It's those r's that are hard to hide sometimes... he tries to bury them in making weird noises but sometimes they do sneak out. That would make a hilarious episode, eh? "Doctor Who and the Troublesome Pronunciation".
As a chronic furniture-jumper I love how DT just owns the sets. Srsly - there's this one couch at my parents' place that I think one in ten times I've sat on it normally. Most times I scramble over the back... my bed's the same way, too.
Hehehe. Watched it in daylight. *shrug* Didn't really find that the shadows were effective villains because the characters kept standing in the shadowy recesses of the set. Note to Moffat: statues were creepier.
Being trapped in your brain is v. scary, but the ghosting isn't actually the person, it's just an echo. It would be creepier if they'd had the characters paralysed rather than skeletonized; some sense that the physical was acting as a prison, rather than being eradicated and leaving the consciousness to linger in a processor (or at least that would hit my creepy-buttons more that what the episode did).
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As a chronic furniture-jumper I love how DT just owns the sets. Srsly - there's this one couch at my parents' place that I think one in ten times I've sat on it normally. Most times I scramble over the back... my bed's the same way, too.
Hehehe. Watched it in daylight. *shrug* Didn't really find that the shadows were effective villains because the characters kept standing in the shadowy recesses of the set. Note to Moffat: statues were creepier.
Being trapped in your brain is v. scary, but the ghosting isn't actually the person, it's just an echo. It would be creepier if they'd had the characters paralysed rather than skeletonized; some sense that the physical was acting as a prison, rather than being eradicated and leaving the consciousness to linger in a processor (or at least that would hit my creepy-buttons more that what the episode did).