Showing posts with label the master. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the master. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 March 2020

Doctor Who: The Timeless Children.

I would call this lazy writing, but I think you actually have to work pretty hard to come up with something this bad.




Does everyone remember the War Doctor; played by John Hurt (created purely out of necessity as Christopher Eccleston didn’t want to come back) and slotted into the Doctor’s timeline in the gap between Eight and Nine.

Well turns out Moffatt doing things like that just encouraged Chris Chibnall to see if he could do something more game changing.

However, as has come up quite a lot, Chris Chibnall is a terrible writer and Steven Moffatt is not.

So let’s tackle the minor things first:

·      The support characters are better actors than the main cast.

·      Tosin Cole doesn’t know how to act.

·      Graham has a heart-to-heart with Yas in which he sings her praises, whilst talking about someone who is most definitely not Yas.

·      The Master’s plan is stupidly predictable.

·      The Cyber-Masters look ridiculous.

·      The entire cast keeps up the tradition of stating the obvious, due to Chibnall not understanding the television is a visual story-telling process.

Now,  the big universe shift.

The Doctor has been the first Time Lord all along and has had her memory erased to keep her from knowing. Also she has no limits to her regenerations as that was something her adopted mother imposed after stealing her genes.

Erm, does anyone remember when Eleven aged to death in his final episode. His body was worn out (like One’s) and he couldn’t regenerate because he had no life cycles left.

Anyway, we now know where the Jo Martin Doctor came from; she was from a previous set of Doctors that was erased from her memory.

Err, Chibs…if she pre-dates William Hartnell why does the Martin-Doctor have Hartnell’s Tardis? Why would this Doctor even be the “Doctor”? That was a name that the First Doctor adopted as his alias on Earth. Why would a previous version of the same person have arrived at the same alias?

It would have made more sense for the Master to have been the Timeless Child.
This would have explained why he was so pissed off when he found out about it.

He spends lifetimes knowing he was the Master; of feeling superior to others for reasons he can’t explain and being consistently shunned by Rassilon and the High Council. Then he finds out that he is the source of all of the Time Lords’ power; that they are derived from him and by rights he should stand above them as their creator; their Master.

It would explain where the Master gets his instinctive sense of superiority from; the unconscious knowledge that he is the most powerful Time Lord in the universe.

You could even work the previous Doctor story-line into it, by saying that the Doctor has been resurrected before as he/she has been shown to be able to stop the Master’s plans. Their childhoods could have been manufactured to always keep them close, so that every version of the Doctor would always develop a deep knowledge of the Master, that he/she needed to give him/her the edge in a fight.

And that would by why the Doctor was the only other Time Lord that the Master left alive; he’d want to defeat her last to make sure she knew that she was literally created for him. A final slap in the face to the person who foiled all his plans.

This version even fits better with the Doctor’s speech at the end about how he can’t rob her of her identity. I mean what’s going to give you more of an identity crisis, learning that you’re a walking god or learning that your literal life’s purpose is to keep an eye on one of your high school friends?

And it works better with the Jo Martin Doctor; the thing she did wrong could have been to abandon her duty, creating a chain of events that the Time Lord’s foresaw would lead to the Master discovering his true nature. Gatt’s mission was to bring the Doctor back, wipe her memory and place her back in the timeline in a place that would avert the Master’s eventual discovery.

However, the intervention of Thirteen, which was caused by the fact that she had no memory of the Martin-Doctor meant that Gatt’s mission failed. The Time Lords undid themselves with their hubris and their process of recreating the Doctor backfired as Thirteen could have worked out what was going on if she’d had the memories they took.

But…instead we get some half-baked excuse that the Master can’t stand the idea that he is derived from the Doctor.

This is just plain bad writing; a contrivance used to justify character actions that don’t make sense.

Anyway, the Master creates some hilariously bad looking Cyber-Masters but they’re all destroyed by Space-Barristan Selmy. Apparently he was the one who sent the cyber goo back in time in the first place. So, among all other things, we have to admit that Space-Joffrey was right to dismiss him from the Kingsguard; on the grounds that he was too old and had lost his wits.

Barristan, you have time travel; send the cyber-goo forward in time to the end of the universe to be swallowed up by all the nothingness there. Not backwards in time, when they’ll be loads of poets milling about.

So the series ends on a cliff-hanger with Jodie Whittkar doing an impression of David Tennant in a jail cell, ending her second season still not having established a personality for her Doctor.





Sunday, 2 November 2014

Doctor Who: Dark Water - spoiler warning

So we know who Missy is now….and she’s exactly who everyone thought she was.


Earlier this week, I threw a theory out there that Missy was just a piece of misdirection designed to distract us from the real threat of the series. This would mean that the reveal would be pretty interesting, but largely insignificant in light of the real threat that we’d all failed to notice.

Well, mush the like the River Song reveal, Missy’s identity falls into that which was recognised by the first episode. I’m not saying that she’s not a good villain, but going for such an obvious one just seems lazy. Also what happened to the Time Lord’s ability to recognise one of their own instantly. The Tenth Doctor knew the Master (even with a new face) straight away, but the Twelfth doesn’t recognise him/her without any explanation.

So there we go; I’m not thrilled about that reveal.

As to the episode, it’s pretty good as a standalone (albeit half of a standalone). To see Clara as a psychiatric wreck, following Danny’s death is pretty good starting point. The Doctor’s trick with a dream state is pretty awesome, as Moffat finds time to call back to manipulative Dreamlord persona that hides under the surface of the Doctor.

The reveal of the Cybermen is very well executed and had last week’s trailer not spoiled their presence it would have been very surprising.

Another small thing that I really liked was the Malcolm Tucker reference thrown in by The Doctor’s psychic paper conveying all the swearwords that he’s not allowed to use on a family show. For nostalgia’s sake it’s also nice to see the Cybermen stalking around St Paul’s in a call back to classic era.

The other reveal we got, was the source of Danny’s PTSD. Turns out that while serving in Afghanistan, he accidentally killed a child. Pretty dark stuff, but it’s handled pretty well.

Overall, this episode does a very good job of setting up the finale, I just wish that the villain reveal could have been more surprising.