Doctor Who Season 2: Difference between revisions

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(First watched 2009-01-21)  So they introduced a TARDIS magnet which can point to the TARDIS.  Of course, after giving this to one half of the group, the other gets lost and can't find either the others or the TARDIS.  They also have a... time travel television thing, which they use to check out various points in history.  From [[Abraham Lincoln]] to [[The Beatles]] to a very different-looking [[William Shakespeare]] and Queen Elizabeth I than the earlier ones the Doctor would meet later.  And along with losing the TARDIS for one group and getting trapped by something with tentacles for the other... the Daleks have indeed followed them there!  I enjoyed Ian reading some science fiction book and saying that it was pretty far-fetched.


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[[Doctor Who Season 3]]
[[Doctor Who Season 3]]

Revision as of 11:56, 21 January 2009

Doctor Who

Doctor Who Season 1

SPOILERS TOTAL. You've been warned.

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009: Planet of Giants

(First watched 2007-07-30, -31, -08-01) Very cool.  Were it a modern episode a Honey, I Shrunk the Kids comparison would be appropriate, but this episode predates that movie by a quarter century.  Considering that and a BBC budget, it was done well.  Great to see something really goofy go wrong with the TARDIS, other than just ending up in an inconvenient place or time.  The background drama going on wasn't very remarkable, but it kept the environment of hour protagonists from being static... and somehow gave them a way to save many lives, even on modern Earth as inch-high versions of themselves.  The villain trying to disguise his voice with a piece of cloth, though... yikes, what a crappy trick.  I think this is the first time I remember seeing that cliche in something other than a completely parodic manner.

This episode made me want to play Pikmin.

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010: The Dalek Invasion of Earth

(First watched 2007-08-04, -05, -06, -07, -08, -09) The Doctor said their previous run-in with the Daleks was "a million years" in the future as an explanation to why they were still around.  I won't take that as an accurate measurement, but... the Daleks they saw before seemed to have come into being on that planet, and seemed bound to the planet.  Are we now to take it that they were just some remaining sect, and the others had long since gone off planet to conquer?

Goodbye Susan.  Boy, that'll make things awkward for Ian and Barbara if they ever get back home.  They disappear at the same time as a student, and turn back up without her.

I think it speaks to British-Gallifreyan conceptions of maturity and ages of consent when they can get away with the Doctor dumping off his ~16-year-old granddaughter in a devastated world to get married to someone she's just met.

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011: The Rescue

(First watched 2007-10-07, -08) Not bad.  A short one, mostly an excuse to pick up another traveler in Vicki, but the question of what happened on the planet was a change, too.  No, not an Earth-Dido conflict or the Didoans becoming aggressive... but just a human mass-murderer trying to make it appear that way as a cover story.

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012: The Romans

(First watched 2008-04-23, -05-01, -06, -08)  Boy, the doctor is a big grump.  Refusing to let Ian and Barbara go with him and Vicky to Rome, I'd think him randy if I didn't know better.

They didn't do a very good job of making the fight hectic; when Barbara beaned Ian accidentally it absolutely looked intentional.

Ahaha, the Doctor really manhandled that assassin!  And was cocksure about it afterward!

Ahaha, the Doctor's silent lyre playing as an "emperor's new clothes" trick so everyone fakes that they heard him.  His weird antics are making this my favorite of the historical serials yet.

Rome?  BUUUUURNED.

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013: The Web Planet

(First watched 2008-05-11, -12, -08-16, -10-11, -11-27, -28)  I know there's only so much they could do, but those ant things walking around with a pair of human legs look silly indeed.

Bees, too?

Hahaha.  In the third episode, an ant man inadvertently bumps into the camera since he probably can't see shit in there.

Boy, this one is just sooo goofy in an unfun way.  That it's taking me half a year to finish watching it is both an effect and cause.

OK, so it did end up taking me half a year to see.  At this rate I'd never catch up.  But boy, from awful costumes to boring story, this is pretty much scraping the bottom of what I expected of the early years of this show.  We didn't even get much main character interaction beyond Vicki/Doctor, since they were all split up.

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014: The Crusade

  • The Lion 1965 [[]]
  • The Knight of Jaffa 1965 [[]]
  • The Wheel of Fortune [[]] [[]]
  • The War Lords [[]] [[]]

(First watched 2008-12-10, -28, 2009-01-01, -03)  Hey, this later-day version includes an intro by old-ass Ian.  Very cool.

So Ian gets knighted and the Doctor wishes he'd been, too.  While I wouldn't be surprised if it happens by the end of the serial, I know it happens to him at least once in a later incarnation.

On the whole this one reminds me of a less eventful The Romans, or even The Reign of Terror.  These historical ones seem to have a bit of a pattern of Barbara getting imprisoned, Ian rushing off to find her, and the Doctor trying to use power to his advantage by playing a highfalutin role.

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015: The Space Museum

(First watched 2009-01-04, -08, -09)  The first episode was quite interesting.  The slow discovery of the oddness of their situation and how their interaction with the rest of the world is not as it should be reminded me of The Langoliers.  The Doctor's explanation of how it's all quite explainable by dimensions of time doesn't seem to make much sense, but really his understanding of stuff like this is supposed to be way beyond the viewer's.

The Doctor in a Dalek machine!  That's got to be the coolest thing since Mario got into Kuribo's shoe.  Or vice-versa, considering this was a quarter century earlier.  I also love how he foils the mind-reading machine by sending it nonsense imagery.

I guess on Doctor Who they don't have something like the Prime Directive.  Vicki is helping to incite planetary revolution because she thinks it might increase her own chance of survival.

The last part wasn't very exciting.  They get captured... but it turns out the revolution was enough to change things.  Actually the Doctor's light bulb explanation made a bit more sense as to why they were only sort of there in the first episode.  OK, maybe not actual sense, but it's an understandable analogy.  Another weirdness in this episode is that the Doctor was being transformed into a museum piece.  "It's irreversible!" claim the museum guys.  "No one's ever done this before!"  And yet they flip a few switches and he's back to normal in a couple minutes.  I guess they could've just been lying.

So the Daleks know they were there, recognized them for who they were, and knew they took off again.  I know in the more recent Doctor Who series the Daleks are also known to be powerful in travel of time and space, but I think this is something new for the 1960s.

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016:

(First watched 2009-01-21)  So they introduced a TARDIS magnet which can point to the TARDIS.  Of course, after giving this to one half of the group, the other gets lost and can't find either the others or the TARDIS.  They also have a... time travel television thing, which they use to check out various points in history.  From Abraham Lincoln to The Beatles to a very different-looking William Shakespeare and Queen Elizabeth I than the earlier ones the Doctor would meet later.  And along with losing the TARDIS for one group and getting trapped by something with tentacles for the other... the Daleks have indeed followed them there!  I enjoyed Ian reading some science fiction book and saying that it was pretty far-fetched.

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Doctor Who Season 3