I have to confess, I consider The Time of the Doctor as a
guilty pleasure. The first time I saw this episode I didn’t like it, to put it
mildly. I scoffed and rolled my eyes and was more than a little confused.
(Truth be told—and this must be the Christmas truth field in play—I first saw
this out of order; I had probably only seen one, maybe two, Clara stories before
it.) Each time I have seen it since I have appreciated it more. Now I almost
think it is one of my favorites of Matt Smith’s tenure.
I’ll begin with Clara. The first time through I had no
background of the Clara/Doctor relationship; she was a generic
companion to me. As I have pointed out through this slow journey of mine, I
still don’t have a deep understanding of Clara’s character, but I have warmed
up to her and can see the friendship between her and the Doctor. This family of
hers, however, is out of the blue. We have never seen them before; it is a
paper thin relationship that has been created out of air for the convenience of
our story. Clara’s treatment of them bears this out. They are unimportant to
her and to us. But it makes for a hilarious skit. The “I need a boyfriend” bit
is straight out of sitcom land; Clara is looking more like That Girl every day.
The Time of the Doctor is a string of such skits; it is a
clip show; a highlights reel; a reunion episode; a greatest hits album. It is a
Saturday Night Live version of Doctor Who. And it is one of the most enjoyable
events to watch in this new era.
All of the old favorites are collected here: the Crack, the
oldest question, the Silence, Trenzalore, Gallifrey Lost, the Time War, the
exploding TARDIS. All of the unresolved questions; all of the tedious arcs. All
coming cleverly together into a satisfying whole. I won’t say that it makes the
long, drawn out, and dreary season-long storylines worthwhile, but I will say
that for once they have actual relevance for me. Added to the mix are an assortment of
Doctor Who foes led by the obligatory Daleks and Cybermen with an occasional Weeping
Angel thrown in.
I’ll even go so far as to say that I don’t mind the dreadful
Silents in this. They’re still ridiculous, but I have to laugh at them rather
than rage against them. “Confessional Priests,” the Doctor explains them away
to Clara, and he goes on to say that they are, “genetically engineered so you
forget everything you told them.”
Useless in other words. You confess and immediately forget; so you
haven’t unburdened yourself at all; you are as guilt-ridden as ever. What you
have done is spilled all of your deepest darkest secrets to these creepy
monsters and don’t even know you have done so. So you turn around and confess
again. Only to forget yet again. And the cycle continues ad nauseam. In the
meantime the Silents could sell the information they glean to the highest
bidder. Blackmail anyone? I wonder if the Bloody Queen Liz 10 had these guys
created; she’s big on the forgetting-you-did-something-dreadfully-important
front.
The story is a muddle calling for all sorts of suspension of
disbelief and leaps of faith. But even though I can’t commit to it, I can enjoy
it for the lighthearted romp of an SNL ride that it is.
Daleks, Cybermen, Slitheen, Silurians, Judoon, Sontarans,
etc are all convened in one spot; one time and space. All of this fire power
and they are being held at bay by the shield put in place by the Papal
Mainframe. So where was this shield during the Time War? But whatever; the
Doctor slips through with the aid of Tasha Lem, the Mother Superious, and
single handedly fends off all attacks for hundreds of years from an assortment
of Daleks, Cybermen, Weeping Angels etc. As the centuries drag by he gets
relief from the Clerics, and together they turn Trenzalore into a war zone in
defense of Christmas.
Now all of these various and sundry Doctor Who foes have
shown up at this far flung spot at this ambiguous time in response to a
mysterious message that has been broadcasting through all of time and space
since the beginning of the universe. None of them can explain what the message
is or why they have responded other than an all-pervading sense of terror.
Frightened Daleks and Cybermen et al. Scared of the unknown. Monsters under the
bed. Shadows in the night. And they have all arrived at this one spot because
that is the source of the message. But why this time? What time is it, by the
way? Must be in the distant future; must at least be after the 52nd
Century when all of the Demon’s Run events went down, although it is Christmas
2013 or there about Earth time when the Doctor first gets the message. Who knows
when the Daleks etc first heard the cry. If it has been echoing out through all
of time and space, I can only wonder why the Doctor never heeded its call
before. Why wasn’t this ubiquitous question heard loud and clear reverberating
throughout that Crack of a season?
And here’s something—apparently The Silence is responsible
for Everything. They exploded the TARDIS that led to the Crack; that led to the
Pandorica; that led to Demon’s Run; that led to Lake Silencio; that led to the
collapsing universe; that led to the inane Question; that led to just about
every bad thing that has happened in the Doctor Who universe for the past few
seasons, up to and including our present predicament. So here’s an idea:
Unscheduled Faith Change—from this point on why not dedicate the church to the
destruction of the Kovarian Chapter in the most convoluted way possible?
Perhaps this new chapter could create its own fixed point at the Sea of
Tranquility. And just to distinguish their team from Eye Patch Lady’s they can
send in their psycho killer dressed in a Soviet space suit.
But alas, none of this is to be. Instead the church
dedicates itself to aiding the Doctor in defending Trenzalore (even though the
members have been turned into Dalek puppets, but oh well, let’s forget about
that).
So now I begin to wonder why it wouldn’t be a good thing to
let the Time Lords through to aid in the cause. The Daleks are concentrated in
one spot; let the Time Lords through; sneak attack; dead Daleks.
This is where the vagaries of the Time War enter in. The
Time Lords are let through and the Time War continues throughout time and
space? Is that the fear? Except—without the Time Lords the Daleks are free to
roam about all of time and space leaving devastation in their wake. Presumably
this is what prompted the Time Lords to action to begin with. But then the Time Lords became as corrupt and
evil as the Daleks? Or maybe just the High Council? Are there Time Lords that
are good but caught up in the battle? What of all those children that were of
such concern in The Day of the Doctor? The General and Androgar in the War Room
on Gallifrey seem to be decent guys; just soldiers doing their darnedest to
defeat the Ultimate Evil. And the Doctor seems exuberant at the thought that
the Time Lords are saved, even if in some frozen moment of a pocket universe.
So what exactly is the fear if the Time Lords are freed? And again we are left with the vagaries of
the Time War.
And then there is this truth field to deal with. The Doctor
and Clara discover the realities of this phenomena when they are compelled to
answer awkward questions they would rather not. But the Ultimate Question, the
Question that has been seeping through The Crack since the dawn of time, the
Question that everyone is so dedicated to keeping from being answered, the
Question that haunts and that frightens and that has shaped intergalactic
history—That Question can be ignored by the Doctor for hundreds of years as he
sits and whittles and zaps a Weeping Angel or two despite the best efforts of the truth field.
As for the Question: Doctor Who? The Time Lords are waiting
patiently in their frozen bubble; waiting for the Doctor to provide his name so
that they know it is safe to come out and play. They have these Cracks that
they can traverse at will, we are to believe, but they won’t until they get the
Word from the Doctor. So the Doctor figures this out and sits with his ear to
the Crack for hundreds of years and says nothing to it. He knows his long lost
and beloved race is there hanging on his every word; yet he says nothing to
them. He formulates no plan; he brokers no peace. He sits; he waits; he dispatches
a wooden Cyberman; he makes friendly with the locals; he does battle with the
Daleks. But he remains Silent.
Along comes Clara to have a chat with the Crack. “It’s time
someone told you you’ve been getting it wrong.” Thank you, Clara. “His name . .
. his name is the Doctor.” Well, duh. What more do you need? What more do the
Time Lords need? After all of these hundreds of years they don’t know that it
is the Doctor on the other end of their Crack line of communication? And they
never tried to converse and ask some relevant questions? Ditto the Doctor?
Speaking of communication—why doesn’t the Doctor understand
the initial message if it is in Gallifreyan? And if it is in some weird
Gallifreyan code that the Doctor can’t recognize, why did the Time Lords use
this ancient and weird and untranslatable language for their most important
communiqué? Why even ask the question if they know no one, including the
intended recipient, would be able to comprehend it? And if a Cyber head can
translate it, why can’t the Cybermen?
And then after all of these hundreds of years the Time Lords
decide that this is indeed the Doctor, because Clara says so, and rather than
bursting free of their bubble they send through a new regeneration cycle for
the Doctor and then close up the Crack, seemingly for good. Now wait a minute—can
the Time Lords control these Cracks? It appears as though they open one up in the sky and
close it again. Have they been in charge of them all along? All through that
Crack of a season? Or is it just for the convenience of this story? Or did the
Crack fortuitously open of its own accord right when the Doctor and the Time
Lords needed it most?
And please tell me how the Doctor getting a whole new
regeneration cycle solves the standoff at Trenzalore? The Daleks et al decide
after hundreds of years that they don’t want to go on with this endless battle
through another thirteen generations of the Doctor so they give up and go home?
Or is it because the Time Lords have decided after hundreds of years to stop
transmitting their message? In which case, why didn’t the Doctor simply tell
them on Day 1: ‘Sorry guys, it’s not safe out there and you’re drawing
attention to yourselves. Why not be quiet for a while until things settle down
and I’ll sneak back in the TARDIS in a millennia or two and whisper the all
clear?’
OK, I know his regen energy blows the Daleks out of the Christmas sky (sheesh, talk about genocide), but really, we all know there are plenty of Daleks to go around. Where one burns twenty come to take its place.
OK, I know his regen energy blows the Daleks out of the Christmas sky (sheesh, talk about genocide), but really, we all know there are plenty of Daleks to go around. Where one burns twenty come to take its place.
Seems to me that the bad guys won here. The Daleks and
company are free to go about their merry way sowing death and destruction
across the universe. At least there must have been hundreds of years of
universal peace while all of these deadly foes concentrated their forces at
Trenzalore.
But you know, Gary, even though the story falls apart on the
whole, the individual bits shine and I find I don’t really mind the inanity so
much. Take the Papal Mainframe for instance. As an entity it is ridiculous. It
is sprung at us with no historical context and we are left scratching our heads as to
where this almighty church has been hiding all of these years. Why, I wonder,
didn’t it intervene during the Pandorica buildup of forces (as just one example)?
I’ve already expressed my contempt of the Silents as Confessional Priests. As
for Tasha Lem, I’m getting rather annoyed with this casual Lothario side of the
Doctor. Having said all that, however, the Mainframe is impressive in its grand
scale and fits into the story, the Silents provide some comic relief, and Orla
Brady as Tasha is fascinating.
The town of Christmas is quaint; the wooden Cyberman is
cool; the aging Doctor is touching; Handles is comical; Barnable is adorable;
Gran is both funny and poignant (and great to re-visit Etta from Vengeance on Varos); cooking turkey in the TARDIS is terrific; naked Doctor is madcap; the
not-so-invisible Sontaran comedy duo is hilarious (until they’re blown up); the
return of Amelia and Amy is moving (although Amy is creepy and Amelia is fake—I
guess they took a page from Ed Wood’s ‘Bela/Not Bela’ book).
This is one Doctor Who in which the sum of the parts is
greater than the whole.
Culminating in the regeneration. Peter Capaldi.
I look forward, Gary; traveling as the Doctor would, ever in
hope . . .