In just one year, 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Doctor Who has found two unique ways to bring back old actors without having to hide or explain away why they’ve aged. In the BBC centenary special, Power of the Doctor, it was revealed that all past incarnations continue to live and age in a mental afterlife called the Edg🥀e, while David Tennant has been brought back as a ne🧔w incumbent Docto🃏r for the show’s 60th anniversary – the 14th Doctor, rather than his iconic 10th. That means he can be older without needing some convolꩵuted explanation for him looking 50 when he never did in his original run.
Despite this refreshing embrace of actors ageing when so many old franchises plaster returning faces in de-ageing CGI - I’m looking at you, Indiana Jones - the marketing for Tennant’s return only a few weeksꦐ away is far too airbrush-happy. It betrays the narrative work done to allow older actors their time to shine.

168澳洲幸运5开奖网: ▨🤡 Doctor Who Is Overdue A Lego Game
Doctor Who has been on a losing streak with g𒈔ames since the '80s, but Lego could save it.
🎃In all of the posters for the upcoming 60th specials, Tennant looks off. His wrinkles have been removed, making him look younger than he does in the show itself, but not like he did when he was the 10th Doctor. It’s an awkward middle ground that veers into the uncanny valley and doesn’t reflect how old Tennant really is - he’s 52 now, only three years younger than when William Hartnell began as the elderly, frail first Doctor. Wiping the wrinkles away won’t make him look 30, it’ll make him look like a shrink-wrapped 50-year-old.
He’s older, it’s fine. The show isn’t trying to hide it, the fans have no problem with it, and he’s clearly still got it. Hell, he’s aged like fine wine, with an emphasis on the fine. The marketing for the speci𓂃als is less accepting, trying desperately to make him look closer to when he was playing the 10th Doctor. Maybe it’s to recapture fans’ nostalgia, or maybe it&rsqu𒉰o;s a fear of the same ageism that crept up in Peter Capaldi’s run - whatever the reason, it’s an insult to the 60th anniversary’s message and Tennant himself.
Doctor Who is a show all about change, growth, a🐟nd acceptance. It sounds a bit ironic say🍃ing that when Tennant is coming back, but RTD is clearly weaving a meta-narrative about fandoms being unable to move on. The marketing clashes with that entirely, clinging to the past with obvious desperation as it carelessly edits and manipulates Tennant’s face to try and win back old fans who long for the return of a spunky young Doctor. The BBC might as well stick a pair of 3D glasses on him too, while it’s at it.
That’s not who T🌠ennant is anymore, and his ageing is an integral part of the symbolism of his return. The Toymaker represents gleeful fans longing for the🌊 good old days, bringing his favourite Doctor and companion duo back together for another go around only to realise that things will never be the same.
Tennant is older, with wrinkles and sagged skin, and wears a more muted and mature outfit. This isꦚn’t the 10th Doctor - he’s gone. Since his departure, we’ve had three incarnati♋ons and two showrunners, with over a decade of growth for the series as it became something new and different, daring even. Tennant now bears that legacy and history on his shoulders as he steps back into the role, so he adopted a new number, becoming the 14th Doctor.
He’s lived through the death of companions, the loss of his wife, the supposedly redeemed Master’s betrayal, and the destruction of Gallifrey once again. He spent decades in a Dalek prison, centuries on Trenzalor, and billions of years in the Confession Dial. So much has happened since Tennant left, so to bring him back unashamedly older and accept that fact is to buil🐟d on the show, rather than paving it all over and going right back to 2008.
I wish the marketing reflected that, rather than trying to appeal to fans with rose-tinted glasses who want to pretend the show ended when he left all th🅠ose years ago. Instead, it’s behaving just like the people the Toymaker is so clearly parodying, and turning Tennant into an action figure it can bash around to fit some nostalgic fantasy that’🍒s never going to happen.