andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2010-04-18 10:35 pm
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Dr Who
I actually liked it quite a lot - except for one bit.
I've basically plonked the Moffat Dr Who as "Well written kid's TV" - more obviously so than RTDs - and thus I don't require things to make _actual_ sense, just to be vaguely internally consistent to the same level as, say, fairy-tales.
This being the case I could have done with a bloody explanation of why having the android recall his human side would any effect on his blowing up! Spitfires in Space, though, I was fine with. Possibly this was because I'd seen them in the trailer though.
Julie, on the other hand, just wanted Ms Pond to stab the Dr with a flagpole and then steal the box to have adventures by herself. Heck, she could even pick up a companion of her own if she fancied it.
I've basically plonked the Moffat Dr Who as "Well written kid's TV" - more obviously so than RTDs - and thus I don't require things to make _actual_ sense, just to be vaguely internally consistent to the same level as, say, fairy-tales.
This being the case I could have done with a bloody explanation of why having the android recall his human side would any effect on his blowing up! Spitfires in Space, though, I was fine with. Possibly this was because I'd seen them in the trailer though.
Julie, on the other hand, just wanted Ms Pond to stab the Dr with a flagpole and then steal the box to have adventures by herself. Heck, she could even pick up a companion of her own if she fancied it.
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And regarding the non-explosion, I was prepared to buy that the robot's state of mind is capable of influencing his functioning -- he basically didn't explode through self-hypnosis. Kind of wacky, but arguably he's a sufficiently complex machine to pass as human, so he can have psychosomatic non-exploding.
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Anyhoo, as for the guy not blowing up, I thought it was to do with that "thing" that needed proof that the daleks were daleks. It being told he was a human meant he wasn't a bomb and couldn't blow up. I don't know though, that's just how my mind explained it to me.
I'm the luckiest person in the world. There are 2 David Tennant episodes I have never seen. The specials from last year as I was still sentimentally avoiding it then. Plus I didn't pay a lot of attention to the 2008 xmas one either cos it was xmas so even that's almost new.
I'm probably going to carry on watching this series though, just because I enjoy moaning.
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At least Moffat managed to write a farewell scene that didn't take a third of the damn episode; though the real test of that will be next fortnight's two parter.
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Like exactly the opposite. This is the first of the new series that felt like it was at least furtively struggling towards entertaining and intriguing the adults.
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That's what I think! It seems to be unpopular in Who fandom, but I do like a good moan.
Also I find a lot of episodes are much better when I watch them *after* knowing the Big Thing of the season finale, because I can forgive certain types of gubbins if it's going somewhere.
btw, as for the recent Specials, the Mars one is good but the desert one is awful.
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Gatiss seems much better at writing dark comedy (i.e. League of Gentlemen) rather than Dr Who (this is only his third episode after The Unquiet Dead and The Idiot Lantern). I don't mind the tendency the new series seems to have towards asking the audience to suspend their disbelief just that little bit more than before, but Gatiss went just a bit too far with the inconsistencies this time.
Still, if that's the filler in the series, then overall it'll be a good year. Angels next week :)
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And I totally agree. If that's the worst it's going to get, then I'm going to be very happy!
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'We need to disconnect him from the Dalek network. He needs to believe he's human!' (because then the two approaches the Dctor and Amy took make sense, and you've a nice observation that the Doctor doesn't know what it means to be human, really. His method doesn't work. His emotional range is limited to nostalgia and loss).
'Well, I did have three prototypes built... but is three enough?' Or as has been suggested elsewhere, have Churchill send the android back in time to give him the time to make the Spitfires.
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I did laugh at the subtle symbolism of MoffatDaleks blasting RustyDaleks to pieces to signal the New Era. 11 hasn't really come into focus yet, but he's made the top five of non-annoying Doctors so far, which is a start.
I could have done with a bloody explanation of why having the android recall his human side would any effect on his blowing up
It's the Power of Heart, unfortunately.