- she seems to know what she’s doing. the first thing i’d do if i wanted to invade the world would be to kill you. - thanks. - i wouldn’t even let you get talking, like you always do. bullet between the eyes, first thing. - again, thank you. - twelve times, if necessary.
“At the end of Day of the Doctor, there is the moment between the two Osgoods where they become complicit. They are the only two in the room who know which of them’s a Zygon and which of them’s human, and in that moment, they form a bond. And I knew that’s where I wanted a Zygon two-parter to start.” – Steven Moffat
Osgood went from being insecure and feeling utterly inadequate to proudly talking about her OCD and using it to contribute to tactical missions. And the Mistress went from being a misogynist (“killed by […] a girl, how inappropriate…” / “the girlie and the freak…” / ”always the women…”) to relishing her own femininity and happily calling herself a queen.
Character development doesn’t always have to be at the center of attention. It can consist of characters growing and changing off-screen, showing the things they’ve learned simply by putting them into practice.
I love this.
oh look they even put the fandom in the trailer
how very nice of them
Osgood - the ultimate Doctor cosplayer