Friday, April 1, 2016

Winifred Gillyflower | Mr. Sweet

In series 7 episode 12 we're introduced to the "crimson horror" and the people responsible for it: Mr. Sweet and Winifred Gillyflower.

The Doctor and Clara end up in Yorkshire 1893 where they hear about a recruitment of people to live in a place called Sweetville.



Advertised as a safe haven for those who wish to survive a coming apocalypse, Mrs. Gillyflower, a somewhat innocent looking elderly woman, is only interested in the fittest, brightest and most beautiful applicants.

Winifred Gillyflower
The people Mrs. Gillyflower chooses are preserved from the "apocalypse"  in giant bell shaped jars.

The bell jars

The Doctor ends up in the "reject pile". The rejects are dipped into a huge pool of the crimson stuff, which ends up being leech venom. We find out that Mrs. Gillyflower's "Silent partner" Mr. Sweet is a tiny red leech from the prehistoric era. Mr. Sweet has attached to Mrs. Gillyflower's chest, and in return for sustenance, he provides he with the venom she plans to use on the human race.


Mr. Sweet
The Doctor after being dipped in the Crimson Horror




Madam Vastra, Strax and Jenny all come to the aid of Clara and the Doctor, and together they were able to thwart Mrs. Gillyflower and Mr.Sweet. Mr.Sweet has a pretty gruesome demise at the hands of Mrs.Gillyflower's blind daughter, Ada. 

Madam Vastra



Strax
Jenny
Ada
Clara in her 1893 outfit




Saturday, March 26, 2016

Grand Marshal Skaldak | Ice Warriors




So this week we also have a species from the classic Doctor Who, the Ice Warriors. According to my research they first appeared with the third doctor, Jon Pertwee. Matt Smith was the first Doctor of "NuWho" to encounter them. And the only Doctor to encounter Grand Marshall Skaldak.

The Ice Warriors are natives of planet Mars. They have a strong instinct for war, much like the Sontarans.  They are reptilian creatures that are seven feet tall, with a very strong sense of honor. They also really do not like lying, but will do so when they must.

The Ice Warriors live for about 300 years and are used to extreme cold. Their armor was made to help protect them from the bitter cold on mars as well as protect during war. Their armor has a sonic weapon built into its arm  and it is capable of moving independently by remote control.

Skaldak in his armor

Grand Marshal Skaldak isn't just an Ice Warrior, he is the greatest Ice Warrior hero of all time. When the Doctor and Clara Oswald come across him he had just been woken up from a 5,000 year sleep, and being held captive on a Russian sub marine. 

Their run-in with Skaldak isn't the most pleasant, seeing as he declares war on all of humanity, but in the end they come to a very honorable conclusion.

Skaldak with his helmet off

Check out the trailer below to see more Skaldak!







Saturday, March 19, 2016

The Great Intelligence


Some of the Classic Doctor Who fans might argue with me on this one. Technically, The Great Intelligence has a past with the Doctor. The first episode where the Great Intelligence appeared was in 1967 with the second Doctor, so in my defense, Matt Smith is the only Doctor to encounter The G.I in "Nu Who".

Doctor Who's Christmas special, "The Snowmen" aired December 25th 2012. It is the second time we encounter Clara Oswald (my favorite companion).

This episode takes place right after the very dramatic exit of the William companions. The Doctor goes to London in 1892, basically to morn his friends. He claims that he isn't going to help people anymore, until Clara gets his attention again.

We are also blessed with the presence of Jenny, Madam Vastra and Strax in this episode. Clara ends up talking with Vastra because the Doctor is avoiding her.

When Clara sees the Doctor again, the fun begins. Snowmen, very creepy snowmen, start to appear outside of the house Clara works at. Also, there is an ice sculpture of an old house maid chasing them around the house.


The Snowmen


The Doctor learns soon after that this is the work of the Great Intelligence, who possessed a child at a very young age, and had been using him to do his bidding for years.

When he encounters the embodiment of The Great Intelligence, he finds a giant snow globe, that talks, no more information on this due to spoilers. The Doctor is able to defeat the G.I and the episode ends.


The Talking Snow Globe


Now this is not the last time we see The Great Intelligence. It appears again in the episode "The Bells of Saint John," season 7, episode 6.

The episode starts with a monk in Cumbria in 1207, telling the Doctor that "the bells of Saint John are ringing". What the monk meant was that the phone on the T.A.R.D.I.S was ringing.

When the Doctor answers the phone, it's Clara. And she is trying to connect to WiFi. She foolishly connects to a very odd looking WiFi, and lets The Great Intelligence in.

WiFi Clara Connects To


Of course, the Doctor flies to Clara and saves her, just in the nick of time. She was being downloaded by what they call a "spoon head".



The Doctor Defeats The Spoonhead


The Doctor and Clara



Clara uses her newly inherited hacking skills and they are able to track down where all of the trouble is coming from.

Clara Hacking

Off to Find The Great Intelligence

We find out that The Great Intelligence is once again using a human to do it's bidding. And it is once again defeated.

Sorry about all the quick details and information on these episodes. There is quite a lot to The Great Intelligence, and nobody wants to read a novel. I hope you all enjoyed this post, if you have anything you would like to add please feel free to comment below, I would love to hear from you. Also, don't forget to vote this week!








Friday, March 11, 2016

The Shakri


In Season 7 Episode 4, The Power of Three, The Doctor, Amy, Rory and Brian Williams (Rory's dad) begin the year and the slow invasion.

Amy and Rory wake up to find cubes, everywhere. Brian cam over to help figure out what the cubes were. They were solid black, and they did nothing. They were just cubes. The Doctor shows up as well. Little did the Doctor know, it was going to be a while before they found out what was going on.

The Cube
After a year, the cubes began "waking up" they all did something different, controlled emotion, played music and even shot at people. 

The cubes eventually shot out an electric pulse, stopping the hearts f many humans near by, and that is when things start to get interesting. The Doctor finds one of seven portals to a space ship.  The space ship belongs to the Shakri, who the Doctor believed were just a myth to keep the children of Gallifrey in their their place. He is soon greeted by a hologram of a weird looking black-cloaked humanoid. 

The apparition warns that the Shakri plan to release a second wave of cubes and cause further deaths, to stop the human race from colonizing space. 


The Apparition

The Doctor takes care of things, like usual and the world goes back to normal. I have included one of my favorite scenes and a trailer below. 











Saturday, March 5, 2016

Kahler-Tek


Season 7 episode 3, A Town Called Mercy, is quite possibly my favorite episode of Matt's.

The humor, drama and thrills in this episode make it one of the best.

The Doctor, Amy and Rory were a little off from Mexico, and landed in Mercy, Nevada. A place that looks like it came directly from an old western movie, except "the locals are hostile to strangers, and a border of stone and wood surrounds the town. As the Doctor soon finds out, a gunslingers behind this, and not just an ordinary one."


The Gunslinger is from a species called Kahler, but his name is Kahler-Tek. The Kahler were a technologically gifted race who suffered from a terrible war that wiped out 50% of the planet. A group of scientists, including Kahler-Jex, had the job of restoring peace. They experimented on volunteers and turned them into cyborg killers.


Kahler-Jex


 Kahler-Tek is half man, half machine and he seeks revenge on the scientists who turned him into a cyborg. Kahler-Jex is the last one of the scientists, and he just happens to be in Mercy.

Jex really does regret what he had to do to those poor men during the war. He stays in Mercy, Nevada as a way to atone for his sins.

Kahler-Tek is a disturbing looking man with a laser for an arm, a tattoo on his face, scars everywhere and he even has a Cybernetic eye with built in censors.

Kahler-Tek
Kahler-Tek forces everyone in Mercy to stay behind the barrier, anyone who crosses is killed, and demands that they hand over Kahler-Jex or he will kill them all anyway.

The episode takes a series of dramatic turns, Amy fires a weapon, the Doctor holds a gun to someone's head and there was even a sacrifice. I'm going to include one of my favorite scenes as well as the trailer, below.


Amy takes things into her own hands



Friday, February 26, 2016

The Minotaur

In season 6, episode 11 the T.A.R.D.I.S gets taken off course, and lands in what looks to be a hotel.

They find lots of portraits hanging on the wall, with extremely odd captions underneath them. Such as  "that gorilla."
Rory reads the captions found under the pictures

Amy, Rory and the Doctor meet a peculiar group of people who seem to be terrified of something.

They are threatened with a chair leg
The three are told that there is a "room" for everyone, and found out that once you see your room, you repeatedly say "praise him" until you are killed by a monster.

The monster ends up being a Minotaur, a terrifying horned creature that stalks the halls of the hotel looking for its next victim.

While walking around the hotel they find out what sort of things are in the rooms...

This creepy clown was in one of the rooms


 The Doctor believes that the Minotaur is feeding off of the fear of those trapped in the hotel. But he was wrong, the Minotaur was feeding off of their faith. The Minotaur literally drained the life from it's victims.

When the Doctor traps the Minotaur he tries to interrogate him but fails when the Minotaur acts likes a normal bull and smashes his way out of the trap. 

The minotaur has several horns on his head, both in the front and the back, he has powerful arms and fists. He wears ragged, primitive-style clothing to fit with his age, which just so happens to be thousands of years old. 

The Minotaur

The story behind the Minotaur is actually pretty sad, he was imprisoned for thousands of years and wanted nothing but his own death.

That's all I'll say about the Minotaur because you know, #spoilers.  Keep looking though! I have some pretty cool pictures and a trailer, as always! Love you Whovians !









                                       




Friday, February 19, 2016

Gangers



In season 6, episode 5 we meet the "Gangers"

The Doctor, Amy and Rory end up in the 22nd century where they find five people, Dicken, Miranda Cleaves, Jimmy Wicks, Buzzer and Jennifer Lucas working on an acid mine. They are using Gangers, short for Doppelgangers, to keep themselves safe while working in such a dangerous environment.

The Gangers are formed from an artificial substance called the Flesh, which are telepathically controlled by their human twins. When the Ganger falls in acid for instance, Buzz, another Ganger can be created with ease.

"Creating a Ganger is a complex process. First, a special harness scans the molecular structure of a human. Next a vat of Flesh slowly fills up a human sized tank until it is brimming with the gooey white substance. Slowly, facial features begin to form, the process continues until a perfect Ganger copy has been created." (Doctor Who The Complete Visual Collection)

Jennifer's Ganger Being Created
When a solar tsunami hits the monastery where the acid mine is located, the link between the humans and their Gangers is severed and the Gangers become their own people. The Gangers have their own thoughts and feelings, which leads down a bad road.

The humans and the Gangers have it out for each other because the humans think of them as copies, not real people, but the Gangers feel like real people, they have memories and can think on their own.

The Doctor Talking To The Gangers

The Gangers plot to kill the humans to ensure their own survival. The most troublesome Ganger was Jennifer's. She wasn't very stable, she doesn't remember that the humans on the island were her coworkers. She plots to kill them by causing the mine's acid to explode, and tries to rally her fellow Gangers to start a Ganger revolution worldwide. Jennifer's Ganger eventually becomes a disgusting flesh monster, which I won't add pictures of because it needs to be a surprise to you when you watch the episode.

Jennifer's Ganger Tries To Hurt Rory


Matt Gets A Ganger

Oh and not to mention, the end of this episode reveals a REALLY BIG secret!!! Totally caught me off guard.. What did you guys think of this episode? You can vote or comment below to let me know!  Trailer down below \/ \/ \/





Friday, February 12, 2016

Handbots

In season 6 episode 10, The Doctor, Amy and Rory encounter the Handbots.

They are medical robots designed to look after people suffering from the fatal Chen 7 plague that was located in the Two Streams facility on a planet called Apalapucia. In case you're trying to pronounce the name of the planet, watch below.



These robots did not have a huge range of motion and they were also quite lacking in intelligence. But they were made with hypodermic needles and darts to administer the medicine. They walk around with their hands up to sense bacteria in the area, as well as see.

Handbots
The Handbots are unable to tell that a human body would not be able to cope with their medicine, and this is what makes them villains. They are only trying to help, but really they could kill Amy and Rory. Amy gets trapped for 36 years with these Handbots chasing her, and surprisingly, she holds her own.  

Amy protecting herself from the Handbots

Amy even makes a Rory-bot, he is adorable. 

Rory-bot

The most awkward part of the episode is when the two Amy's meet each other, but you know, it's wobbly wobbly, timey, wimey. 









House

Season 6 Episode 4 was called "The Doctor's Wife" if you're a Whovian, you'll know it.

In this episode, The Doctor, Amy and Rory travel outside the universe, and meet some very interesting folks. Their names were Auntie and Uncle.

Auntie and Uncle
Rather upbruptly they meet, Idris. They don't know until later but she is the Tardis, in a matter of speaking. House, the villain in the episode, is the planet that they landed on. But it has a conscience, and he can talk. On House's orders Nephew (the ood on the planet) empties Idris' mind from her body and fills it with the Tardis matrix.


The Doctor and his wife, Idris

House was able to separate Amy and Rory from the Doctor when the two of them went back to the Tardis. House plays evil little tricks on Amy and Rory, using the Tardis. House does things like blinding Amy and tricking her into thinking Rory has been in the Tardis for 50 years, alone.

House eventually steals the Doctor's Tardis with Amy and Rory along with it. The Doctor and Idris build a new Tardis out of Tardis pieces and save Amy and Rory from House.

Unfortunately, the Tardis matrix has to leave Idris, so the Doctor loses his "wife", but he will always have the Tardis.

The trailer for this episode is beneath this sentence, it includes scenes from when House terrorizes Amy and Rory, as well as some creepy voice overs from House himself. 




Monday, February 8, 2016

The Pandorica Opens (Bonus Blog)


Congratulations you guys! We worked together, got 100 followers on Instagram and now you get a bonus blog! The most votes were for "Matt Smith as the Villain" so here it is!


The Pandorica Opens; Season 5 Episode 12. Matt Smith (the Doctor) gets a clue from his friend Vincent Van Gogh, a painting that eventually leads the Doctor, Amy and River to Stonehenge. Underneath Stonehenge is the Pandorica, a box that is told to hold a creature more evil than anything else in existence. 

Van Gogh's message to the Doctor
The Doctor inspects the box and figures out that it is opening, from the inside...River proceeds to tell him that just about everything he has ever encountered in his 900 years is out there, above Stonehenge, waiting to "take the Pandorica" Matt deals with them in such a suspenseful, well spoken way. Take a look below.




Little does the Doctor (Matt Smith) know, the Pandorica was built to contain him. He had scared all these different races, the Cybermen, Daleks and even the Sontarans, so bad that they got together and planned a way to capture the "taker of worlds"; the Doctor.

Different Races Gathering To Capture The Doctor (Matt Smith)
The Doctor begged and pleaded that something bad was going to happen should they lock him in the Pandorica, but they did not listen to him. They put the Doctor in the box and sealed it tight.

The Villain Is Captured
Matt was the villain in this episode, though his actions may have been for the best, to the alien races, he was the bad guy.




                                     

Friday, January 29, 2016

The Krafayis



The Krafayis appears in season 5 episode 10: Vincent and the Doctor.

This was an amazing episode, Amy and the Doctor go back to France, 1890 to talk to Vincent van Gogh about an alien looking creature that they saw in Vincent's famous painting, The Church at Auvers.
Actual Van Gogh : The Church at Auvers

When they got there they quickly realized that Vince was a poor, drunk man, who nobody seemed to like. Right after they meet him, a young girl is murdered, the town blames Vince. The Doctor and Amy are able to slyly convince Vincent to let them stay at his home for a few days.

During a conversation about "hearing the colors" Amy screams off in the distance. She was attacked by something invisible. Now this scene, is quite possibly my favorite,  Vincent fights off this invisible creature, that only he can see, while the Doctor claims that he is having "some sort of fit"


Krafayis in the church window













Matt, the Doctor, uses this clever little machine that gives information on whatever it sees. The machine spots the creature and gives us the following information :

  •  Krafayis,
    • Planet of Origin: Uncertain
    • Nomadic pack animals
    • Strict dominance hierarchy
    • Huge Territories, several solar systems wide
    • Preferred Habitat: Planets with Oxygen and Nitrogen based atmospheres 
The Doctor sees the Krafayis

The Doctor later elaborates by saying that the Krafayises travel in pacts around the universe, and when one falls behind, the pack leaves it. And that's how this one ended up in France.

The Krafayis is a vicious creature that kills as the pack travels. It almost looks like a giant chicken, with creepy eyes and the height of NBA player Yao Ming. 


The Krafayis problem ends up being solved, but I will not say any spoilers.
The Krafayis
Vince and his self portrait


Check out the trailer for this episode below \/ \/


Let me know what you thought about this episode in the comments below! Or answer the weekly poll question to the left <<<<




Friday, January 22, 2016

Saturnynes


The Saturnynes are another terrifying species that Matt Smith has to deal with. They are in the episode "The Vampires of Venice" in season 5, episode 6.

You are made to believe that the Saturnynes are vampires throughout msot of the episode. Girls as young as 17 join the House of Calvierri to gain a better place in society. Once these girls, such as Isabella, daughter of a boat builder, join the house, their family never see's them again.


Isabella and her father

Rosanna Calvierri and her son, Francesco, choose the girls that make it into the house. Signora Calvierri only lets them in if Francesco "likes" them.


Rosanna and Francesco Calvierri

The Doctor brings Amy Pond and her fiance Rory Williams to Venice as a sort of...wedding gift. Shortly after arriving the Doctor notices Isabella's father causing a scene while he tries to look for her. This causes the Doctor to investigate.

Soon enough, we find out that these girls in the school have vampire like fangs, walk around outside with their faces covered, and that they don't even have reflections in a mirror.

The Calvierri Girls

We eventually find out that the Calvierris and the girls, are a lot worse than vampires. They are in fact, amphibious arthropod aliens who drink blood. They have razor sharp teeth, legs that comes from the abdomen, which are multi jointed and end in blade like bones that can pierce their prey.
Saturnyne

Saturnyne


The Saturnynes look like humans because they use a perception filter that manipulates the brainwaves of anyone looking at them..

They are eventually defeated by the Doctor (surprise!) by disabling the elements manipulator that stops the flooding of Venice. Rosanna commits suicide because she failed to secure the future of her race. I won't say anymore because spoilers.

My sources include the episode itself, the  Doctor Who: The Complete Visual Collection book and www.tardis.wikia.com .