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At this point, the Division's leader explains that they exist "outside one universe and on the cusp of many more" which endlessly branch out into the multiverse. The idea was that operatives from across space and time could "guide and shape events" as they saw fit, which was in direct contravention to Gallifreyan law, as the Doctor rightly points out.Īnd the reason why this Division could evade the Doctor so easily, even with all of the tech at her disposal, is because the Division doesn't even exist in our universe. In between all of the other parallel storylines, our good Doctor learns that the Division began on Gallifrey to ensure the timeline's safety. Yasmin Khan, Mandip Gill, Doctor Who, season 13 We've known for some time now that the Division, a black ops Time Lord sect, was up to no good, and we also knew that the Doctor was once a member of this organisation before they removed her memories, but this is the first time that real answers have come our way. Could this be causing the Flux? Or could this be caused by the Flux? These were the kind of questions that fans asked back then, and now that episode five has shed new light on all this, it looks like they were bang on the money with this concept, at least.įollowing last week's stony cliffhanger, the Doctor is taken to a new location where she encounters Barbara Flynn's mysterious character once again. The idea is that these lines represent parallel timelines that are just casually living their best lives until they start colliding, which can only be a bad thing in the world of Doctor Who. Like in the MCU, the Multiverse is coming ? #DoctorWho #Series13 #DoctorWhoFlux #JodieWhittaker - 13th_Doctor October 9, 2021 It was a small detail, one which most assumed would be insignificant, but a few diehard Doctor Who fans picked up on this and wondered if it might mean that Flux would introduce a new multiverse to the show – much like the one picking up steam right now over at Marvel.
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Episode one threw us in at the deep end with enough mysteries to fill a TARDIS, but now that we're nearing the end, it turns out that one of the biggest reveals of all was actually foreshadowed before Flux even started.īack in early October, the BBC released a promo image of Jodie Whittaker stood in front of coloured lines which start off parallel, but then suddenly become more erratic towards the end.
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That tradition has of course continued into the modern era, and the new Flux experiment (AKA season 13) is even more susceptible to this line of thinking than most. For years, even decades, viewers have trained themselves to figure out even the most wibbly-wobby and timey-wimey of plot points long before any secrets have actually been shared. Visit Ben Kendrick's website for info on his fiction work, follow him on Twitter subscribe to his (humorous) five guys watch The Bachelor podcast, or contact him directly: ben(at)screenrant(dot)com.Doctor Who: Flux episode 5 just confirmed a game-changing fan theory that Whovians predicted before this new season even started.ĭoctor Who: Flux episode 5 spoilers follow.ĭoctor Who fans are more than used to theorising about their favourite show. Thanks to a background in fiction writing, Ben is drawn to films that make story and character a priority however, that doesn't stop him from enjoying a range of Hollywood offerings - from blockbuster action flicks to campy so-bad-they're-good B-movies. A graduate of the New School’s Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing program, Ben has been passionate about movies ever since standing in line for a midnight showing of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade when he was eight years-old. He is a member of the Denver Film Critics Society as well as the Online Film Critics Society - with work referenced, cited, or syndicated on CNN, Wikipedia, Huffington Post, Rotten Tomatoes, IMDB, Yahoo, and Business Insider, among others. Ben Kendrick is the publisher of Screen Rant, the site's head film critic, as well as host of the Screen Rant Underground and Total Geekall podcast.