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  • #91
    Thanks for the explanation, Kheldarson!

    Quoth Kheldarson View Post
    Like Bella Swan from Twilight.
    While I am of course familiar with the existence of this character and the piece of work, do you really think I've read any of the books or seen any of the movies? After all, I'm over the age of 12. And I have a scrotum.

    Quoth KatherineB View Post
    I really can't stand any of Moff's female characters, and that includes Amy.
    Hey! Them's fighting words!

    "The Customer Is Always Right...But The Bartender Decides Who Is
    Still A Customer."

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    • #92
      Quoth Jester View Post
      Thanks for the explanation, Kheldarson!

      While I am of course familiar with the existence of this character and the piece of work, do you really think I've read any of the books or seen any of the movies? After all, I'm over the age of 12. And I have a scrotum.
      It was the most mainstream and current example I could think of. Unless you're familiar with Elminster? :P
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      • #93
        Why I'm Sticking With It

        I thought of putting this on my blog.

        One of the big problems with this year's crop of Doctor Who episodes is that they all center on morality. They're obsessed with whether or not going for Twelve was a good idea. The first episode makes it unclear whether the Doctor kicked a living android out of a balloon, in the second he asks if he's a good man in the middle of a huge conflict over what makes someone "good" or "bad," and so on.

        Now, morality stories are just as valuable in the abstract as other kinds of stories - technical stories (some piece of engineering is failing/going critical/going on a rampage) and political stories (oh, look, the Daleks/Cybermen/Armpit Creatures of Segelius Three are invading again) just as examples. Doctor Who has never shied away from what it means to be "moral." Plus, the Venn Diagram has some overlap - "The Curse of Peladon," just as a top-of-the-head example, covered a political struggle and a moral crisis caused by a technological leap. So the idea of an entire season about whether or not the Doctor is "a good man" isn't, in isolation, a criticism concern.

        The trouble is, of which "Kill the Moon" is a magnificent example, that anything the story has to handle outside the morality theme, it does really, really badly. Whatever "Kill the Moon" has to say about morality disintegrates the second you ask a question about physics. Or politics. Or engineering. Or biology or chemistry or literally anything else crucial to the story.

        The only episodes that haven't suffered in some way are ones in which the morality play isn't as central. "Time Heist" is both morally focused and technically intriguing. So is "Listen." But "Robot of Sherwood" expects us to believe in that final arrow-flight because we're all too busy paying attention to Locksley and the Doctor bickering. "The Caretaker" spends so much time hyping the friction between Danny Pink and the Doctor that the actual threat looks more like a B-plot. It's too soon to decide what to make of "Mummy on the Orient Express."

        To be fair, I'm still having a good time watching these shows. It's only on second viewings or with a bit of thought that the stories fall apart. There's no reason not to tune in the following week, same Doc-time, same Doc-channel. But part of me is hoping for a payoff for this morality question that's been impoverishing the season.

        There are a lot of little gestures going unremarked, as well. All right, there's the Promised Land. But what's with the writing? There has been Gallifreyan writing (or, at least, a Gallifreyan, writing) in almost every episode, from the Doctor filling the entire bedroom with crazy in "Deep Breath" to his drawing in the sand in "Mummy on the Orient Express." His face was supposed to be a plot point - why the Peter Capaldi model has twice appeared in the Whoniverse was apparently meant to be a thing. Now, being that this is Moffatt, and his "big twists" tend to fall flat (still a bit disappointed in the Silence, frankly), I'm not entirely optimistic, but I think they keep the show worth watching, even when the writing goes completely south in the name of pursuing some bit of ethical trivia.

        "Mummy on the Orient Express," with the Doctor's act of potential self-sacrifice, did advance the morality plot a bit, rather than just hanging a limp episode on it. I've always liked episodes in which the Doctor appears corrupted, even to the audience (c.f. always-hero Fourth Doctor "The Invasion of Time," which he spends most of the first two acts screaming his head off), but less so when the Doctor is morally ambiguous as a given (c.f. tried-to-strangle-his-companion, abusive, shouty Sixth Doctor "Mindwarp," where the same trick just comes across as cree-eepy).

        I don't want to tell Moffatt how to do his job, but it might be more interesting if the Doctor were trying to solve a puzzle that the audience had already solved. Then he wouldn't so much need redemption as convincing.

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        • #94
          Quoth Jester View Post
          Hey! Them's fighting words!
          *lol* This far away, I think I'm safe.

          Quoth Ben_Who View Post
          His face was supposed to be a plot point - why the Peter Capaldi model has twice appeared in the Whoniverse was apparently meant to be a thing. Now, being that this is Moffatt, and his "big twists" tend to fall flat (still a bit disappointed in the Silence, frankly), I'm not entirely optimistic, but I think they keep the show worth watching, even when the writing goes completely south in the name of pursuing some bit of ethical trivia.

          "Mummy on the Orient Express," with the Doctor's act of potential self-sacrifice, did advance the morality plot a bit, rather than just hanging a limp episode on it. [...]

          I don't want to tell Moffatt how to do his job, but it might be more interesting if the Doctor were trying to solve a puzzle that the audience had already solved. Then he wouldn't so much need redemption as convincing.
          Ben, I really like the points you make here and I agree with you. I am particularly concerned how they will address the issue of Capaldi's former role(s) and I almost wish they would just get on with it. I have to wonder why it's taking so long to address - apart from the fact that, as far as Moff is concerned, the only episodes or references he is willing to acknowledge from S1-4 are his own episodes. He almost seems to be hoping that, if he doesn't reference the rest, we'll forget them.

          And I would have loved the Doctor's self-sacrifice more if he hadn't pulled a very similar stunt in Time Heist, risking losing his mind to the Teller. It felt a bit recycled to me: having the Doctor facing a grave danger, digging up references to his past which he chokes out - and then snapping out of it at the very last second. I am at least grateful to see the Doctor being the one to save the day again, which we seemed to lose during a lot of Eleven's era, but I wish we could find at least semi-original ways for him to do it.
          "Bring me knitting!" (The Doctor - not the one you were expecting)

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          • #95
            I'm having a hard time dealing with the fact that the doctor almost seems like a secondary character. Just a way for clara to get into problems and she can't figure out how to get out of them. Previous companions seem to at least have some kind of idea how to do things by this point of being the doctors companion. She just doesn't. Yet she's the focus of almost all these stories.

            I've disappointed in this season.

            My husband and I have been recording the episodes to watch later. To be honest, it's Wednesday and we still haven't watched last weekends episode. We will probably watch at some point but I'm really tired of the focus on Clara and all her whining.

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            • #96
              Moirae? the last episode won't help with that feeling about Clara..... its worth watching because as a story - whilst its not up to Dr Who standard for me - its a decent story idea.
              I am so SO glad I was not present for this. There would have been an unpleasant duct tape incident. - Joi

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              • #97
                Actually, I felt you could skip all of the conversations just between Clara and the Doctor and you wouldn't miss much. Fast-forward through those and stop as soon as the Doctor is around other people.
                "Bring me knitting!" (The Doctor - not the one you were expecting)

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                • #98
                  So last night's episode was pretty decent. I thought the monster was rather brilliant, the effects were fascinating, and when we were focused on the adventure, it was fun!

                  Just too bad it kept reminding me of better plot points (Doctor Donna) and had to bring in Clara's relationship drama; although yay for calling her out on her lying!

                  Both curious and disappointed with the Missy reference. Do we really need another creepy woman in black manipulating our female lead?
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                  • #99
                    I have been very harshly critical of this season, and I believe with good reason. But I'll say it here without reservation: the latest episode was really, really good. A damn shame we had to be this far into the season for a truly brilliant Doctor Who-esque episode, but I'll give the show props...this one kicked it. Hard. Sure, one could find some minor quibbles, but you could do that with almost any episode from any season with any Doctor. This episode, this story, this plot, this writing, this acting, these effects....this lived up to what we expect from Doctor Who.

                    About damn time!

                    "The Customer Is Always Right...But The Bartender Decides Who Is
                    Still A Customer."

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                    • I did like it and the story and methods were.... like old Dr Who. before the current silliness that runs around Clara's life.

                      And actually... its almost like the writer turned on Clara. Almost like at the end it was like "look I know you are a school teacher and you just saved us but you are NOT getting a damn merit award.... grow up..."

                      The Missy thing better be something good when they DO reveal it....
                      I am so SO glad I was not present for this. There would have been an unpleasant duct tape incident. - Joi

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                      • Quoth Jester View Post
                        This episode, this story, this plot, this writing, this acting, these effects....this lived up to what we expect from Doctor Who.

                        About damn time!
                        Notice that Moffatt didn't write it...
                        Skilled programmers aren't cheap. Cheap programmers aren't skilled.

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                        • My partner works for the railway and listed about ten things that were wrong with the trains...and that was only on the first viewing
                          Final Fantasy XIV - Acorna Starfall - Ragnarok (EU Legacy)

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                          • This actually was probably the best episode thus far this season. My only real complaints were any times where Clara's personal drama became the focus, and that freaking fixation on "not a good person" we've been harping on since Matt Smith's second season.

                            On that, I've realized one of my major problems with the current season.

                            It feels like an anime filler arc.

                            Hear me out.

                            The biggest source of The Doctor's angst for the entire modern series has been the destruction of Gallifrey. It was the point where he felt he crossed the line. He chose the lesser of two evils, but even that lesser evil was unforgivable. During Day of the Doctor, we discovered that the Doctor never actually destroyed it. Afterwards, he even gets confirmation that Gallifrey survives the Time War.

                            Part of what made Day of the Doctor so exciting (beyond the multi-doctor crossover and three excellent actors who played off of one another very well) was that is suggested a new direction and new energy for the show. The Eleventh Doctor remembers the events of the episode. His greatest emotional burden has been lifted, and he knows Gallifrey is out there. In fact, the final monologue practically says outright that his search for it will be the new plot focus:

                            That's not true. Not any more. I have a new destination. My journey is the same as yours, the same as anyone's. It's taken me so many years, so many lifetimes, but at last I know where I'm going, where I've always been going. Home... the long way round.
                            And after all these suggestions of new energy, new direction, guilt absolved, and a goal ahead...

                            We ignore all of it.

                            We drop the whole idea.

                            Instead, we get a season with an older, more haggard Doctor, who's still carrying all of the baggage, but lashing out over it now. Instead of a new adventure, we have one callback after another. And instead of chasing after Gallifrey, we're watching a companion who's overstaying her welcome work out her personal relationship drama.

                            It's like we were told what the new adventure will be, but then they just started putting it off and mining old episodes for whatever ideas they could get to pad out some time.

                            You know. Filler. Exactly what anime does when the show gets ahead of the manga and they need to play catch-up for a while.
                            » Horse Words «·» Roleplaying Stuff «

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                            • I thought this episode was great, we got to see clara get into the mind of the doctor a bit and see what it's like when she has to manage everybody and save the day while having someone nag them along. I loved the doctor doing that little dance at one point and anything with the tiny tardis was awesome especially the sledge hammer. I think the comment at the end is more the doctor doesn't want clara to become him. However I am really glad to have an episode where the doctor doesn't make fun of Clara. I mean there's always been playful barbs and banter between doctor and companion but every single episode this season had a shot at how Clara looks and it was getting very old for me. Also Tardis siege mode looks like the pandorica to me.
                              Interviewer: What is your greatest weakness?
                              Me: I expect competence from my coworkers.

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                              • So I finally caught up on the Dr Who episodes having missed the last three as they aired. Finally, as we near the end of Clara's time with the doctor, we are beginning to see the character that was originally promised in her first three episodes. That of a clever, intelligent, and strong woman willing to take a risk instead of spending all her time whining. Of course, it took until Flatline to see it again. Its a pity they couldn't seem to figure it out before now.

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