The Waters of Mars
Nov. 17th, 2009 10:24 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Paper thin A plot, non-existent B plot: check
Obvious Sci-Fi cliches "He's stronger than us, I know, let's split up!" served up apparently without awareness or irony: check
Big emotional moments powered by story and character logic that doesn't bear close examination: check
Science sufficiently nonsensical that a bright 12 year-old would probably notice: check
but... but... but...
That was great, wasn't it?
Worth it simply for the scene where the Doctor walks away from the base.
I'm beginning to think RTD writes his best Doctor Who when he's actively trying to question or subvert our assumptions about the show.
Obvious Sci-Fi cliches "He's stronger than us, I know, let's split up!" served up apparently without awareness or irony: check
Big emotional moments powered by story and character logic that doesn't bear close examination: check
Science sufficiently nonsensical that a bright 12 year-old would probably notice: check
but... but... but...
That was great, wasn't it?
Worth it simply for the scene where the Doctor walks away from the base.
I'm beginning to think RTD writes his best Doctor Who when he's actively trying to question or subvert our assumptions about the show.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-11-18 01:20 pm (UTC)The whole reasoning behind the suicide, not to mention the Doctor taking them all back to Earth rather than somewhen else so there was still a mystery, all sits under "story and character logic doesn't bear close examination". I thought the idea, the acting, and the dialogue was breath-taking. In a perfect world I would wish a little more attention had been paid to the set up so that there wasn't a simple way for the Doctor to save their lives and leave the official history intact and that it was clear what Adelaide thought she would achieve by committing suicide after she'd been brought back to Earth. You can come up with explanations which make sense (and indeed fans are) but I don't think they are really there in the text.