Falcon is a spaceship, tardis is not a spaceship. It's an altogether more sophisticated concept. Quite clever for a 60s early evening tv series.
Quite clever for a 60s early evening tv series.
Here's how that thought pattern went:
Creator guy: we need a new spaceship idea
Apprentice props guy: I hear you
Creator guy: Space ships have been done, right? A time machine's interesting, but the problem is going forward in time from the same place is probably going to land your time machine in the fruit and veg aisle in the Wadebridge Asda.
Apprentice guy: I hear that.
Creator guy: But nobody's done a two-in-one, am I right?
Apprentice guy: Look, dude, all I got's some two by four, a sign that says 'POLICE BOX' and a wagonload of blue paint. So what's it going to be?
Creator guy: Uh, a police box.
Apprentice guy: Amen to that.
It's like Einstein-light. Reductionist in its magnificence.
Or the product of a show with no cash and - if I can speak frankly - some fairly half-ass villains.
It's not a Police Box it's... er... a spaceship in disguise... it's just broken so it's always a Police Box. See.
some fairly half-ass villains
?
Can't see the daleks getting beaten by a bunch of teddy bears with catapults.
Dude, Ewoks live in trees.
And anyway, let's not pitt the best Doctor Who villain against the worst Star Wars (non) villain.
Who's up for a Dalek vs. Vader beat down?
That's going to be a short battle, and the scrap metal dealers get first dibs on Dalek mash.
Who's up for a Dalek vs. Vader beat down?
Nah, gotta be Vader vs The Master!
Tsk. The cable turns, not stretches, don't you know nuffink?
OK, I'm wrong on that point, so maybe the Tardis doesn't get a 10% accuracy gimme for speeding offences.
Oooh! I just thought of another get out though. Given that it travels in time and space, and therefore could theoretically be everywhere all at the same time (the flipside to the same place at different times) - that's going to make it pretty bloody tough for the Intergalactic traffic police to pin down the exact grid reference. I can imagine the scene in court ' But Your Honour, the paperwork states i was doing 0.5 past light speed on the Proxima centauri bypass, whereas the grid reference you gave me is for a field in Cumbria?'
Plywood (I'm all growed up with a wife and kids).
Lol 🙂
Funny, but let me re-iterate, the tardis does NOT TRAVEL ANYWHERE.
It would be palpetine vs the master surely?
Anyway no on has metioned a TARDIS is a type of crafte the DR's TARDIS is broken and [edit] the outside of the door [/edit] doesn't go anywhere in particular so whilst yes the a TARDIS could in theory whupp Han Solo's Millennium Falcon the Dr's probably couldn't as [edit]his outside of his door [/edit] would end up in the wrong place.
Plus the fact that they are from two separate universes it is impossible that either of them would ever meet.
You should also note the Dr is not a smuggler.
They both seem to break a lot so I would not fancy racing either tbh
You need the enterprise - the advantage of re routing through secondary couplings as they had the sense to build in redundancy for emergency situations- that's Starfleet for you- and the word engage simply works every time.
PS the TARDIS can take any shape but is broken and stuck as the police box- it has a chameleon circuit for disguises appropriate to the time/place it lands
the TARDIS can take any shape but is broken and stuck as the police box
Which begs the question of what shape an un-chameleoned TARDIS is.
Funny, but let me re-iterate, the tardis does NOT TRAVEL ANYWHERE.
It's everywhere and nowhere baby
That's where it's at
Going down a bumpy hillside
In it's hippy hat
..or words to that effect.
And yes, I'm assuming .5 past light speed (c) is c+.5c or 1.5c
Plus the fact that they are from two separate universes it is impossible that either of them would ever meet.
why? the tardis is master of all it surveys as well as quite a lot that doesn't. And it surveys a lot, enough to be able jump from universe to universe should the plot line take it there, like it did when Billie Piper's dad died but they changed the course of time and he lived on in a different universe (possibly the one with the millenium falcon it) and the doctor went there to visit. or something
Yes but they are two made up universes from two separate creators.
I am not commenting on the 'possibility of two made up characters meeting; whilst using our current understanding of physics to explain how they would / might meet.
I was always given to understand a TARDIS' appearance was a reflection of it's owners tastes for the purposes of "Dressing" a portal.
Hence 'The Doctor' throughout his various incarnation has always maintained a soft spot for 1930s Police boxes.
The external appearance of a TARDIS is pretty inconsequential, you could have one that looked just like an Austin Princess, a Wardrobe or Millenium Falcon if, as a Time Lord, you found the aesthetic more appealing...
The Millenium Falcon goes pretty fast, but the TARDIS is way cleverer as it goes nowhere and yet anywhere it fancies all at once, and defies the laws of physics the Millenium Falcon is forced to work within. Of course there is far less theatre associated with the TARDIS and so the Millenium Falcon still impresses us upright apes far more easily...
* grabs TV guide and pants *
Is that last word a verb or a noun?
I was always given to understand a TARDIS' appearance was a reflection of it's owners tastes for the purposes of "Dressing" a portal.
Hence 'The Doctor' throughout his various incarnation has always maintained a soft spot for 1930s Police boxes.
No, Junkyard is correct. Well, and you are, sort of.
The TARDIS is supposed to change appearance to blend in with its surroundings. So, for example, you could land it in a forest and make it look like a tree.
The Doctor's TARDIS has a broken chameleon circuit. The story goes that it was in for repairs when the Doctor originally stole it. He didn't get around to fixing it and, according to the Ninth Doctor (Eccleston), he eventually became fond of it and didn't want it fixing.
If you want to know which is better, just offer Han Solo a swap. He'd take your arm off, obviously.
Back when I was a lad (in the Tom Baker Doctor Who days) I thought I had the TARDIS sussed. In fact, I thought it was rather simple, if you accept a couple of little things.
If you accept the idea of infinite parallel universes, all overlapping as they do. And in between all these universes is the Void. Now, as we know, the Void contains neither space nor time. So all the TARDIS had to do is move into the Void (which of course is instant as no distance is involved), and from there you can then travel to any other place in any universe at any point in time. All done instantly and without actually needing to travel any distance. A simple "dimension jump" machine doing away with all the awkward physics of travelling faster than the speed of light, never mind also factoring in time travel.
So I was really rather upset when the David Tennant Doctor Who then didn't know the technology of a void ship when they had one in the Daleks v's Cybermen episodes. Meant I'd had it wrong all those years. Have to presume it's some sort of wormhole thingumy.
If the TARDIS doesn't actually move*, why do we always see footage of it twirling and tumbling through time/space/jelly and its occupants being buffeted around inside?
* I'm not arguing that it does BTW, just pointlessly pondering a potential plot SNAFU
If you want to know which is better, just offer Han Solo a swap. He'd take your arm off, obviously.
See, I don't get that. He's flying a perfectly operable (and super cool) space ship. So, Doctor Who chucks him the keys and says: take my police box that's nowhere and everywhere at the same time but doesn't actually move (although, as verses points out, we see it moving in the show) and I'll have your badass spaceship. How's about it?
Han's going to go for that?
The Doctor's TARDIS has a broken chameleon circuit. The story goes that it was in for repairs when the Doctor originally stole it. He didn't get around to fixing it and, according to the Ninth Doctor (Eccleston), he eventually became fond of it and didn't want it fixing.
I so hope that lot came from Wiki and that's not actual knowledge...
You should also note the Dr is not a smuggler.
Brother, we all gotta survive somehow.
Thanks for the clarification Cougar...
It can fly as well because we have seen it but perhaps that is just a very unstable "door" giving the appearance of flight?
A it is made up its easy to come up with reasons
Han's going to go for that?
Hell yes. Imagine you are a wanted smuggler. Being able to be anywhere and anywhen instantly would be rather bloody useful wouldn't it?
Hell yes. Imagine you are a wanted smuggler. Being able to be anywhere and anywhen instantly would be rather bloody useful wouldn't it?
So would knowing where and when you were going.
Han is a risk-taker, but I doubt he'd mess with the space-time continuum when he has a perfectly good hatch under the Falcon's walkway that Stormtroopers never seem to check.
I don't think the Tardis is that unreliable. I think the Doctor lets it do random stuff, for a bit of fun.
He's a crazy cat, that Doctor.
He'd be a proper liability in the Millennium Falcon. 😀
I so hope that lot came from Wiki and that's not actual knowledge...
I'm not particularly a huge fan, but I did actually know that. My knowledge of classic Who is actually pretty weak, though I took it upon myself to watch some of the old shows recently just to get a feel for the previous incarnations. Patrick Troughton is particularly good.
I don't think the Tardis is that unreliable. I think the Doctor lets it do random stuff, for a bit of fun.
The TARDIS is sentient; the theory is that it doesn't always take him where he wants to go, but usually takes him where he needs to be.
That's what I was going to say also, yes.
With the Dr around, there probably wouldn't even be an Empire.
The TARDIS is sentient; the theory is that it doesn't always take him where he wants to go, but usually takes him where he needs to be.
Stupid question, probably: how does TARDIS know where the Doctor needs to be? Is this some kind of machinery-has-inner-knowledge-of-time-lord-requirements thing? Like if Doctor Who needs some milk for his Shreddies, TARDIS takes him automatically to Wadebridge ASDA?
See, that might work for the Doctor, but where does Han NEED to be? He's smuggling, so if that TARDIS is the self-righteous equipment type won't it take him down to Imperial Jail?
With the Dr around, there probably wouldn't even be an Empire.
Nah-hah. Vader's force vs the Doctor's sonic screwdriver? The Empire would be exactly the same and the only issue would be how BBC could fill its Saturday night schedule.
If the TARDIS doesn't actually move*, why do we always see footage of it twirling and tumbling through time/space/jelly and its occupants being buffeted around inside?
This one I did have to look up.
http://tardis.wikia.com/wiki/TARDIS
TARDISes usually moved through time and space by "disappearing there and reappearing here", a process known as "de- and re-materialisation". This was controlled by a component called the dematerialisation circuit. They also could fly through space like conventional spacecraft, but doing so for prolonged periods could damage the ship, at least in the case of the Doctor's TARDIS.
So, it can do both. It quite often gets interrupted during its regular operation too, as plot mcguffins demand.
That same page answers an earlier question here too; what does a non-chameleoned TARDIS look like?
When the chameleon circuit was not operative, a TARDIS in its natural form resembled a plain cabinet with a sliding door on the front
Every day's a school day.
Stupid question, probably: how does TARDIS know where the Doctor needs to be?
Because it's [i]sentient.[/i] Do pay attention, 007. (-:
where does Han NEED to be?
Elsewhere, usually.
Because it's sentient. Do pay attention, 007. (-:
Stupid question #2: if it's sentient, why does the Doctor have to twist the knobs before he [doesn't go, but go] anywhere? Shouldn't the TARDIS just do its thing in any case?
Next thing you'll be saying that, if the TARDIS had its own sonic screwdriver, you wouldn't need the Doctor at all.
Lol.. nicely put Camo16 but wrong.
The Dr doesn't have big fancy weapons, cos he doesn't need them. He just has brilliant intelligence, which is a greater weapon than all the galaxy's blasters.
You just know there'd be an episode where the Dr goes to confront Palpatine as he's plotting his power grab, and he'd convince him of the error of his ways. Bring balance to the Force the Dr would, yes.
You just know there'd be an episode where the Dr goes to confront Palpatine as he's plotting his power grab, and he'd convince him of the error of his ways. Bring balance to the Force the Dr would, yes.
Pah! The scene where Boba Fett tracks the Doctor down and destroys the last time lord with a single precision blaster shot wouldn't even make it as a Star Wars Mini-sode.
Vader wouldn't even bother to read that memo. He'd be all like 'whatever, I got bigger problems than an eccentric gangly Brit waving around a badly made silver toolwand...'
Wasn't there an episode where they said the TARDIS was designed to have six (?) pilots rather than just one.
Ad that explained why The DR had problems doing it properly on his own ?
Pah, you just don't get it.
The Doctor is too clever for that. And since let's face it, most of the characters in Star Wars are pretty bloody stupid, he'd have no trouble in outmanoeuvring them.
The Doctor is too clever for that.
This is the same Doctor who's spent the last 40ish years fighting the same villains over and over again.
See, that's Hans edge. He can help to destroy an Empire in one attack on a star sized battleship.
Meanwhile, the Doctor has another problem with... Cybermen... seriously? those guys again?
Clever he might be? But efficient he certainly is not.
Wasn't there an episode where they said the TARDIS was designed to have six (?) pilots rather than just one.
Yeah. Hence the hexagonal shape of the console.
Stupid question #2: if it's sentient, why does the Doctor have to twist the knobs before he [doesn't go, but go] anywhere? Shouldn't the TARDIS just do its thing in any case?
Good question. How do you know it doesn't? If you were the Doctor, perhaps with a couple of impressionable Earth laydees in tow, would you slam the door on the pursuing horde of Bugblatter Beasts and then go "and now, we wait for the TARDIS to take us somewhere it likes..." Hardly "oh, swoon, my hero" material, is it?
This is the same Doctor who's spent the last 40ish years fighting the same villains over and over again.
Dear me.. he can't defeat them outright, it'd cause too much instability in history, and leave him with no way of amusing himself. Immortality would be boring wouldn't it, without an adversary?
Besides, the Doctor would never commit genocide.
Oh, wait.
Cougar and Molgrips, you're describing a super hero who might or might not have control of his vessel (and pulls the odd knob or two to impress the ladies) and lets daleks and cybermen pester the universe because it's better to take foes down one or two at a time...?
By this time, Han's blasted spaceships, rescued princesses, stroked his wookie and made Bruce Willis look like Steve Carroll...
All with the help of the Ewoks....embarassing really ...and Lue had to do the real job of getting the actual baddie
It goes deeper than that. It's brain vs brawn. Impetuous macho man vs the intellectual warrior.
Anyway. Han doesn't want to get involved, and only does so cos his friends are in trouble. The Dr DOES want to get involved in everything, and there's some suggestion he is controlling it all for his amusement. Which makes him a bit God-like, doens't it? A whole nother avenue of debate right there.
EDIT: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2011/dec/24/doctor-who-god-christmas
You want to talk about Godlike?
Han not only managed to save the universe (okay, with a little help), but he also found time to save precious Earth artefacts in the guise of true American archeologist hero and to save a poor Amish girl from herself and her suffocating community whilst building a barn and looking good in a hat.
What does your Dr Who do in his time off? First he's a scarecrow on kids' TV, then he's sticking his arm up cow butt in the Yorkshire Dales...
He didn't save the universe, he helped defeat the empire, which was just a temporary feature of one galaxy.
What does your Dr Who do in his time off?
Dr Who doesn't have time off. Tch.
