Showing posts with label 12th Doctor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 12th Doctor. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 April 2017

How Season 10 Could Be The Best Season of Doctor Who Yet!

This weekend, the Doctor flew back onto our screens for its first series since 2015 and it did not disappoint. The new companion, Bill Potts (Pearl Mackie) was great, Nardole (Matt Lucas) was amusing enough not to be annoying and The Doctor (Peter Capaldi) was at his electrifying best. The main monster, a girl called Heather who had somehow been turned into a strange water/puddle creature, was absolutely terrifying as well! Can this amazing start continue though? And if it is to continue, what will be the main reasons? How can Moffat turn his Doctor Who swansong into the best season since the show came back twelve years ago?

Keep a leash on Matt Lucas

I like Matt Lucas. In interviews he always comes across as a thoroughly nice chap and he's also quite funny, Little Britain aside. On the surface, his double act with an older and kinda cantankerous Doctor is genius. However, in last nights season premiere he did come perilously close to being annoying and in Doctor Who, annoying is not a good thing. As great as Catherine Tate was as Donna in the Tennant era, she is far better in her later episodes than in her earlier ones because she grew into the role. In her Christmas special debut, she was annoying and, in my opinion, is one of the main reasons that episode is cited as a series low point. If this season of Doctor Who is to be as great as it potentially could be, Nardole needs to be kept on leash and needs to become a foil to Capaldi as opposed to a side kick.


Make the show scary again

The long awaited return of The Mondasian Cybermen should
reintroduce the fear factor
Last nights monster was downright scary in my terrified opinion. If I'd had a sofa, I'd have been cowering behind it. That's what Doctor Who is about, being scared and that is one of the times when Doctor Who is at its finest. There's a reason that the likes of 'The Empty Child' and 'Blink' are favourites among the shows fan base, the monsters are bloody scary! The Daleks need to be scary again which might mean giving them a series off. Yes, they are iconic but they have been massively overused since the shows arrival. 


Make John Sims return more than a gimmick

It is now common knowledge that John Sim is set to return alongside Missy as The Master and it needs to be done right. Don't make it gimmicky, please! Have a reason for him being there. My preferred reason would be for us to meet up with The Master before his regeneration into Missy. We all know how Moffat has enjoyed making his mark on the show and by having a multi Master story, he would be the first to do that. It might be a good thing, to see The Master and Missy onscreen together however I'm not convinced and much prefer the regeneration idea. Maybe The Doctor causes The Master to regenerate, maybe they cause each other to regenerate. 


Be uncomplicated

Capaldi; a great Doctor hampered by Moffat?
For me, the Moffat era is one of complication and vast plots. That's not a bad thing really however I get how it could put some viewers off. Doctor Who  should be about escapism. As viewers, we should feel like one of his companions, travelling with The Doctor to improbable worlds for adventure. By over complicating things with impossible jargon, long overarching plots and having The Doctor forever questioning what kind of man he is, it takes some of the wonderment and fun out of proceedings. The Matt Smith years were complicated with the impossible astronaut arch and then the impossible girl yet with Peter Capaldi, Moffat has gone on complication overload which, for me, has tainted the Capaldi era somewhat. It's a huge shame really because Capaldi has often been fantastic in the role and clearly loves being The Doctor. 

What would you like to see in this season of Doctor Who? What are you looking forward to and what are you dreading? Will you miss Capaldi and do you think he's done a good job in the role? Leave a comment and thank you for reading!


Thursday, 16 February 2017

Time for a woman to take control of the TARDIS

For fifty three years, The Doctor has been a man, traversing time and space in his little blue box. Surely, after thirteen male incarnations, it is time that he regenerated into a she. Of course many will have trouble with the concept, much like they did when The Master returned as Missy. There will always be those who criticise progress but there are some very good reasons why the next Doctor should be a woman.

Capaldi was a return to what made
Hartnel a great Doctor
I'm a big Doctor Who fan. I'll admit to not being as well versed on Classic Who as I'd like but I do have a decent conversational knowledge of the show. When Matt Smith announced his departure and there were rumblings of a female Doctor to replace him I was sceptical. The reason for that was because I didn't think it was the right time. After Eccleston, Tennant and the aforementioned Smith, I felt the show needed to go back to its routes and so championed Capaldi who eventually got the role. Capaldi was the first incarnation of The Doctors new set of regeneration's and so it felt right for him to be the character. He promised a more gruffer, older version of The Doctor which heralded back to William Hartnel's version. A woman wouldn't have had the same effect, I don't think and the reason why brings me to my second point.

If or when we do get a female Doctor, it could become gimmicky, or at least it would've had Capaldi's incarnation been a woman. At that point we hadn't met Missy. Although it had been inferred that Time Lords could switch genders during regeneration, we had never really seen the proof. Then Missy popped up and if that wasn't proof enough, we saw the process for ourselves in the season 9 finale, Hellbent. Now it is proven fact, a Time Lord can regenerate from a man to a woman and (it's assumed) vice versa. Because we, the audience have seen it and have known that Time Lords can regenerate into women for three years now, we are desensitized to the fact. After Smith, it would've been gimmicky but after Capaldi it is almost par for the course.

Moffat will soon be leaving the show,
a job he describes as "the best job in
the world" 
The departure of Steven Moffat from show runner duties is important because it allows for a mini-reboot of the show. There is a marked difference between the Russell T Davies years and the Moffat era in how episodes are structured and how they feel. With Chibnall coming on board for series eleven, it allows for another change and therefore for a change in gender of the lead character. If The Doctor does become a woman then it is likely that her main companion will be male and so we have a shift in the dynamics of the relationship between Doctor and companion. That relationship is extremely important, so important that the show pretty much rests on it. It is possibly why the likes of Rose, Amy and Clara lasted so long while Martha Jones didn't.

Could Swinton be the next Doctor?
My final point is that there are so many exciting female names being thrown into the hat now. Before Capaldi, the only female name which got a mention was Miranda Hart. Don't get me wrong, she's a terrific actress and with Call The Midwife she has shown she can do serious as well as comedy. She's not The Doctor though. This time we have Sheridan Smith, Olivia Coleman, Maxine Peake and the 4/1 favourite for the role, Tilda Swinton. As a Doctor Who fan, I would be more than happy with any of those actresses. Sheridan Smith's role as a companion to the Eighth Doctor (Paul Mcgann) in the Big Finish audio plays probably rules her out but maybe not. Peter Capaldi and Colin Baker had both prior Doctor Who experience before eventually landing the main job. All of that aside though, the world is ready for a madwoman to fly around in her little blue box, helping where she can. In fact, I'm ready!

What do you think? Are you ready for a female Doctor and if so do you have someone in mind? Or are you firmly in the male Doctor camp? Feel free to leave a comment below!

Monday, 5 August 2013

And The Next Doctor Is..........

So, the 12th/13th Doctor has been announced as the one and only Peter Capaldi! You have to hand it to Moffat and his team. For the last few months, well ever since Matt Smith announced his imminent departure from the show, they've been fanning the flames of rumour regarding possible choices for the new Doctor. A black Doctor seemed likely at one point with David Harewood and Idris Elba considered front runners for a while. In fact Harewood was considered a front runner right up until last nights big reveal! We also had a woman Doctor being rumoured with Miranda Hart and Dame Helen Mirren being championed by many a twitter user. Of course, the old names were also in the 'frame' with Russell Tovey (very nearly a David Tennent replacement), Benedict Cumberbatch (wanted for every role in the world ever) and Martin Freeman (one of my top choices) all being mentioned. Then we had the obvious choices, people such as Rory Kinnear, Andrew Scott, Stephen Mannagan, etc. In the end though Moffat went for his one and only choice of Capaldi.

Capaldi in 'The Fires of Pompei
     Now, Peter Capaldi is probably best known for his role as potty mouth Malcom Tucker in political satire The Thick Of It although Whovians will also recognise him for a previous appearance in the show! Back in David Tennents last full season he went to Pompei and Capaldi played Caecilius, the father of the family the Doctor saves at the end. Of course this isn't the first time an extra has gone on to play a lead part in the show. Colin Baker was in a 1983 episode before becoming the 6th Doctor a year later and both Freema Agyeman (Martha Jones) and Karen Gillian (Amy Pond) appeared in the show as different characters before landing the assistant gig. Infact Gillian actually appeared in Capaldis Pompei episode! It is therefore not unheard of for this to happen.

     As far as Peter Capaldi's twelth Doctor goes, what can we expect? Well I think it's safe to say that we can expect a different kind of Doctor. Capaldi is an amazingly versatile actor as his body of work suggests. He's also an older Doctor, the same age as William Hartnel when he got the part. I championed an older Doctor because I think it's what the show needed. It hails back to the original vision for The Doctor and I'm convinced that Capaldi will do a great job. Of course, with the ghost of Malcom Tucker still hovering we could get a few interesting encounters between The Doctor and his enemies. I can just imagine The Doctor telling an army of Daleks to f$%& themselves! On a serious note though, sure Capaldi's not as good looking as Andrew Scott or with the star quality of Idris Elba but at least he's not Miranda Hart!