --Donovan-j-charlie 23:17, June 19, 2010 (UTC)

The Daleks have lost their fear factor for me. I don't know whether it's just because they appear so often, or because with the new design I can't help but think "Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain". I think the Cybermen are much more intimidating. They've been getting more and more powerful over the last few series, they take people and turn them into more Cybermen and use them as soldiers, rather than just killing them, and they can walk up stairs. 213.123.6.242 00:14, June 20, 2010 (UTC)

The Daleks probably went to all that effort because they know that every attempt to zap the doc has failed, so they built this thing that would absoloutly hold him. Remember they don't want him to pilot the TARDIS so they would have thought if they shoot him he will probably run into it flee, or suppose they try and shoot him he could just flee. But still when they had him in chains they could have just zapped him there, it is a bit of a plothole, but overall I still think that was one of if not the best finale's of the new who. Winehousefan, 09:20, June 20, 2010 [UTC]

So the fundamemtal question remains - why contain when it is easier, and more certain, to kill. There was plenty of opportunity.

Perhaps the Alliance is being played? Jack Chilli 09:32, June 20, 2010 (UTC)

Maybe they realized that he'd regenerate, and didn't want to take the chance of him coming back if they killed him. --Halftimelord 09:35, June 20, 2010 (UTC)

Regenerate? They had an amada of thousands of battleships. Kill him chop him to chunks, kill all of them, take every atom and kill that. He's not an immortal or even physically tough. Jack Chilli 11:57, June 20, 2010 (UTC)

Yes, but they might not have known that. All the times that they've tried to kill him before and failed, they might just decide that it would be easier to keep him locked up than try and kill him, because he might seem indestructible to them. --Halftimelord 12:06, June 20, 2010 (UTC)

They have fought wars with the timelords. They can analyse him by sight; know his strenghts and weaknesses. They know he regenerates but they have the power to keep killing and killing and killing and killing him. They are not stupid. Or, they _were_ not stupid. It just seems very wrong. Jack Chilli 12:30, June 20, 2010 (UTC)

Where were the Weeping Angels? All that stone and not one statue. . . Jack Chilli 12:01, June 20, 2010 (UTC)

I think Jack Chilli may have a point. Is the Alliance being played? So, scenarios:

1. Reversal of Fortune: at the end of the episode, we saw the supernovas and darkness happening anyway. So that could have the Sontarans et al, next week going, "Well that didn't work".

2. In Stephen Moffatt style, a Doctor or other ally may have put something inside the Pandorica to aid whoever gets put in there.

3. While exploring the outside, 11th said "whoever controls the Pandorica controls the universe", so, could one race be intending to control it and the Doctor once he is inside, while everyone else thinks it is to do with saving the universe?

4. Is this going to be another Crowning Moment of Awesome  for the Nestene? Personally, I think they earned one in TPO.

Jack mentions the Weeping Angels. They already learned to their cost that you don't put the 11th in a trap, not if you value your continued existence, so they would probably cry off the idea.

This, like most of my speculations, may not have a bearing, but in the back of my mind, the Silurian force field that makes it look like night, keeps occuring. Usually over Amy's house, but how about round the Earth? Perhaps to convince the Alliance that silence has fallen? Torchwood Five 92.40.152.114 12:56, June 20, 2010 (UTC)

Again, it seems odd that the Silurians are there. Somebody bring them along for fun? What time period are they from? Why are they needed? Are they good-guys getting ready to help? An awful lot of disparate species are brought across time and space to witness the end of the Doctor. I'm finding hard to believe in the Aliance being real. Jack Chilli 17:59, June 20, 2010 (UTC)
 * Interesting... I haven't seen reference to that Silurian energy barrier outside their 2-parter before, but it would explain the misplaced night sequences. Maybe they're protecting Earth, or maybe someone else is... Agonaga 18:11, June 20, 2010 (UTC)

Almost everybody there has understood that you don't put the Doctor in a trap but they do so anyway? The Angels thought they could feed off the energy from the cracks and eventually consume all of space and time. Then they fell into one. Perhaps this didn't do what we assumed it would, perhaps this actually let them consume everything. They have feasted on the Universe and it has gone.

Is the trap an elaborate ruse by the future doctor to _protect_ him from the destruction so that he can fix it 'later'. The prison box is not a prison; it's a refuge. He has set the path to allow his success and has he destroyed the TARDIS to destroy the Angels by forcing the cracks open. The TARDIS explodes when he is put in the box. Why then? His enemies (many of them) and his current self may not know this yet. His future self has allowed the destruction of the univere to take place (he had some good chances to leave a note ("Dear Me; don't go near Stonehenge; the universe will end. Yours ?".); he must have a good reason to do this.  The Angels watch from every crack we've seen; he must take care.  Jack Chilli.

Oh, and what was the message on the psychic paper in TEH? Just another repeat of "Prisoner Zere has Escaped?" Wouldn't that be a bit redundant?

It seems to me there's quite a few things pointing to the Alliance being unreal, some of which had already been mentioned: I don't know if it's all Nestene as suggested above or some sort of "Amy's Universe" thing going on (everything ends and Silence falls at moment of her death, after all) but the more I watch it (twice full and caught the ending a third time) the more I feel like the Alliance just can't be real. BrainySpecs 06:26, June 22, 2010 (UTC)
 * Really? The Daleks imprison the Doctor instead of exterminating?  In the past, they've shown difficulty in following orders when told to keep him alive, a compulsion to kill.
 * Pretty much the same statement about the Cybermen, who have refused his surrender in the past and had to drop a one-liner before killing him which saves his backside.
 * Too many different enemies, just too many. How would they all have found one another anyway?
 * Too many useless enemies, like Weevils and Hoix and a few other really, really dumb species that I can't think of offhand. I mean, who had the idea to bring these guys into the mix, and would they even be capable of understanding the danger?  And how do these kind of "dumb animal" aliens manage to stand still for so long?
 * Too many enemies that are NOT useless, but still don't seem to belong -- Silurian and (I forgot the name, starts with "Dh" I think) the female warrior race from a 1965 story.
 * The "formation" of the enemies felt too posed, even for a fanboy-esque fiction, and the music just oozed a "not real" mood.