Showing posts with label Discovering Doctor Who. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Discovering Doctor Who. Show all posts

Friday, September 02, 2011

Doctor Who: Season 3

I’ve been in a Doctor Who frame of mind, and not just because of my new woolen TARDIS… wait, I haven’t told you about it?! Last weekend was Fan Expo, and aside from getting to meet a lot of amazing people and reconnect with friends who I seem to see every year at cons (which is more than I see non-con friends, I’m sad to say), I finally met the delightful Christina Boulard, who owns TresBellesKnits, where she sells her lovely knitted creations. And… she gave me my very own tiny knitted Dalek!!! This is me with Christina (in her gorgeous and very long Tom Baker scarf) and the one I shall call Dalek Wool (he's from the Cult of Knitros)



And here he is in close-up…



Seriously, how amazing is that?! I love it. And if you love it, too, head on over to Christina’s site and choose one of your own! Her general shop is here and the page for the Daleks is here.

Thank you again, Christina!

But as I was saying, I’ve had DW on my mind, not just because of Dalek Wool but because I’m continuing to work on ECW’s upcoming Doctor Who book with authors Graeme Burk and Robert Smith?, which has been a lot of fun. And so I figured I should get around to posting this, which I wrote about three months ago. ;)

I liked season 3 a lot, and bombed through it in about three nights. Overall there were parts where Tennant was at his best, and I liked Martha a lot. Smart, beautiful, assertive… and some of my favourite episodes of the series are in S3. This is the season where Tennant becomes the Emo Doctor, where his pining after Rose makes him unable to pay any attention to the companion in front of him, and where her need to be something more to him becomes the very definition of UNREQUITED. So while I wasn’t thrilled by the Doctor/companion pairing, I actually loved what that coupling did for their characters and how it developed the Doctor so much.

But thank god for season 4’s Donna Noble, who will come along and smack him back into reality.

And speaking of which, we get our first taste of her in the Christmas special, “The Runaway Bride,” where she is hilarious and awesome. I didn’t love the episode overall, but it was exciting and fast-paced and Catherine Tate is brilliant.

Smith and Jones was next, and it was a great season opener, although I didn’t think it was a memorable episode overall. I did love when the camera panned back and you saw that beautiful scene of the hospital alone on the moon… gorgeous. And of course the “Go Fro Schmo Toe Poe Woe Moe” rhinoceros aliens were menacing and kinda funny.

The Shakespeare Code was interesting, but I found it a little complicated and was wondering how young kids could have been following this one. Also, for the Classic Series fans, has Shakespeare appeared before? I had an image of Shakespeare in my head and thought it was maybe something I was remembering from childhood on Doctor Who before I realized wait, I think that was an episode of the Twilight Zone. ;)

Gridlock has people perpetually stuck in cars, and as the episode was happening I was thinking, “This is a little strange…” but the longer it went, the more I liked it. By the end of the ep, I thought it was rather stellar. It’s frightening and clearly a comment on our wasteful world and the love we have of our cars. The guy from Father Ted is in it, and Martha is eventually kidnapped by Annie from Being Human (before Annie became a ghost, of course). Great cast, amazing look at the various aliens in their cars, and wonderful and highly original premise.

I know I should probably cower and prepare for people to throw things at me, but I found the Dalek two-parter to be a little boring. I loved the idea that the Empire State building actually looks a bit like a Dalek (ha!) and it has a few good lines (“Yet again that’s a no with the kidding” was a very Joss Whedon-sounding line) but this two-parter was draggy for me. I watched them with my son, actually, so now he thinks Doctor Who consists of the Doctor, the TARDIS, Daleks, and man-pigs. And for the most part, he’s correct! Good thing he’s not old enough to realize this is the least successful Dalek outing so far…

And maybe I was just in a mood this night or something, but I thought The Lazarus Experiment and 42 were also middling episodes… am I becoming hard to please?

No, because next up was Human Nature (with Viserys from Game of Thrones as the baddie!) and The Family of Blood. “Mother of mine…” “Son of mine…” BRILLIANT episodes, both of them, I adored these ones. But again, I noticed that the Doctor has two hearts, yet rarely uses either one of them, at least for romantic love. CAN he fall in love or does he choose not to, knowing that he simply can’t connect to anyone in that manner? Poor Martha. She’s rather doomed.

And then… Blink.



Holy. CRAP.

Everyone had told me about this episode, starting at 2010 Polaris when this woman came in a stellar costume of one of the Blink angels, and when I said, “What is that supposed to be,” I had collective gasps around me and “You mean you haven’t seen BLINK?!” said in utter shock. Geek cred gone momentarily.

But wow, was it worth it. I’ve discussed this episode with Mark Askwish at Space a lot, and both of us agree that where Hush is the Buffy episode you can show to non-Buffy fans as a way to get them to start watching the show, Blink is that episode for Doctor Who. It’s rather standalone, it allows you to get into the DW universe without having to know everything that came before it, and it’s frickin’ TERRIFYING. OK, so maybe it give a false impression that DW is more frightening than it actually is, but wow, WHAT storytelling. I want to bow down before Steven Moffat (also the guy who brought us the “Are you my mummy?” episodes in season 1) and thank him for being a genius. THIS is officially the first episode of Doctor Who that I watched between fingers. I’ve now seen it three times. In the scene where Sally is chatting with that guy (Lawrence?) and they keep turning away and the one angel is closer and closer, I was actually moaning in fear and finally dropped my head into my hands and said to my husband, “Just tell me when the angels are GONE!” But then I looked up again, because I just couldn’t look away. Even scarier than Hush.

What an episode. And to think, it’s the Doctor-lite episode of the season.

And really, from “Human Nature” onwards season 3 ROCKS. Utopia with the always masterful Derek Jacobi… having Captain Jack back.



The Sound of Drums (John Simm from Life on Mars is the Master!! I LOVE HIM), and Last of the Time Lords are wonderful episodes. The SFX on tiny old little Doctor in the cage is amazing… and creepy. It's like the Doctor's own Mini Me, if Mini Me were actually him, shrivelled into a tiny apple-head doll that moved. I wish that had gone on forever, I absolutely adored those scenes. The tension between the Doctor and the Master is wonderful, while at the same time the Doctor is so desperate to hold onto him no matter what he does because he’s the only other Time Lord left. The end of this season is devastating.

And good-bye Martha. I felt like you didn’t really have a chance, but the actress who plays her was SO good, and don’t get me wrong – the Doctor/companion pairing wasn’t done badly, it was actually done brilliantly, and just felt like the right thing to have done following Rose. The rebound companion was always doomed to fail as she was shadowed in the memory of Rose, and the way the show explored that was fantastic.

What a season… we get the Jack Shephard of Doctors, who tries to fix things and is always so sad. But he never becomes entirely emo; he cackles too much for that. Oh season 4… how will I be able to say goodbye to this Doctor? I’ll just think about how much I love season 3 some more.

Wednesday, August 03, 2011

Discovering Doctor Who: Season 2

I’ve been meaning to write up this blog for a couple of months now, ever since I finished S2 of Doctor Who, which feels like a lifetime ago. I made notes while I was watching it, but many of them had questions in it that have since been answered (since I’m now at the end of S4) so I’ll just talk about the season itself.

It began with Christmas Invasion, the first ep with the new Doctor, although he’s unconscious for most of the ep. I wasn’t quite sure what I was going to think of the guy… I LOVED Eccleston, he was my first Doctor, so this Tennant guy was going to have a long way to go to convince me he was any good. When he first awakens and comes striding out, I thought he was a bit much. All pomp and too loud, nattery and excitable. But there was something I liked about him…

And then I watched New Earth, which links back to the S1 continuity through the End of the World episode. We again see the Face of Boe, who says he’ll impart a secret to him (and now I not only know what that secret it, but who the Face of Boe actually is!!). But the true awesome of this episode is Billie Piper playing Cassandra. She is BRILLIANT.

Now, before I go any further, I want to clarify something for the Rose fans out there who very easily get their knickers in a twist when someone says something against their fave companion. In the last rundown of season 1, I said that I liked Rose, but my husband didn’t, and he actually stopped watching S1 (despite being a big Classic Series fan) because of her, saying he’d rather stick a fork in his eye than listen to her blither on. I thought he was being a bit harsh, and I said that while I didn’t love her, I really liked her a lot, and maybe with a second season I’ll like her even more, but that the Doctor outshone her for me. What I did love about her was that she stood in for the viewer as the person through whose eyes we discover the Doctor, and she asks all the questions we need answered.

That is what I said. And then I got a flurry of comments saying, “Oh NIKKI how could you HATE Rose?” Er, I didn’t say that I… “She’s WONDERFUL and the Rose haters are terrible, and I can’t believe that you are one of them!” But… I’m not, I was just saying that… “You know what, Nikki? I COMPLETELY agree with you, I hated her too, she’s just horrible and Billie Piper and can eat dirt for all I…” No, no, I don’t think she should eat dirt, I never said that…

So just to be clear, I never hated Rose. I couldn’t quite get into her at the beginning of the season despite seeing her as our conduit, but I said by the end I liked her a lot more. (It’s my HUSBAND who hated her… attack HIM! Heehee…)

I can safely say that by the end of S2, I adored her. Many of you jumped on me for not embracing her fully, but you had two seasons with her and two Doctors to watch, AND you had the full S3 where he pines after her and makes the viewer love her even more. I didn’t have that when I watched S1, yet I still really liked her.

OK. So. I hope I’ve made it clear now that I’m not a Rose hater. At the end of S2, it’s quite the opposite, actually. I thought she was wonderful.

And now back to New Earth, where Rose is gone and has been taken over by Cassandra. The chemistry between Piper and Tennant is there from the get-go, and his confusion over her acting so strangely is hilarious. (I’ll never forget her looking in a mirror and saying, “Ugh, I’m a CHAV!” and me having to email my best friend, whose parents are British, and say, “What’s a chav?”) ;)

Tooth and Claw is the one where they go to the Torchwood Estate (oooohhh….) and see Queen Victoria. My daughter walked in during this one and I thought, “Okay, everyone also mentioned on the first season rundown that Doctor Who is perfect for 6-year-olds!” She watched, was interested… and then the TV was off by the time that beast thing in the cage came to life. This really isn’t the children’s show the Classic Series is. And she had a lot of questions about the moral quandaries during the show (more stories of my kids watching it with me to come in S3 and S4…)

My fave thing about Tooth and Claw was Rose betting the Doctor that she can get Vicks to say, “We are not amused.”

And on I move to the next episode that’s held in a school and OH MY GOD IT’S GILES!!!! No one told me Anthony Stewart Head was on Doctor Who!!! Now, I have to admit, when I saw him as the demon of some long name that I can’t quite recall (started with a K or something?) I was at once elated and saddened, because since the beginning I’ve been thinking he’d make a terrific Doctor Who, and now obviously he won’t because he’s played a villain.

And yet, he actually wasn’t my favourite part of this episode: Sarah Jane Smith was. Now, again, as y’all know, I’m not one of the ones who choked on their drink and said, “OMG, it’s my favourite companion!!!” In fact, I hadn’t a clue who she was. My husband wandered in during the episode and said, “Hey, it’s K-9!!” And I didn’t know what that was, either. But I can tell all of you who are Classic Series fans that you don’t have to be to have gotten that episode. We know by this point what Rose means to the Doctor and vice versa, but more importantly, what these adventures and this lifestyle means to Rose. If she’s the “chav” who got out of her staid life and was able to go around the world with this mysterious and exciting life, what happens when the Doctor needs to move on? Is she left behind?

The answers to those questions are in this episode, where the beautiful and slightly older Sarah Jane Smith comes face to face with the Doctor after having been left behind so many years ago. He’s wearing a different face, but it’s still the man she would have given her life for. (I saw this episode just a few weeks after the lady playing her passed away suddenly, so it was with some sadness that I saw her for the first time.) The Doctor explains to her how difficult it is staying the same age while others age and slip away, and that his is a very lonely existence. It was like so many of the vampire discussions I’d seen in other shows, and for the first time I realized that despite his aloofness, he’s filled with a lot of pain. Eccleston’s Doctor was a little surly at times, but generally seemed goofy and quite joyful. I got the feeling here that Tennant’s would be a little more emo. Brilliant ep.

The Girl in the Fireplace was next, with its V for Vendetta baddies, and the girl, then woman, in the fireplace. Again, another episode focusing on the idea of the Doctor coming and going from people’s lives and him having such a strong, grave impact on them that when he goes, they can’t stop thinking about him. He, on the other hand, emphasizes that he’s so alone and stays the same while others get older and leave him. So he leaves them before that can happen.

Rise of the Cybermen/Age of Steel was next: I figured these guys were Classic Series baddies because I remembered seeing one of their heads in that museum where Rose and the other Doctor went earlier in season 1. We’re introduced to the Fringe-like parallel universe where everyone has a doppelganger and whose lives have taken slightly different turns based on different decisions being made (see “Left Turn” in S4). The Cybermen have things downloaded directly into their heads, which I must admit, sounded very convenient to me! Imagine plugging in and getting all seasons of a series put right there! (Yes, in an apocalypse I’d be the first one assimilated by the machines.)

What was interesting is that in this universe, Mickey is Ricky, and in S1 the Doctor INSISTED his name was Ricky no matter what Mickey said. So now we see there’s an insinuation that the Doctor had been to the parallel universe and had met Ricky first, which is why he insisted that was, in fact, his name. And the President looked a lot like the guy who was in that show with Anthony Stewart Head… damn, the show’s name escapes me but it was like a Sex and the City for guys… Manchild! I think that’s what it was. Anyway, I think he was in that, too.

So where do the Cybermen fall in the Whoverse? Are they as important as Daleks? When we first saw the head in the museum in S1 my husband immediately said, “Cybermen!!” They don’t appear to have updated them much, given what I saw in the museum, and I liked that.

The Idiot’s Lantern was a fun episode for me; not the best of the season, but generally outside of the UK, anything that’s set in a different time period tends to be either war- or royalty-related, so it’s nice to get something from the 1950s for a change.

The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit: I REALLY enjoyed this two-parter. There’s this quiet, dark, scene where the Doctor is dropping down into the pit slowly and talking about faith and science, how he’s gone to the ends of the universe to see things, and maybe he just keeps travelling to see if there’s anything out there left to see… it’s one of my favourite moments of the series. Faith is a new element that seems to have come to the fore in these episodes and recently: do you believe, don’t you, does it matter? The Doctor has seen everything and he has very little faith in anything he can’t see, or so he says, but sometimes his actions belie what he says here.

One question, though: How would Rose know what a black hole is? (Do we just assume the Doctor has told her about them?)

Love & Monsters is a fairly Doctor-less episode, and I understand that Tennant had a contract that allowed him to be away for most of one episode each season? (For a 13-episode season? Seems a bit much… but anyway…) I liked the episode, though, with Moaning Myrtle and the idea of a bunch of people who’ve had Doctor sightings and have joined forces to find more about him, something we haven’t seen much of since the first episode of the New Series, where we saw the websites about the Doctor. Again, playing on the S2 theme of the Doctor coming in and out of people’s lives and touching them deeply.

The next ep, Fear Her, is the one with the little girl and her drawings. I liked this episode a LOT and it was super-creepy… The 2012 Olympics was a nice touch; will it be odd this episode watch post-2012? I mean, if the shot-put competition turns out differently than the Doctor predicted and all… ;)

Army of Ghosts is the first part of the season ender, where people believe that ghosts of the people they’ve loved and lost have come back (at a certain point of the day), not knowing that they’re not ghosts at all, but the Cybermen. Jackie’s back, and there’s a hilarious scene when the Doctor begins running through all of the strange stuff that’s happened on Earth lately and Jackie’s been oblivious to all of it (this will continue to be played to great effect in future seasons with other people who are wilfully ignorant of the goings-on around them. As a one-time fan of EastEnders, the bit on the telly with Peggy screaming at the ghost in the Queen Vic – “I don’t care if you are just the ghost of Den Watts, GET OUT OF MY PUB!!!” – made me scream with laughter. Hahahahahahahahaha!

I LOVED having Mickey back, but not as much as I loved that ending, where Rose, Mickey, and the guy who used to be on EastEnders as the only cute guy in that really annoying family who moved onto the Square and then left right after… are all standing around waiting for the Sphere to open, anticipating Cyberman, only to get… Daleks!! LOVE.

Doomsday is the finale, and the Daleks suddenly become the funniest villains on TV since Spike on Buffy. Apparently coming back in droves has made them super snarky. Highlights include the Cybermen standing in the hall telling the Daleks to identify themselves, and the Daleks countering that the Cybermen identify themselves, and back and forth until Mickey says, “It’s like watching Stephen Hawking go up against a talking clock!” Hahaha! Ooh, ooh, and then when the Dalek shouts at the group to “Cease social interaction!!” Or when the Cybermen say they’re superior, and the Dalek says the only thing they’re superior in is dying?! BRILL.

Like on Buffy, Doctor Who knows how to pull off a thrilling and incredible finale. They’re two for two at the end of this season, and Doomsday was an episode that despite its humour, had a pallor of gloom hanging over it because of the beginning, where Rose’s voiceover says that she died. She doesn’t die, but she’s separated from the Doctor, and it’s heartbreaking. Like so many characters on TV before her, I didn’t know how much I liked her until she was gone, and then I just wanted her back. The Doctor clearly feels more than just a friendship for Rose… it’s a deep, deep love, and you can tell this is one of the hardest goodbyes he’s ever had to say.



By the end of the season, Tennant had proved himself worthy and I loved him. Of course, there were a few things that became a little annoying, like the way he always had his eureka moments. “So if Who is on first… and What is…. No No NO!!! Oh GOD,” head up in the air, arms out, spinning around, “NOW I GET IT!” stops spinning, turns to the person he’s talking to… “WHO IS THE NAME OF THE PERSON WHO IS STANDING ON FIRST BASE, DON’T YOU SEE?!” knocks himself in the forehead with his palm “OCH, I can’t believe I didn’t NOTICE this before!"

I may be exaggerating slightly, but this began to irk me by the end of the second season. By the third it became endearing, and by the fourth I would have been sad NOT to have seen it.

I thought Eccleston was a marvel, but Tennant is my new favourite Doctor.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Can I Ax You a Question??

I'm a big fan of Catherine Tate. She's a comic in the UK who had (has?) her own sketch comedy show, and I spent hours watching YouTube clips of her best sketches when I should have been writing books on Lost. About a month ago when I finally watched the season finale of The Office, I was so excited when she was one of the potential managers, and posted my glee on Facebook, saying how much I loved her as a comic.

But now, I'm beginning season 4 of Doctor Who (yes, I owe you guys a bunch of blogs on previous seasons and I hope to do those soon!) I realize that many DW fans must have been chuckling behind their hands at me, knowing something I didn't know... that she would eventually play the Doctor's companion! I was SO HAPPY and already I'm really enjoying her.

But of course, this also casts a new light on this particular sketch that I've watched about half a million times (mostly because I'm fascinated by Tennant's real accent) and that has always made me laugh, not knowing she'd ultimately be a big part of the show. (When this was filmed, she wasn't yet on DW, but I'm wondering if this pairing led to it.)

This is probably Tate's best known character, Lauren, a shit-disturber who's always driving her teachers crazy, always in the same way but tailoring her response to the teacher and the subject he or she is teaching. So watch when she takes on her new English teacher.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Spotted at the Royal Wedding

So this morning I got up at 3am to watch the royal wedding. I wasn't going to. I'm one of those people who doesn't care much for the royal family, and whose mom is a royalist so I've had a lifetime of being annoyed by it. But on Easter weekend I was reminded by aunts talking about it that I'd gotten up at 5am to see Di marry Charles, and maybe it would be kinda cool to do it again. My best friend was getting up at 2:30 this morning, so I thought what the hell... I'd drive down to her place Thursday night, grab a couple of hours of sleep, and we'd watch together. It was awesome fun in the end, even if it was kinda bleary, tired fun. She went all out -- blue and white streamers with the little white bells; wedding confetti all over the coffee table; homemade scones with jam and clotted cream; full English breakfast later in the morning; little plastic tiaras and pearls for us to wear while watching; champagne poured during the kiss. (She's a serious royalist, but you probably figured that out by now.) So it was awesome.

Anyway, at one point in the (poor) CBC coverage, one of the anchors made a comment about how no one alive today was around to see Queen Victoria's coronation. I made a sarcastic remark about how that damn commentator was making a rather general, sweeping statement, and not taking into account time travellers or Doctor Who.

Well, it turns out that Victoria's coronation isn't the only royal event the Doctor has attended at Westminster Abbey. Speak of the devil...



(Via Vanessa Aisha)

UPDATE: After my post went up, one of my readers sent the following evidence, proving my statement the morning of the wedding to be absolutely correct! Thanks for the laugh, Scott. ;)

Saturday, April 09, 2011

Doctor Who: Season 1

Earlier today, I finished watching season 1 of Doctor Who. I first posted months ago that I was going to be watching this as a complete n00b, with almost no background on the show whatsoever. Then I watched the first two episodes, and then the Buffy Rewatch began, so I put the show aside.

But the thing is, I recently acquired a book on Doctor Who for ECW Press, my publisher, and I’ll be editing this book, written by Graeme Burk and Robert Smith?, for next spring. The manuscript is coming in soon, and I don’t want to be spoiled, so I had to redouble my efforts and get back into it. And so, I did. And just as so many people have been telling me for so long, it’s amazing. Mark Askwith at Space told me that Russell T. Davies is a big fan of Joss Whedon and there’s a definite Buffy feel to it, and he was absolutely right. As with Whedon’s work, I can laugh and tear up all in the same scene.

So first, the non-spoilery stuff for those who haven’t yet watched: if you think Doctor Who is too campy (as I previously thought), it’s not. However, many people refer to this as a kid’s show, and I just don’t see my kids watching it just yet. I was told when I started that it’s for ages 6 and up; my daughter is 6, and there are certain moments that I know would terrify her (and not in the good way that kids like to be scared). That said, I think it’s a show my kids could watch at a younger age than Buffy, for sure. Probably around age 8 or 10 would be fine.

But if you’re an adult who thinks Doctor Who is just silly, you’re mistaken. The storylines are incredibly poignant, and even the aliens (no matter how bad) have humanity to them. They might slaughter humans like they’re garbage, but they do care about something... or someone. The relationship between Rose and the Doctor is very close. She loves him, and he her, but it’s not a romantic type of love. They’re closely connected and that connection is one of the best things about the show. The time travel aspect is something that is at once fascinating and heartbreaking, depending on where or when they go. I cried more than once. I cannot wait for season 2.

And now, onto the spoilery stuff. Please stop reading if you haven’t yet watched it.

Now I’m reaching out to the Doctor Who fans out there. I’m dying to discuss this, but since it’s been years since these episodes aired, it’s probably easiest to chat with you than to seek out any old discussions on it. Perhaps I’m going to be way offbase on something – there’s a chance my favourite episodes were the ones most reviled by Doctor Who fans – but on the other hand, I know what I like and don’t like, and so I’m most interested in hearing how my tastes are similar and diverge to everyone else’s. So let’s start.

I already talked about the pilot episode, “Rose,” and “The End of the World.” Both of them were fun and endlessly campy, and I fell in love immediately with the show on the first one. I didn’t like the second one quite as much, but it showed just how far-reaching the time travel could be.

The Unquiet Dead is one where the Doctor and Rose join forces with Charles Dickens, a real-world element I loved. The Gelth – the ethereal creatures that live through the gaslights – were very creepy, and at the end where the girl is instantly killed by them (but appears to be alive) and sacrifices herself for everyone, it’s a poignant moment that signalled to the viewer that, again like Joss Whedon, Davies is not afraid to get us attached to people only to kill them off. As with many characters on the show, there’s a sense that one person can make a difference in history, but many of those heroes are unsung. We read about kings and knights in the history books, but we don’t read about the servant girl who did something extraordinary to affect the world. I really enjoyed this episode (and Simon Callow was a fantastic addition to the show).

The next two episodes weren’t favourites of mine – “Aliens of London” and “World War Three” introduced the Slitheen, a family of aliens who have ingratiated themselves into the British government. The Slitheen are giant rubbery things with three claws at the end of very long arms, and up close when you could see the actors running around in the rubber suits, my husband and I were laughing. When the cameras pulled back and you could see them running at a distance, it was clearly more CGI than in close-up. As I mentioned in the earlier post, my husband grew up watching Doctor Who with his dad... he’s not a hardcore fan – he can’t name episode titles, he doesn’t quote any dialogue, and he hasn’t watched those early episodes in years, but he certainly knows his stuff from growing up with Tom Baker as his Doctor. He seemed to like these two episodes more than I did, but he did add, “Just for the record, I don’t remember farting in the other Doctor Who episodes...”

Now, with him being such a big fan, the next episode was the one that was for him. “Dalek” is the first truly marvellous episode of the series, in my opinion. My husband was excited to see his favourite baddies again, and my only frame of reference for the Dalek was seeing models of them at fan cons, or listening to my husband saying, “Exterminate... EXTERMINATE!!!” So when the Doctor first went into the room to check out the life form the collector asked him to see, and a little blue light came on in the room and a halting screamy voice started, my husband went, “YES!” and I said, “What?” “It’s the Dalek!” The lights slowly come up, and standing there is... a garbage can. “Wait, that’s the most feared thing the Doctor knows? It’s got a whisk and a toilet plunger, how the hell can it hurt anyone?” And then I saw what the Dalek was capable of. Of course, there was a scene where they were running along and hallway and ran into a stairwell, and my husband burst into laughter. “One of the biggest jokes is that the Dalek are the most feared things in the universe, yet you can baffle them with stairs.” And then the Dalek elevated to go up the stairs, and it was crazy creepy. “They couldn’t do THAT in the old series,” my husband said, while I just shivered with just how eerie this thing was. “Does it look the same?” I asked. “Well, it’s more golden... a little shinier than I remember it, but otherwise they have absolutely nailed the voice of it and it looks the same.” “Did they always scream like that?” “Oh yes,” he said. At the end of that episode, when the little goopy octopus thing was revealed to be inside (hubby said to his knowledge we haven’t seen the inside of one, but he said he couldn’t say that with any certainty), it was beautiful. The creature tells Rose to order it to destroy itself, and she at first says no, and then does it, because the Dalek has discovered some humanity within itself, and knows it can’t go on like that. It rises up, the gold balls come off the sides, encircle him, and destroy him. Silence. Then, “They couldn’t do that in the old series, either.” ;) I LOVED the episode, but my husband said he hoped that wasn’t the last of the Dalek. I said I doubted it, if they are that important to the Doctor Who canon.

Next up was The Long Game, another good one with Simon Pegg (yay!!) as The Editor. And as in real life, the editor is pure evil (aren’t all editors pure evil? Hahahaha... OK, if you’re one of my authors, don’t answer that). The corpses working at the consoles were super-creepy, but I thought Pegg made a great campy villain, and the goopy thing on the ceiling (“I call him Max”) was particularly gross. This is one the kids will love.

Father’s Day is an excellent episode that made me consider what I would have done in the same situation. If you could go back to a particular time in your family’s history and change the death of someone, would you? I’ve had a few people in my family die in accidents, and I know if I went back in time to meet them I doubt I’d be able to walk away and let nature take its course. In this episode Rose goes back to the day her father was killed by a car, when she was only a few months old. Her mother had romanticized who her father really was, and Rose finds out he was more of a sleaze than her mom ever let on, but in the end he truly cares about his daughter, and when he discovers this 19-year-old girl is in fact his daughter from the future, he knows what he has to do. On Lost, Miles explained that you can’t change the past, that whatever happened happened, but in this episode when Rose averts the accident, she opens a wound in time that sends in reapers (giant winged creatures) who decide to patch up that wound by basically destroying every living thing in their paths. To save his young family, Rose’s father goes out and sacrifices himself by standing in front of the car, restoring the lives of those who were killed that day. Years later, Rose’s mother would tell her about the day her father died, and that a young woman crouched beside him as he lay dying, but she didn’t know who that girl was. Since the earlier story was that her father had died alone, Rose was able to bring comfort to a situation without altering history, and so there’s a bittersweet ending. It was beautiful. I really loved this episode. And at that point my husband got into another show and kept wanting to watch it instead of Doctor Who, so I watched the next few episodes on my own. And the first one was just... WOW.

The Empty Child is set in 1941 during the Blitz in London, where barrage balloons hang low in the sky and children are starving because their parents have died. During air raids, the children rush into the houses where the inhabitants have rushed into bomb shelters and take a bunch of their food, but one particular group of children is being frightened by a child wearing a gas mask and saying in a haunting voice, “Mummy... are you my mummy? Mummy, I’m here... are you there, Mummy? Muuuuuummmmy.....” He’s about 4, has blond hair, and I swear if my son had a British accent he would sound just like this child. He creeped me out to no end, and I felt like I was on the verge of tears for the entire episode. Nancy, the girl who is the head of the group of children, tells the doctor it’s her little brother Jamie and that he’d died, and you can’t touch him or you’ll become like him. For me the saddest moment was when the Doctor orders everyone to their rooms, and Jamie drops his head like a scolded child and slowly walks away... I just wanted to hug the little guy, and couldn’t bear to watch him walk away alone. Meanwhile Rose has been separated from the Doctor and has met Captain Jack Harkness, who I know from Torchwood already (I only watched the first episode of that show, and didn’t really like it but I’m told I need to watch it within the context of Doctor Who... can someone tell me where season 1 of Torchwood falls in the Doctor Who canon? At what point in watching these episodes would I begin watching Torchwood?) He’s got the hots for her (and pretty much anything else with two legs), and he amazes her with his spaceship and his big gun. Pun intended.

Part 2 of this episode is The Doctor Dances, and together I think these are my favourite episodes of the season (seriously, I can still hear that child’s voice in my head). When they discover the gas masks are fusing themselves to the people’s heads, the group all comes together and are chased through the hospital by the people. There’s a hilarious scene where the Doctor finally refers to his little instrument as his sonic screwdriver, and Captain Jack is aghast that that’s the only weapon he carries through time with him. “Who looks at a screwdriver and says, ‘Hey, this could be more sonic!’??” Later when the Doctor plays a time travelling joke by switching his gun with a banana (you had to have been there), they’re trapped in a room with the batteries worn down on the gun, and Jack saying, “Well, I’ve got a banana, and you could put up a bunch of shelves in a pinch.” This episode was as funny as the previous one was scary. But at the end of the episode, I’ll admit I was reduced to tears when Nancy is cornered by little Jamie in his gasmask, and she admits tearfully that it’s actually her son. When she runs to him and hugs him against her better judgement, her love flowing from herself to him is what cures him and brings him back to life. While sci-fi fans tend to prefer less happy (more realistic) endings, I loved this one, and was right there with the Doctor as he was laughing and leaping around, saying, “Just this ONCE, nobody dies!!” Even Captain Jack appears to be about to die at the very end (right after he rides a bomb in a Dr. Strangelove allusion) and the TARDIS comes to save him. Beautiful two-parter.

Boom Town is next, and once again... the Slitheen. Ugh. I wasn’t very thrilled by it until a moment in the bathroom when the Slitheen women hears another woman talking about her family, and instead of ripping the woman apart, which she’s about to do, she changes her mind, and you can see how sad she is to be the last of her family. This is an episode where good and evil aren’t so clearly separated, and the Doctor accompanies the woman back to her planet where she will be executed without trial. Discussions of who’s better than the other one ensue, and in the end she tries to trick them all, but in a shocking moment, we see that the TARDIS is a life form with a soul, and when she looks into the heart of it, the TARDIS’s telepathic sense reads her thoughts and gives her what she wants – she’s reduced to an egg and allowed to start her life over again. I was glad to have this episode, because it cast a new light on the earlier Slitheen episodes. Although I’ll still be happy if I never see them again.

Next up was Bad Wolf, a slightly cheesy but still very funny episode that was a send-up of British game shows and reality shows, specifically Big Brother, Weakest Link, and Trinny and Susannah. While I personally cannot stand What Not to Wear, my best friend watches the British version of it all the time, and she fills me in on it. So I had the context for that show (and thought it was particularly funny that the android Trinny had small boobs and the android Susannah had much larger ones, just like their human counterparts). I loved that Tanya Branning from EastEnders was in this one as Lynda (OK, yes, I do watch trashy British TV, although I haven’t seen EE in ages), and when Rose was disintegrated I thought she really HAD died, although I muttered to myself out loud, “I could have SWORN she was in the first Tennant season!” but I second-guessed myself and assumed she must be dead. Watching the Doctor’s reaction was very touching, and that’s the moment (if it wasn’t clear by his jealousy with Rose’s relationship with Jack in the previous episodes) when you know how much he loves Rose. This episode ended with the Daleks (YES!) and the Emperor of them all, and I must admit, when you see a bunch of them, they are rather terrifying.

This episode led us into the finale, The Parting of the Ways, where the Doctor sends Rose away and she simply can’t go back to her old life. After having seen what she’s seen, it’s understandable – how could you possibly go back to Council flats and fish and chips after you’ve seen the things she’s seen (cue Roy Batty speech)? Mickey, her former boyfriend, is someone who’s popped up throughout the series as the poor guy left behind, but who will always be waiting for her like a loyal puppy. But in this episode, when Rose tells him there’s absolutely nothing for her there, he knows it’s over. He helps her out of love, and I wonder if we’ll see him again in season 2? He’ll probably still hang out with Jackie for a while, but I don’t know if he will still be a part of her life or not. Rose, like the Slitheen in Boom Town, looks into the eye of the TARDIS, and what she sees... is like a Tralmafadorian in Slaughterhouse-Five. She can suddenly see all of time laid out before her like a plateau of simultaneous acts, and when she emerges from the TARDIS, all glowy-eyed, and Dalek-destroying, I wasn’t sure what the heck was happening. The Doctor kisses her and takes back from her everything that is inside... but that means he can no longer be the Doctor that we know.

Last summer I was at the Polaris convention (which seemed to be 50% about Doctor Who) and had a conversation with Cindy, who posts here as SenexMacDonald, and she was telling me the Doctor regenerated. I’d always thought it was like how they change characters in soap operas: “Today the Doctor will be played by David Tennant” and you just accept it’s the same guy, different actor. But she told me no, it’s much more than that, and a vital part of who he is. Watching the Doctor regenerate at the end of this episode was amazing and sad. I really loved Eccleston a lot – he was my first Doctor, after all – and while I know the fans really love Tennant, I was sad to see him go.

Now, I do have to mention one thing I don’t absolutely love, and that’s Rose. While I think she’s great, and the companion is certainly (for me) a conduit through which the viewer can discover all the things that normally we’d be asking, my husband actually said if she fell into a burning pit of snakes he’d be pretty happy. I said, “Why, she’s not that bad,” and he said he thought she was immensely annoying. As the season went on, I began thinking the same thing. I don’t know if it’s Rose herself, or the actress playing her, or what it is. When I thought she’d been killed in Bad Wolf, I was upset, but that’s more because I was worried about the Doctor’s reaction than anything else.

In any case, I loved this season. The finale was mindblowing, The Empty Child is something that will probably be with me forever, and the poignancy of Father’s Day and Dalek raise it above most other shows on TV right now. I can’t wait to get into S2 now. What did you think of season 1? Please leave comments below and tell me what you thought of these episodes... did you like the Slitheen more than I did? Is The Empty Child a favourite episode of other fans? Please don’t leave any spoilers for future seasons, however... I don’t want to know anything that’s happening in the future.

On to the first Christmas special!!

Thursday, December 02, 2010

The Lost Doctor Who Cold Open

I love this so much I want to marry it. And for everyone who's asked me, yes, I am still watching Doctor Who, but I'm still in season 1 because I'm trying to catch up on so many other shows at the same time! But I'll be back on it soon. Until then, enjoy! I would love to see what colour the sky is in Craig Ferguson's head. ;)

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Doctor Who: My First Foray

So, as I outlined in a recent post, I've decided I'm going to watch the Doctor Who reboot from the first season onward (i.e. from the beginning of the Ninth Doctor) and last night I began. I was told that it would take some getting used to, that I would probably have to stick with it for a few episodes, but eventually I'd like it.

Well... half of that was true. I loved it from the beginning!

"Rose" gives enough backstory to help even the newest of the n00bs. And I'm new. Now, I'll admit I cheated; my husband was sitting on the couch next to me and I was able to fire questions at him throughout. "What's that blue thing he's holding? What does it do? Why is the inside of the TARDIS bigger than the outside? What's the Doctor's name? Does he have a name? OH WAIT A MINUTE! Is that why he's called Doctor Who, because he says he's the Doctor and people say 'Doctor Who'?"

This episode begins in Rose's world. She's just a normal English girl, going to work in a department store until one day she has to drop something off in the basement and suddenly all of the mannequins in storage come to life and start walking toward her. Now, many people said my 6-year-old could watch this with me, but I watched that scene and just pictured her having nightmares for weeks, so I'm glad she wasn't watching with me. It was campy and over-the-top, but hey, Warren built a female robot on Buffy so he could have sex with it -- this wasn't exactly something I hadn't experienced before on TV.

The introduction to the Doctor was awesome; Eccleston is instantly charming and funny, "Nice to meet you, Rose... now run for your life!!!"

I saw the TARDIS for the first time, and heard the noise that my husband said was pretty true to the original series (that grinding noise it makes when it whirs away). We're introduced to Clive, a guy who has a website about the Doctor and seems like a zany conspiracy theorist... if we didn't know he was absolutely right. This is the way Russell T. Davies gets in all of the background on the Doctor to fill in the n00bs, and then we flash back outside to the garbage bin eating Rose's boyfriend. Or, as my husband said, "In order to get eaten by a garbage pail you've really got to do something dumb." (I loved the added effect of the pail burping afterward.)

At first I thought it was a little OTT that Rose doesn't notice her boyfriend is now plastic, but then I thought it was really funny... the guy's a tool, totally boring, and annoying. She almost dies in an explosion and he comes by to make sure she's ok before heading off to the pub to watch a football match. Winner.

Best line comes from Rose: "If you're an alien, how come you sound like you're from the North?" HAHA! Doctor responds: "Lots of planets have Norths!" Brilliant.

About three-quarters of the way through the ep (we were now in the warehouse with the giant goopy plastic gobby mess talking) my husband said, "This is campier than the original series." I just stared at him and said no, I didn't think so (from the minute here, minute there that I'd ever seen, this wasn't nearly as OTT) but he insists it is. What do you guys think?

My favourite moment was at the end, when the London Eye was starting to be filled with electricity and the Doctor yelled, "It's the end of the world!!" I just thought, ah... as a faithful Buffy viewer I heard that line about three times a season, and I cannot TELL you how warm and fuzzy it makes me feel to hear it again. I welcome, um, whatever the plural of apocalypse is. It feels like home again.

Episode 2, The End of the World, is where Rose finds out just how dangerous her new traveling companion is. He says, "Where do you want to go? Into the past or into the future?" I immediately looked at my husband and asked what he would do. Without a moment's hesitation he said, "I'd go to the 70s and see the Velvet Underground play in New York... then to the 80s to see the Smiths play a small place in Manchester." Meanwhile I'd been thinking I'd go to Bono's high school in 1976 and be there the moment U2 was formed.

God, sometimes I think we're just pathetic. I could go back in time and see one of history's great events or talk to Virginia Woolf or warn Oscar Wilde not to go through with the defamation trial or see my grandparents as children... but no, we just want to go see rock stars before they were famous.

Anyway.

So Rose says let's go into the future and show me something interesting, and he takes her 5 billion years into the future where they're going to watch the Earth come to an end once and for all. Wow. They're on an alien spaceship and she sees all of these creatures enter the place -- crazy music is playing and it feels like the Star Wars cantina -- and the episode was definitely filled with funny moments. They roll in a jukebox and say that humans called this an iPod, and it played the music of the greatest composers of the day... a record drops and it's Tainted Love (the second time I heard that song that day, actually, since it was also on Being Human when I'd been watching it earlier). Then as the Earth begins to crumble, one of them says, "Let us mourn the Earth with a traditional ballad," and Britney Spears' "Toxic" begins playing... HAHA!!! SO funny.

This episode begins the intrigue of where the Doctor came from. One of the tree people discovers he's a Time Lord, and he reveals that he's the last of his race after some sort of war. This was exciting. The special effects were better in this one, and while it had its funny moments (including a bad Michael Jackson joke about too much plastic surgery that just seemed to have lost something watching it now) and it's over-the-topness (the "last human" is one that's had 780 facelifts and is now nothing but a sheet of skin with some capillaries stretched out like a canvas), it ended with some profound thoughts of life and death, of mortality and leaving your mark on the world. We all want to be remembered, but some day this will all be gone. As Rose stands on the edge of oblivion, it suddenly makes her feel very small and insignificant. It was a very powerful ending.

So whoo!! I'm so glad I'm liking this, and now, on to the next one!!

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Doctor... Who?

OK. So. One of those things that I'm constantly told is seriously destroying any geek credibility I ever thought I had is the fact that I've never watched Doctor Who. And I mean never. Like, as a kid it would air on PBS and my brother and I would be flipping channels (and by flipping I mean turning the knob) and we'd come across Doctor Who on Channel 2, and we'd always go, "Ew," and continue turning the channels. There was always some alien with neon flashing lights and things that looked like air ducts for arms... pretty much only a sidestep away from the technology of Yo Gabba Gabba. It didn't attract me as a kid, and it doesn't attract me now.

But then, several years ago Russell T. Davies reimagined the series and it was relaunched. I lasted about 5 minutes into the first episode with Christopher Eccleston before asking my husband why the trashcans were talking. I got one of THOSE LOOKS and I got up to go do something else.

And so, time has passed, Eccleston has given way to Tennant who passed the torch to Smith. Yeah, I know WHO the doctors are, I just don't know what they're doing.

At the Polaris event I attended a couple of weeks ago, there were several people dressed in Doctor Who outfits, and they looked fabulous. The best was one woman dressed as someone I was told was a Weeping Angel from an episode called Blink, an ep that I was told would blow my mind if I saw it. I've been intrigued to see the show long before Polaris -- I already had the first two series on DVD, still in the plastic wrap and waiting for me to finish the book -- but seeing these costumes and watching the passion with which people talked about the show intrigued me even more.

I know that Davies was hugely influenced by Joss Whedon. A friend of mine from Space told me that I had to watch the show because it was very Buffy-like, with season-long arcs featuring smaller stories in between. I recently read an article where Davies basically said screw Twilight, it was the genius of Joss Whedon that started the vampire craze and people need to thank him for it (he kinda became a hero of mine when I read that).

At Polaris I talked to my friend Cindy, who explained that the Doctor actually regenerates from one body to the next. I was surprised -- I just thought it was a James Bond type of thing. No one notices that Bond looks like Roger Moore one minute, Sean Connery the next. They change actors on soap operas all the time playing the same character. So why would the Doctor be any different? I was fascinated to learn it was completely different. It sounded like a Cylon resurrection thing to me.

And so... I've decided I'm going to give it another go. And I'm going to track my progress on here. I'm someone who doesn't have a "Doctor," another bit of lingo I've heard recently where your Doctor is the one you grew up with (my husband's is Tom Baker... he was a huge fan of the original series). I know that tiny phone box is important somehow, I just don't know why. I think the theme music is wicked. And hey, I loved Xena, so I'm up for camp.

So I'm going to post my experience as someone who knows nothing, because I really don't know a thing. You can sit back and laugh and point at me, and hope that I'll eventually catch on, and maybe I'll get to a point where I'm actually learning and we can really discuss the show. I was talking to a friend of mine recently who is British and I told him that it seems every British person watches Doctor Who the way we watched Sesame Street or the nightly news... it's just something you do, no question. Here Doctor Who isn't as widely watched, and is considered sci-fi. He said he has friends who despise sci-fi but they've watched Doctor Who all their lives, and consider it to be something else. It's a deeply British thing.

So, I'm about to jump on the bandwagon. Or... Dalek. Or Tardis. I don't know which is which. Is the Tardis his spaceship? Oh wait, it's TARDIS, isn't it? My husband can rattle off the acronym (I remember "Time" so I've got one word down). Sigh. It's gonna be a long journey, isn't it? Here's hoping I enjoy it!! ;) Wish me luck.