Doctor Who
May. 5th, 2007 11:30 pmThree entries in two days! My word!
I watched Doctor Who today. I've been putting off watching it because I missed a couple and wanted to catch up, but I sort of figured I was home and bored and not watching was just creating a backlog, and hey, I LIKE Doctor Who.
It was all right, I guess.
I didn't find the Doctor offensive this week so much as...bland? Like, watch as I work it all out - it's yet again some bad-guy being selfish, there's usually something about power sources (I swear, any bad guy on this show, the limiting factor nearly always power sources, and the motivating factor is money 50% of the time and selfish escape from something the other 50%). So anyway, there's this selfish bad guy who's all about the power sources and the Doctor distracts him by moralising at him. And it's not so much that I even disagree with his moralising. Everything dies. You can't hang on. It's a powerful and important message. But hearing David Tennant over-animate it like he's had one too many red bulls for breakfast somehow renders it ordinary and I stop listening.
Though the slap was a bonus.
One of the things I appreciate about this series is the time it's taking for the Doctor to "get over" Rose. Not because I'm particularly attached to that as any kind of "ship" but because of the way they played the relationship - it really was the first time in the history of Who they'd played up that sort of thing (they didn't even do it with Romana, really). And if they didn't take time and keep in oblique references to Rose - if the suggestion was that his relationship with her was typical - it could be lend a very manipulative and dark tone to the whole thing. So kudos to them on that, and it was nice to see Martha stand up for herself and demand full companion status.
Curiously, the dark, manipulative aspect of the Doctor is what Martha's Ma seems to be getting at. I'm...uncertain, though, and this could be because I missed a few episodes and haven't caught up yet. But I keep feeling that - as much as these things can be addressed in what is, essentially, a kids' show - the dangers of being the Doctor's companion, and the way his relationship with both Rose and Martha could, in some ways, be characterised as manipulative, is something worthy of discussion. But Martha's Ma's worry kind of loses its melodrama because I don't actually believe she knows something about the Doctor that I don't. I mean, I feel for her and stuff because her kid is out galavanting with a really dodgy-seeming dude, but that's different from generating suspense and drama.
So...yes. I am curious.
And looking forward to the inevitable love triangle that will crop up when Captain Jack returns. That trailer did look hella cool.
Signing off, because it is late and I am tired.
I watched Doctor Who today. I've been putting off watching it because I missed a couple and wanted to catch up, but I sort of figured I was home and bored and not watching was just creating a backlog, and hey, I LIKE Doctor Who.
It was all right, I guess.
I didn't find the Doctor offensive this week so much as...bland? Like, watch as I work it all out - it's yet again some bad-guy being selfish, there's usually something about power sources (I swear, any bad guy on this show, the limiting factor nearly always power sources, and the motivating factor is money 50% of the time and selfish escape from something the other 50%). So anyway, there's this selfish bad guy who's all about the power sources and the Doctor distracts him by moralising at him. And it's not so much that I even disagree with his moralising. Everything dies. You can't hang on. It's a powerful and important message. But hearing David Tennant over-animate it like he's had one too many red bulls for breakfast somehow renders it ordinary and I stop listening.
Though the slap was a bonus.
One of the things I appreciate about this series is the time it's taking for the Doctor to "get over" Rose. Not because I'm particularly attached to that as any kind of "ship" but because of the way they played the relationship - it really was the first time in the history of Who they'd played up that sort of thing (they didn't even do it with Romana, really). And if they didn't take time and keep in oblique references to Rose - if the suggestion was that his relationship with her was typical - it could be lend a very manipulative and dark tone to the whole thing. So kudos to them on that, and it was nice to see Martha stand up for herself and demand full companion status.
Curiously, the dark, manipulative aspect of the Doctor is what Martha's Ma seems to be getting at. I'm...uncertain, though, and this could be because I missed a few episodes and haven't caught up yet. But I keep feeling that - as much as these things can be addressed in what is, essentially, a kids' show - the dangers of being the Doctor's companion, and the way his relationship with both Rose and Martha could, in some ways, be characterised as manipulative, is something worthy of discussion. But Martha's Ma's worry kind of loses its melodrama because I don't actually believe she knows something about the Doctor that I don't. I mean, I feel for her and stuff because her kid is out galavanting with a really dodgy-seeming dude, but that's different from generating suspense and drama.
So...yes. I am curious.
And looking forward to the inevitable love triangle that will crop up when Captain Jack returns. That trailer did look hella cool.
Signing off, because it is late and I am tired.