Thursday 30 June 2011

Doctor Who: mid-season musings

Well, we’ve fallen into the gap between the two halves of this season of Doctor Who, so it’s a pretty good time to consider what’s going to happen next. Naturally, spoilers for the first half of the season abound, and rumours regarding the future likewise.

The mid-season finale was slightly disappointing in that the rather lovely Lorna and the amusing Strax ended up mortally wounded. In a not-very-surprising twist River Song was revealed to be the offspring of Amy and Rory, and was probably the kiddiwink seen in the first two episodes of the season. She also has some Time Lord DNA and is able to, at least partially, regenerate.

The actual ending was slightly strange. The Doctor ran off in the TARDIS, leaving his companions and River behind, searching for young River. At the end of the episode it showed a skeleton at the bottom of a body of water, clutching a sonic screwdriver.

The Doctor’s ‘death’ in episode 1 also needs to be explained. The most obvious solution is that the ganger Doctor gets reconstituted and allows himself to be killed. That said, the real Doctor could do that, and fake Doctor could be made permanent (this could provide a handy get-out clause for the 13 incarnations limit Time Lords have, although this is more of a law of man than nature [see: The Deadly Assassin]).

The first half of the season was generally good, especially the excellent first two episodes, though the finale was a little lacking in tension. There are rumours that Rory and Amy will leave the Doctor at the end of the season, presumably to look after the young version of River.

Matt Smith should be around for another few seasons at least, (I think he’s guaranteed to be there in 2012, and maybe 2013). It’d be good if they got him a companion (or two) from the past instead of a modern day girl. Well. That, or Sally Sparrow, obviously.

It also appears that Moffat’s taking a different line to RTD regarding the daleks. Specifically, they’re going to be used less often, which I think is a damned good thing. They’re great villains, but were being over-used. I hope that the increasingly overblown season finales get binned too. Dobby the House Doctor was not a good look.

Lastly, 2012 is going to see fewer episodes. The BBC first claimed this was because Moffat, who also writes Sherlock, was too busy, a claim the man himself refuted in plain terms quite quickly : http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-13784334

Thaddeus

2 comments:

  1. Have you read the last couple of issues of Private Eye? Basically they're saying that the reason for the series split this year and probably only a few specials next year is behind the scenes chaos with the management team and random budget cuts meaning they can't afford to make as many episodes and are running behind on the episodes they can make. It all sounds rather too familiar an exercise in golden egg laying goose slaying to those of us old enough to remember the Michael Grade years:-/

    As for the Daleks, it's certainly true they've suffered from a particularly severe case of villain decay. If they're going to come back, and be worth watching, I thing they really need a victory to demonstrate why they're supposed to be so dangerous. Not something offscreen with people tutting over news reports, but an actual full-on Doctor barely escaping with his life in a damaged tardis with dead assistants sort of victory. Frankly too it would do the Doctor some good to have his clock cleaned at least once.

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  2. I'm somewhat aware of what happened last time, and agree it seems bizarre given the popularity of New Who.

    I've not read Private Eye for a few years now.

    I think you ought to get a job writing a season finale.

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