Doctor.who.the.time.of.the.doctor.2013.1080p.bl...
After receiving a mysterious message from a lone signal – “Doctor Who?” – the Doctor arrives on the planet Trenzalore, where a truth field prevents lying. The planet’s sleepy human colony, Christmas, sits above a centuries-old question buried in a crack in time: the first question, asked by the Silence.
What follows is a 900-year siege. The Doctor defends the planet against multiple alien forces – Daleks, Cybermen, Weeping Angels, and the Silence – all terrified of what might emerge if the question is answered. The answer, of course, is the Doctor’s true name, which would unlock the Time Lords’ return from the pocket universe.
The episode ties up loose ends from the “Silence will fall” arc, revealing that the Silence engineered humanity to kill the Doctor to prevent the Time Lords’ return – not out of malice, but because a new Time War would destroy reality.
In its final moments, an aged and regeneration-burned Doctor receives a new regeneration cycle from the Time Lords, allowing him to transform. The final line – “I will always remember when the Doctor was me” – remains one of the series’ most heart-wrenching moments. Doctor.Who.The.Time.of.the.Doctor.2013.1080p.Bl...
All proceeds support the BBC and future Doctor Who productions.
If you’re archiving or seeking the optimal rip (based on the keyword fragment), here are typical specs for a genuine 1080p Blu-ray encode:
| Parameter | Details | |-----------|---------| | Resolution | 1920×1080 | | Aspect Ratio | 1.78:1 (16:9) | | Video Codec | AVC (MPEG-4) / High@4.1 | | Frame Rate | 23.976 fps (24p) | | Audio | English DTS-HD MA 5.1, Stereo, Audio Description | | Subtitles | English SDH, French, Spanish (on US release) | | Runtime | 60 minutes (approx.) | | File size (typical remux) | ~22–25 GB | | File size (high-quality 1080p encode) | ~8–12 GB | After receiving a mysterious message from a lone
Note on the keyword: The fragment Doctor.Who.The.Time.of.the.Doctor.2013.1080p.Bl... suggests a file naming convention common in high-definition releases – likely from a Blu-ray remux or scene encode. The full name would probably end with BluRay.x264 or BluRay.REMUX.
"The Time of the Doctor" is the seventh Christmas special of the revamped "Doctor Who" series and the thirteenth episode of the seventh series. It was written by Steven Moffat and directed by Paul Murphy. The episode stars Peter Capaldi as the Twelfth Doctor, although it originally aired with Matt Smith in the lead, as the episode was initially planned and partly filmed with Smith before the decision to regenerate the Doctor.
The episode received positive reviews for its blend of humor, adventure, and emotional depth. The introduction of Peter Capaldi as the Twelfth Doctor was widely anticipated, and his performance did not disappoint. The episode maintained the tradition of "Doctor Who" combining clever science fiction concepts with historical and cultural references. All proceeds support the BBC and future Doctor
While the keyword you provided references a YIFY (YTS) release, it’s important to note: YIFY encodes are optimized for small file sizes (typically 1.5–2 GB for a 1080p movie). For an hour-long episode, that’s around 1.2 GB. At that bitrate, fine detail suffers, especially during the fast action sequences with Weeping Angels and the intense regeneration effect.
For casual viewing on a phone or tablet, a YIFY encode is acceptable. But for a home theater setup with a 50”+ 1080p screen, the lack of grain and occasional macroblocking will be noticeable. The official Blu-ray or a remux (untouched copy) is the only way to experience the episode as intended.