Dear Gary—
Doctor Who has a long way to go to get back into my good
graces after Journey’s End. The Next Doctor is a good start.
This is an episode that can stand on its own. It doesn’t
have to be seen in any particular order or in conjunction with any other story
or within the context of a season long arc. It is lighthearted in tone with
just the right amount of pathos. And it doesn’t try to replace Donna. If
anything, the Doctor himself becomes a companion of sorts.
Plus it takes place at Christmas and it happens to be the
Christmas season as I view this, so I am full of that spirit that is so willing
to forgive.
David Morrissey also helps. He plays the part of the Next
Doctor with the perfect flamboyant flourish and yet there is a hint of sorrow
that manages to peak through. When the Jackson Lake damn breaks, the flood of
pain that washes over him is heartbreakingly real. Rosita is a great caricature
of a companion, too. “Always telling me
off,” the Next Doctor says of her, to which the Doctor replies, “Well, they do,
don’t they?” Strong of will and quick with a punch, Rosita tends to look after
the Next Doctor more than the other way around.
The Doctor, the Next Doctor/Jackson Lake, and Rosita make a
wonderful trio and the touches of slapstick are welcome. I love the glaring
clues that the Next Doctor is not in fact The Doctor, from his sonic
screwdriver (“It makes a noise; that’s sonic, isn’t it?”) to his TARDIS (“It
stands for Tethered Aerial Release Developed in Style. Do you see?”). Even the
Cybershades, which under normal circumstances are laughable, seem to reflect
the charming nature of this playacting at the Doctor motif.
The sets, the costumes, the wide-eyed and grimy orphans in
peril—everything lends a Dickensian air to this Christmastime tale.
The jarring note comes courtesy of the Cybermen.
Despite the fact that the Cybermen are scarier on a
practical level in their New Who reboot, they always tend to come up short for
me and I’m not exactly sure why. Perhaps someday I will take the time to
analyze it more. For now I’ll remark on the comic book element that somehow
creeps in each time I see them in the modern era. In this story we have the
Cybershades and the Cyberleader with his plastic brain showing. Then there is
the unwieldy Cyberking. I keep hoping that the Next Doctor will go all The
Empire Strikes Back on it and trip it up with his lasso.
On a more philosophical level, I wonder if their origin
story from their first appearance in New Who, Rise of the Cybermen, blunts
their menace for me. These new, human Cybermen from a parallel universe are the
creation of one man in his mad attempt to live life eternal; not a race that
willingly underwent the conversion for their own survival. New Who Cybermen are
motivated by the programmed instructions of John Lumic to convert all of
Mankind; Classic Cybermen are motivated by the survival of the Mondasian race.
Every meeting of the Doctor with the Cybermen in this new era has been with
these new fangled Cybermen. I wonder what would happen if these New Who human
Cybermen from a parallel universe ever met up with a group of Classic Cybermen
hailing from Mondas.
Putting that aside, however . . .
Cybermen crashing through the cobbled streets of 1851 London
just doesn’t rhyme (as my father would say). For the most part they are kept
under wraps, but there is only so much sewer and cellar skulking they can do.
Sooner or later they have to come up to do their dirty work and I’m not sure
how these giant metal men stealth their way through the city without notice.
And of course when the Cyberking rises there is no hiding it. I guess this is
one chapter of history that was never recorded.
The collaboration of Miss Hartigan does help a little bit in
accepting the secretive operations of these clinking, clanking, clattering
collections of caliginous junk. (Oh what a wonderful Wiz he is.) In fact Miss
Hartigan, clad in her red dress complete with parasol, is an excellent
intermediary between the fictions of Dickens and Cyber Who. Taking the arm of
one of her knights in shining armor, she is picture perfect.
Like the Next Doctor, Miss Hartigan has hints of tragedy
lurking beneath the surface. However in her case we never learn her background
and we can only speculate when she states, “Yet another man come to assert
himself against me in the night.” She is
a remarkable woman, or so we are told. The Doctor tells her, “You might have
the most remarkable mind this world has ever seen.” I don’t know, though. This
is narrative convenience that weakens her as well as the Cybermen.
The justification for the Doctor’s statement is the fact
that she can resist the Cyber conversion and dominate the Cyber brain. Now if
she is this most unique of individuals, how is it that she never did anything
with her life up to this point? It rather makes her pathetic more than
anything. And what does this make of the Cyber threat? Now that I think of it,
Miss Hartigan is not the only instance of a personality surviving the Cyber
conversion process. First to mind is Yvonne Hartman from Doomsday. I think the
Cybermen seriously need to refine their procedures.
Having said all of that, the Doctor’s use of the Next
Doctor’s TARDIS to confront Miss Cyberking Hartigan is fantastic, and I can
forgive the all too handy zapper by virtue of this from Jackson Lake: “Well,
I’d say he used that Dimension Vault to transfer the wreckage of the Cyberking
into the Time Vortex, there to be harmlessly disintegrated. Oh, I’ve picked up
a lot.”
The best, though, is saved for last. “But this is nonsense.”
Jackson’s reaction to the TARDIS is one of absolute wonder and amazement, that
childlike glee of a Christmas morning. “Complete and utter, wonderful nonsense.
How very, very silly.” It is that pure innocence of emotion that inevitably gets
corrupted with the passage of time, and I’m glad that Jackson races from the
TARDIS before the dark world of the Doctor has a chance to infect him.
Overall I give a Peace on Earth pass to this wonderful
little Christmas package of an episode. I think it is exactly what the Doctor
needed as well. All of the companions lined up in Journey’s End have gone their
own way. The Doctor is alone. Being able to jump into an adventure as a
sidekick and to observe the Doctor/companion relationship through this somewhat
warped mirror has given him a new perspective.
“They leave,” he tells Jackson of “all those bright and
shining companions.”
“Because they should,” he continues. “Or they find someone
else. And some of them, some of them forget me. I suppose in the end, they
break my heart.”
He hasn’t fully come to terms yet, but it is the start of a lonely
journey he must make.
However there is room for hope in this journey as the Doctor
heads off to spend Christmas dinner with Jackson and Rosita.
And so I send this out, Gary. “Merry Christmas indeed.”