So the Doctor has a new companion, Steven Taylor. He starts off being kind of bossy (no good when that happens around the Doctor). I like the character of the Monk, he’s pretty well imagined and is a decent adversary, if only because he’s so feisty when dealing with the Doctor. He’s also the owner of another TARDIS, which is rather cool! We haven’t seen a different TARDIS yet. It’s also another time-sensitive story; I’m glad to see time travel topics being taken advantage of. The Doctor ends the serial being a bit mean towards his fellow Time Lord and maroons him on Earth in 1066.
September 2007
September 3, 2007
September 3, 2007
Watched The Chase. Like the Tenth doctor’s travels, the first episode shows Shakespeare. Unlike the later story, this gives quite an uninspired explanation for the authoring of Hamlet. Also the episode manages to pander to the fan base by including a video of The Beatles’ television appearance (the song being played, Ticket to Ride, was released just a month prior to the show’s airing date). It really is a good thing that The Beatles ended up being a long-term success with enduring popularity; otherwise, this would have been a reference to a long-forgotten band.
The TARDIS finds its way to the top of the Empire State Building, along with some Daleks. Later in Tenth Doctor times we’ll be seeing some Daleks working on the very same building. After Manhattan, the crew lands on a moving ship (the Mary Celeste); this would probably be the first time they’ve landed on a moving object, so far. The ship moves on to a haunted mansion exhibit (note: the writers could have known about the Disneyland’s Haunted Mansion since it was already under construction and had been publicized).
I really liked the fact that the Daleks’ time machine is much like the TARDIS, i.e. bigger on the outside, and the Doctor vs. Robot Doctor fight. Very nifty.
Finally, we say farewell to the original companions — Barbara and Ian. I don’t know yet what the other companions will bring: when I started watching the old series my only frame of reference for companions was Rose Tyler and Martha Jones, who are quite different in attitude (and age) from Barbara and Ian. I didn’t really know what to expect, and thus was surprised by the somewhat formal style of Ian and the fear often exhibited by Barbara, plus by the patronizing relationship the Doctor had with Barbara. Some things were the same: the Doctor needs his companions, just as they need him, and he depends on them thinking on their feet and never really losing hope. Over the course of the first two seasons our Barbara and Ian matured and became more fun, more interested in their travels, more inclined to get involved in local affairs in the places they visited. I have high hopes for the upcoming companions.
September 3, 2007
Moving on for now; The Crusade; The Space Museum
Posted by ilyah under 1st Doctor, Doctor Who, Season 2Leave a Comment
I still haven’t watched the Netflix DVDs that I have out (incidentally, they are Labyrinth and Xanadu), and so decided to just move on to the next serials and to watch The Web Planet when I get to it.
I successfully watched the parts of The Crusade that were available on YouTube. This happens to be episodes 1 and 3, with 2 and 4 being available as photo montages and the original audio track plus a narrator to connect what was happening to the audio track (i.e. explain what’s in between the photos). It’s a palace intrigue serial, but a rather good one at that. It was rather hard to follow, since I wasn’t in the mood to watch the photo montage and thus missed vital parts of the serial. Basically, since our crew (Vicki, Barbara, Ian, and the Doctor) is still alive and well at the end of the last episode, all is well.
The Space Museum is continuing a trend from the episode that introduced us to Vicki (namely, “The Rescue“) — that is, a world with 60s-looking rocket ships. The whole theme of the Doctor visiting (being stuck in?) a museum of alien stuff, only to be surprised by a Dalek being kept in the exhibit, will be repeated in the episode “Dalek” in the New Series’ Season 1.
The show itself is built on a somewhat non-linear basis, taking advantage of the time-traveling aspect of the overall premise for once. At one point the Doctor gets frozen in a scene vividly similar to Han Solo being frozen in carbonite… The serial ends on a great cliff-hanger, a set up for the next show. Overall, it’s actually been a pretty interesting story!