Doctor Who Season 7: Difference between revisions

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*''[[1970]] [[March 14]]''
*''[[1970]] [[March 14]]''


(First watched 2024-06-12) The only serial to slap Doctor Who in the title like it's a novelization, I think? His new non-stolen car is more of a jalopy, but a good fit for him. Unless it rains, I guess.
(First watched 2024-06-12, -14, -16, -18, -26, -30, -07-05) The only serial to slap Doctor Who in the title like it's a novelization, I think? His new non-stolen car is more of a jalopy, but a good fit for him. Unless it rains, I guess.


I'm with the Brigadier on this one, a scared man going nuts and drawing on the wall doesn't imply much... certainly not that he's reverted to a caveman state making cave drawings. Those caves down there must be pretty huge, though, to have room for what seemed like a pretty big dinosaur.
I'm with the Brigadier on this one, a scared man going nuts and drawing on the wall doesn't imply much... certainly not that he's reverted to a caveman state making cave drawings. Those caves down there must be pretty huge, though, to have room for what seemed like a pretty big dinosaur.


Through episode 5: if this serial were part of most other shows I'd probably describe it as "very Star Trek", but the aspects I mean are very The Doctor, too. We have humanity and Silurians, both distrustful of each other and with scared people who'd rather see the other side wiped out, and the Doctor in the middle trying to forge a peace.
I already knew the gist of Silurians from Eleven-era episodes, but it is a very interesting one. A previously dominant species goes into hibernation, and takes so long to come out of it that a new intelligent species has evolved and taken over the planet. I don't think this jives with modern theory, but here they seem to explicitly connect the Silurians' hibernation as a reaction to the Moon appearing, which they did not expect to become a moon but to remove the planet's atmosphere and make it unlivable for a long period.
So in the end the Silurians' attempt to kill humanity by disease fails, they're tricked to going back into hibernation, aaaaand UNIT seals them for what they hope is permanently. Though when the Doctor sees the explosions, he thinks they've killed them. Which one? Well, I kind of have to lean to the former, because it's much harder to imagine the Doctor going "Oh well, just gonna keep working with these people who have just committed genocide."
Not something just with this serial, but about the Brigadier. As someone who's been watching Who in one form or another for nearly two decades now, he's been a name that has frequently come up but I haven't seen much of myself until lately, so I've been very curious to see what makes him such a big deal. I've previously noted his willingness to roll with the unbelievable when presented with it, but his unusual relationship with the Doctor must be another thing. Most people who spend much time interacting with the Doctor either become great friends or great enemies with him. Whereas the Brigadier is in an unusual position of being an ally who doesn't always agree with the Doctor, and thanks to having other loyalties and being part of a chain of command, sometimes goes directly against the Doctor's wishes as in this serial with the sealing in of the Silurians.
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053: '''The Ambassadors of Death'''
053: '''The Ambassadors of Death'''
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*''[[1970]] [[May 2]]''
*''[[1970]] [[May 2]]''


<!-- (First watched YYYY-MM-DD) Thoughts. -->
(First watched 2024-07-07, ) I like how they try to make even the title ominous with just text, by a bit of zooming and saving OF DEATH for a second later.
 
The space center has pretty shit security, the Doctor just drove and walked past everyone. Damn good thing he wasn't, like... any number of dangerous people or entities that can be found on this show.
 
So so far our situation is that a mission to Mars has returned, but with no communication from the astronauts. Another capsule meets them in Earth orbit, they dock, and... unknown. Now communication is lost with another astronaut, and some coded communication happens between the Mars ship and (of course) London. Given the title of the serial I can only assume this is bad news.
 
A general comment on this season. It is always presumed there are gaps between the TV stories, which leaves room for all the comics and novels and audio stories and whatnot. But something like this season in particular there are only 4 serials, and all put together most serials cover a handful of days at most. So if this season covers the Doctor's first year of exile on Earth, we're probably left not seeing about 95% of those days.
 
There was a comedic scene with the Doctor playing around with the TARDIS controls outside of the TARDIS, but it did make me wonder how easily it fit through the door. Bigger on the inside, yeah, but what a bottleneck.
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054: '''Inferno'''
054: '''Inferno'''

Latest revision as of 18:11, 7 July 2024

Doctor Who

Doctor Who Season 6

SPOILERS TOTAL. You've been warned.


051: Spearhead from Space

(First watched 2024-06-04, -05, -09, -11) First impression of the new Doctor... not much, since he spends most of the episode unconscious in bed Pretty speedy with a wheelchair, though.

It's a weird thing how the show went from looking like one type of very retro to another type of very retro.

New Doctor stealing his clothes from a hospital. I believe Eleven did the same thing. I hadn't seen much of Pertwee prior to this, I kind of expected a deeper voice. But maybe that's just the kind of impression a guy with a cape gives off.

The Brigadier is a pretty credulous guy. He first thinks they've found the Doctor, then sees it doesn't look like him but the man claims to know him... so he figures: Well, if the Doctor is some kind of alien that travels in a magic box, the ability to change his face isn't any crazier, so I'll run with that until given reason to believe otherwise.

The hospital security sucks, not sure whether to blame them or UNIT. After the Doctor has already been kidnapped once, he's apparently given no kind of protection since he just gets up and sneaks off while the doctor (lowercase d) is out of the room.

The default Autons are a lot like Michael Myers. Blue jumpsuit, fake face, don't talk, can withstand attacks that would take down normal people.

The Doctor says that since the Nestene are/is (?) telepathic any off planet surely know what happened here on Earth. But being telepathic doesn't imply infinite interstellar telepathic range, does it?

I like how at the end the Doctor and Brigadier try to come to an arrangement. The Doctor doesn't care about having a salary, but DOES want a cool car. I'm kind of curious what the Doctor's living space in this era is like, I wonder if we ever see it.


052: Doctor Who and the Silurians

(First watched 2024-06-12, -14, -16, -18, -26, -30, -07-05) The only serial to slap Doctor Who in the title like it's a novelization, I think? His new non-stolen car is more of a jalopy, but a good fit for him. Unless it rains, I guess.

I'm with the Brigadier on this one, a scared man going nuts and drawing on the wall doesn't imply much... certainly not that he's reverted to a caveman state making cave drawings. Those caves down there must be pretty huge, though, to have room for what seemed like a pretty big dinosaur.

Through episode 5: if this serial were part of most other shows I'd probably describe it as "very Star Trek", but the aspects I mean are very The Doctor, too. We have humanity and Silurians, both distrustful of each other and with scared people who'd rather see the other side wiped out, and the Doctor in the middle trying to forge a peace.

I already knew the gist of Silurians from Eleven-era episodes, but it is a very interesting one. A previously dominant species goes into hibernation, and takes so long to come out of it that a new intelligent species has evolved and taken over the planet. I don't think this jives with modern theory, but here they seem to explicitly connect the Silurians' hibernation as a reaction to the Moon appearing, which they did not expect to become a moon but to remove the planet's atmosphere and make it unlivable for a long period.

So in the end the Silurians' attempt to kill humanity by disease fails, they're tricked to going back into hibernation, aaaaand UNIT seals them for what they hope is permanently. Though when the Doctor sees the explosions, he thinks they've killed them. Which one? Well, I kind of have to lean to the former, because it's much harder to imagine the Doctor going "Oh well, just gonna keep working with these people who have just committed genocide."

Not something just with this serial, but about the Brigadier. As someone who's been watching Who in one form or another for nearly two decades now, he's been a name that has frequently come up but I haven't seen much of myself until lately, so I've been very curious to see what makes him such a big deal. I've previously noted his willingness to roll with the unbelievable when presented with it, but his unusual relationship with the Doctor must be another thing. Most people who spend much time interacting with the Doctor either become great friends or great enemies with him. Whereas the Brigadier is in an unusual position of being an ally who doesn't always agree with the Doctor, and thanks to having other loyalties and being part of a chain of command, sometimes goes directly against the Doctor's wishes as in this serial with the sealing in of the Silurians.


053: The Ambassadors of Death

(First watched 2024-07-07, ) I like how they try to make even the title ominous with just text, by a bit of zooming and saving OF DEATH for a second later.

The space center has pretty shit security, the Doctor just drove and walked past everyone. Damn good thing he wasn't, like... any number of dangerous people or entities that can be found on this show.

So so far our situation is that a mission to Mars has returned, but with no communication from the astronauts. Another capsule meets them in Earth orbit, they dock, and... unknown. Now communication is lost with another astronaut, and some coded communication happens between the Mars ship and (of course) London. Given the title of the serial I can only assume this is bad news.

A general comment on this season. It is always presumed there are gaps between the TV stories, which leaves room for all the comics and novels and audio stories and whatnot. But something like this season in particular there are only 4 serials, and all put together most serials cover a handful of days at most. So if this season covers the Doctor's first year of exile on Earth, we're probably left not seeing about 95% of those days.

There was a comedic scene with the Doctor playing around with the TARDIS controls outside of the TARDIS, but it did make me wonder how easily it fit through the door. Bigger on the inside, yeah, but what a bottleneck.


054: Inferno


Doctor Who Season 8