purplecat: The Tardis against a sunset (or possibly sunrise) (Doctor Who)
[personal profile] purplecat
Looking back this is the point where Moffat's plotting falls apart. Or perhaps, more accurately, where he ceases to feel the need to fill in the gaps sufficiently.

The double episode of The Impossible Astronaut/The Day of the Moon opens the sixth series of new Doctor Who and sets up the over-arching plot asking who killed the Doctor and how will he get out of that?* As a pair of stand-alone episodes these work really well. The Silence are really good monster and the mechanism in which the Tardis crew record the number they have seen in marks on their hands and faces is incredibly effective in building tension. Canton Everett Delaware III is a fun character. The repeated appearance of Nixon reassuring miscellaneous US functionaries is a moderately good joke. The whole is both creepy and fun, as a good Doctor Who story should be.

Sadly, a lot of questions are left unanswered and the answers we eventually get vary from the mundanely obvious (how the Doctor escapes his death, the identity of the child), to the convoluted and throwaway (the nature and purpose of the Silence). In particular, while I've seen Alex Kingston's performance in these episodes praised, viewed through the lens of later revelations (particularly, her relationship to Amy and Rory, the identity of the Child, and the facts of the Doctor's "murder") it does not convince me at all, none of these revelations appeared to me to be foreshadowed and while you could argue that River is simply an excellent actress, as the viewer of a story, I want more.

Relatedly, the child's escape from the Silence seems, in retrospect, entirely pointless. She is, apparently, later recaptured in events we never get to witness. Similarly, it's not at all clear what the Silence are doing faffing around with technology on Earth in 1969 when they have Kovarian's resources at their disposal. I mean, assuming they are working with Kovarian (which I presume since they kidnap Amy who then ends up in Kovarian's care) which is a detail I'm waiting to see confirmed or denied. But the bottom line is that, although Moffat may know how all of this fits together, he is not giving the information to the viewer.

Which is a shame, because as I say, outside of the wider context these form an effective pair of episodes.

Mind you, even NLSS Child, who is oblivious to a great deal of nuance, commented upon how out of character it was for the Doctor to commit genocide, even by proxy.

*In one of the obvious ways, as it transpired.

(no subject)

Date: 2015-07-22 09:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] parrot-knight.livejournal.com
River gets away at the end of Let's Kill Hitler, and is recaptured by Kovarian at the end of Closing Time, which is the episode of which you are thinking.

(no subject)

Date: 2015-07-22 09:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] parrot-knight.livejournal.com
I'd always assumed she got away under her own steam. Her programming seems to be reactivated at her regeneration into River, as she makes no attempt to kill the Doctor as Melody.

(no subject)

Date: 2015-07-23 11:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] parrot-knight.livejournal.com
I'd never read Melody's behaviour during the Hitler assassination scene as part of an attempt to kill the Doctor. I'd need to watch the episode again.

Profile

purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (Default)
purplecat

July 2025

S M T W T F S
   12 3 4 5
6 7 89 1011 12
13 14 151617 1819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags