Logline
Traps are sprung and old enemies unite as the Doctor and Belinda finally arrive home to find a very different world. Can the Doctor see the truth before midnight arrives?
Written by: Russell T Davies
Directed by: Alex Sanjiv Pillai
Traps are sprung and old enemies unite as the Doctor and Belinda finally arrive home to find a very different world. Can the Doctor see the truth before midnight arrives?
Written by: Russell T Davies
Directed by: Alex Sanjiv Pillai
Oh, interesting - I didn’t realize that was the translation. I guess that ties in to “The Church on Ruby Road” and how luck and coincidences can affect reality, in this case leading to Desidirum. A bit of a deep cut that I barely remembered.
That’s sort of my issue with episodes of this nature in general - we know it’s not real, it will (probably) be undone by the end of the season, so a lot of it is just there to be weird.
Me neither, though I was not as high on “Rogue” as many people were last year. Hopefully it’s leading to a more significant return soon, and doesn’t fizzle out like the Captain Jack cameo during the Chibnall run, though I’m sure that one imploded for very different reasons.
I really did enjoy the ways in which Conrad’s shitty worldview infested this world. I’m sure the Rani was all too happy to let that happen, fostering doubts in those whose lives were less than ideal.
Agreed - this is one of those episodes that throws some really compelling ideas out there, without really slowing down to examine them.
The line about Ruby walking past their encampment every day and ignoring it was…not subtle (and that’s a good thing - I’m over subtlety).
Another classic thing that I’m aware of, but will have to do some homework on.
On the whole, I’m with you. It was a decent episode, I was entertained, but by its nature it’s mostly an exercise in table-setting for the big finale.
This episode was a lot, and only the last step toward a conclusion of the season arc(s). I’m going to try and post as I form thoughts about specific themes…
There are definitely elements carried over from this one into the entire show since then. First, the themes of coincidence and luck, and perhaps by extension wishes (and doubt?). It seems like RTD is still grappling with telling them apart, like with the unfortunate Zufall family who nominally belonged in one category, but were played according to one or several others.
There was nothing Zufällig about the Rani finding the seventh son of a seventh son of a seventh son. That’s a traceable anomaly, a standout pattern that portends the specialness of the child. More than an omen, an identical lineage might be engineered to similar effects — in which case we are uncomfortably close to the magical thinking of eugenics.
Our showrunner would make a poor practical magician if he can’t separate happenstance from wishes that have more intent behind them, a “gamification” perhaps of randomness, or the methodical identification of patterns in (apparent) coincidence. However, he did also introduce the “technology of rope” in “TcoRR”. That’s a fairly scientific approach that requires a deeper understanding of a field’s taxonomies and the patterns inherent in them.
We might expect that stringency of method from the Rani, and so far it has been suggested as much in behind the scenes interviews. We will have to wait and see if her scientific applications of coincidence shows on screen. I think only then do we have a proper synthesis of science fantasy in the show.
So those are two components from the first christmas special that have set the course for the following seasons. Superstition, and its scuentific formalisation. The third, most glaring one is — all the babies. I don’t think we’ve ever had so many orphans, foundlings, kidnappings, and (space) baby factories in the span of two seasons before… and then there is the baby elephant in the room, the Timeless Child.
Right now, Doctor Who has more unknown parents in play than in your average soap opera. I’m not even going to speculate which are going to be tied up, or how. At best, it’s going to be a pattern we won’t recognise until it’s shown to us.
I would guess that it wouldn’t work, though - the laws of magic would probably insist on it being genuine happenstance.
I unfortunately don’t think we’ll see the Rani applying the actual scientific method to what she’s doing - her experimentation seems to be done, and she’s moved on to application.
I think she’s retained her sense of purpose, though, which sets her apart from the more chaotic Master.
Yeah, her long term purpose certainly was spelled out in the recent teaser trailer!
Catching up on Omega is as easy as Rani homework was. His broadcast appearances are pretty scarce.
It’s “The three Doctors” and “Arc of infinity” — and again the second one really does feel like homework — plus “Remembrance of the Daleks” for additional credit, even though it’s only the Hand of Omega that appears there.
But you sort of owe yourself any chance to watch Sylvester McCoy dropping clues to the Cartmel plan, so do take “Remembrance” if you can!
Let’s see, “Arc of Infinity” and “Remembrance of the Daleks” are both four-parters - I should be able to manage that.
Yeah, and “The three Doctors” is 100 minutes as part of Tales of the TARDIS. Should be possible in a week or so 👍