Since
I started writing Doctor Who
reviews in mid-series 6, I have generally only reviewed individual
episodes. While, within those reviews, I might comment on the overall
direction of the series (and particularly on the resolution in my
review of a series finale), I haven't previously reviewed an entire
series as a whole. I generally haven't felt the need to. However,
this year, during Series 9, I noticed an unusual thing happening: I
was rating individual episodes quite highly, yet my feelings for the
entire series were much lower, and they seemed to sink lower as the
series went on, despite the fact that my opinions of the individual
episodes were often getting higher. While this isn't entirely
unprecedented, it seemed to be a much greater dichotomy than usual
this year, and so I began to think that I should write a follow-up
review after the series finale that looks back on the entire series.
This is that review.
My
main issue with Series 9 is the series arc story, which is, to say
the least, poor and unconvincing. Series arcs are an interesting
phenomenon, a product of modern television storytelling that old,
“classic” Doctor Who
didn't have to deal with. In those days, seasons of any show on
television just sort of ended. They didn't make a big deal of the
conclusion. Similarly, there wasn't a continuing story arc joining
multiple episodes (or, in Doctor Who's
case, serials) together. Each story was distinct and separate from
what came before and the only continuity was character continuity
(and even characters didn't do much developing from one story to the
next).
Doctor
Who experimented with a couple
of arcs back in the day. There was “The Key to Time” arc of
Season 16 and “The Trial of a Timelord” for season 23.
Occasionally, a season might
have a linking theme, such as entropy in Season 18, or a couple
stories in a row might be linked together in some way, such as the
Black Guardian trilogy in Season 20. But on the whole, each story was
separate and contained, and the final story of a season wasn't
treated any differently than the stories that came before it.
It
was in the 90s, while Doctor Who
was off the air, that this started to change and story arcs that
continued over multiple episodes became more common. Babylon
5 was at the forefront of this
change, presenting a show that had a continuing story that went from
its first to last episode over five years. Other science fiction and
fantasy shows began to follow Babylon 5's
lead. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine,
The X-Files, Buffy,
the Vampire Slayer, and others
began introducing ongoing story arcs, some that lasted over multiple
years, others that would run a single season before concluding and
allowing for a new arc to start the following season. By the time
Doctor Who returned to
television full-time in 2005, story arcs had become the norm for much
of television, beyond just science fiction and fantasy programmes.
Doctor Who really had
little choice but to take part.
I
don't want to make it sound as if I think this is, in any way, a bad
thing. I actually think it's been a change for the better in
television. Although they have the downside of making it more of an
issue to miss an episode, story arcs provide more of a reward for the
viewers. They give a direction to the show and to the characters, and
allow viewers to travel with the characters through a developing
world, one where the events of one episode impact the episodes that
come after it, and there's a
greater sense of accomplishment when the end of the arc is reached.
That said, story arcs were something new for Doctor Who,
and I'm not sure the show has ever fully acclimated to the format.
Doctor
Who's story arcs have ranged
from subtle, background arcs (like Bad Wolf in Series 1) to more
overt arcs (like the Saxon arc of Series 3 or the cracks in time of
Series 5). Series 9 goes for
more of a background arc, although it is certainly not a subtle one.
This, in itself, is not necessarily a bad thing. However, it is the
way it all links together (or fails to link together) that makes it
ultimately unsatisfying. Many of the references to the arc throughout
the series feel forced and unnatural. Although they're generally
background details, the stories make a point of putting them in the
spotlight and pointing them out as if to say, “Here's the series
arc! Pay attention to it!”
There
are actually two story arcs in Series 9. One is Clara's personal
journey and fate. The other is the story of the Doctor's confession
dial and the Hybrid. Both of them suffer from the problem I mentioned
above of not being very well integrated into the stories. I commented
frequently throughout my reviews of Series 9 episodes that Clara's
story was rather perplexing—not that it was hard to understand what
was going on, but that it was treated as such an afterthought. In the
majority of stories in Series 9, Clara is sidelined and given very
little to do, if she's present at all. Although the titles of the
opening two episodes, “The Magician's Apprentice”
and “The Witch's Familiar”
seem to refer to Clara, the sidelining happens almost immediately
(after a brief bit of
Clara-centric material in the opening scenes of “The Magician's
Apprentice”) and continues until “Face the Raven”, the
first story of the series that gives her a significant
role—ironically, the story where she dies (or appears to, at any
rate). One of the episodes during that time, “The Woman Who Lived”,
doesn't feature her at all except during its closing scene, and
another, “The Zygon Invasion”, has
her replaced by a double early on, so most of what we see of her in
that story is actually another character entirely. When she is given
some small token moments, the dialogue goes out of its way to draw
attention to her becoming more Doctor-like in her behaviour, whether
it's the Doctor himself calling her out in “Under the Lake” or another
character, such as Cass in “Before the Flood” doing so.
The rest of the time, she mostly follows the Doctor around and asks
questions like a stock companion of older Doctor Who.
We
seem to be expected to see Clara as reckless, that
she's trying to copy the Doctor without really understanding how and
why the Doctor does what he does. Yet
she doesn't really do much that could be considered reckless (at
least, no more reckless than what people in adventure shows,
including Doctor Who,
do all the time). About the only truly reckless thing she does is
hang out the door while the TARDIS is flying over London in “Face
the Raven”, and it is
the Doctor who puts
her up to that. Even the action that leads to her death in that story
isn't really all that reckless. In fact, her plan makes a good deal
of sense given her lack of information, and it is the kind of thing
the Doctor might do. So, while she does become more Doctor-like,
she's not really reckless.
Yet
even her more Doctor-like behaviour seems an afterthought throughout
Series 9. We see it in a few token moments, and are simply told about
it most of the rest of the time. In Series 8, Clara has a much more
developed journey, which includes her learning to understand the
Doctor and even become more like him. When she is forced to take over
his role in “Flatline”, it works naturally because we have seen
her approach this point throughout the series, and even here, we see
her still learning. Keeping her in the sidelines throughout Series 9,
only to get those few token moments, simply doesn't develop her in a
believable or satisfying way.
I
am planning a retrospective on Clara's time on Doctor Who
(from “Asylum of the Daleks” all
the way up to “Hell Bent”) and will go into more detail there on
her role in Series 9 (and how it compares to her roles in Series 7
and 8). Expect that in early
January. For the rest of this
review, I am going to focus on the other part of the arc of series
9—the Hybrid and the Doctor's confession dial (although I will
certainly mention Clara again when talking of the resolution to the
series).
The
Doctor's confession dial is introduced early in the first episode of
the series, where it plays a significant role in getting the action
started. The Doctor sends it to Missy, who then decides to seek
Clara's assistance in finding the Doctor, who has gone into hiding.
There is something of an odd feel to
the series right from the start, and I think this comes about because
despite those opening moments playing up the importance of the dial,
it ultimately plays very little role in the story and there doesn't
really seem to be a reason for the Doctor to have a confession dial
in the first place. We are told that he creates one because he is
expecting to die, but the Doctor has gone into many other situations
in the past expecting to die and hasn't felt the need to make a
confession dial. So why does he do so this time? What's different
about his upcoming encounter with Davros? By the end of “The
Witch's Familiar”, there really doesn't seem to be anything
different about it at all—not even in the sense of an ongoing
mystery. What the Doctor's confession is
is the mystery, but the fact that he's made a confession at all (or
actually hasn't as we learn much later in a twist that does not seem
well set-up by the opening events at all) is not really questioned at
all.
There's
also the fact that this is a brand new aspect of Time Lord society
that the show is introducing, one that initially seems at odd with
what we know of Time Lords. Of course, this isn't the first time
Doctor Who has
reinvented aspects of its alien cultures, and it likely won't be the
last either. This is a new
aspect of Time Lord society that could probably fit in quite
seamlessly, but it's
confounded here by the fact that it's
introduced in an episode
which expects viewers to keep up with a whole pile of other things as
well. As I commented in my review of it at the
time, “The Magician's Apprentice” contains many elements that are
more typical of a series finale than a series opener. It throws
things at viewers very fast, particularly a succession of characters
they are expected to know (despite some not having appeared on the
show for literally decades), and it doesn't take much time to develop
the themes it is dealing with, preferring instead to rely on a lot of
spectacle and eye-candy. “The Magician's Apprentice” is a very
enjoyable episode for people
who are well-versed in the history of Doctor Who,
but is not particularly accessible to new viewers, and the confession
dial ends up lost amidst a whole pile of other details. It's
mentioned again in “The Witch's Familiar” (along with the first
mention of the Hybrid), but by then it's more of an afterthought as
it no longer has any real impact on the action.
For
the
rest of the series, the confession dial remains mostly unmentioned,
though mentions of the Hybrid show up repeatedly, and generally in
ways that again feel forced. Davros brings it up somewhat randomly in
“The Witch's Familiar” and from that point on, mentions of
something or other being “like a hybrid” occur several times
throughout the series, each time in an ominous manner. The problem
here is that there have been numerous examples of hybrids on Doctor
Who throughout the years and
none of them have ever made the Doctor think of the Gallifreyan
legend of the Hybrid before. Of course, that's because the Hybrid is
an idea added this year and that's okay. However, adding something
new like this needs to be done much more organically, rather than
with forced mentions every time a potential Hybrid shows up.
I
think the biggest problem, however, comes from the fact that these
mentions of the Hybrid never seem to
lead anywhere until they get there, and
even then, they don't really arrive at anything. The series ends
unsatisfyingly by not revealing exactly who or what the Hybrid is and
suddenly downplaying the Hybrid's threat. We learn a few
possibilities and the most likely seems to be the one Me
suggests—that the Hybrid is both the Doctor and Clara travelling
together. It's actually a very intriguing idea, but we never see any
actual evidence that the Doctor and Clara travelling together is so
dangerous. It ties back into Clara's arc of becoming too Doctor-like,
but what does she ever do that is actually so bad?
I've
commented before, most recently in my review of “Hell Bent”,
that Doctor Who has a
problem with telling, rather than showing. We are told repeatedly
that the Hybrid is a terrible threat, but we never see any example of
this. Perhaps the threat is that the Doctor is willing to go so far
to save Clara that he will risk the destruction of the entire
universe to do so. Indeed, we are once again told that extracting
Clara and not putting her back will cause this, yet the universe
doesn't seem all that badly off. Well, the time period “Hell Bent”
is set in is the very end of the universe, but you would expect it to
be badly off by then. The rest of time, on the other hand,
doesn't seem affected. Supposedly, Clara still must go back to her
death, but since she has an apparently unlimited amount of time
before doing so, the threat is kind of nullified, making the Hybrid
no threat at all.
The
story of the confession dial and the Hybrid also ties into the search
for Gallifrey arc that began in “The Day of the Doctor”.
Not much has been done with that arc since then, but “The
Magician's Apprentice” and “The Witch's Familiar” do seem to
set that arc up as being important to Series 9. And indeed, the
series does end with the return of Gallifrey. Yet what should have
been a climactic resolution of that arc ends up a complete
anti-climax. The Doctor doesn't really find Gallifrey. He just ends
up there. And it's not lost any more. It's just hiding at the
extremes of the time continuum.
The
problem here is that the circumstances keep changing and we don't see
them change. Once again, we're just told about them. In “The Day of
the Doctor”, Gallifrey is caught in an alternate universe and
frozen in a single moment of time. In “The Time of the Doctor”,
it's apparently not frozen any more, though we never learn why.
Instead, while it's still in another universe, the Time Lords are now
capable of interacting with the Doctor's universe—even causing the
cracks in time. They can even
grant the Doctor a new set of regenerations. In “Hell Bent”,
Gallifrey is no longer in another universe, and once again we don't
get to see how it got out. On the one hand, it's nice to know that
the Time Lords are actually capable of getting a few things done on
their own and aren't complete idiots. Yet having all these things
happen off screen and covered in one or two lines of exposition just
makes for unsatisfying storytelling. And
previous developments that the Time Lords had become just as bad as
the Daleks by the end of the Time War? Discarded when the Doctor
tells Rassilon and then the High Council to leave Gallifrey—as if
that will make Gallifrey a good place again. What is perhaps even
more surprising is that they apparently just do as the Doctor says.
They need to make way for another idea.
Steven
Moffat seems to suffer from a strong case of “I've got a better
idea” syndrome. It's something that I'm sure every writer has
experienced to some degree or another. I certainly have. It's when
you're working on a story and partway through, you come up with an
idea for something else. That new idea starts taking over your
thoughts and it becomes difficult to stay focused on the story you
were working on. There's a temptation to drop that story and start
the new one instead. Of course, once you're halfway through the new
one, an even newer idea forms and the cycle starts again.
While
it's okay to give into this from time to time (sometimes those new
ideas can improve upon the old ones), it seems to me that Moffat
gives into it far more often than he should (it's
also harder to do it in an ongoing television programme when the old
ideas have already been presented to the public).
It's one reason why I think he's much better at writing single,
self-contained stories than he is at longer series arcs. As a result,
there have been numerous sudden shifts to arcs over Moffat's time as
showrunner and even more plot threads that are left hanging—sometimes
for years—until they are discarded in a line or
two of dialogue. In “Let's Kill Hitler”, Amy
and Rory suddenly have a best friend that they grew up with, but
viewers have never heard of before, all so Moffat can throw in the
idea that they grew up alongside their daughter. “The Time of the
Doctor” suddenly clears up the mystery of the Silence in a couple
lines of dialogue with the mystery having been solved entirely
off-screen. Gallifrey is
frozen, then it's not, then it's free—all because the current
story, the latest better idea, needs it to be free, so why bother
spending time freeing it? Let's just jump to it already being free.
From a writer's perspective, it can be very fun to leave old ideas
behind and jump straight into new ideas; from a viewer's perspective,
it's just frustrating, especially if the viewer has become engaged in
the old idea.
This
same problem of a better idea seems to inflict the story of the
confession dial in Series 9. As I mentioned earlier, the end of the
series suddenly reveals that the dial never had the Doctor's
confession in it to begin with, but never bothers to explain why. If
the Doctor hadn't made his confession yet, why send the dial to
Missy? There's no suggestion that the Doctor was engaged in some sort
of deception or ploy. Rather, it just seems that the “rules” of
the confession dial have changed, as though Moffat had a better idea
along the way—that the Time Lords could use the dial as a torture
chamber to wring the Doctor's confession out of him. “Heaven Sent” is an amazing
episode. I love it to bits. But the changing rules are frustrating.
There's
also an inconsistency to the Doctor's character in Series 9. Although
this isn't really related to the story arc, it does play into the
problems with the series as a whole. It's clear that the intent was
to soften the Doctor somewhat from how he was in Series 8. The addition of the guitar and sonic sunglasses help to establish this change. While I
really like the Doctor in Series 8, I agree that a softening of his
character was a necessary development (although
I would have preferred if it
happened
a little more gradually).
However, while his character in Series 9 is definitely softened, the
writers seem uncertain how much he should be softened and in what
ways. And so, sometimes he's more clownish and comical. Sometimes,
he's cold and calculating, letting someone
die so he can test a theory one episode, and then in the next, he's
sick and tired of all the death around him. At the end of “The Girl Who Died”, he
comments on the terrible risk he's taken bringing Ashildr back to
life and how immortality can negatively affect a person. Then, next
episode, he's shocked by the person Me has become.
And
so I am left with this dichotomy concerning my feelings for Series 9.
Part of me wants to rank it as a weak series, one
of the weakest of Moffat's time as showrunner.
Yet individually, I really like most of the episodes. I would rank
“The Woman Who Lived” and “Heaven Sent” amongst the best of
the best. Even the weaker episodes, like “The
Girl Who Died”,
“Sleep No More”, and “Hell
Bent”, are still quite entertaining. But
I suppose that's Doctor Who.
It can be both brilliant and frustrating simultaneously, and perhaps
that's even part of what makes me love it so much. I look forward to
a (hopefully) stand-alone Christmas special in “The Husbands of
River Song” and then a
fresh start next year in
Series 10.
Addendum 25 December, 2015:
It occurred to me that I should mention a few more positive aspects of Series 9 in addition to the individual episodes (I had intended to, but managed to forget to include them). One really notable thing about Series 9 is the increased diversity in casting. Indeed, Series 9 may well be the most diverse series of Doctor Who so far (although I haven't actually done a close comparison to be certain). There are many roles for women and people of colour. This series also has the first deaf actor (Sophie Stone) and first transgender actor (Bethany Black) to appear in Doctor Who. There were also women writing for Doctor Who this year for the first time in seven years. Catherine Tregenna wrote "The Woman Who Lived" and Sarah Dollard "Face the Raven".
These are very positive changes and hopefully reflect trends that will continue.
Addendum 25 December, 2015:
It occurred to me that I should mention a few more positive aspects of Series 9 in addition to the individual episodes (I had intended to, but managed to forget to include them). One really notable thing about Series 9 is the increased diversity in casting. Indeed, Series 9 may well be the most diverse series of Doctor Who so far (although I haven't actually done a close comparison to be certain). There are many roles for women and people of colour. This series also has the first deaf actor (Sophie Stone) and first transgender actor (Bethany Black) to appear in Doctor Who. There were also women writing for Doctor Who this year for the first time in seven years. Catherine Tregenna wrote "The Woman Who Lived" and Sarah Dollard "Face the Raven".
These are very positive changes and hopefully reflect trends that will continue.
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