NuWho Rewatch: Asylum of the Daleks
Sep. 21st, 2015 08:51 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I really like this story. In fact, I still really like this story even though I was a little worried that, once you were aware of the various reveals, it would lose some of its force. The Doctor, Amy and Rory are captured by the Daleks and sent to infiltrate the Daleks' asylum and shut off its forcefield so the Daleks can destroy it. On their way they are rescued repeatedly by Oswin Oswald, "souffle girl", who claims to have been trapped in the asylum following a spaceship crash.
I like a lot of the imagery in the story. Amy's vision of the Daleks as they see themselves has been widely acclaimed, but there are some other great visuals in the asylum and I also like Oswin's mental hideaway with its reds and browns. Oswin's story is both clever and genuinely affecting. Even where the Dalek convert whispers "I know. I read my file" to the Doctor when he tries to engage her emotions with her lost daughter, is surprisingly effective.
Less well-handled is the Ponds break-up and reconciliation.
daniel_saunders has complained that the show never properly addressed the emotional fall-out of River's kidnap which is a valid criticism, though you can see how it would have been difficult to do within the constraints of the genre. This is, I think, Doctor Who's attempt to do that, but the break-up comes out of nowhere (arguably even if you have watched the Pond Life shorts that led up to this season and pre-figured it) and while the audience are still trying to understand what has happened everything gets patched up. The fact that the underlying issue was Amy's belief that children were all important to Rory, his (and I think you could argue the audience's) lack of awareness of how much he meant to her, and her own infertility gets rather lost, I think, in the rapid pace of these events. That story needed more space, probably two or three episodes to play out in a way that it would have time for the audience to understand and digest. I do like that it isn't simply a bolted on sub-plot, but that it is the Dalek nanogenes and the way they work that forces Amy and Rory to finally have a conversation, but beyond that it feels too rushed and I don't think it really works to move us on from the River plotline.
That said, I really dislike the infectious Dalek nanogene idea, much as I like Oswin's story. They are too easy, too ill-defined, and make the Daleks too powerful. You have to wonder why the universe hasn't been entirely converted into Daleks if all they need to do is dump a few conversion nanogenes on any planet and then sit back and watch. I dislike the Cyber-rain at the end of series 8 for similar reasons.
The story's final reveal, that the Doctor has been wiped from Dalek memory also appears to have been quietly dropped (though I leave it open that I could be wrong about that, because some of of the dialogue in The Magician's Apprentice might be interpreted to refer to it). Moffat's intended trajectory from series 6 onwards has obviously been about the Doctor taking a step back from his very visible position as defender of all that is right and good in the universe. However the route has been inconsistent. In part, I think, this is because of the attraction of old enemies who can say words to the effect of "so Doctor, we meet again." But also because the audience clearly responds well to the Doctor's speeches in which he effectively threatens enemies with his reputation. I think it would be good to see more stories (particulalry climatic "event" stories) with a Doctor who is an unknown to those around him, but the show is obviously struggling with actually delivering on that idea.
In lots of ways Asylum of the Daleks is similar in structure to something like The Girl in the Fireplace - it is a science fiction short story with a twist in the tail. Unlike, The Girl in the Fireplace, it isn't self-contained and much of its context, I would argue, is dependent on a wider folk-understanding of the Daleks. It's also burdened with the rather rushed Ponds sub-plot which needed more space to breathe.
I like a lot of the imagery in the story. Amy's vision of the Daleks as they see themselves has been widely acclaimed, but there are some other great visuals in the asylum and I also like Oswin's mental hideaway with its reds and browns. Oswin's story is both clever and genuinely affecting. Even where the Dalek convert whispers "I know. I read my file" to the Doctor when he tries to engage her emotions with her lost daughter, is surprisingly effective.
Less well-handled is the Ponds break-up and reconciliation.
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That said, I really dislike the infectious Dalek nanogene idea, much as I like Oswin's story. They are too easy, too ill-defined, and make the Daleks too powerful. You have to wonder why the universe hasn't been entirely converted into Daleks if all they need to do is dump a few conversion nanogenes on any planet and then sit back and watch. I dislike the Cyber-rain at the end of series 8 for similar reasons.
The story's final reveal, that the Doctor has been wiped from Dalek memory also appears to have been quietly dropped (though I leave it open that I could be wrong about that, because some of of the dialogue in The Magician's Apprentice might be interpreted to refer to it). Moffat's intended trajectory from series 6 onwards has obviously been about the Doctor taking a step back from his very visible position as defender of all that is right and good in the universe. However the route has been inconsistent. In part, I think, this is because of the attraction of old enemies who can say words to the effect of "so Doctor, we meet again." But also because the audience clearly responds well to the Doctor's speeches in which he effectively threatens enemies with his reputation. I think it would be good to see more stories (particulalry climatic "event" stories) with a Doctor who is an unknown to those around him, but the show is obviously struggling with actually delivering on that idea.
In lots of ways Asylum of the Daleks is similar in structure to something like The Girl in the Fireplace - it is a science fiction short story with a twist in the tail. Unlike, The Girl in the Fireplace, it isn't self-contained and much of its context, I would argue, is dependent on a wider folk-understanding of the Daleks. It's also burdened with the rather rushed Ponds sub-plot which needed more space to breathe.