Saturday, November 30, 2013

Doctor Who Reaction: 50th Anniversary "The Day of The Doctor"

By: Steven Moffat

**Spoilers**
If you have not yet seen this episode, please go and do so before proceeding.

              Doctor Who is the longest-running sci-fi show in all of television history. It's unique design and set-up make it perfectly suited to running as long as people are willing to keep making it. For many it is a lifestyle - dictating favourite quotes, teaching morals, and reminding us of history and literature. This year on November 23rd this extraordinary show celebrated its 50th birthday with a special episode created just for the momentous occasion. I watched it and it is only now that I find myself able to quite put my thoughts to paper.
                 
               So was this episode everything that it was built up to be? No - of course not! Nothing ever can live up to the hype and expectations. That's just humanly impossible. Did it do its job of celebrating the anniversary of a cultural phenomena that has lasted half a century? You bet it did!

             I love that we actually got to see the 10/Elizabeth I wedding that has been alluded to so many times over the years (even if I did think that the resolution of her arc was a bit rushed) and I was so, so excited to see the pictures of Susan Foreman, not to mention the fact that Clara was teaching at her former school. I squealed like a little girl whenever the titles started up (and whenever 10 put on the fez) and had a soppy grin on my face the whole way through.


What I liked:

- Rose Tyler (or rather: Bad Wolf) was AMAZING! Whenever I first heard that Rose was coming back for the 50th I groaned and instantly ranted to my brother about how annoying this was going to be. I am not a Rose Tyler fan. I don't passionately hate her but I just find her whole character arc to be handled very poorly. But here - I love that they explained a bit more about Bad Wolf (because I always wondered what that was and where it came from) and that she was quite likable. There was a certain Idris madness about her. but also you could see all of Rose's good qualities (like the friendly smiles and passionate good intentions). If this Rose Tyler had appeared in her original series I think I might love her. As it is, Bad Wolf/The Moment didn't convince me to love Rose...but did I ever enjoy watching her here!

- 10 & 11 arguing with the War Doctor. I could just watch these guys bicker all day, really I could. I also loved the little clip we got of Capaldi as the 13th Doctor and I fangirled so hard whenever all 13 of the Doctors appeared on screen with their 13 TARDIS'.

- Gallifrey is back! Much as I enjoyed The Doctor's arc before, I can't wait to see how this new story will unfold.

- Daleks were not overused, Zygons looked great, the Time Lord Council's costumes are as stupid-looking as ever (and I've seen The Master from the television movie!).

- 10 in a fez.


- TOM BAKER SHOWED UP AT THE END!!!!



What I didn't like:

- It was over too soon. Now I know that sounds rather corny and typical, but I feel like there were some elements that could have benefited from a slightly longer running time. The Queen Elizabeth plot, for instance, was resolved far too easily and too reminiscent of Davies Forced Exposition. But overall they did a wonderful job with the time they had.

- None of the Classic doctors (aside from Tom Baker) appeared in anything but stock footage. This was supposed to be a 50th-Anniversary, not the anniversary for the revived series. 

- Christopher Eccleston was not in the episode. Don't get me wrong - I respect the man for having a stance on something and refusing to compromise what he believed to be a right decision. That being said...couldn't we at least have had a regeneration scene? 



            And that is all I have to say about The Day of The Doctor. It was a great experience, a roller-coaster ride of emotions, and an episode that I know I will watch over and over again. It was funny, touching, sad, and hopeful and it did its job of celebrating the 50th Anniversary of a wonderful show about as close to perfectly as we could hope for. Bravo, Steven Moffat! I give it a 4/5.



What did you think? Do you agree with my rating? If not - what would you say differently?

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Top Ten Literary Friendships


           

13: Anne Shirley & Diana Barry - Anne of Green Gables, Anne of Avonlea           
             I know that these two did feature in more books, but these were the ones that I read as a spry young thing. I did not discover the rest of the Anne books until I was a bit older so they don't count. That being said - how could I not include 'bosom friends' Anne and Diana on this list? These two went though a lot together, not the least being adolesence, and came out on the other side stronger for it. Anne is the dreamer - always escaping into her fairytale daydreams while Diana is the more practical of the two and is constantly bemused by her friend's supposings even while she is supportive and kind.


12: Wilbur & Charlotte - Charlotte's Web
              This film can and still does make me tear up to this day - and this is honestly the first book I can remember reading that had a bittersweet ending and for that I will always hold a special place in my heart for the unlikely duo of a spider and a pig. There is just something magical about the way the two of them bond and work out their problems together. You can practically smell the barnyard while you are reading and, far from being repulsed by it, I just can't get enough. I love watching the way Charlotte cares for Wilbur, the naive spring pig, as he first has to deal with the news that he is to be butchered and then with the knowledge that Fern (his beloved caretaker) is growing up and starting to be interested in something other than her childhood fantasies. Those are some deep messages to deal with and this book does it beautifully by neither confusing nor talking down to its audience. Even the ending is rather sad with Charlotte giving the last few days of her life to ensure Wilbur's survival and then Wilbur steadfastly guarding Charlotte's eggs in return. Theirs is truly an epic, if unusual friendship.


11: Jesse Aarons & Leslie Burke - Bridge to Terabitha             
                 When I first sat down to read this book I had been forewarned that it had a rather sad ending. Heh - 'sad' they say...'sad' doesn't even cut it! This is one of those stories that as soon as you've finished it you have to go back and read the beginning two chapters again. Not because it's necessarily so gripping either in terms of plot or universe but because if you walk away without doing so you will spend the rest of your day depressed. The whole reason that the plot climax is so devastating is the way that the friendship between Jesse and Leslie is built up over the course of the story. They're just two best friends having the time of their lives in a little fantasy world where they can be anyone and anything they want. They are best friends who are just trying to cope with life and so they become each other's worlds for the whirlwind summer/fall that they play together. So whenever one of them is snatched away by a freak accident, the other (and the audience) is left struggling to deal with being left behind and alone. It is traumatising because they were so happy before and because they felt like real people with a real relationship. This book is surprisingly mature with some of its themes and the friendship between Jesse and Leslie was certainly one that stuck with me as I grew up.


10: Black Beauty & Ginger - Black Beauty
        This is such a depressing book and yet it is probably the one that I read the most between the ages of 10 and 12. It's a classic. Black Beauty and Ginger more than earn their place on this list despite the fact that for most of the book they're not even together. The story is written entirely from the horse's point of view, which makes for some interesting moments, and it is great fun to hear them tell their different stories of different masters and jobs to each other. What makes Black Beauty and Ginger stand out, though, is that Ginger is a horse as snappish as her name, due to some terrible masters, yet she decides to open up to Black Beauty and share her story. After that the two horses become good friends (pulling a carriage together, despite not being 'matched') and continue to think of and worry about each other for the rest of their lives. Black Beauty is present at Ginger's death and mourns her and Ginger, even while rebelling against some of their harsher masters, always has an eye out for Black Beauty. They truly look out for each other to the best of their abilities.


9: Mole, Rat, Badger, & Toad - The Wind In The Willows, The Willows in the Winter
        
              Not the most inspired of character names, perhaps, but given that this book has little to no plot until nearly the third quarter we had better hope that the characters are better developed. Thankfully Kenneth Graham delivers beautifully with some of my personal best-loved characters and interplay. The conversations between all of these personages is so compelling and enjoyable to watch that you forget the fact that what you are reading is essentially a collection of moments without any real plot driving it. If anything the book is a collection of conflicts that don't really intersect, save for the fact that they are happening to any number of these four friends. But it is their characters and their loyalty to each other that makes these four friends so compelling.


8: Jo March & Laurie Lawrence - Little Women, Little Men
             Now this is a friendship that managed to weather the stormy waters of 'oh dear - he proposed to me but I don't really love him like that, he's just a friend' issues. That has to count for something, right? Jo and Laurie are neighbors and best friends, though from Laurie there has always been a bit of a crush to his relationship. Jo considers Laurie to be 'her boy' and insists on alternately mothering and swatting the fellow in the absence of his actual mother. She stands up to his sometimes out-of-touch grandfather for him whenever things spiral out of control and is always supportive of his struggles to get through college. Laurie is very loving and respectful towards Jo and her three sisters, treating them like ladies and never failing to do a favour for them. He cares for their mother and father and tries to help the family in any way he can that wouldn't be condescending. After having his affections rebuffed by Jo, Laurie heads to Europe where he is eventually brought back to his senses by Jo's youngest sister, Amy, who he eventually marries before returning home to man up and admit to Jo that she is right. Even after they are both happily married (Laurie to Amy and Jo to a German professor) the two friends remain supportive of each other and Laurie sends his children to Jo's school. We are led to believe that they remain friends for the rest of their lives.


7: Mary, Dickon, & Colin - The Secret Garden   
            This is also a book that I read over and over as a young person and I still make a point of getting out my beloved audio drama and illustrated edition every spring for a re-read through. It is just wonderful to read about the transformation of Mary, Colin, and the titular garden, and the book evokes a sense of wonder and magic about the everyday things of life such as flowers or soil. Themes of friendship and family are prevalent throughout the text, made all the more obvious by the fact that the families of Mary and Colin are so frightfully dysfunctional. Mary's parents didn't care squat about her and then died in a cholera plague, leaving her to be sent off to an unknown uncle in England. Colin's mother died when he was born and his father (Mary's uncle) went off on a ten-year-long sulk, leaving his infant son in the hands of impatient servants. Both children are extremely spoiled and so both are extremely good for each other as their fights help to teach them both that neither 'own the entire orange'. Dickon, on the other hand, is the younger brother of Mary's sort-of maid, Martha Sowerby, and is an animal whisperer who loves nature and growing things. He introduces the two other children to the outdoors and basically gives them a perspective on life that comes from outside their brocade tapestries and china teacups. They all make each other better, because ultimately that is what friendship should be all about.


6: Don Quixote & Sancho Panza - The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha
           Okay - so maybe I'm cheating a little bit with this one because, while I did start the story while I was 15 I didn't really finish it properly until age 17 (other projects kept getting in the way) but I still consider it fair game because I was introduced to this friendship before my cutoff age and I still consider it to be one of the greats. Don Quixote is a man who has become so immersed into his novels that he goes quite mad and can no longer separate fiction from reality. He goes off on a noble quest, self-styling himself as a knight, and vows to slay dragons and rescue fair maidens and engage in other feats of valor and chivalry. Sancho is the poor guy who gets conscripted to be this madman's squire. He is responsible for making Don eat and sleep and not make a total raving fool out of himself (not to mention putting up with all of the madness on a daily business). They stick together by necessity and because, over time, they do come to appreciate each other for what they truly are. Sancho is there whenever Don regains his mind at the end of his life.


5: Jill Pole & Eustace Scrubb - The Silver Chair, The Last Battle   
         Oh Narnia, what fond memories you call up! The sometimes antagonistic relationship between Jill and Eustace, classmates and ex-enemies, is a staple of the stories where these two children find themselves in a more perilous Narnia from the one Eustace remembers. They both save each other's lives more times than I can count and are both supportive and helpful towards the other. Sure they have their fights, but that just makes them real people experiencing a real relationship. Besides; those times of arguing only make it all the sweeter whenever they come out the other side stronger for it. Along with their companion, Puddleglum the Marshwiggle, Jill and Eustace set out on a quest to rescue the lost prince of Narnia Rilian. In The Last Battle, they will then aid Rilian's descendant, Tirian, in one last fight for the land of Narnia.


4: Sherlock Holmes & Doctor Watson - The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
           I can remember the very first Sherlock Holmes mystery I ever read. It was The Speckled Band and it was in one of my school readers for English. I must have read that thing a million times - drawn in not only by the extremely intense mystery but also by the friendship between Holmes and Watson. At this point I was still very young and hadn't read much beyond Narnia or Redwall, so I had never encountered any characters like these before...and I LOVED them! Something about their partnership just drew me in and, to this day, I still enjoy reading about them and watching movies to feature them.


3: Tom Sawyer & Huck Finn - The Adventures of Tom Sawyer/Huckleberry Finn
                  These two bad boys are an interesting pair of friends as Tom is all about the romantic adventure of life and Huck is a bit more cynical when it comes to his outlook on life. But that makes perfect sense because their lives are so, so different. Tom is a mischievous school boy who is raised by his stern, prissy aunt and who harbors a crush on a fellow student named Becky. Huck, on the other hand, lives life on the streets whenever he isn't dodging his drunken and abusive father. Yet despite it all these two boys become rather good friends, culminating in Tom's helping Huck with smuggling an escapee slave to freedom and getting shot in the process.


2: Christopher Robin & Pooh Bear - The Many Adventures of Winnie-The-Pooh 
            For many of us this was the first literary friendship that we encountered, whether it was through the Disney movie or the original A.A. Milne books. These stories about a young boy and his beloved stuffed companion are so heartwarming (and I use that term reluctantly, given how overused it is) that it is easy to see why they have become such classics. In fact - do I even have to explain what makes this one so great? It explores the implications of childhood and growing out of your daydreams and stuffed animals. That's all you need to know. Now go read the books.


1: Frodo Baggins & Samwise Gamgee - The Lord of the Rings
            Did you really expect me to put anyone else at the top of my list? Ever since I first read these books (which was about age thirteen...so it's been a while) these two have become the friendship that I go to whenever I'm feeling a bit down and disgusted with the world at large - which happens more often then you might realize. I either pull out my tattered, much-read copy of the books and flip to my favorite chapters or I find an excuse to watch the movies back-to-back and let the amazing characters therein drag me into their world where the dragons can be slayed and the darkness is not forever. These two friends went to Hell and back and actually carried each other up a flaming volcano, knowing that once their task was completed they would be doomed to starvation and burning alive. I don't know what else to say about them.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

NuWho Review: 2013 Minisode "The Night of the Doctor"

           
By: Steven Moffat

**Spoilers**
If you have not yet seen this episode, please go and do so before proceeding.

           I don't understand why people hate the made-for-tv movie so much, really I don't. Sure it's nothing particularly splendid and can be at times both un-meaningly campy and unbearably dramatic...but, c'mon! Aren't there plenty of episodes that suffered from far worse in terms of premise and storytelling? Personally I think that anyone who skips the movie really misses out on something special - and that something special is Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor.


            It was so exciting to see his Doctor on the screen again, especially with better effects and writing than what he had to contend with in the film. This minisode is so, so important because it gives us the Eight - Nine regeneration that we had been missing (and more or less confirming the rumors that Eccleston is, in fact, the Tenth Doctor) but it also gave McGann his first on-screen appearance as The Doctor since the 1990's! It was great to see Doctor Eight again, wonderful to see that mysterious regeneration and the return of the cult from The Brain of Morbius, and I can't wait for the 23rd to come! Where's Jack Harkness and his Vortex Manipulator when you need him...?


Saturday, November 9, 2013

NuWho Review: 2006 Christmas Special "The Runaway Bride"


By: Russell T. Davies

**Spoilers**
If you have not yet watched this episode, please go and do so before proceeding.

          This episode starts out the same way as Rose and The Christmas Invasion with a camera zoom-in from outer space to a specific point on Earth – in this case, the wedding of Donna Noble. We see her walking down the aisle, escorted by her father and exchanging excited smiles with her groom. But the magic of the day quickly takes on a new meaning when a cloud of frankly beautiful golden sparkles gathers around the beaming bride and whisks her away, leaving all of the guests and family looking on in shock.


          I am a big fan of the scene where Donna appears in The Doctor’s TARDIS – though I do wish that it had been left off of the end of Doomsday – and I find that the dynamic between Tennant and Tate works beautifully on the screen. It's just so funny that The Doctor is so bewildered and so shocked out of his slump and I always take quite a bit of pleasure in hearing Donna take him to task for "How many women have you abducted?"

        In this episode we are also introduced to Sylvia, Donna’s mother, who is quite rude and abrasive. She is constantly haranguing those about her, finding faults with all and sundry, and is just a very unpleasant person to be around even whenever she is trying to be nice. When you look at a woman like Sylvia (and listen to her) it is quite obvious where Donna’s loud, rather abrasive personality comes from. If you had to live with Sylvia Noble you would develop a brash attitude because you would never get a word in edgewise if you didn’t. Same with the rather thick shallowness that Donna exhibits, despite the fact that there are clues telling us she’s really smarter than she acts. She has lived her entire life being told that she’s not quite making the cut (thanks to her mother) and you get the impression that she’s used to being either ignored or used by the men she dates. No wonder she has so many rough edges! It’s a coping mechanism created by years in the school of hard knocks.


Favorite Moments & Random Thoughts:

- The Doctor agrees to take Donna back to the church (she gives him very specific directions - going so far as to include 'The Solar System') but instead the queasy TARDIS drops them off several districts away from Chiswick. In the dash to catch a cab (a sequence that contains some of the most hilarious dialogue I have ever seen outside of a Moffat minisode) Donna ends up in a cab driven by one of the robosantas from The Christmas Invasion and The Doctor notices too late to do anything. 

- In his defence, though, he was rather busy robbing a bank.

- What then ensues is something you don't see on Doctor Who everyday: a car chase involving a cab and the TARDIS on one of the major motorway's. The comedic and dramatic timing is perfect here. The effects look great and the music raises the sense of humour and tension perfectly. This is easily one of my favourite Doctor Who scenes because it is both unique and beautifully executed. It is corny, yes, but the way they handle it is so obviously tongue-in-cheek that it makes the chase fun to watch rather than groan-inducing.

-  It is also rather funny to see the TARDIS throw a tantrum and take The Doctor to task for the rather reckless and inconsiderate way he way driving her down the motorway. She lands on the roof of a hospital and all but throws her two passengers out of her smoking door. Even The Doctor says that he needs to give her some time alone to recover. 

- Poor TARDIS...first she was feeling queasy and then she is sent racing down a high-traffic road to rescue a runaway bride, bobbing and weaving among the vehicles as her Time Lord manically drives her with his screwdriver and a piece of string. No wonder she needed to vent her feelings!

- I'll be the first to admit that this earlier incarnation of Donna could be both brash and grating, not to mention a bit stupid, but in a way that only makes me like her all the more because it means that she had one amazing character arc. And this rooftop conversation with The Doctor is where we get our first glimpse of the quieter, more human side of Donna. There are two ways you can look at the way she describes her relationship with Lance. One school of thought says that the fact that she basically bullied Lance into marrying her sets feminism back a few decades and turns Donna into a shrew. The other side of the argument (and the one that I, as a woman myself, subscribe to) points out the fact that the whole conversation is played for a bit of dramatic irony exposition and perfectly fits with Donna's overall persona. Think about it. She's a woman who is fast approaching middle age and who has probably watched all of her friends get married and start a family. Her mother is constantly nagging her and from what we've seen we can probably deduce that Sylvia compares Donna negatively to those friends. And Donna herself would be very aware that her biological clock is ticking while life leaves her behind. So of course whenever a handsome, charming coworker seems to take interest in her Donna would jump at the chance because she sees it as an escape from her meaningless existence - a ticket out of her lonely life. While it is played for laughs, this sequence is not so much a slam against Donna and women in general as it is an insightful look into one lonely woman's psyche.

- Her loneliness is starkly shown to us whenever, as she finally arrives at her own wedding reception, she finds that not only have her family and friends gone on with the festivities without her (simply because they had already paid for them) but her beloved beau and the man of her dreams is dancing happily with her rival. That scene just kicks me in the gut every time. It is akin to the moment from Aliens of London whenever Rose realizes that she has been gone for twelve months rather than twelve years and we see what that time has done to poor Jackie. It hurts!

- In fact this entire portion of the episode is just one big long feels fest. There is the sickening feeling whenever you see what Donna's wedding party did to her, then there is amusement whenever she gets back at them by faking tears (clearly shown whenever she winks at The Doctor...who looks rather like he wants to laugh), and then there is the beautifully thought-out and realized scene where all of the guests are joyously dancing and The Doctor is remembering Rose as all the while a song about a lonesome, traveling man with no home plays in the background. 


- Eek! I'm no Rose Tyler fan but that one hit me right in the heart. I hate to think what it's like for those fans who love her...

- Up to this point the episode is a very enjoyable, well-grounded story that - while it doesn't quite live up to the scale of The Christmas Invasion still manages to hold its own by creating a new feel and atmosphere that is unique to itself...but then the creature responsible for all of these strange happenings rears her ugly head and much of the good of the story is sucked right down the drain. Between her over emotive voice work and the stupid reveal of Lance's real loyalties - I would have quickly lost interest in the entire thing were it not for the interactions between Donna and The Doctor. It reminds me of Boom Town which was the Eccleston episode that had a wonderful premise that seemed like it was going to delve into The Doctor's moral psyche a bit and really ask some tough questions...but so quickly did a lame about-face in the last twenty minutes that all sense of dignity was leached away. That is what happens here as soon as the Empress Racnoss opens her hissing, scenery-chewing mouth. In fact, she is the only thing I don't like about this episode. Unfortunately she plays a rather large part so she is inescapable.


-  It is right about this point (the reveal of the Racnoss and Lance) that the episode begins to break apart. Words fail me to describe how stupid the whole plot of the Racnoss ship being the center of the Earth, let alone the extreme coincidence of Torchwood just happening to construct a drill to reach down to it, is. 

- I think it would have been a bit more bearable, though, without the hammy scenery chewing of the Empress. Granted it can't be easy to act in all those (admittedly excellent) prosthetic and false teeth - but I still feel that she could have benefited from a bit of subtlety.  Her screeches and hissings are more reminiscent of the Smeagol-Gollum arguments from The Two Towers than of anything truly threatening. She doesn't even have the creep appeal of Gollum working in her favor. It's just a bad situation all around.

- I am a fan, however, of the way things quickly shift from a comedic mood to surprisingly dark and disturbing once The Doctor breaks the Thames loose. It is emotional whiplash but, for the purposes of this part in his timeline, it works. As Donna says, he needs someone to stop him. 

- Even the increasingly grating screams of "My Chiiillldreeeeennnn!" from the Empress only serves to heighten the chaotic horror of this scene. The Doctor has reverted back to the way Nine was whenever we first met him. He is dark and vengeful and full of cold wrath. It is in scenes like this that we see a glimpse of what he must have been like during the Time War. Thank God Donna was there to shake him out of it before he went too far.



 So how is The Runaway Bride overall? Well - for about the first half it is a very solid episode; very different in tone from The Christmas Invasion, but that can only be a good thing because it is nigh impossible to duplicate a win like that. But then the Racnoss show up and ruin much of the ride. Still there is a lot to like about this episode between the character interactions and some of the more impressive practical effects - so these good points will help carry you through the bad. I give this episode a 3/5 because the story is solid (if a bit lame in places) and the characters are a joy to watch!




What did you think? Do you agree with my rating? If not - what would you say differently?

Thursday, November 7, 2013

The Most Adorable Thing...

            Now this is what I wish had been featured in the movie rather than the obscene amount of CGI and improbable stunts!
      
         Could have done without the snot jokes too, come to think of it...