“Look at the eyebrows. These are attack eyebrows.”
Welcome Doctor Twelve.
“They’re cross.
They’re crosser than the rest of my face. They’re independently cross. They
probably want to cede from the rest of my face and set up their own independent
state of eyebrows.”
Peter Capaldi is the Doctor.
Matt Smith won me over immediately with his charm. With his
independently cross attack eyebrows Peter Capaldi manages to trump Matt Smith.
At times the Eleventh Doctor’s charm got in the way. He always had to be
likeable even when doing some despicable things. Doctor Twelve has no such
pretenses. His is a practical, no nonsense approach that sets him apart.
(“There’s no point in us both being cold.”) There is no doubt that Peter
Capaldi is the Doctor, and more than that, he is his own Doctor.
Clara takes a bit more convincing, however.
“How do we fix him?”
It is a perfectly natural first reaction. Vastra’s response
is condescending and unwarranted.
The tone of this inaugural episode Deep Breath is captured
perfectly in those first few moments with the giant dinosaur vomiting up a blue
box in Victorian London; with Strax’s “Hello; exit the box,” greeting; with the
Doctor’s struggle to put names to faces; with a disheveled “the-not-me-one; the
asking questions one.” Vastra, Jenny,
and Strax fit right in.
However, this detecting trio is beginning to wear a bit
thin. In particular I am starting to dislike Madame Vastra and her superior
air. Her dismissal of the puny ‘apes’ around her and of Inspector Gregson are
one thing, but her treatment of Strax and Jenny is insufferable. Jenny’s
declaration of love for Vastra is a moving speech, but it would be more
powerful if their relationship wasn’t played strictly for laughs. I would think
Jenny would have more self respect and that she would react to Vastra’s
chauvinism with more than a sitcom shrug of the shoulders and roll of the eyes.
It is a disappointing dynamic that is neither subtle nor enlightened. Even my favorite, Strax, is becoming too much
of a good thing.
I can overlook this disturbing aspect, though, and skim along
the amusing surface of the tale. Vastra, Jenny, and Strax provide a familiar
structure allowing for Clara to work through her feelings for this new and
alien face of a man she thought she knew.
You well know, Gary, that I never quite understood the
relationship between Clara and the Eleventh Doctor or why Clara stuck around.
Doctor Who didn’t really know what to make of it, either, and in the end had to
fall back on the trite libido crutch. With the advent of Doctor Twelve that
illusion is smashed and Clara has to figure out her new role. Starting from
scratch, the show has a chance to rebuild this bond into something believable.
For this one episode, at least, it gets it right.
It begins by separating the two, and this is where the
so-called Paternoster Gang comes in handy. Vastra’s treatment of Clara is
heavy-handed, but it is a quick and easy, not to mention entertaining, way to
show Clara processing the Doctor’s regeneration. I’m not sure that having
Marcus Aurelius as your only pin-up at 15 and bragging you can flirt with a
mountain range are worthy of a standing ovation, but I love that she tells off
Vastra; and in the end the content of her speech isn’t really that important;
it is the context and delivery that matters as a shortcut way to reveal Clara’s
mettle.
The Doctor on his own is equally enlightening and
entertaining. His compassion for the dinosaur, his aversion to furious mirrors,
his relish in being Scottish, and his brusque interactions with the tramp
encapsulate this Doctor perfectly.
After their separate journeys of self-discovery, the Doctor
and Clara are ready to meet once again, and it is appropriate that they do not
exactly hit it off. Their “egomaniac, needy, game-player sort of person”
exchange is hilarious and to the point. I can only hope that this slightly
prickly banter keeps up; I much prefer it to the gushing and fawning that so
often characterizes the Doctor’s companions of late. The mutual respect and
trust that is essential for the dynamic has to be earned, and that is exactly
what the Doctor and Clara proceed to do as they navigate the hell’s kitchen
scenario they have walked into.
It starts with their vaguely contentious and highly amusing
cooperation as they implement their sonic screwdriver escape. It becomes full
blown, however, when the Doctor seemingly abandons Clara to her fate. In
actuality he is placing complete faith in Clara and she lives up to that
confidence. Using the Doctor’s hints about holding her breath she makes her way
through the murderous cyborgs until she comes face to half face with the robot
leader, at which point she cleverly draws upon her teaching skills to outwit
the control ‘bot. The payoff is as she stands terrified but defiant before the
stalemated Half-Face and takes that final leap of faith:
“I know where he will be; where he will always be. If the
Doctor is still the Doctor, he will have my back.”
Right on cue the Doctor arrives, and again it is brilliantly
played—the trust, the respect, and the prickly banter.
Doctor: “See, Clara? That’s how you disguise yourself as a
droid.”
Clara: “Yeah, well, I didn’t have a lot of time. I’d been
suddenly abandoned.”
Doctor: “Yeah, sorry. Well no, actually, I’m not. You’re
brilliant on adrenaline. And you were out of your depth, sir. Never try and
control a control freak.”
Clara: “I am not a control freak.”
Doctor: “Yes, ma’am.”
This is the Doctor/companion dynamic that has always worked
best.
Now the story falls apart a little, but that’s OK because the
importance of the episode is to establish these characters. The Doctor could of course end everything
with one flick of his magic sonic, but instead we have the reappearance of the
dynamic trio for a bit of action and suspense and we have the stand-off between
the Doctor and Half-Face, the whole purpose of which is to set up the
obligatory season arc that I really could do without. It mars an otherwise
decent adventure and does not ring true.
“Do you have it in you to murder me?” It is a false dilemma.
Because Half-Face isn’t anywhere close to being human. He is a robot, a droid,
a machine. An artificial intelligence. He isn’t any more human than the woman
suit Buffalo Bill fashions in Silence of the Lambs. He isn’t any more human
than the Madame de Pompadour is in The Girl in the Fireplace. Just because he
has an outer covering of human flesh, some freshly harvested human eyes, and
some mismatched human hands, doesn’t mean he has grown a human soul. I can
believe this less than I can believe that in 1935’s Mad Love the murderous
Rollo’s hands that have been grafted onto Stephan Orlac’s arms have taken on an
independently destructive will of their own and turned Orlac into an expert
knife thrower. (Sorry, Gary. This is the
time of year when Frankie and I settle back to enjoy all of those good old
black and whites and I couldn’t resist referencing this classic of B filmdom.)
So no, if the Doctor pushes Half-Face out of the balloon, or if he pours a
glass of wine on his head as Doctor Ten would do, it would not be murder.
Frankenstein’s monster is still a monster. Half-Face is still a droid.
This makes the whole Missy paradise nonsense even more
nonsensical and clumsy. It is maddening enough that we have to be introduced to
this villain of the season. It could have been effected in a much more shrewd
and crafty way.
Setting the Missy unpleasantness aside, Deep Breath is a
breath of fresh air, mainly on the strength of Peter Capaldi and on the much
more interesting bond forming between the Doctor and Clara. The “I’m not your
boyfriend” line is a good start and I hope Doctor Who takes this statement to
heart. The phone call from Doctor Eleven is a good touch as well, bringing closure to
that era and culminating in Clara’s full acceptance of the Doctor’s new persona
as she flings her arms about his neck.
Doctor: “I . . . I don’t think that I’m a hugging person
now.”
Clara: “I’m not sure you get a vote.”
Gone are the false, romantic, high school notions. This is a
clean start to a promising pairing.
“I think there should be more round things on the walls . .
.”
Not everything is perfect, Gary, but things change and move
forward. I’m moving forward with more hope than I expected.
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