Theory:Doctor Who television discontinuity and plot holes/Time Heist


 * So did he actually do (almost) whole heist before just to set up the heist? Why do it two times?
 * Causal loop? (see below a similar question).


 * Why didn't the Doctor just choose without-solar-flare-time, and use the TARDIS?
 * Because Karabraxos wouldn't be evacuating and would still hold sway over the Teller, making it impossible to rescue it and its mate.
 * Unless he used the TARDIS to go directly to the personal vault. Then he could wait until Karabraxos called for the Teller to deal with the intruders (as she did in this episode). At which point, he does the same stunt, lets the creature read his mind to know he is there to help, sonics open (or lets the creature open) the door with its mate, and just pop off in the TARDIS. No real need for any of the shenanigans here, but then there usually isn't for most heist movies.
 * Not really feasible. Again, Karabraxos would still have her mental connection to the creature and power over it. The Doctor explains all that during the episode.


 * Not really relevant to anything, but was it ever explained where the Doctor/Architect got the escape ship in orbit that was mentioned?
 * True. But, it's got to be trivial enough for the Doctor to get hold of a small spaceship from some point in time/space.


 * What was the purpose of telling everyone that the devices were atomic shredders instead of teleporters? Other than for the surprise dramatic effect? He obviously knew what they were since he's the one that put them all there in the first place.
 * I guess that's because of the Teller who could read their thoughts - if he knew, Karabraxos would know, if she knew, she would cause additional problems. Basically, the less they knew about their own mission, the smaller was their guilt and the chance that the Teller would sense it - they didn't even know for sure what they're coming for.
 * We know that often "The Doctor lies", but another possible explaination is that here he's not lying at all, he doesn't really know that those devices are teleporters because he wiped his own memory with the worm.


 * How, as "the Architect", did the Doctor get around security to plant all of those tools and items? I mean, if it took four of them to acquire them back and only the Doctor to place them where they were found, why did he need three other people?
 * Well, there's the usual explaination, the ontological paradox, old as Oedipus and particularly loved by Moffat and his gang: the Doctor hires three other people because Karabraxos tells him that he "robbed/will rob" the bank with three other people, on the solar flare day, with the lead pipe (no, sorry, that was from another story).


 * Suspension of disbelief is important in stories, and even more important in science fiction: we need to believe the Doctor's world is real even if we know it's not, BUT that world must be consistent. At the beginning of the episode the writers 1) remove the magic blue box from the game (as usual, to show the audience that Doctor is really in dire straits), and 2) they establish that Karabraxos is the most secure bank in the universe. But THEN they destroy all suspension of disbelief with the teleporters! WHY on Krop Tor Hell is Karabraxos known as the most secure bank in the universe, when you can sneak in and out at will with a friggin' pocket teleporter? And if it is so easy for the Doctor to get a whole briefcase of pocket teleporters, why he never used them before or after this adventure? (out-of-universe: of course, because the TARDIS and the sonic gadgets are already overpowered game-breaking tools, and pocket teleporters would be just too much, that's why the writes made him disable Jack's vortex manipulator: Jack already had a story-breaking superpower, immortality).
 * Just because people say it's the most secure bank in the universe doesn't necessarily make it true.
 * Yes, "most secure" is certainly advertisement boasting, but I'm sure the rich customers require a certain level of security beyond simple advertisement. A telepathic guard (one single telepathic guard, for crying out loud) is ridiculously useless in an universe where pocket teleportes, transmat rays, vortex manipulators and other similar gadgets exist. So the pocket teleporters are a very bad plot device (even worse than the usual "foolish wand-waving" with the screwdriver that fixes everything if the plot requires, and fixes nothing if the plot requires): "oh, too bad, we can't use the TARDIS... but we can ***-pull a briefcase of pocket teleporters with the label "this is not a deus ex machina". There's a good (in-universe and out-of-universe) reason if Harry Potter does not simply teleport out of Gringotts :)