Theory:Doctor Who television discontinuity and plot holes/The Family of Blood


 * In the dance, why doesn't the Family shoot Martha? She wouldn't have enough time to react to the gun being fired, as seen later on.


 * They may have been afraid of hitting and killing Mother of Mine, who is after all being used as a shield by Martha.


 * Why didn't Martha just keep the fob watch in her pocket the whole time?
 * Because it is programmed to rewrite human DNA. Martha is Human, and is saturated with Arton Energy as Smith is. We saw what it did to Tim. It'd do the same to Martha.
 * No it wouldn't, the only reason Tim heard the watch is because he had a low level telepathic ability; that's why Joan didn't hear it.


 * What happened to the scarecrows?
 * Without the Family to animate and control them they reverted back to their previous state.


 * Why didn't the Family of Blood die after they were imprisoned for eternity?
 * The Doctor wanted them to pay for what they had done, so he used his knowledge to grant them immortality in a way they would not like. The forms of their punishments may also have made them immortal, i.e. being frozen, time slowing down at the event horizon of a collapsing galaxy, and the unknown properties of the mirror dimension.


 * If all that is required to defeat the Family is to distract them long enough so as to tamper with the controls of their spaceship, rendering them effectively helpless, why does the Doctor choose to employ such an overcomplicated plan that puts a lot of innocent humans in danger and only leads to the very killings for which the Doctor feels obliged to punish the Family so severely for at the climax?
 * They were actively shooting at him when he ran from them, and had to escape and hide from them before he could get them to such a point.


 * Considering the Family's ship was theirs, why weren't they aware that the Doctor having pushed all the switches would have had a bad/unwanted effect on the ship?
 * They weren't paying attention and didn't expect Smith to have set it up.


 * No explanation is given for how exactly the Doctor manages to capture and punish each member of the Family at the end of this episode, apparently demonstrating the possession of unprecedented powers on his part.
 * The Family realise that they should stop, they look up at the Doctor after the explosion and, realizing they have no way to escape, possibly give themselves up to him.
 * The Family no longer had their ship and weapons. They were helpless.


 * It isn't possible that the Doctor can trap Sister of Mine in every mirror because a mirror is basically an object with a reflective surface, in fact, you see things by the light being reflected off them, so everything except pure black is a mirror.
 * We are talking about a species that has harnessed the energy of black holes to travel through the space/time continuum and used bowships to fight giant vampire bats in space. It may not be possible per se, but the Time Lords were capable of a lot of impossible. That, and the Doctor is definitely not one to mess with. If anyone could find a way to trap a body within the confines of what we call a mirror for all time, it'd be him.
 * the mirrors probably work in the same way the reflections do in the curse of the black spot.


 * Keep in mind that in the Whoniverse, it's somehow possible to use mirrors to travel in time and through dimensions (Evil of the Daleks, Warriors' Gate, at least two EDAs, at least one BFA, and at least one NSA). So, either we don't understand everything about mirrors, or they work differently in the Whoniverse.


 * Also, the NSA Martha in the Mirror confirms that this is meant absolutely literally: the Doctor figures out that the Mortal Mirror isn't a real mirror because he can't see Daughter of Mine in it.


 * How can Father of Mine live forever if all the Doctor did was chain him?
 * Maybe the Doctor did two things—made him immortal, and chained him—but only explicitly mentioned the latter (since he'd already separately said that he made sure they'd all live forever).


 * Otherwise, the chains or the shaft presumably did something to keep him from dying. We've seen things like the compressed time streams in The Girl Who Waited, DT fields in Anachrophobia, and even the TARDIS interior in various stories that can stretch out objective and subjective time differently, so he could have lived a subjective infinite amount of time even though his body only aged an objective finite amount of time, or something like that.