深夜福利影视-深夜福利影院-深夜福利影院在线-深夜福利影院在线观看-深夜福利在线播放-深夜福利在线导航-深夜福利在线观看八区-深夜福利在线观看免费

【3755 まみ ポルノ映画感】Enter to watch online.'Doctor Who' Sutekh reveal: Meet The One Who Waits.

【3755 まみ ポルノ映画感】Enter to watch online.'Doctor Who' Sutekh reveal: Meet The One Who Waits.

Doctor Whofan755 まみ ポルノ映画感showrunner Russell T Davies wanted to bring back Sutekh, a classic villain from the Tom Baker era of the show. So he invented "Sue Tech" — a.k.a. tech CEO Susan Triad, the final form of Davies' season-long Susan Twist mystery. That's what millions of other Doctor Who fans discovered in the final minutes of the show's tense pre-finale episode "The Legend of Ruby Sunday."

With the distraction of trying to discover Ruby's mother, a red-herring anagram (S TRIAD, too obviously TARDIS) and the bombshell question of whether Susan Triad was a regeneration of his granddaughter Susan, the Doctor (Ncuti Gatwa) failed to notice one of his ancient and most powerful enemies has wrapped himself around the TARDIS — a machine this villain has manipulated before.

SEE ALSO: Russell T Davies explains the 'Bridgerton'/'Doctor Who' conundrum

Welcome back Sutekh, a fan favorite Doctor Whovillain who previously only appeared in one story nearly 50 years ago, and now also the Jeopardy! question to the answer "this character was revealed to be The One Who Waits."


You May Also Like

Who is Sutekh?

A woman in a business suit standing in front of the "S Triad" corporate logo.Yeah, Sutekh didn't look anything like this first time around. Or did he? Credit: Disney+

Sutekh the Destroyer is the villain of the 1975 story "Pyramids of Mars," an iconic Tom Baker tale from one of the show's most gothic horror-filled seasons. And it didn't get more 1975 gothic horror than an ancient Egyptian god (Sutekh, also known as Set) who turns out to be a genocidal alien imprisoned on Earth by his people, the Osirans.

Sutekh was kept in check by signals from a radio beacon in a pyramid on Mars. How those signals worked exactly, especially given that Mars is sometimes on the opposite side of the sun, was never explained. Anyway, Sutekh was released from his tomb by a blundering British Egyptologist, Dr. Marcus Scarman (Bernard Archard), in 1913.

SEE ALSO: Who is Ruby Sunday? The ultimate 'Doctor Who' fan theory

Aiming to destroy all of creation, Sutekh inhabits Scarman, and eventually mind-controls the Doctor into taking the TARDIS and Scarman to Mars to destroy the beacon. (It's implied that Sutekh was powerful enough to draw the TARDIS to him in the first place.) Sutekh succeeds in destroying the beacon— but then the Doctor pulls a fast one by trapping Sutekh in a "time corridor" during the radio transmission gap between Mars and Earth.

A Time corridor? Not quite the Time Window that UNIT HQ has in "Legend of Ruby Sunday" — something we've seen before in "The Girl in the Fireplace" and "The Day of the Doctor" — but close enough. Oh, and there's another UNIT connection to "Pyramids of Mars" — much of which takes place in an Edwardian country house that will one day be the HQ of ... UNIT.

SEE ALSO: 'Doctor Who' just bested 'Bridgerton' in queer romance

Baker's Doctor estimates that Sutekh ages 7,000 years in the time corridor; we're told that he dies there, but we never see the body, a fact that has already allowed Sutekh to crop up Lazarus-like in audio adventures, comics and novels.

'The Pyramids of Mars' is a theme this season.

If you're feeling like the Sutekh connection came completely out of left field, note that Davies has referenced this exact story once this season already. Like "Sue Tech," the 1975 story has been hiding in plain sight.

Mashable Top Stories Stay connected with the hottest stories of the day and the latest entertainment news. Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletter By clicking Sign Me Up, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Thanks for signing up!

In "The Devil's Chord," Davies lifted the scene where Ruby Sunday sees the future apocalypse if they don't stop the Maestro directly from "Pyramids of Mars." In the 1975 story, Sarah-Jane Smith (the late, great Elisabeth Sladen) is shown her own blasted future if Sutekh wins.

Something else that's been hiding in plain sight, on multiple sets and costumes, so often you'll just have to go back yourself and look? Triangles, a.k.a. triads, a.k.a ... pyramids.

The corporate logo on the ambulance in "Boom!"? Triangular. The sconces in the big music room during the "Devil's Chord" climax? Triangles. Jinkx Monsoon's hair and outfit for most of that episode? Multiply triangular. (And yes, a triad is another name for "chord.")

The thing that Rogue and the Doctor trapped the Chuldur on in "Rogue"? Hugetriangle.

We may have seen Sutekh in satanic form.

One other thing noted in "Pyramids of Mars" about Sutekh: The murderous swathe he cut through the universe left him so reviled that some cultures called him "Satan." (This is where the story's connection to Earth mythology ends, because in our world Set/Sutekh and Satan are figures with completely unconnected origins).

Nevertheless, we have seen Satan in Doctor Who — specifically in Davies' first go-round as showrunner. "The Satan Pit" had the Doctor (David Tennant) meeting the titular devil. Satan attempts to escape to Earth via a spaceship crew, forcing the Doctor to consider sacrificing Rose (Billie Piper).

No connection between that Satan and Sutekh has been established, beyond the fact that they were both voiced by Gabriel Woolf (who reprises his role as Sutekh in "Legend of Ruby Sunday" at the grand old age of 91 — providing hope for everyone who thinks Carole Ann Ford, 83, may yet return as the Doctor's granddaughter Susan.)

With that connection, though, Davies now has every excuse to tie that highly popular story to his current big bad. After all, Sutekh has been around for a long, long time — plenty of time to take plenty of forms and fall into plenty of traps.

What will Sutekh do next?

Arguably, the name of the finale itself was a spoiler hiding in plain sight. "Empire of Death" sounds like exactly the kind of outcome Sutekh intended to bring about: the end of all living things who could oppose him (everything and everyone, basically).

It's also worth noting that the logo used when revealing the season's episode titles put "Empire of Death" in the place of "Police Box" at the top of the TARDIS. Sutekh has control of the Doctor's machine now, just as the Toymaker and the Maestro both briefly had it. But Sutekh is so powerful, he even scared the Toymaker (who first mentioned him as The One Who Waits).

What could a God of Death do with a time and space machine that contains all the power of a black hole? "All creation shall fall into dust and ruin," announced Harriet Arbinger at the close of "The Legend of Ruby Sunday." Sutekh ended the episode promising the Doctor "and all in your vile incessant universe ... Sutekh's gift of death."

In other words, death comes to everyone and everything, everywhere, all at once. How does the Doctor get us out of that? Is it possible that the Doctor's granddaughter is going to save the day after all? Could there, in other words, be one final Susan twist at the end?

How to watch:New episodes of Doctor Whodrop every Friday night at 7 p.m. ET on Disney+, where available, and simultaneously at midnight on BBC iPlayer in the UK. The season finale airs June 22.

Topics Disney+ Doctor Who

Latest Updates

主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产精品福利电影一 | 国产av秘一区二区三区 | 国产成人av网站手机不卡 | 国产一区二区在线亚洲中文在线 | 国产精品99无码一区二蜜桃 | av无码久久| 成人亚洲人在线播放av | 99久久精品免费看国产四区 | 国产毛片精品av一区二区 | 高清无码影视 | 国产精品粉嫩美女在 | 国产成人av在线影院无毒 | 成人毛片免费看片 | 国产无码免费在线观看网站 | 69精产国品 | 成人综合另类日韩国产欧美 | 国产福利91精品一区二区三 | 高清无码一区二区在线观看吞精 | 国产精品秘一二三区 | 国产一区二区三区精品区在线 | 91午夜精品亚洲一区二区三区 | 国产精品先锋中文在线第一页 | 精品国内在视频线最新 | 精品国产免费午夜剧场 | 国产极品粉嫩馒头一线天av | 国产精品一区二区久久精品涩爱 | 国产ts人妖赵恩静在 | 国产成人无码a区在线 | 国产专区视频在线12 | 国产精品成人av无码久久 | 69国产超薄丝袜足j在线直播 | 国产成人久久精选无码 | 国产99re在线观看69热 | 韩国精品无码一区二区三区视频播放 | 国产主播剧情演绎在线观看 | 国产精品麻豆va | 国产一区二区精品久久91 | 成人影视大全在线看入口无码 | 按摩艳片一区区在线播放 | 精品丰满人妻一区二区三区 | 国产精品一区二区国产馆蜜桃 |