Every year it's the same tired story. The showrunner of the venerable and excellent telly program Doctor Who starts setting up a running arc throughout the season, hinting at a massive conspiracy that we believe will ultimately come into play in the season finale, culminating in the realization that Amy Pond's home town was actually the Eye of Harmony the whole time or the return of the Eighth Doctor or Adric or Nega-Rose. But of course, every year it's the same thing - all the theorizing comes to naught, and it ends up just being a regular season finale with a big space battle and the Big Bad being defeated by the Power of Love or whatever.
But that ain't gonna stop me from theorizing.
This week
on Fanboy Friday I'm going to be talking quite a bit about the seventh season
of Doctor Who, and, specifically,
what I'd be doing with their upcoming season finale were I to be lucky enough
to be wearing Stephen Moffat's big imposing Scottish TV writer shoes.
Despite
my opening preamble, I'm actually a big fan of the Who finales. Doomsday was fantastic, the whole Utopia/Sound of Drums/Last of the Time Lords
three part finale was impeccable save the moment when the Doctor was saved
by the whole world clapping it's hands and saying "I believe in Time
Lords" (I paraphrase, but still). During Moffatt's current tenure as
showrunner, the season finales have actually been kind of amazing. Season
five's finale might've been about saving the whole of time and space from
evaporating, but the action of the episode was contained and quite intimate.
The whole thing took place entirely in a museum with just the four main
characters running away from a petrified Dalek. Amazing!
This
season, we've got two mysteries going already. The prophecy at the end of last
season about how the Doctor will be forced to answer "The Question"
(the question being "doctor who?") and this will have some kind of
universal ramifications. The other mystery which wasn't really a mystery unless
you're like me and read entertainment news, was that the actress playing the
Doctor's new companion, Jenna-Louise Coleman, was in the first episode playing
a differently named character, who is revealed to actually be a Dalek, and
subsequently dies. How exactly is that actress going to go on and play the new
series lead if she's killed in the season premiere?
I think I
have a pretty ingenious solution to this. So! This season, each episode keeps
drawing attention to the fact that the Doctor has been going on a tear deleting
any record of himself from databases throughout the universe because his
legendary reputation was doing more harm than good. Hence everyone asking him
"Doctor who?" like, every episode this year. So. I presume this is
setting up how that question will be important - the fact that people know or
don't know who the Doctor is is important. And, at the end of the Dalek
episode, Jenna Coleman's character uses her crazy hacker skillz to delete any
record of the Doctor from the memory of the Dalek race before she dies. This is
pretty big since it's established in that episode that "Doctor" is a
synonym for "Predator" in their language - the Doctor's existence is
tied to the Daleks' entire worldview.
My theory
here is that when Jenna Coleman joins the main cast, she'll be the same
character as in that Dalek episode, but picked up by the Doctor before she
crash-landed on the Dalek planet and became assimilated (because he thought she
was so cool, and decides to use his freakin' time machine to save her from her grisly fate).
This, of
course, will lead to the Daleks remembering who the Doctor is, because Jenna
Coleman was never Dalekized and never deleted the Doctor from their database.
The Daleks will, as per usual, come up with some kind of Season Finale level evil
scheme that the Doctor will only be able to stop if his anonymity remains
intact - leading to a fateful, terrible decision where he'll have to either
consign Jenna Coleman back to her original, tragic fate or let the Daleks win.
I think
this would be great, especially because the importance of the question
"doctor who?" is only established by facts that came into play after we found out what the question was
in season six (Jenna being Dalekized, the Doctor becoming anonymous, etc). It
wouldn't rely on any arcane backstory from the classic series or back in the new series catalogue! That and it sets up a neat, timey-wimey but emotionally trying conflict for the
Doctor to go through.
I really
hope this multiple characters played by the same actress who are somehow linked
isn't explained with some kind of mystic silly shared soul or essence thing,
and that they aren't 'destined' to all meet the Doctor and die similar deaths or
something. There's enough fate-based material to play with just by having a
Time Machine as a weekly prop without bringing in actual Fate. I'm sure the
Moff has something up his sleeve, but I, for the life of me, have no idea what
it is.
But,
again, theorizing has never actually helped when it comes to Doctor Who (or any other sci-fi series. I mean really, Starbuck's dad should've been a secret Cylon. Really.) Fingers crossed for an exciting second half of season seven!
Also, since if you got to the end of this post I assume you watch this series, when Amy and Rory got trapped in the late 30s, why couldn't the Doc just go get them in the TARDIS? I know there was all that "I can't go back to 1938 New York, too much time distorion" malarky, but, couldn't he have just gone back to 1938 Detroit, and got in a cab? Or go to 1941 New York? All I'm saying is that it really seemed more like a major inconvenience rather than a "we can never meet again" thing.
END OF RANT, NERDS!
DON'T YOU GET ME STARTED ON KARA THRACE AND HER SPECIAL DESTINY.
ReplyDeleteAnd seriously, 1938 Detroit plus a cab... but then it would have been the Amy show (moreso). All good things must come to an end.... or a spinoff...
I never liked Amy and Rory anyway, so I wasn't terribly sad to see them go - and frankly, it's not like they could have recycled the whole parallel universe dealio they used to keep him away from Rose, so a generic "can't do it, TIME DISTORTION" had to work. I kind of get the feeling that the writers wanted someone, finally, to feel entirely fulfilled from their experience with the Doctor - how better, than to have them willingly and happily choose their love for each other in a way that necessarily separates them from the longing for adventure that the Doctor represents?
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I could go on forever, but as far as the new series is concerned, I'm mostly just holding my breath and hoping I don't hate it - Nine will always be my Doctor , and Rose my companion, and everyone else is just a poor substitute.