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Blogger Achille Talon said...

Ohumm! A whole blog-post for an answer, now that is a nice surprise. And a fair-enough answer it is too. I don't think I agree that regeneration need remain something that only "exists" when we know it's going to happen for behind-the-scenes reason — certainly NuWho doesn't play it thus, it keeps coming up far from era finales. But the point that "regeneration saves you from death" was a shaky notion at best as of 1978.

I would argue that there is a way to play immortal or nigh-omnipotent heroes beyond the ones you propose, though, which is to bind them up in a deeply-held code of conduct which forbids them to call upon said powers unless absolutely necessary (by which we mean, narratively satisfying). Jon Pertwee can transmigrate small objects, but only for a party trick.

See also: Gandalf is pretty sure he'll be given a shiny new body if he goes down fighting in the course of his duties, but he still isn't going to impose on Heaven's good graces by constantly enacting suicidal plans. It wouldn't be the *right* thing to do. Perhaps because it would be boring and he knows, to some extent, that he's in a story? So, by the same reasoning, my model is this: the Doctor can survive just about anything, but, for deep, inscrutable reasons, lives his life — or lives — as though he couldn't.

Of course, Tom Baker isn't really written like this, but Sylvester McCoy essentially is, and it's at the very least not an unreasonable lens to cast back on Troughton, the ever-mysterious little man, who in his final story pulls out the comparable trump card of "well, if matters get *really* thorny I could always send a psychic SOS to my omnipotent native civilisation, and they'll sort out the whole ghastly business for me".

(…Oh, by the way, that first "Lalla Ward" in my original message should clearly be a "Mary Tamm", I got muddled with the Destiny precedent I was invoking. Sorry about any momentary confusion thus induced!)

Wednesday, 26 June, 2024