
The ninth Christmas special, the eight hundredth broadcast episode, the end of the eleventh Doctor and the finale of a four-year-long twisty-turny war through time. New characters, old characters, a multitude of monsters, the fallout from the anniversary special, the resurgence of the Time War and a regeneration. Oh, and Christmas dinner. Steven Moffat chose to pack a hell of a lot into one hour's worth of festive television, and while it was a brave attempt, the ultimate result was, perhaps inevitably, disappointing.
The beginning of The Time of the Doctor is very wonky indeed. The most ineffectual Daleks ever, intercut with Clara's Christmas dinner preparations, before the episode started proper. Then it moves onto some very misjudged comedy involving a naked Doctor and holographic clothes, a joke which outstayed its welcome and wasn't actually very funny in the first place. Fluffing the beginning so badly was a very poor move, with the episode having to play catch-up for its remaining runtime. The first half of the episode is oddly paced – not necessarily a bad thing, but with only an hour's runtime to cover so much, the story sagged in the middle. Somehow, a ground war between Daleks, Silents, Cybermen and Sontarans managed to come across as a little boring, which is no mean feat.
Which is a pity, because there is so much to enjoy here. All of the best moments of the episode are character beats, with more attention being paid to them than to the pyrotechnics and plot developments. This, again, is not bad thing, particularly when the majority of the characters are so well-explored and well-acted. But this is the Christmas episode, and it requires a certain amount of bangs and flashes to keep dozy post-dinner viewers engaged. There's a tricky balance to be met, and this production missed it.
While it's a nice touch to get back to ordinary, contemporary life for a moment after all the cosmic angst we've seen recently, the sequences with Clara's family could have been cut completely. What a miserable bunch. With the exception of her gran, played by Benidorm's wonderful Sheila Reid, I'd happily never see that lot again.
On the other hand, we have Trenzalore and the Papal Mainframe, a curious mix of ordinary people and a cosmic convent. Orla Brady deserves particular praise in this episode. Talented, gorgeous, and pretty much wasted on a character who turns into little more than a River Song stand-in, Brady makes us care for a character who we have no reason to care for. There's no indication that the Doctor and Tasha Lem have any connection – we're just told that they do. She's dropped into the story with a tag saying “Old mysterious friend of the Doctor.” Considering how many elements of the past were drawn on, why not just give us a character we actually know the Doctor has a past with, someone we've seen before? As it is, it's entirely down to Brady that Tasha is a successful character at all. And really, a sexy space nun with a bed in the shape of an altar? Moffat, go and have a wank and come back to the script with a clear head.
I love Christmas Town though, and the whole set-up. It's the scenes set in Christmas that really work. From the beginning, when we meet the cheerful couple (good to see Only Fools' Tessa Peake-Jones again at Christmas), the quaint human colony where lying is impossible is a wonderful setting. God knows how a village in a perpetual winter, with no crops or livestock apparent, on a planet surrounded by an impenetrable force field, actually survives, but at least it provides a pleasant backdrop. It's the sort of place one can imagine the Doctor actually settling down; somewhere nice and simple, that reaffirms his faith in humanity, but still has a constant threat for him to fight.

The most moving scene of the episode is not the regeneration, but Handles' death scene. Only the Doctor could rip the head off a Cyberman and become friends with it. Handles has been praised as the new K-9, but he's rather better, with Kayvan Novak managing to sound endearing and monotone at the same time. The poor, battered piece of kit, the one constant friend the Doctor has had throughout his long, long life on Trenzalore, manages to be the most emotionally engaging element of the episode.

And, after all of that, with the Doctor on his last legs, Clara whispers to the Time Lords, who promptly change their centuries' long game plan and bugger off, giving the Doctor a full new regeneration cycle as a Christmas present. Quite why the eleventh Doctor has been bumped up to the thirteenth version is anyone's guess. While it makes perfect sense, it is entirely of Moffat's making. He introduced the missing Doctor played by John Hurt, making Smith the twelfth version, and he could easily have ignored the middle-regeneration taken by David Tennant. After all, it has not, until now, been established that it “counted” as a full regen. Instead, Moffat hinges the plot on it. (I did love the Doctor confessing to “vanity issues at the time.”) I can only imagine that, with the thirteen-lives limit approaching, Moffat decided that it was best if he sorted it out while he was still in charge, apparently not trusting his successor to do so, and engineered the situation. As it is, it does add an extra level of jeopardy to proceedings, even though we know, as viewers, that the Doctor will continue on.
Finally, the Doctor gets a zap of twinkly orange stuff, and begins to regenerate. The regenerations have been becoming more violent each time, and now the Doctor is able to wipe out a Dalek squadron and cause a small avalanche with his artron blasts. It's a satisfying moment, but the overall solution to the problem is disappointingly obvious. He's out of lives, so the Time Lords give him some more. Anyone could have come up with that solution.

And then, suddenly, he's changed. With all the flare of a particularly big sneeze, the Doctor flinches and changes. It's hard to say what Capaldi will be like based on his first brief moments. The first lines of a Doctor are rarely anything to get excited about. For now, based on the very Smith-esque lines (that had already been released, so they weren't even a surprise), the Doctor doesn't seem much changed, but it really is no indication as to how Capaldi will play the part. We'll have to wait till the autumn to find out.
Hanky-Panky in the TARDIS: Does every woman have to fancy the Doctor now? I have no complaint with the Doctor displaying sexuality, but it's not necessary for him to flirt with and snog every attractive female he meets. Clara admits that she fancies him in the truth field, which is fine, it's obvious that she does, but it's a sweet, embarrassed sort of fancying, one that never really seems requited. Then he meets Tasha Lem and it's all “Hello babes,” and altar beds and snogging her Dalek-ised face off. The long development of his relationship with River Song doesn't mean much if he just locks lips with the next Mrs Robinson figure he bumps into.

Explain this one: The Doctor destroys all the Daleks with his artron energy blasts. Why don't the Time Lords just come through then? No, they slip back into their parallel universe, apparently content to wait a few more centuries. Also, if the regeneration energy is so powerful, how did the Time Lords ever do so badly in the Time War? They could have all lined up, sacrificed one regeneration each and wiped the Daleks out for good.
Time can be Rewritten: Right, so the Doctor's timeline has been altered, so that he doesn't die on Trenzalore. Which means that his remains, the temporal scar we saw in The Night of the Doctor, isn't there. Which means that Clara can never throw herself into it and become scattered amongst the Doctor's timeline. Which means that her Oswin incarnation can never wipe the Daleks' memories of the Doctor. Not that it matters, because they all get their memories of him back with no trouble anyway, so that was entirely pointless.
Links and References: The Terileptils appeared in the 1982 Davison serial The Visitation. The Punch and Judy puppet show features puppets of the Doctor and what looks like a Monoid from The Ark (a 1966 Hartnell serial). Did the Monoids turn up on Trenzalore too? They can't have lasted long. The Doctor is still carrying the Time Lord Seal that he pinched off the Master in The Five Doctors back in 1983. As unlikely as it is that he'd still be carrying this, it does serve the purpose of reminding fans of the previous time the Time Lords revealed they could bestow fresh regeneration cycles (they offered the Master one as payment).
Best joke: Matt Smith whipping off his wig to reveal a bald head, a cheeky nod to his wearing a wig for this episode after shaving his hair for How to Catch a Monster. What's even funnier is that, after shaving her head for Guardians of the Galaxy, Karen Gillan must be wearing a wig too.
Best line:
“I will not forget one line of this. Not one day, I swear. I will always remember when the Doctor was me.”
Wow, nice review! :)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltRxJtp38QE
ReplyDeleteWhat do you think of the Spanish fan film, “El Mundo Imperfecto”?
Even back then, some people loved pointing out the plot holes Steven Moffat created when he rewrote the 11th Doctor as the 13th incarnation (and that's not counting the timeless children and the Mobius Doctors!).
ReplyDeleteMoffat, perhaps wanting to get the "12 regenerations, 13 lives" rule resolved over very quickly, rectons Matt Smith as the final incarnation of the Doctor: it was a bit of a plot twist to spring on us though, because watching any of Eleven's adventures, up to meeting the War Doctor, you'd honestly have no idea. On the beach in Utah, the Doctor began to regenerate. Come 'The Angels Take Manhattan', he used regeneration energy to fix River's wrist, despite not actually having any more to use for himself, it would seem. In 'Let's Kill Hitler', he was prepared to regenerate after River killed him, and in 'Nightmare In Silver', he threatened to do it to get Mr Clever out of his head. Sorry, but does the Doctor actually know that he's on his last incarnation, or did it take John Hurt to remind him? Moffat claims he doesn't keep count of his bodies, but that's just scatterbrained of him, especially given all the references to Eleven we've heard these past few years. It's just as well he remembered which one he was in time, otherwise he'd have died in 'The Time of the Doctor' with no help from the Time Lords.
Thanks to the addition of the War Doctor in the Doctors list of incarnations, plus the Meta-Crisis Doctor, the 11th Doctor is technically the 13th. This means that the Doctor has reached the last of his incarnations and would have died by natural causes if the Time Lords hadn't intervened and gave him another cycle.
Since the War Doctor was just a product of Christopher Eccleston not returning for the role as the Ninth Doctor for the 50th anniversary special, however, there are some little nuggets of continuity errors when viewing past episodes. In Let's Kill Hitler, for example, when the Doctor got poisoned by River, he goes to his TARDIS and spoke to its voice interface to be guided what to do. The Doctor asks if he needed to regenerate. If he was really in his last life then he wouldn't think regeneration was an option. The TARDIS voice interface even answers: Regeneration disabled (due to the poison) rather than out of lives, which would've made more sense.
Meanwhile, in the episode The Angels Take Manhattan, the Doctor heals River Song's hand by using regeneration energy. Back then, the only question was, "How did he use regeneration energy if his last regeneration was at least a hundred years ago? But, after the 50th anniversary and the War Doctor became canon, the question became, "How did he still have regeneration energy if his current incarnation was the last one?" Who even knows anymore?!
With the addition of the War Doctor and Meta Crisis being a regeneration (not counting timeless children), all of the inconsistencies are decidedly awkward and, as I say, Moffat clearly had no plans to make 11 the last Doctor until Eccleston had refused to return. If that had worked out differently (which it wouldn't, but...), this would have been just a normal regeneration.
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