Series
9 of Doctor Who has
seen a return to more multi-part stories, opening with two two-part
stories and following those with... not exactly a two-part story, but
two linked episodes. With the second episode of each pair, I've
commented on how they compare to one another, whether the second
episode has lived up to the expectations of the first, exceeded them
(in the case of “The Witch's Familiar”
compared to “The Magician's Apprentice”),
or fallen short (in the case of “Before the Flood” compared
to “Under the Lake”).
“The
Woman Who Lived” by Catherine Tregenna is technically a new story,
not the second part of “The Girl Who Died”
(despite the “To Be Continued” slapped on the the end of that
one). The two episodes have different writers, different settings,
and different plots. Even the atmosphere and tone of the two stories
are different. But what links them is they both form segments in the
life of the one carry-over character (apart from the Doctor himself,
of course), the titular Girl Who Died/Woman Who Lived. Much like the
entirety of Doctor
Who shows us moments in the life
of the Doctor, these two episodes show us the life of Ashildr/Lady
Me. As such, it's only natural to compare them as the second builds
upon the first.
So,
the question is, how does “The Woman Who Lived” compare to “The
Girl Who Died”? Does it meet expectations? I have to say it more
than meets them. It leaves those expectations far behind in the dust.
“The Woman Who Lived” is Doctor Who
at its best. It's a calm, character-based tale (mostly) free from
world-destroying shenanigans. Epic,
world-threatening adventure has an important place in Doctor
Who, but it's not the only thing
and never should be. There need to be introspective stories that slow
things down a bit and show us effects and consequences. “The Woman
Who Lived” does this and more. With brilliant performances by its
two leads, it mixes a compelling morality tale with emotion and a
light dose of comedy (and much more successful humour than that
attempted in “The Girl Who Died”).
“The
Woman Who Lived” is Catherine Tregenna's first Doctor Who
script, although she wrote four episodes of Torchwood,
including the highly regarded “Captain Jack Harkness”. Her
Torchwood episodes are
some of my favourites, all of them strong character tales, so I'm not
surprised that her first foray into Doctor Who
is just as good. Tregenna is only
the second woman to write for Doctor Who
since it returned in 2005, and
the first since Helen Raynor
in 2008 (Raynor
wrote four episodes total over 2007-2008,
“Daleks in Manhattan”/“Evolution of the Daleks” and “The
Sontaran Stratagem”/“The Poison Sky”). A third woman, Sarah
Dollard, has written an episode, “Face the Raven” that will air
later in Series 9. All things
considered, this is a pretty
bad gender-balance record for the show, but it is good to see that
some attempt has been made to address the problem this year.
Hopefully, this will continue in future years to even out the
balance.
The
basic premise of “The Woman Who Lived” is nothing new to Doctor
Who. In fact, Doctor
Who (and Torchwood)
has examined the issue of immortality on numerous occasions. Captain
Jack even gets a nod in this episode. This
story builds
on that idea by giving us an in-depth discussion between two
essentially immortal characters about the problems of immortality
(the Doctor isn't truly immortal, but he might as well be given that
he can potentially receive more and more sets of regenerations every
time they run out).
At
the end of “The Girl Who Died”, the Doctor resurrected Ashildr
via a handy plot convenience and then took off—the man who runs
away from consequences. He knew at the time that he might have made a
mistake and that the troubles of immortality might change Ashildr
immensely. As such, it's a bit odd that he seems surprised by her
changes here, although a large part of that is probably an act for
her benefit to help her remember her old self. However, it's also
hard to say just how long it's been for the Doctor since the last
episode. Clara has taken a holiday from the TARDIS and so the Doctor
could conceivably have been wandering about for years on his own
before reconnecting with Clara at the end. At the very least, he's
had enough time to visit Ashildr on one other occasion (although not
revealing himself to her at that time). So perhaps he has simply
forgotten his earlier concerns. Forgetting the past is a theme in
this episode.
And
Ashildr certainly has changed—a
lot. We get a glimpse of it during
the time lapse at the end of
“The Girl Who Died” as her expression changes away from
happiness. Now she has buried her feelings away as best she can. She
has experienced
too much loss, too much unhappiness.
“The
Woman Who Lived” contains one of the most original ideas regarding
immortality, one never seen in Doctor Who
before and one I'm unaware of appearing in any other show that has
tackled immortality—the limits of memory. Immortals in various
programmes, including Doctor Who
rarely seem to have much difficulty recalling the past (in
picture-perfect flashbacks even!), yet this story acknowledges that
the human brain simply can't store 800 years worth of memories with
any sort of precision. Ashildr has even forgotten the village she
grew up in—the one she was willing to die for rather than abandon.
Ashildr
doesn't initially even remember that name. She hasn't gone by it in
centuries. She now goes simply by Me. And that, in itself, is a
simply ingenious look into the person she has become. As we all get
older, we tend to feel that time goes by faster. Each successive year
is a smaller and smaller fraction of all the years that have come
before. Imagine living for hundreds of years. Would the decades and
even centuries start to fly by? Me has seen so many friends and loved
ones come and go, so many people appear and disappear that they no
longer have any real meaning to her—they are just mayflies, she
says. There is only one constant: herself. She is all there is. What
better name than Me? What
other name speaks more
volume than those brief two letters?
This
is a very different kind of immortality than that of Captain Jack,
who, while he has suffered loss too, does not seem to have the same
memory problems as Me (perhaps Rose, as Bad Wolf, adjusted Jack's
brain physiology when she restored him to life to help him cope; she
could see all of reality after all). Me is forced to chronicle her
life in shelves and shelves of journals that she can reread to help
her remember. These, too, offer a great insight into her
character—not just in the events
they retell, but the events they don't. Some memories are just too
terrible to recall, she says,
and so she tears those pages out. But
not the pages detailing the deaths of her children. She keeps those
to remind herself never to have any more children.
This
is all covered in a few relatively brief sequences in the episode,
yet they contain more depth of character than most people in Doctor
Who ever get. It's phenomenal
storytelling by Tregenna and utterly heartbreaking. But it's more
than just the depths of storytelling that convey who Me is: it's also
Maisie Williams's portrayal.
I've
come across a few very vocal detractors of Williams's performance.
She's too wooden, they say. But I think they miss the point. Me is
trying very hard to be
wooden, to pretend that things don't affect her—but they do, and
those things come out sometimes. Williams does an amazing job
bringing that across. Her facial expressions are subtle, but they are
there—her sadness, her
anger. She neither overacts
it nor underacts it. No real person has ever lived 800 years, so
portraying such a person is not an easy thing. How exactly does one
portray the weight of 800 years of loss without known that weight
oneself? Yet Williams, at only 18 herself, successfully convinces
that she has lived that long.
This
episode gains a lot by Clara's absence through most of it. In some
ways, this is a bit unfortunate as it sidelines Clara again (which
has been happening a lot this series—the series which is her last)
and uses that absence to focus on her effect on the Doctor,
essentially removing her agency as a character. Yet at the same time,
this gives added agency to Me, who is not afraid to remind the Doctor
that he will one day lose Clara. Even if she stays with him her whole
life, she will eventually die, and the Doctor will be alone again. If
he took Me with him instead, he would have a companion for life.
But
the Doctor has a different approach to his long life than Me,
something she doesn't initially understand.
The Doctor has had a much longer life and much more time to learn the
pitfalls of living so long. He knows the importance of the
“mayflies”. They remind him of the
value of life whenever
he starts to forget it, and so he travels with short-lived humans to
keep him grounded. It's a lesson we've seen the Doctor learn before.
But the Doctor still runs
away. He doesn't like to face the long-term consequences of his
actions. Me runs away, too, but in a different way, trying to hide
herself from herself.
Peter
Capaldi's performance here is likewise excellent. He too brings
across the Doctor's age and sorrow in just a few telling looks, often
in response to a mention of Clara. His look in the closing shot of
the episode sums up everything he has been through and his knowledge
that, despite Clara saying, “I'm not going anywhere,” one day she
will be gone and who knows how many others after that will be gone
too? It's also a
bit of foreshadowing that that moment may come sooner than either of
them expect.
Of
course, all this introspection has to take place somewhere, and
that's where the story's setting comes into play. In my review of
“The Girl Who Died”, I bemoaned its rather ahistorical portrayal
of Vikings. In retrospect, however, it's more the fact that the
episode doesn't really make much use of its faux setting. It's a
stock village with stock characters. “The Woman Who Lived”
certainly isn't perfectly historically accurate either, but
its setting is so much more a part of what is unfolding in the story,
from the Knightmare's highway robbery to sneaking through the
Fanshawe home to the gallows at Tyburn.
I
particularly like the gallows scene and Sam Swift's “stand-up
comedy” routine. I've commented before on the problems of forced
comedy, “Robot of Sherwood” being a
good example of that. But this scene turns that idea on its head.
It's very much forced comedy, but it's forced in the context of the
story itself. Executions were a form of public entertainment at the
time. Entertaining the crowd and making them laugh bought the
condemned a few minutes longer to live. It's the very origin of the
term gallows humour itself.
Although there are jokes being told, this is a tense scene meant to
build up sympathy for Sam and
add depth to his character. It's
not really to make the viewers laugh.
Sam
is also the perfect character to be the recipient of the other
immortality chip. It's not because he's any more deserving of it than
anyone else—he's certainly not the sort of person Me would have
chosen to spend eternity with under normal circumstance (I think it's
also pretty telling that Me never used it on her husband or
children). It's similar to Rex becoming immortal at the end of
Torchwood: Miracle Day.
Rex is the last person
anyone would choose to bestow immortality on, but he is the perfect
narrative foil to Captain Jack. Sam Swift is a foil to Me, opposite
to her in many ways, but providing a balance to her.
If
there's one weakness in “The Woman Who Lived” (and there's always
a weakness if you look hard enough), it's Leandro the lion man from
Delta Leonis. Of course, his presence is merely to provide Me and the
Doctor with something to do while they delve into the real story,
which is Me's life and immortality. As such, he's a plot strand that
should be tied up relatively easily. On the other hand, he never
really portrays much of a threat. Even his fire breathing never
really does anything, and the attack by his people at the end causes
surprisingly little damage. His fate is also somewhat garbled. This
isn't a fault of the script or performances, but some odd editing
choices. He does get a couple of lines where he tells Me that if she
closes the portal his people will kill him, and just before he
disintegrates, he calls out to
his people to spare him, but both lines are garbled amidst
overpowering music and quick jump cuts. They're very easy to miss,
leaving one wondering why he suddenly disintegrates. But really, the
story's not about Leandro and the weaknesses in his part of the story
don't overshadow the strengths in the main story.
Some
quick final thoughts:
This
episode contains one of the best lines of dialogue ever to grace
Doctor Who: "I
didn't know your heart would rust because it kept beating. I didn't
think that your conscience would need renewing or that the well of
human kindness would run dry.” It is kind of naïve of the Doctor
not to predict something
like this might happen,
but it's an amazing line nonetheless and said with such conviction by
Peter Capaldi.
Contrastingly,
the episode also contains one of the worst lines: “Purple, the
colour of death.” What purpose does this obviously
dubbed line
serve other than
to tell viewer
that the purple death ray on the screen is both purple and a death
ray? Rather pointless really.
Me's
acceptance that she does care in the middle of the attack is perhaps
a little sudden, but such are the limits of a 45-minute episode.
Me's
male voice as the Knightmare is unconvincing. It is too obviously
dubbed over and not Maisie Williams speaking, even when she's in the
mask.
It
is unfortunate that the first Doctor
Who
script written by a woman in seven years doesn't pass the Bechdel
test.
Me's
appearance in the selfie at the end seems to imply that we have not
seen the last of her. I look forward to her return.
Overall,
“The Woman Who Lived” is amongst the finest of Doctor
Who
stories in recent years and even a good deal longer. Each viewing has
had me entranced from beginning to end. I don't want Doctor
Who
to be like this every week, but I do want it to be like this from
time to time. Incredible
stuff!
thank you for this review
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