Sea Devils And Die: GeroniMoffat's Doctor Who In The 2010s

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I liked the Nestene copy of Rory being wrong but not sure how it works that it had all Amy's memories/knowledge of him yet still had him being a Roman.

the photo of him in Roman drag (with her in police stripper drag) let it make this mistake I guess

how much can a koala ˁ˚ᴥ˚ˀ (sic), Monday, 28 June 2010 06:17 (fourteen years ago) link

well yeah, but Amy's knowledge is that he's a guy from Wales who once dressed up as a Roman so why did this contradicting "information" win. I could probably do with watching the whole thing again tbh.

Not the real Village People, Monday, 28 June 2010 06:37 (fourteen years ago) link

Nestene was in a hurry?

^ credited apologist I guess
I s'pose I am prepared to make excuses for the holes in Moffatt's handwaves bcz I want to hold onto the enjoyment I have while watching it, whereas with RTD the hole swould leap out at you, fart in your face, and make the BIG ROMP elements too hollow and unearned to even enjoy while they were going on

how much can a koala ˁ˚ᴥ˚ˀ (sic), Monday, 28 June 2010 07:01 (fourteen years ago) link

Kind of feel the opposite - that RTD's "this is all big fun nonsense, woohoo!" was fine for me, but SM's plots almost make sense, which just makes them more disappointing in the areas they don't.

JimD, Monday, 28 June 2010 07:23 (fourteen years ago) link

ok but you know that probably every time travel story ever written does not make sense (and not in a 'time travel is impossible duh' way)...

postcards from the (ledge), Monday, 28 June 2010 08:30 (fourteen years ago) link

http://www.philosophypress.co.uk/?p=866

postcards from the (ledge), Monday, 28 June 2010 08:31 (fourteen years ago) link

hmm. doesn't 12 Monkeys sidestep this problem?

Nhex, Monday, 28 June 2010 08:46 (fourteen years ago) link

yeah that's a 'you cannae change anything' kinda story, perhaps my 'every time travel story ever' was a slight exaggeration.

postcards from the (ledge), Monday, 28 June 2010 08:48 (fourteen years ago) link

Worst year ever. cbf saying anything more, not worth it. Just awful.

Gary Sizzle (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 28 June 2010 09:06 (fourteen years ago) link

I think Matt Smith blows David Tennant out of the water, and that alone is enough for me to call this season the best of the new series. The stories weren't as strong as, say, season three's, but I preferred this season's evenness and subtlety to the mawkishness and abysmal lows of the RTD seasons.

the girl from spirea x (f. hazel), Monday, 28 June 2010 09:39 (fourteen years ago) link

but you know that probably every time travel story ever written does not make sense

It wasn't those bits I had a problem with though, it was more then clunky "recreating the universe using molecules from a box plus, er, someone's ability to remember stuff" etc that felt disappointing. I mean, that's an RTD style explanation right there. And like I said, coming from RTD it's fine, but from SM that's disappointing.

I don't want to side with the h8rs though, I liked it!

JimD, Monday, 28 June 2010 10:03 (fourteen years ago) link

I think it fitted the show's logic fine. Rusty would have introduced such ideas unheralded, but Moffat has been dropping hints and setting all this up for 13 weeks, avoiding the dreaded Deus Ex Machina.
Doctor Who is not hard SF and nor should it be. Some anal spod on the Guardian blog was citing Asimov's comment that SF was ruined when it mainstream, which is bollocks. Anyway, who cares about Asimov's dreadfully written, deeply boring and reactionary Utopian science fictions with their tedious adherence to rules and laws. Gimme the magic, fun, excitement and IMAGINATION of Doctor Who over such joyless tosh.
I guess I'm one of these people who is attracted to SF not so much for the science but for the imaginative and fantastical elements. I also love the gothic and uncanny, which is something this series has done superbly. I'm hoping the gothic elements will be carried through - Gaiman could do great things with it. Would love to see Moorcock and Mieville scripting some episodes too.

Count Palmiro Vicarion (Stew), Monday, 28 June 2010 10:29 (fourteen years ago) link

i really liked the pandorica-ex-machina business but that's mostly because i am fascinated by
* the big crunch theory (it is somehow more reassuring than the eventual heat death of the universe)
* stuff that exists OUTSIDE TIME (when i was little and was trying to imagine god/heaven, that's what i imagined, a thing that was simultaneously in all times at once but also outside time entirely)

popol vuvuzela (c sharp major), Monday, 28 June 2010 11:14 (fourteen years ago) link

So now I am watching that Orbital thing on the youtubes (thank you Leee) and thinking that if M. Smith knows Orbital exist then why hasn't he just shot Murray Gold already please

atoms breaking heart (a passing spacecadet), Monday, 28 June 2010 13:25 (fourteen years ago) link

ok murray gold isn't fit to drink orbital's wee, but still i don't think either of them do great things with the theme. murray treats it as a regular tv theme, orbital treat it as a slice of standard techno. neither of them deal with the avant-garde aspect of it.

postcards from the (ledge), Monday, 28 June 2010 13:39 (fourteen years ago) link

the final episode in the current series of Doctor Who had only moderate success.

Saturday's series finale was seen by an average of 5.1 million people - down on the 8 million who watched new Doctor Matt Smith's debut in April.

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Monday, 28 June 2010 14:24 (fourteen years ago) link

Yeah, I will admit that "Doctor?" was pretty disappointing on the first many listens, because Orbital + Doctor Who Theme sounded like it should be next-level amazing etc and really it was just a kind of tinny "well, there it is... oh, it ended", but still, when Murray Gold came along with his over-loud orchestral whatnot the Orbital version suddenly seemed like a good thing after all

(I do not mind it being a "slice of standard techno" at all, but techno at its best is propulsive, dark, cosmic, shimmering - all adjectives that go pretty well with the original theme, so why does combining the two seem to fall short on all of these? but STILL, ugh Murray Gold)

atoms breaking heart (a passing spacecadet), Monday, 28 June 2010 14:44 (fourteen years ago) link

Saturday's series finale was seen by an average of 5.1 million people - down on the 8 million who watched new Doctor Matt Smith's debut in April.

Wasn't Saturday the hottest day of the year so far? I don't think even Matt Smith's charisma can compete with that.

trishyb, Monday, 28 June 2010 14:50 (fourteen years ago) link

There is - who would have guessed! - much back and forth on fan sites over the ratings. Ppl who didn't like this series say "it's doomed", people who did like it say "overnights don't matter any more". Neither are right IMO. Doctor Who *has* become an interesting test case for how TV watching is changing. Episodes have been getting an extra 1-2m from TV on demand (catch up, Tivo style devices, etc.), another 1.5m on iplayer (it's easily the most popular iplayer thing ever), and even without iplayer the final ratings hold up pretty well at 7m or so per episode.

But it's also true that they got a really big UK audience for "Eleventh Hour" and it dropped off pretty quickly - the in-series ratings decline is surely steeper than they'd like, hot weather or not. And they won't want the 'media narrative' around the show to become 'not as good as it used to be'. It might be that next year is a bit less ultra-connected than this year was.

IDK, it's all a bit academic - loved the show this year, more into it than I've been since the Eccleston series, but in the end the BBC will stick with it as long as they do and that's that. What's pretty definite is that they realise how important the brand is - so they won't let it degrade the way it did in the 80s, they'll axe it earlier and revive it earlier.

Groke, Monday, 28 June 2010 15:09 (fourteen years ago) link

I loved this but 'end of the universe' = stakes are too high and that makes it difficult to actually care about because there's no way you can do it without pressing a reset switch and reset switches are lame. The first bit with the time travel knotted together was fantastic though. Loved the Doctor wearing a fez as well.

Can't work out where the Doctor was supposed to have gone between putting Amy in the Pandorica and turning up at the museum. How much time was supposed to have elapsed in his own personal timeline?

So is this a new universe and a new Rory/Amy/River with the old ones' memories? Or has everything just been put back as it was before things started cracking? Has all that RTD-era stuff happened or not? Does this universe have Timelords in it? Very confusing.

I absolutely wet myself when Matt Smith turned up with Orbital, it took a couple of minutes to twig what was happening and then it was like "fucking hell, that's so obvious and yet brilliant". One of those priceless festival moments.

Vulvuzela (Matt DC), Monday, 28 June 2010 21:46 (fourteen years ago) link

Actually the bit with the Dalek begging for mercy and River showing none was great as well. We're going to get the River origin story next year, right?

Vulvuzela (Matt DC), Monday, 28 June 2010 21:48 (fourteen years ago) link

Can't work out where the Doctor was supposed to have gone between putting Amy in the Pandorica and turning up at the museum. How much time was supposed to have elapsed in his own personal timeline?

Presumably none, the universe is mostly erased so it's not like he can go fannying off for a while and have adventures on Alpha Centauri with big-eyed chicks.

how much can a koala ˁ˚ᴥ˚ˀ (sic), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 00:03 (fourteen years ago) link

He was at Glastonbury. We have video.

VegemiteGrrrl, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 00:53 (fourteen years ago) link

wrong coat, did Flesh And Stone teach you nothing?

how much can a koala ˁ˚ᴥ˚ˀ (sic), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 02:16 (fourteen years ago) link

Timey-Wimey? (my new explanation for anything I can't explain)

VegemiteGrrrl, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 02:27 (fourteen years ago) link

Boo on River + Pond blowing up the fez.

I laughed so hard at this I watched it a couple times in a row.

Best Who finale in millennia. Best thing I can say is that I want to watch a new episode right now.

Elvis Telecom, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 04:15 (fourteen years ago) link

"It's a fez. I wear a fez now. Fezes are cool." *yank*

Don Homer (kingfish), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 05:48 (fourteen years ago) link

"i wear a fez now" was perfectly delivered, prob. my favorite moment.

it sucks and you all love something that sucks (reddening), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 06:44 (fourteen years ago) link

Watched this earlier tonight whilst beginning the arduous process of boxing up 6 years of books to move across town. Thought it had many great moments. I liked that there were clever with some of the time-jumping(ref to the Moff-created Harkness debut?), but it never got *cute*.

I missed the line about him being the stag dancer, which is awesome. Did hear Rory's offhand muttering to her mother "I was plastic..."

Other bits: Rory standing guard thru 2,000 years only to pop up as a guard in a new uniform, the dalek stand-off, the Doctor waking up on the floor of the tardis("Oh! uh. okay."), the fact that we now have a married couple as companions.

One thing I am wondering about if they'll keep the character growth despite any possible reset/forgetting. Rory went from a RTD-standard sexless wishy-washy extra/S.O. to actually becoming a Roman officer, being able to blast at a Dalek, standing watch for that long, surviving the Blitz, etc. One of the things that pissed me off about the ending of the last full season(and we complained on it on here, iirc) is that Donna went from just a bleah mundane to having a much greater sense of power and ability, only to get that growth wiped out.

Hopping around with the Doctor and getting blasted at and eaten and usually disintegrated a couple times and always saving the universe over the course of a companionship would change and grow a person(even if they're just increasingly horrified and split, Tegan-style). Seems kinda bullshit to wipe that out, but we'll see how they do next year.

Don Homer (kingfish), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 07:16 (fourteen years ago) link

Yeah surely this is the same River if nothing else, because future River has already seen him after the Pandorica incident. In the same universe. I suppose the only way this can work is that nothing was reset, just put back where it should have been. But then how to explain Amy initial Doctor adventures, without her parents? Argh. Think Moffatt's been a bit too clever for his own good here.

Vulvuzela (Matt DC), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 08:05 (fourteen years ago) link

loved the shrinking universe feel (very Final Crisis #7, for comics ppl)

OTM, I was thinking the same thing! Also, the Doctor saving earth by travelling into the heart of the sun -- isn't that All-Star Superman?

Thought that was a terrific conclusion, right up there with Blink/Fireplace etc. Almost metal. I thought what Tom politely calls the "sense-making elements" were all good and proper. And KG (finally!) totally stepped up the emotional moments in the last act.

Chuck_Tatum, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 09:10 (fourteen years ago) link

I think the "That's a fairytale"/"Aren't we all" Doctor/River dialogue in Flesh and Stone is kind of meant to foreshadow the reset button but yes it makes very little sense. You end up having to assume the River in that story remembers a completely different version of the Pandorica storyline that happened in the cracking-but-not-yet-collapsed universe the Angels story (and all of episodes 1-12 at least) is set in. Which takes you into BRAINFAIL.

Groke, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 10:20 (fourteen years ago) link

I think the assumption has to be that River/Amy/Rory remember everything that happened throughout the last series, and they remember the additional details (ducks, stars, new parents) as well. It doesn't work otherwise.

Vulvuzela (Matt DC), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 10:21 (fourteen years ago) link

Rory protecting the Pandorica for 2000 years was a great moment by the way. Wish they'd kept him as a good Auton, it was cool.

Vulvuzela (Matt DC), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 10:22 (fourteen years ago) link

That's certainly the case for Amy and Rory and there's no problem with that - it all happened. River is the problem because she's asynchronous to the rest of the cast, so it's not a case of her 'remembering' the Byzantium, it hasn't happened to her yet. Fine, you say, it never can happen to her, except she mentions the bloody thing in Silence In The Library.

Basically Moffat's two clever storylines have tangled up a bit. Which doesn't spoil my enjoyment of it all one tiny bit, and is fun to think about, but is a HERE BE DRAGONS for the continuity police...

Groke, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 10:27 (fourteen years ago) link

Yeah I meant the later River rather than the one from the end of this series.

This shit must be fucking confusing for children. Wouldn't be surprised if Moffatt toned it down for the next series.

Vulvuzela (Matt DC), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 10:30 (fourteen years ago) link

I think for a certain type of kid it'll be incredibly exciting. I remember going "WHOA MIND BLOWN" when I was 8 and watching some of the complicated stuff they had going on at the end of the Baker/start of the Davison eras, which is probably why this season really resonated with me in a way that the last few didn't. Where they have to get the balance kidwise is appealing to that kid, and the kid who wants to see the monsters, and the one who wants to be scared, and the one who wants Amy and Rory to be happy... but generally I think children like mysterious stuff going down, even if they're tuning out the details and focusing on the exploding TARDIS or the Stone Dalek.

Groke, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 10:43 (fourteen years ago) link

I dunno, I wouldn't have thought this was too confusing, especially as the episode seemed to be bracketed up into a dozen little mini-stories, each with their own resolution. Also, isn't it the plot holes in the peripheries that are the fascinating bits? That's the stuff you actually remember.

Chuck_Tatum, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 10:46 (fourteen years ago) link

If you get the imagery right you can get away with murder, sense-making wise. The most timey-wimey old Who story was Warrior's Gate, which I saw as a nipper, didn't understand the narrative of, but the robot axemen, time-shifting lion men, etc absolutely stayed with me and I remembered the story very fondly.

Groke, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 10:50 (fourteen years ago) link

My friend's five year old (a Who nut) loved the finale, although he said 'it was quite confusing'. But yeah, I don't think kids mind being confused. And there was so much cool stuff for them to focus on. He went berzerk when the Alliance turned up. 'Cybermen? Daleks?! SONTARANS!!!' (he loves Sontarans). The odd nerd moaned that 'oh the Cybermen and Daleks would never team up', but if the Tories and Lib Dems can... Joking apart, why not? That sort of joyless nitpicking takes all the fun out of it. And setting up the Alliance only to have them play no part in the Big Bang was a nice touch, subverting the RTD finale mode. Making a single Cyberman and Dalek threatening was a great achievement.

Count Palmiro Vicarion (Stew), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:06 (fourteen years ago) link

We're going to get the River origin story next year, right?

I am so over origin stories. I'd like to see more stories I don't already know the conclusion to, thanks.

trishyb, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:09 (fourteen years ago) link

much better if River remains a little mysterious.

American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:12 (fourteen years ago) link

I'd like to learn about her eventually, but they could keep up the intrigue for at least another series and I'd be quite happy.

rhythm fixated member (chap), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:18 (fourteen years ago) link

Kids are perpetually confused, so they handle it much better than adults. They can just write chunks off as "confusing stuff" and move on.

The problem with too much made-for-kids stuff is trying to remove all the possibility forbconfusion, which makes it dull for adults and leaves kids unstretched. I think Moffatt gets this, so even episodes that are very kid-focused (like the first one) will take sudden zigzags into the strange.

stet, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:28 (fourteen years ago) link

I was often confused by Doctor Who as a kid (Ghostlight, anyone?). Loved it all the same.

rhythm fixated member (chap), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:29 (fourteen years ago) link

Also, you know, kids will fill in the blanks with their own interpretation, and (lucky them) don't yet understand the concept of 'canon', etc. Also, surely the story wasn't THAT confusing?

To get back to the episode, though, wasn't it a fucking cracker? Surprised to see so much internet grumbling (or maybe not). Haven't watched a single episode on telly, though (all iPlayer and t0rrents).

Can Aldo come back now, too?

Chuck_Tatum, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:42 (fourteen years ago) link

Am now rewatching the whole series from the start, picking up on new bits and bobs that I didn't notice before, and that feed into the finale. Also makes me wish they could somehow have both adult and child Amys as simultaneous companions. Maybe a child Amy from a parallel universe, as otherwise adult Amy would remember it all from being a kid.

Ghostlight was simple in plot, pretentious in aim, and ultimately shit for that

Britain's Obtusest Shepherd (Alan), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:53 (fourteen years ago) link

Oh, ten year old me didn't have the foggiest what was going on in Ghostlight, but loved the atmosphere of the thing.

rhythm fixated member (chap), Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:56 (fourteen years ago) link

That's exactly what 32 year old me made of it too.

JimD, Tuesday, 29 June 2010 11:58 (fourteen years ago) link


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