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[livejournal.com profile] rosiespark and I decided to watch Doctor Who series 1 all over again, for discussion. I never really had much chance to discuss series 1 in the first place, since I came to the show when series 2 was already under way in the UK - I was a latecomer, yes. Really a latecomer compared to all those people who have been watching since nineteen sixty-whatever.

[livejournal.com profile] rosiespark tells me that [livejournal.com profile] walkingdaydream wants to join us in the talk so I added her to my flist - hope that's all right, [livejournal.com profile] walkingdaydream! Nice to meet you. And of course, anyone else who wishes to join in, is welcome.

So. Doctor Who series 1, episode 1, 2005, "Rose".

I suppose you could say this was a fateful episode for me, because it was the first Doctor Who episode I saw, and it plunged me into this wonderful new fandom, but that wouldn't be true. I had seen two episodes of Doctor Who before that, and they didn't take. One was something with, I think, William Hartnell. Didn't like it, don't remember it, this was about twenty-five years ago. The other was the Paul McGann movie, which ... I'm not even sure what to say about it now. My reactions to it have changed over a decade or so. Let's just way I wasn't impressed at the time.

Having heard the new series was good, some time in the late spring of 2006 I watched "Rose". I thought the story was lame. But the characters... the set-up... the dialogue... Without being bowled over, I was intrigued. Curious. I particularly liked the Doctor. Rose seemed just a kid, but the Doctor?

I wanted more. Could hardly wait for more. I'm sure I would have denied it then still, but I was hooked. Guilty pleasure, perhaps?

So now, going back from the perspective of having seen all of series 3, and the comparative sophistication of having digested a lot of Doctor Who lore in the past year... have my reactions to it changed?

I still think the story is lame. And silly. And the dialogue, compared to some later episodes, is lame and silly in some places, and brilliant in others. It isn't just Christopher Eccleston's brilliant acting - I'll swear, he could make something worth watching out of anything. Anything!

But it isn't just him. For one thing, Billie Piper is also remarkably good, in an understated way (or perhaps an overstated way? with Rose, it's hard to be sure) that is easy to overlook because it's so in-your-face. Rose is as Rose is. The more I watch, then as now, the more I appreciate Rose, an utterly brilliant character from the beginning.

For another, the... I'm struggling for the right word here. Atmosphere, perhaps. Setting. The mixing of mundane and fantastical. The lightness with underpinnings of darkness. Bits of dialogue - both humour and drama - that rise above themselves. The set up of themes that are still unfolding.

Okay, let's take this with some detail of annotation. I watched it with occasional reference to the book Doctor Who: The Shooting Scripts - which to a besotted fan like myself, is one of the most beautiful books ever. I was amused to see differences between the shooting scripts and the finished dialogue - not big differences, but interesting ones - for instance, in the book (p. 18) Mickey says to Rose, "See ya!" while in the TV show he says, "Good-bye." In another place, two scenes are transposed.

But what's really interesting is the bits of exposition that were translated into action. For instance, I love Russell T. Davies' initial description of Rose in our first introduction to her, right at the beginning. Her alarm clock has gone off. Don't we all hate the sound of alarm clocks? For obvious reasons? Don't we all know exactly what Rose is thinking and feeling at that moment? Don't we all feel the same thing? What Russell T. Davies says is:
ROSE TYLER sits up in bed, gathers herself for a second. She's 19, her bedroom's a mess, she's got another bloody day at work, and she's so much better than this.
There you have it - the major theme of series 1, and maybe of series 2. Rose's story arc, set up in its entirety. The sense of boredom and uselessness and the tedium of life - and somewhere out there, still unseen, adventure waiting to happen.

And then we come back to the very same thing in "Army of Ghosts", at the end of Rose's saga, seeing her on the bus: "For the first nineteen years of my life, nothing happened. Nothing at all. Not ever. And then I met a man called the Doctor."

Thoughts on watching:
  1. It charms me that Rose's bedroom is so pink. I'm not sure why pink is a signature colour for Rose in first season - a pun on her name, perhaps? - but it works.


  2. Rose kisses Jackie before going off to work. This episode sets up a lot of the Rose-Jackie relationship, one of my favourite in the series. I love Jackie; and the combination of good scripting for her, and brilliant acting by Camille Coduri, makes her incredibly real, and the nuances of the relationship between them so clear. (It's never remotely so clear regarding Francine and Martha, where the relationship is a one-note thing.) Does Jackie not work? She says (in "Doomsday") that she used to work in a shop, but she doesn't seem to work at all when we see her in series 1 or 2. Why not? Does she have some sort of pension? Pete's life insurance, perhaps? Or are we supposed to think she's on social assistance?


  3. I love the scene (without dialogue) where Rose meets Mickey for lunch at Trafalgar Square. It sets up so much about their relationship and character, at its best. Which shares aspects of its worst. It's so very playful.


  4. The shooting script describes Mickey as 'laddish'. I never remember or understand exactly what that means. Immature?


  5. So we get the spooky bit where Rose is wandering the basement of Henrick's with the lottery money, with spooky dummies stalking her and Wilson nonresponsive and doors closing.... and then, fateful moment, the Doctor is there saying "Run!" and they run and it all begins. I found myself this time trying to track what happened to the lottery money. Right before the Doctor appears, when the dummies are menacing her, the bag of money is in her right hand. When she starts running, holding the Doctor's hand, it's gone. I guess she dropped it right before he appeared.


  6. There are, in the world of television, some great first-meeting scenes. One is the first meeting of Mulder and Scully in X-Files: "Nobody down here but the FBI's most unwanted." One is the meeting of Duncan MacLeod and Methos in the Highlander episode "Methos": "...Methos?" "Mi casa es su casa." Or in Smallville, Clark Kent and Lex Luthor, meeting as Lex's speeding car hits Clark on the bridge and he goes over. I love moments like those. And I love this one: "Run!" So they run. Sets the tone for so much.


  7. Just for the record, I love their initial dialogue, in the elevator. In fact I probably love all the Doctor/Rose dialogue in this episode - it's close to banter, but it's edged, it's mysterious, it's both a meeting of minds and a contrast of human and alien. I love the way the Doctor's viewpoint is just out of synch with the human, so Rose is struggling to understand him, and intrigued, and instinctively trusting. How soon does she realize just how strange he is? How soon does she realize he is an alien?


  8. I don't understand why Jackie calls the person on the phone "Debbie-on-the-end" - is that a reference I don't know?


  9. I like the contrast here, that Mickey and Jackie both - though the love Rose - are quite self-serving in their reactions. Jackie wants money for Rose in compensation. Mickey wants to watch the match at the pub. The Doctor has his own agenda, but it isn't that he's out for something.


  10. The scene the next day where the Doctor comes to visit Rose's flat does so much to characterize him. The bit about the ears implies he hasn't looked in mirrors much since his last regeneration. We get some wonderful lines ("He's gay and she's an alien"), the byplay with the cards, and a bit of dialogue I particularly love:"What are you doing here?"
    "I live here."
    "Well, what do you do that for?"
    "Because I do."
    And I love the line, "someone blew up my job." When does she later say, "It's practically his way of saying hello?"


  11. I usually hate puns but I do get a kick out of the Doctor's "Armless" line. And this might be a good place to point out that I love it that they had Christopher Eccleston use his natural accent, it adds so much to the role - I can't imagine his Doctor with another accent, and I think Ten would be much better with the Scottish accent that is natural to David Tennant.


  12. Compared to most of the rest of this, I don't much like the moment of cluelessness when Rose thinks the Doctor is joking (like Mickey did) about being strangled by the plastic hand; just as I don't much like his later moment of cluelessness when he doesn't see the London Eye. (Conceptually, anyway. I love the way Eccelston acts that moment.)


  13. In the following scene, the brilliant lines just follow fast and furious. "Ten out of ten for observation." Or:
    Doctor: "Is that supposed to sound tough?"
    Rose: "...Sort of."
    Followed by: Rose: "Is that supposed to sound impressive?"
    Doctor: "...Sort of."

    And in retrospect, his line "I'm a long way from home," is quite moving. And the double -dialogue of "the entire world revolves around you" which ends with the exchange:
    Rose: "You're full of it."
    Doctor: "Sort of, yeah."

    I says so much about them both: that she's impressed with him, but won't let it go to her head; that he's got a streak of self-deprecation entwined with his self-confidence.


  14. And this scene includes that bit of monologue that I love so much I want to quote just for the fun of it:
    It's like when you were a kid. The first time they tell you the world's turning and you just can't quite believe it because everything looks like it's standing still. I can feel it. The turn of the Earth. The ground beneath our feet is spinning at a thousand miles an hour, and the entire planet is hurtling around the sun at sixty-seven thousand miles an hour. And I can feel it. We're falling through space, you and me. Clinging to the skin of this tiny little world, and if we let go... That's who I am. Now, forget me, Rose Tyler.
    But it is, of course, already way too late for that.


  15. For the first time here I really noticed the theme of the TARDIS noise. The TARDIS is of course a whole mythic theme in itself, but this show uses the noise it makes so effectively. Rose hardly notices the TARDIS when she first sees it. Then she hears it, and has to go running back - arriving too late to see it. I am reminded specifically of two other times when the sound of the TARDIS makes people run: when Mickey and Jackie hear it at the beginning of "The Christmas Invasion", and when Captain Jack hears it at the end of "End of Days".


  16. When Rose goes to Mickey's flat, why does he tell her not to read his e-mails?


  17. The scene with Clive. In retrospect, I am reminded of Elton - putting Elton not in Clive's role, but in Rose's. Love the kid's line: "Dad! It's one of your nutters."

    And I like the way Clive is something of a Cassandra. Ominous. So much so that Rose doesn't believe him, decides he's a nutter himself. I love the line about Death being the Doctor's constant companion, but even more I like, "If the Doctor's making housecalls... then God help you."

    Clive is the only person actually known to us you is killed by the Nestene Consciousness. Is it a judgement on him for doubting the Doctor?


  18. Mickey as plastic man: another bit that seems particularly lame to me. (And Rose again is clueless.) I rather like how it begins, though, with Mickey's hands being stuck on the lid of the trash bin. There's something convincingly nightmarish about that part. Otherwise - the scene where plastic-Mickey makes his hands into cleavers reminds me of some of the more hokey graphics of 1960s Marvel comics, where villains like the Sand-man or the Super-Skrull used to do that. Knowing that Russell T. Davies is a fan of these comics explains a lot.


  19. Again in the shooting script, I love Davies' decription of the TARDIS here, at Rose's first sight of the interior: the whole place humming with suppressed energy.


  20. Significant interplay about whether the Doctor should or does care about Mickey's fate, and the underlying question of how much Rose cares. Yes, she cares, but she's not dwelling on it either as they run off to the London Eye. I am a little confused about Mickey's mother, when Rose is fussing about telling her what happened: I thought we learned in "The Rise of the Cybermen" that she wasn't around, and Mickey was raised by his gran. Well, the mother wasn't dead, so maybe she reappeared when Mickey was grown. Or maybe it was just a retcon. (Not the Torchwood kind.)


  21. Antiplastic. Of all the lame ideas in the episode, I love that one the most.


  22. The best bit of the London Eye conversation is the moment where - for the first time - the Doctor says, "Fantastic!"


  23. Love Rose's line: "The breast implants." Cracks me up. So... realistic, so insidious, so suited to Rose's quirky humour and her sense of the mundane and the bizarre.


  24. The Doctor: "I'm not here to kill it. I've got to give it a chance." Nice ambivalence, when the Nestene C. sees the antiplastic and quite rightly throws a fit and the Doctor claims he wasn't going to use it. (Yeah, right.) There is an ambivalence to this whole scene that I find interesting and maybe don't entirely understand. How serious is the Doctor about destroying the Nestene Consciousness and saving everyone on Earth? Was he as helpless as he seemed? Was he manipulating Rose? I like the implications here - never fully clarified - that he is, or can be, extremely machivellian, and deceitful.


  25. I love the way the Doctor switches back and forth from a rather formal, courtly politeness (with legalistic implications) to his own casual, forthright manner.

    I love, absolutely love, the line, "I couldn't save your world. I couldn't save any of them." We don't, on first hearing this, understand the reference to the Time War. We don't realize that the Doctor is thinking of his own people too, and knows his own guilt.

  26. The only thing I like about the scenes of the dummies attacking London is the bit at the end, where one of the dummies is lying there with its leg stuck up in the air.


  27. When Rose says, "The end of the world," is that a foreshadowing of the next episode?


  28. In the climactic scene, I like it that the Doctor appears to be giving up (I'm not convinced he is, but I'm not sure he isn't, either) - though why it would help Rose to run at this point is a mystery. If the Nestene Consciousness has taken over the planet, where could Rose run to?


  29. I love it when the Doctor says with total glee, "Now we're in trouble!"


  30. I loved the moment where Mickey runs in terror out of the TARDIS. I like Mickey's exaggerated cowardice throughout this section. At the time, it mostly seemed like a contrast to Rose and the Doctor. In retrospect, it's a great contrast to what Mickey himself eventually becomes - a hero. But here, it's Rose who gets to be the hero.


  31. I like the way Rose has to make a decision between what she thinks she ought to do and what she wants to do. This choice is another recurring theme through the series.


  32. I love the ending. Absolutely love it. In the language of series 2 or 3, she makes her choice, lured by the fateful words, "It also travels in time." But it wasn't those words that made her change her mind, I don't think. It was the fact that the Doctor came back to give her another chance to make the right decision.



I do go on and on, don't I? I'm sure there's more I'd like to say, but enough is enough... for the moment.

Date: 2007-07-14 09:28 pm (UTC)
ext_15621: The Pixel in a paper bag (Default)
From: [identity profile] rosiespark.livejournal.com
I'd got hold of Rose around the time it first aired - probably in response to all the hoo-hah about it on my flist - and I remember watching it and going "Huh?" I was NOT impressed. I didn't bother getting hold of the rest of the episodes and even deleted Rose off my hard drive!

I didn't get into the series till April 2006 - I can't believe it was so late! And I wasn't completely hooked to start with even though I did find Christopher Eccleston fascinating... That reaction has stood the test of time. *g* I think it was Dalek and Father's Day that really hooked me - by that time, I was in the throes of a happy obsession and devouring two or three episodes a day.

for instance, in the book (p. 18) Mickey says to Rose, "See ya!" while in the TV show he says, "Good-bye."

When does Mickey say that? I didn't think he said anything when she leaves with the Doctor. Apart from "for what?" in response to her saying "Thanks". Her reply, "Exactly!" makes me cringe a bit because it's cruel and because it's true. Poor Mickey, he really doesn't shine here, does he?

In another place, two scenes are transposed.

Which two scenes? ::is too lazy to look it up for self::

2 For all her faults, I love Jackie. She loves Rose fiercely, I have no doubt of that, but she seems determined not to let her make anything of herself: her view that Rose should apply for a job in the butcher's, and that working in Henrik's was giving her airs and graces? No wonder Rose dropped out of school and never did her A-levels! Iknow, I know - the infamous Jimmy Stone (s?) had something to do with it too. *g*

And I don't think Jackie does work. I very much doubt that Pete had any sort of life insurance. She's probably living on the social services. It's a council flat - she's a single mum after all. Though they seem to have had the same flat when Pete was still alive. And it may just be fanon that she does part-time hairdressing from home. I can't think where it might be mentioned but it'll be to see if it crops up anywhere.

3. I noticed today that there's almost no dialogue, just the music that bowls everything along with such momentum right up till the moment when Rose reaches the basement.

4. Does blokeish mean anything to you? Immature, yes, interested in not much more than football and going down the pub for a few pints and a laugh. This definition (http://www.allwords.com/word-laddish.html) is even less complimentary. *g*

6. I love their first meeting. We just see his hand take hers, her startled look and then his face as he says, "Run!". Pure genius. I love the way they hold hands, later in this episode and all through the series. They have such an extraordinary connection, right from the beginning. Nothing in series 2 and 3 comes close to this, for me. Doctor/Rose 4EVAH!!! *g*

8. Debbie-on-the-end I'd take to be Debbie who lives in the end flat on their floor - the flats all open onto a common access balcony, so it would make sense to refer to her this way. Like saying Mrs-X-next-door or So-and-so-across-the-road.

9. Mickey and Jackie both - though they love Rose - are quite self-serving in their reactions

Yes, I do get the feeling that Rose has often had to be the most adult person around. Jackie seems completely feckless and I think it's telling that she sometimes dresses younger than her teenaged daughter. She's obviously obsessed with looking younger than her age - that crack about the shock of the explosion having aged Rose so that she looks older than her mother, frex. ::casts eyes up to ceiling:: I think poor Rose puts up with a lot and feels responsible, even, for Jackie. I mean, the reason she initially refuses the Doctor's offer is because of her mum and having to look after "stupid lump" Mickey.

Date: 2007-07-14 10:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I remember watching it and going "Huh?" I was NOT impressed.

LOL. Not really surprising: but I'd already heard intriguing comments from various people that had made me curious, including [livejournal.com profile] commodorified and Simon. So I was ... predisposed to at least give it the benefit of the doubt. I did like the Doctor as a character. I didn't at first particularly like Rose; it's only in hindsight that I am so impressed by her dialogue and her insight.

I wasn't completely hooked to start with even though I did find Christopher Eccleston fascinating... That reaction has stood the test of time.

Yes - absolutely!

I think it was Dalek and Father's Day that really hooked me

I think after "Rose" I might already have been hooked, though not quite realizing it. My next opportunity to watch an episode was in May 2006 and it was "New Earth", followed by "School Reunion". I was eager to see them. Very eager. Yes, by that time I was hooked.

I tend to blame Eccleston but I think the bulk of the blame really goes to Russell T. Davies - after "Rose", anyway. But even, a bit, for "Rose" too, because I did appreciate the good dialogue - if not the dorky story.

I have much more to say (of course) but I have to get a souffle out of the oven or dinner will be burned. You've probably gone to bed by now anyway - so. More later!

Date: 2007-07-14 10:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I think it was Dalek and Father's Day that really hooked me

Dalek was pivotal for me, but I was already hooked before that. Maybe not impressed - but hooked. I was 'getting it' on a visceral level even when I was bemoaning the stupid stories - well, particularly the stupid villains.

When does Mickey say that? I didn't think he said anything when she leaves with the Doctor.

No, not then. It's near the beginning when he's going off to the pub and she isn't, and he's taking the plastic arm to the trash bin.

Which two scenes? ::is too lazy to look it up for self::

In the fast-moving action sequences near the climax, where we're cutting back and forth between the dummies attacking people like Clive and Jackie, and the Doctor and Rose facing the Nestene Bath-pit. There's a bit where Jackie's scene is moved around.

I notice scene #38 is 'omitted'. I wonder what it was.

Her reply, "Exactly!" makes me cringe a bit because it's cruel and because it's true.

I kind of love that. I mean, it's clear Rose cares about him, but there's no glamour there.

Poor Mickey, he really doesn't shine here, does he?

Not at all. I don't remember what I thought about him first time I saw it. Looking back now, I feel sorry for him. I wonder if Davies has the "Mickey growth arc" planned from the beginning.

For all her faults, I love Jackie.

As do I. And her flirting with the Doctor here - I love it.

she seems determined not to let her make anything of herself: her view that Rose should apply for a job in the butcher's, and that working in Henrik's was giving her airs and graces? No wonder Rose dropped out of school and never did her A-levels!

I lvoe all that, and it all adds to the sense that Rose is "so much better than this", but doesn't know it. I also like the contrast between this relationship and the relationship between Martha and Francine - Francine seems a bit of a snob and doesn't want anything to get in the ways of Martha's success, both academically and professionally. Even though I really think Francine is right, I love Jackie so much more!

She's probably living on the social services.

That would be my guess. It fits the profile.

Though they seem to have had the same flat when Pete was still alive.

I believe that here there are situations where you get to keep the place you already had, at reduced rent, if you're on welfare. It's part of the attempt not to have all the welfare cases together in housing that then gets slummy - landlords have to take a certain number of welfare tenants.

it may just be fanon that she does part-time hairdressing from home.

I hadn't come across that, but I wouldn't believe it. Jackie's own hair doesn't look like a hairdresser's. And Rose's hair doesn't look as if her Mum were a hairdresser.



Date: 2007-07-15 01:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
They have such an extraordinary connection, right from the beginning. Nothing in series 2 and 3 comes close to this, for me.

Well, certainly, it's different in series 2 because Tennant is so different. I adjusted to it, I think, but I find his Doctor generally more elusive and less clear. Less open.

Debbie-on-the-end I'd take to be Debbie who lives in the end flat on their floor

Makes perfect sense. Don't know why I didn't think of that.

She's obviously obsessed with looking younger than her age - that crack about the shock of the explosion having aged Rose so that she looks older than her mother, frex. ::casts eyes up to ceiling::

We see the Doctor teasing her about this in "Doomsday".

I think poor Rose puts up with a lot and feels responsible, even, for Jackie.

I think so. If often shows in little ways - and you can see it explicitly in "Love and Monsters" (where she charges to Jackie's defense) and "The Rise of the Cybermen", where she tries to treat the other Jackie as if she were the Jackie Rose knows. Perhaps some of her joy with the Doctor is not just in his company, or the adventure and freedom he brings her, but in at elast partial freedom from the responsibility of taking care of Jackie and Mickey.

Date: 2007-07-16 03:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grimorie.livejournal.com
Perhaps some of her joy with the Doctor is not just in his company, or the adventure and freedom he brings her, but in at elast partial freedom from the responsibility of taking care of Jackie and Mickey.

I agree with this too. I think most of her life she's been responsible for someone and that's another thing I love about 'Rose', they were able to convey that Rose had to frequently be the adult and practical one.

I think the Jimmy Stone thing is the aberration although... thinking about it Rose might have ended doing the same thing for Jimmy. She ended up taking care of him and that ended, from the hints we get, into a rather disastrous relationship.

With the Doctor Rose can finally act her age *and* be an adult. She can enjoy life and find purpose.

Date: 2007-07-16 06:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
thinking about it Rose might have ended doing the same thing for Jimmy. She ended up taking care of him and that ended, from the hints we get, into a rather disastrous relationship.

It fits perfectly with her personality type. It is, in fact, like her loyalty and concern for the Doctor - she won't leave him because he is so alone, she's desperate to give him what he needs - she doesn't talk or think about how much she needs him. She feels appointed to be there when he needs her, and when (in "The Parting of the Ways") he tries to save her from the consequences of this, she can't tolerate it. It could have been another disastrous relationship, but it isn't - at least, not while it lasts! - because the Doctor is better than that, and their needs dovetail nicely, and because he really doesn't take advantage of her.

Date: 2007-07-17 02:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grimorie.livejournal.com
This is true, he doesn't take advantage of her and I think what really sold it for Rose that, yes, he needed her (as Nine) but he was at first and foremost her friend. I mean, there was no pressure for her to do anything but become the best person she could possibly be, to enjoy the life he was offering her and she didn't have to worry about all the trivial *human* things she used to worry about because now she has a whole universe to discover, help and save.

Date: 2007-07-17 02:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I tend to avid the use of the word 'friend' in this context, but yes, I agree with your comments.... I think I'd characterize it as that rare thing, unconditional love, that enhances and doesn't limit either of them. They each had problems in their lives - boredom in hers, which he had every ability to alleviate, and to give her things to live for that made the most of her talents.

I don't even know what to call the problem in his case - grief? guilt? despair? existential black hole? Whatever dark combination of loneliness and pain it was, she was able to bring him fresh perspective and caring.

Until Doomsday, anyway.


Date: 2008-07-07 05:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] monsieureden.livejournal.com
I have to be honest, if it wasn't for all of you guys LOVING this show, the promise of Jack, and fajrdrako noting that it really picks up at Dalek (which I just watched, and loved) I may not have ever took a second look at this series. :)

Date: 2008-07-07 10:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
Yeah, me too. I had to take it on faith for the first while and the original Slitheen story did nothing to raise my confidence. 'The Unquiet Dead' remains one of my least favourite episodes of the show, ever. But there's an emotional momentum that starts with 'Dalek' and keeps going and that's what hooked me. I think. That, and the character of the Doctor, which just keeps... well, 'improving' isn't the word, but 'getting more intriguing' might cover it.

Date: 2008-07-07 01:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] monsieureden.livejournal.com
Yeah, Unquiet Dead was the episode I think i caught years ago without watching in order, and I thought 'why do people like this??'

The character of the Doctor is definitely the hook for me, and Dalek was impressive.

Date: 2008-07-07 06:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
Unquiet Dead was the episode I think i caught years ago without watching in order, and I thought 'why do people like this??'

It remains one of my least favourite DW episodes ever, though there are a few other duds. On the whole it gets better and better as you continue through series 1, though. 'Dalek' is a favourite of mine (I love Henry Van Statten as a villain) and then you get 'Father's Day' and the episodes with Captain Jack... Yeah. I miss Eccleston, but Tennant is good too, in a different way.

Date: 2008-07-07 07:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] monsieureden.livejournal.com
Yes Van Statten was a hoot. Eccleston's smile just cracks me up.

Date: 2008-07-07 08:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I thought Van Statten was brilliantly funny, especially with Goddard. Lines like this:
Van Statten: Wipe his memory, put him on the road someplace - Memphis, Minneapolis - somewhere beginning with 'M'.... So, the next President, what do you think? Republican or Democrat?
Goddard: Democrat, sir.
Van Statten: For what reason?
Goddard: They're just so funny, sir?
Van Statten: ...I like you, Diana Goddard.
Love it.

And Eccleston's smile - yes. The big grin or the little one. And he can easily make me cry in some scenes.


Date: 2008-07-07 09:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] monsieureden.livejournal.com
He was so good and scary w/ the Dalek.

Date: 2008-07-08 12:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
There are many moments I like in that episode, not least the one where Rose realized that this guy collects aliens for his collection... and the Doctor is an alien.

Date: 2008-07-08 02:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] monsieureden.livejournal.com
I liked how the Doctor didn't argue that Rose is the 'woman he loves.' :)

Date: 2008-07-08 11:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I liked how the Doctor didn't argue that Rose is the 'woman he loves.' :)

I liked that too. And still do.

Date: 2008-07-07 07:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] monsieureden.livejournal.com
Yes, and there's the whole... farting theme, lol.

Date: 2008-07-07 08:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
Uh-huh. Just stick it out and remember it's supposed to appeal to the seven year olds as well as us.

Date: 2007-07-14 09:29 pm (UTC)
ext_15621: The Pixel in a paper bag (Default)
From: [identity profile] rosiespark.livejournal.com
10. When does she later say, "It's practically his way of saying hello"?

Gah, can't remember. It's a great line, though. What I love about that scene at the front door is the way she says "You, inside, right now" and grabs him and manhandles him inside the door - and he looks surprised but HE LETS HER. Makes me laugh every time. Go, Rose!

I rather like the "There's a strange man in my bedroom" bit too - Jackie's not one to let an opportunity go by. *g*

13. And the double -dialogue of "the entire world revolves around you" which ends with the exchange:

Rose: "You're full of it."
Doctor: "Sometimes, yeah."


Doesn't he actually say "Sort of, yeah" both to that question and to her "so what you're saying is that the entire world revolves around you?" I know the shooting script has "sometimes, yeah" as his answer to both, but I don't think that's what he actually says. And I like it better with him echoing her previous "sort of". It's a lovely bit of dialogue, and the back and forth and the fact that they're walking through the estate keeps it from sounding exposition-y.

Okay, I think I have to go to bed. More tomorrow. Hurrah for Nine!

Date: 2007-07-15 01:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
What I love about that scene at the front door is the way she says "You, inside, right now" and grabs him and manhandles him inside the door - and he looks surprised but HE LETS HER. Makes me laugh every time.

Yes, it's wonderful. It improves with knowledge of the situation and the characters. I think it already illustrates his vulnerability to Rose - and 'vulnerability' isn't quite the word I mean, but it's close.

I rather like the "There's a strange man in my bedroom" bit too - Jackie's not one to let an opportunity go by. *g*

I find that far funnier than it ought to be. Possibly because she has no idea who/what he is. Possibly because she's just trying too hard. It's a nice illustration of their two different worlds.

Yes, of course he says "sort of", and I meant to type that. It's part of the joy of the scene.



Date: 2007-07-15 01:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I tracked down the "it's practically is way of saying hello" quote - not hard to find, since it had to be an episode I knew well. It's from "The Doctor Dances", when Jack's sonic blaster has run out of power:

+ + +

JACK [running to the window]
I was gonna send for another one, but somebody's gonna blow up the factory.

[He glares at the Doctor]

ROSE
Oh, I know - first day I met him, he blew my job up. That's practically how he communicates.

+ + +

http://who-transcripts.atspace.com/2005%20Transcripts/10_thedoctordances.htm

Date: 2007-07-15 05:38 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
The shooting script describes Mickey as 'laddish'. I never remember or understand exactly what that means. Immature?

It's a kind of young male culture, sports and cars and going out with mates. Suggests the kind of life that doesn't include long term pair bonds or childcare. Not taking things very seriously.

Date: 2007-07-15 01:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
That does sound as if it describes Mickey as he was when we first meet him - not very settled or serious about life. Not really having a direction.

Date: 2007-07-18 11:12 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
i dont agree. I find Mickey a very dependant person (at least on Rose) and he was heartbroken when she left him the first time. I suspect he wanted more than what Rose could give him, ie: commitment and long term family plans.

Date: 2007-07-18 11:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I would agree with that, too - I don't see a contradiction. He was unsettled and not very serious, and extremely focused on Rose, and dependent on her. She was the more mature of the pairing - scary thought, that. That didn't really change till "Age of Steel", when he was able to make a complete change - possibly because he had seen his own death, and it shocked him into taking a new look at reality, and at his life. Possibly because he saw the contrasts between himself and Ricky.

Between "Rose" and "Age of Steel" his love for Rose brought him to new adventures - whether he appreciated them or not - and new experiences that taught him things. I don't think he ever learned to love danger as she did, or to understand her attitude about it, but he learned to be brave. He learned to find some self-knowledge and some self-esteem. He also learned that sometimes it's important to give up on one's dream and find another one.

Date: 2007-07-15 05:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] atheneunknown.livejournal.com
I've been meaning to rewatch the first series, but the girl I want to watch them with works an even more hectic schedual then I have at the moment.

I actually came in to watching the series much later, I beleive I came in just before the Captain did actually. Mind you I watched some of the Fourth, and Fifth Doctors when they aired on PBS during my childhood. So I wasn't coming in without any idea what was going on.

And I beleive the reference to 'Debbie-on-the-end' is in reference to her location on the floor of the building that they live in. Like she's on the end by the staircase or something.

Thats what I always took it as.

Date: 2007-07-15 01:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I've been meaning to rewatch the first series, but the girl I want to watch them with works an even more hectic schedual then I have

Well, do come and join us! I'd been hoping to watch more with [livejournal.com profile] lmondegreen, but she's been busy lately, too.

I beleive I came in just before the Captain did actually.

What luck! That's a good place to pick up on the series.

the reference to 'Debbie-on-the-end' is in reference to her location on the floor of the building that they live in.

Right - that woudl make sense. Thanks!

Date: 2007-07-16 05:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] atheneunknown.livejournal.com
I'd love to come join ya, but living just north of Detroit, would make it quite an issue lol.

And since I don't drive, thats even MORE of a problem lol.

Date: 2007-07-16 10:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
Well, you can always just watch and join the discussion.

Date: 2007-07-15 12:18 pm (UTC)
ext_15621: The Pixel in a paper bag (Default)
From: [identity profile] rosiespark.livejournal.com
14. Love love LOVE that scene. The connection between them! The hand holding!! ::dies:: And the fact that he lets go of her hand just as he says "and if we let go... " ::dies again::

But it is, of course, already way too late for that.

Reminds me of Lymond and Philippa and the anvil moment. *g*

16. When Rose goes to Mickey's flat, why does he tell her not to read his e-mails?

That always makes me laugh. I've always assumed that typical guy that he is (and a bit of a lad!), he probably has sex or porn related stuff that he doesn't want her to see. Hee.

17. Is it a judgement on him for doubting the Doctor?

No, I don't think so, I really don't think DW is that judgemental as a show! It's just a way of upping the stakes a bit, getting a character we know killed.

18. Mickey as plastic man: another bit that seems particularly lame to me. (And Rose again is clueless.)

It is a bit lame, but in retrospect, I love that Rose doesn't notice. It's quite a statement about how stale their relationship has got, that she doesn't even notice that he's been replaced!

19. Again in the shooting script, I love Davies' decription of the TARDIS here, at Rose's first sight of the interior: the whole place humming with suppressedenergy.

Nice! And the way Rose is initially almost more scared of what she finds inside the "wooden box" than she is of the murderous plastic Mickey is a lovely touch. I like her look of panic and the way she stops short, can't believe her eyes and shoots straight back outside without even thinking about it. Because, yes, it would be the most unbelievable and scary thing to experience without warning, as she does.

20. # I am a little confused about Mickey's mother, when Rose is fussing about telling her what happened: I thought we learned in "The Rise of the Cybermen" that she wasn't around, and Mickey was raised by his gran. Well, the mother wasn't dead, so maybe she reappeared when Mickey was grown. Or maybe it was just a retcon.

The fact that Mickey was brought up by his gran, who was dead by then - the fateful bit of loose carpet on the stairs - doesn't mean that his mum didn't keep in touch. I'm quite happy with her not being able to fact bringing him up (on her own?) but not losing touch completely. Since his gran is dead, she'd be his only surviving relative - hence Rose's thought. Works for me, anyway.

22. # The best bit of the London Eye conversation is the moment where - for the first time - the Doctor says, "Fantastic!"

I love the bit just before that when they quarrel over Rose's smallminded concern over Mickey while the Doctor is trying to save the planet (Nine's view) and the Doctor's callousness and complete disregard of Mickey as a person (as Rose sees it). Such completely different viewpoints. And yet they make up really quickly - Rose extends the olive branch with a question about the Police Box and the Doctor is only too willing to accept this offer of reconciliation and to tell her about his beloved TARDIS. There's a similar dynamic when they quarrel in The End of the World, on the viewing platform. ::hearts the Doctor and Rose::

Okay, more later. *g*

Date: 2007-07-15 01:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
Reminds me of Lymond and Philippa and the anvil moment. *g*

Funny in how many ways Lymond and Philippa are, in my mind, the perfect romance, with the perfect romantic characterization. One doesn't think of Rose as being Philippa-like, but in some ways she is: Loyal, resourceful, brave, adventurous, grown beyond her own background. And Rose likes to 'fix' people, too. And in both cases, they will give Lymond or the Doctor what-for when everyone else is afraid to talk to them.

Anyway, the anvil moment. As you know from the story I wrote, for me the 'anvil moment' for the Doctor is immediate, practically as soon as "Run!", but for Rose - ? Maybe that conversation. Maybe the growing realization from earlier (in her flat) that he's so very different, or the later realization (when she first goes into the TARDIS) that he's an alien.

That always makes me laugh. I've always assumed that typical guy that he is (and a bit of a lad!), he probably has sex or porn related stuff that he doesn't want her to see.

Trying to shield her delicate sensiblities? Or just trying to hide some of his kinks? Maybe he's afraid she'll tease him later for his taste in women!

the way Rose is initially almost more scared of what she finds inside the "wooden box" than she is of the murderous plastic Mickey is a lovely touch.

Yes, I really like her reactions here. And the bit of dialogue:
Rose: Are you alien?
Doctor: Yes. (pause) Is that all right?
Rose: Yeah.
And she means it.

I really don't think DW is that judgemental as a show!

No, it's really pretty big on the 'forgiveness' pattern. We know Clive just enough, but not quite enough to be very upset at his demise. Well... close, maybe. I'd love to have seen him meet Elton in "Love and Monsters", since I see a strong thematic link there.

It's quite a statement about how stale their relationship has got, that she doesn't even notice that he's been replaced!

Yes, and quite a statement that she doesn't expect more from him than stock answers. And proof she isn't looking at him very closely.

I'm quite happy with her not being able to fact bringing him up (on her own?) but not losing touch completely.

I like that, too. It also gives a sense of the way the story isn't as simple as a simple explanation would make it seem. Sort of like the Doctor telling Martha in "Utopia" that Jack was 'a friend' who used to travel with him on the TARDIS, which is true, but gives so little of the real story of who/what Jack is. The whole implication that life goes on whether we're looking them or not, and everyone is more than the amalgamated fragments of their own stories.


Date: 2007-07-15 03:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] walkingdaydream.livejournal.com
*waves* Hi!

I was telling [livejournal.com profile] rosiespark that I'm already behind and it's only the first ep. *looks sheepish* I was at the Science Centre yesterday.

But I'm gonna catch up!

Date: 2007-07-15 03:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
The Science Centre - well, that's always fun! I haven't been there in ages. Don't worry about the timing, just chime in whenever you want.

Date: 2007-07-15 05:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] raissad.livejournal.com
Jackie works at home as a hairdresser, according to RTD. The detail just never made it on-screen:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackie_Tyler

Some fans complained that Rose was written as snobby and unrealistic, because she went off with the Doctor and saved the Earths and the Universes, but couldn't get motivated to make life better on her street.

Some of us argued back...

a) She learned about the big picture first, because the Doctor was the first person to show her any picture at all. Rose and Jackie couldn't know what they didn't know before that, because that kind of ignorance is systemic.

b) We noted that the folks calling Rose snobby were usually UKers with working class backgrounds who were reacting to their own class system. They resented the perceived villification of Jackie, because she dared to resent Rose for going off with an "aristo," while she and Mickey stayed behind and dealt with real life, or because she dared to tell Rose in AoG that that life could end or not be what Rose hoped.

c) They resented that Rose moaned about her great new cushy life with a rich alt-Dad and great new job. These were all valid points, up to a point. But, they were letting their understandable biases color narrative structure. RTD wrote a dark fairytale for Rose, Jackie, and Mickey. Their dreams came true at a high price.

Date: 2007-07-16 01:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
A hairdresser! Well, it may be that RTD changed his mind, because I see no hint of that in the show at all.

Some fans complained that Rose was written as snobby and unrealistic, because she went off with the Doctor and saved the Earths and the Universes, but couldn't get motivated to make life better on her street.

Huh? Does that make any sense at all? Did they want Rose to be a social worker or something?

What's so highbrow about the Doctor? Knowledge? Power? He was maybe arguably of the elite of Gallifrey, but Gallifrey is gone. He's just a guy travelling around in his own Police Box. What's "aristo" about that? (Maybe it's having an affair with Mme de Pompadour that does it.)

RTD wrote a dark fairytale for Rose, Jackie, and Mickey. Their dreams came true at a high price.

Yes, exactly. Rose got to live her dream but the price of her dream was the dream itself.

I like the approach.

Date: 2007-07-16 02:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] raissad.livejournal.com
Huh? Does that make any sense at all? Did they want Rose to be a social worker or something?

I'm not entirely sure, but I think they were upset that RTD glossed over the socio-economic issues. Even if RTD had wanted to diiscuss that through the show, I don't know how he would have done it when the show's lead is an alien, who doesn't even carry money, let alone comprehend the wise or unwise use of it. After all, this is a being who uses his sonic screwdriver to work "jiggery pokery" on ATMs around time and space.

Btw, there are some extra bits that RTD put in Rose's backstory that didn't make it on-screen. Apparently, the Doctor isn't the first guy that Rose left Mickey for:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rose_Tyler

Date: 2007-07-16 03:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I quite like the way Doctor Who doesn't address that kind of social issue, and makes the Doctor indifferent to the point of cluelessness about it.

And the ATM scene was everyone's delicious fantasy!

Interesting about Rose's background. I suppose there's no reason for me to be a purist: I like the background for Rose, and Jackie might as well be supporting herself as a hairdresser as any other way. (Though surely if she worked from home she'd have hairdressing stuff in the main room?)

Date: 2007-07-16 01:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grimorie.livejournal.com
Just popping by and saying I love your thoughts on 'Rose'.

But it isn't just him. For one thing, Billie Piper is also remarkably good, in an understated way (or perhaps an overstated way? with Rose, it's hard to be sure) that is easy to overlook because it's so in-your-face. Rose is as Rose is. The more I watch, then as now, the more I appreciate Rose, an utterly brilliant character from the beginning.

Oh, yes, before this I remembered Billie Piper was one of those pop stars and I didn't know what to think but the moment she appeared on screen she stopped being Billie Piper for me and simply becomes Rose. She inhabits the role so well. In fact when I see Billie in her interviews I can clearly tell Billie Piper apart from Rose. It's amazing how that happens.

Like you I also love RTD's description of Rose in the first scene, its just so spot on. You can really see Rose was looking for something more but can't exactly figure what it could be.

Rose kisses Jackie before going off to work. This episode sets up a lot of the Rose-Jackie relationship, one of my favourite in the series. I love Jackie; and the combination of good scripting for her, and brilliant acting by Camille Coduri, makes her incredibly real, and the nuances of the relationship between them so clear. (It's never remotely so clear regarding Francine and Martha, where the relationship is a one-note thing.)

Agreed. I loved Jackie as much as I love Rose both characters are so well drawn and played with so much charm that their flaws become part of their characters. She's real and the relationship between Rose and Jackie very well realized. I can't say the same thing about Francine though, something about her character grates at my nerves.

I love moments like those. And I love this one: "Run!" So they run. Sets the tone for so much.

Yes. So very much yes.

And this scene includes that bit of monologue that I love so much I want to quote just for the fun of it:

It's like when you were a kid. The first time they tell you the world's turning and you just can't quite believe it because everything looks like it's standing still. I can feel it. The turn of the Earth. The ground beneath our feet is spinning at a thousand miles an hour, and the entire planet is hurtling around the sun at sixty-seven thousand miles an hour. And I can feel it. We're falling through space, you and me. Clinging to the skin of this tiny little world, and if we let go... That's who I am. Now, forget me, Rose Tyler.

But it is, of course, already way too late for that.


Oh, this scene! This scene is the whole reason why I fell in love with the show. It's just... so perfect. I love the intensity, the alien-ness and the scope and Rose, listening and being taken in by this man, saying these things. It's really hard not to fall in love after that.

Love Rose's line: "The breast implants." Cracks me up

Never fails to make me laugh!

I love the ending. Absolutely love it. In the language of series 2 or 3, she makes her choice, lured by the fateful words, "It also travels in time." But it wasn't those words that made her change her mind, I don't think. It was the fact that the Doctor came back to give her another chance to make the right decision.

I love that too, from the beginning and end she's made her choice and she falls in love with this dangerous life and still willingly takes it, in fact when faced with death she always makes it clear to the Doctor that it was her choice in coming and not his.

Date: 2007-07-16 03:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
To my mind, this does a lot to validate both the action and the characters. Rose in London was a square peg in a round hole (or vice versa) - she needs the excitement she finds with the Doctor. I love the parallel scene in "The Parting of the Ways" when she says to Jackie and Mickey, "What am I supposed to do? Eat chips?" - an echo of the Doctor saying in "Rose", "Well who else is there? I mean, you lot, all you do is eat chips, go to bed, and watch telly while all the time underneath you, there's a war going on."

One of the reasons I most love this series is the way these themes are consistent, and the references build on themselves and each other.

Date: 2007-07-16 03:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grimorie.livejournal.com
*nods* they do and you're very right, Rose in London *is* a square peg in a round hole. You can literally hear Rose thinking 'there has to be better' and when she finds it she's too intrigued to let go.

She's as much an action junkie as the Doctor and Jack and I love how Rose gains a purpose.

I hope, one day, RTD decides to look in on Rose in parallel Earth I'd love to see how she's getting on because I don't have any doubt that she'll end up running Torchwood in alt!Earth.

Date: 2007-07-16 06:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
You can literally hear Rose thinking 'there has to be better' and when she finds it she's too intrigued to let go.

It must be what she was longing for all her life. Look at her problems with school, when she is obviously very bright. She's not a mundane personality.

Yes, definitely an action junkie and a thrill-seeker. She loves danger.

I'm torn between wanting and not wanting to know what happens to Rose after Doomsday. Yes, part of me is curious as to her story. But mostly I want to think of her life with the Doctor as being "The Story of Rose" as we know it, and I don't want to see her carrying on with her life, marrying someone, having a successful and exciting career at Torchwood... that's all part of "Another Story" and I'd rather not be seeing it.

Date: 2007-07-17 02:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grimorie.livejournal.com
Heh. I suppose its because Rose's whole post-Doomsday world is so intriguing in its possibilities that I'm curious how Rose is doing and while that big, cosmic chapter of her life has been shut close I'd love to take a peek into the new story being written.

I think one of the wonders of Rose being so far away from the Doctor is that she's a closed canon until such time RTD or the DW team see fit to enter her life again we fans can imagine a whole score of adventures happening to Rose.:)

Date: 2007-07-17 02:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
There are certainly intriguing possibilities to her future. I like the way they handled Sarah Jane's post-Doctor life in canon - perhaps if I had more of a sense of where Rose is headed I'd be more curious about it, rather than feeling he urge to shut the door.

Date: 2007-11-22 11:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nina-ds.livejournal.com
I decided to come here and pick up on something I really do love!

I had watched DW on and off when I was a teenager on PBS (mostly Four, Five, and Six) and wasn't exactly a fan, but it was on and I'd watch it. When I heard that they were restarting the show, what really caught my attention was the casting - first of all that they'd cast Christopher Eccleston (who had done by far my favourite work on television in the 1990s, and therefore seemed awfully "high" for the show) and Billie Piper (who'd annoyed the hell out of me with "Because We Want To" and therefore it seemed like pandering to audiences); then, that they'd cast them together. It just boggled the mind.

Friends in England reported that the show was surprisingly good, so I bought the DVDs sight unseen when I went to London for a visit, because I figured nothing with CE was a complete waste of time, although I had my doubts that he would be light enough for the show - some people still don't think he was, but I think his comic timing is vastly underrated and that the show actually "came up" to his level of dramatic complexity in S1. I'll admit to being amused for a moment with the plastic hand strangling him just because the thought crossed my mind: "This is Christopher Eccleston. Wrestling with a plastic arm. And turning purple. Impressive shade of maroon, actually." I liked his cheekiness, and the glitter in his eye, his wild shifts from silly to serious. There's one moment in his "chat" with the Nestene Conciousness where on first viewing I thought he was a little too realistic for the tone of show, the way his voice broke on "I couldn't save them. I couldn't save anyone." I thought it was too intense for such a silly show; instead, we discover just how good an actor he is - he's giving you foreshadowing of things we won't know for 5-6 episodes yet. Brilliant.

BP impressed me despite myself. I loved her in those scenes with Mickey and Jackie, particularly in the aftermath of the shop blowing up, when she's sitting on the couch and talking with Mickey while Jackie was going on and on. She was so natural in her acting; I remember going back the first time after watching S2 and rewatching S1, and she really was much more "real" in S1. She was good in S2, but she had flattened out and wasn't as responsive and naturalistic, it was more "acting". I don't know if that's character development or (I suspect) a difference in who she's acting with.

I remember seeing that walk-and-talk after the "armless" the first time and being blown away by the naturalness/ease of the acting between them, and also the intense intimacy. The range of teasing; the ease with which they jostled each other, walking in each other's space; and his tenderness when he asks if she's all right, echoed later by that beautiful little moment after she's run into the TARDIS for the first time (and run back out again, taken a lap, and gone back in - brilliant!): "Are you an alien?" "Yeah. That all right?" "Yeah." They just click, like nothing I've ever seen before or since. I don't care who liked who best behind the scenes: BP and CE are a match made in acting heaven.

Favourite Jackie moment: she's rambling on about compensation and saying, "Arianna got 2000 off the council because the man behind the counter said she looked Greek. I mean, she is Greek, but that's not the point..." The line is funny, but CC's delivery is just wonderful. And if I hadn't loved her before, her performance on the DW Weakest Link just made me adore her.

BTW, my End of the World post is here (http://nina-ds.livejournal.com/20848.html), if we want to talk about that one, too (I always do!).

Date: 2007-11-23 02:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I decided to come here and pick up on something I really do love!

Good! Because for some reason I am particularly missing both Doctor Who and Torchwood just now and itching for a chance to discuss them more.

I had been shown one story-arc of an early series of Doctor Who in the 1980s, and I didn't like it at all. Not in the slightest. Intended never to watch the show ever, ever again.

In the 1990s I allowed myself to be persuaded to watch the Paul McGann movie. I didn't like it at all. Vowed never to watch the show again. Etc.

So when people told me the 2005 revamped Doctor Who was very good, I flat out didn't believe them. Except that the people who were telling me this were people whose literary taste I respected, and they weren't saying "It's good, considering it's a kid's show," or "It's good, if you like shows with corny alien monsters," they were taking it seriously. And that caught my interest and curiosity. Then when a British friend told me that one of the recurring characters was bisexual, I was intensely curious.

I watched "Rose". Wasn't exactly blown away, but it made me laugh, and even moved me, and caught my attention in a positive sort of way. I really, really liked Christopher Eccleston.

Then some time later, in Montreal, a bunch of friends showed me two episodes that hadn't been aired in Canada yet - "New Earth" and "School Reunion". I enjoyed both and realized that I actually liked the show (a lot) and wanted to see more. Went and bought the DVD set for series 1, fell in love with it, and the rest was history.

I didn't think I liked Rose much, but her story really grabbed me by midway through series 1 and I think she's one of the best examples of character development I've seen on TV. I'd never heard of Billie Piper except for this, so I had no preconceptions.

he's giving you foreshadowing of things we won't know for 5-6 episodes yet. Brilliant.

I love that too, and it's so beautifully done - it's something you don't even understand till later, and when you don understand, it's so moving.

I think Rose's great story arc/character development was mostly in series 1; in series 2 she seemed a little weaker because they had to backpeddle - what do you do after you've become a god and gone back to being a normal person? I think she has some wonderful passages and scenes - I should list "the ten great Rose moments" - but really, once we'd got to "The Parting of the Ways", her story was told, except for the addendum, "how I died". As I see it, Rose's story in series 1 became the hero's journey, in which through learning courage and original thought and the power of love, Rose sacrificed herself to save the universe. Except then the Doctor sacrificed himself for her - in effect, he became the price she had to pay for getting the power to save the world.

So then: she's human, she's with the somewhat-changed Doctor, and they have adventures. Mickey develops. She doesn't change much. Her only story thereafter is her 'death' - how she was torn from the Doctor. Interestingly, her decision at the end of "Doomsday" was not to save the world at any risk to herself, it was to stay with the Doctor at any risk to herself. And of course she lost her heart's desire - she couldn't stay with him.

I don't care who liked who best behind the scenes: BP and CE are a match made in acting heaven.

It was the perfect coming together of actors and script and directing as well. It raised the material above itself to an incredible level.

I could do my "ten favourite Jackie moments", too. And yes, I loved her on The Weakest Link. Jackie's story arc, though comparatively peripheral, was a surprise and a delight.

I will go to your "End of the World" post, but not tonight, as it's getting late. Looking forward to it!

Date: 2007-11-24 04:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nina-ds.livejournal.com
I was lucky, in a sense, that I had the entire set available to me, so I went directly from "Rose" to EOTW, and by the end of that, well, how could I resist? I watched the entire series the first time through over two days. I couldn't stop. I can't even remember if I knew that CE was leaving, I just could see that his arc was ending, and I still maintain that he and RTD always had a pact that he would leave at the end of S1 (even if RTD may have hoped to get him to stay longer). It just fits CE's personality, and Nine's arc is so well-defined.

So is Rose's, as you say. If they'd dealt with her having been a god, or with her having to adjust to Ten, then they could have done something, but as it played out, it annoyed me. (Tangent: I saw someone saying today in a comment on a fic that "Rose clearly had accepted Ten by the time of the swordfight" so she - the commenter - hated TCI fic that had her doubting him or mourning Nine, etc. But while I can understand that interpretation on some level, it sickens me - it makes Rose look shallow and it negates Nine. I know why they did it, but it pisses me off on a number of fronts.) I do wish they had kept with the initial idea to have Rose leave mid-series. It would have helped enormously, particularly because I never could see the relationship between Rose and Ten being true, just desperate on her part and convenient on his.

On Billie Piper, I count it as a mark of how brilliant she is as an actor that I could get over "Because We Want To." To be fair, she'd always had a certain charisma on shows like Top of the Pops, but that song was excruciatingly annoying. It was like, "I'm an obnoxious teenager, YEAH!"

Interestingly, her decision at the end of "Doomsday" was not to save the world at any risk to herself, it was to stay with the Doctor at any risk to herself. And of course she lost her heart's desire - she couldn't stay with him.

That's true on the romantic level. Although it also seemed like a symptom of her desperation and recklessness (and, frankly, some really bad writing; I also thought that DT was so OTT in the control room it was actually comedic, which I don't think was intentional!)

It's true, Mickey (obviously) and Jackie (less obviously) had the best character development in S2. Sometimes - often, even - in ways that reflect rather badly on Rose and the Doctor.

My ten favourite moments from Jackie...hmmm, in rough chronological order:

1. the hopeful near-seduction of Nine, with the snippy face when he refuses
2. The "Arianna" moment mentioned above
3. "Stitch this, mate!" THWACK!
4. The wistful "10 seconds" at the end of WWIII
5. The bittersweet comment that Pete could always be found clinging to the youngest blonde (ouch!)
6. "Lord knows, I have hated that man, but right now I love him."
7. That bronze dress in ROTC/AoS, for sheer chutzpah
8. The "left behind" speech in Love & Monsters (best scene in the entirety of S2 for me)
9. "How very?" the non-reunion reunion with Pete in Doomsday
10. The Weakest Link (not, strictly speaking, Jackie, but when you realize how sweet CC is and how much that informs Jackie)

I feel like there's one really obvious one I'm missing, but I had very little sleep last night, and it's catching up with me!

Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 1

Date: 2007-11-24 06:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
Once again I have too many thoughts, too much to say, and need a two-party reply. I love this! Thank you so much for indulging my passion for character discussion.

I had the entire set available to me, so I went directly from "Rose" to EOTW, and by the end of that, well, how could I resist? I watched the entire series the first time through over two days.

How wonderful! I'd have loved to do that. But couldn't. So I was watching it at weird times - getting up extra early in the morning, for example, to fit in an episode sometimes. It helped that even though I felt obsessively addicted, I didn't want to come to the end too fast. I certainly was thinking about the story even when I wasn't watching - though I had to get beyond the lava-creature in "Rose" and the Gelth and the Slytheen, all of which remain my least favourite DW villains, all of which trigger my deep contempt of plastic monsters.

Funny thing, though - even though I still cringe at the Slytheen in "Aliens of London", I love Margaret in "Boom Town". It just goes to show what a difference a script can make.

I still maintain that he and RTD always had a pact that he would leave at the end of S1 (even if RTD may have hoped to get him to stay longer). It just fits CE's personality, and Nine's arc is so well-defined.

I agree. And though I don't know - as far as I know, they have never publicly said - I think RTD had spent years planning series 1 (when he was trying to sell it to the networks) and the consequent conceptual polish and strong writing are the result. It was his pet project, the love of his creative lifetime. When he lucked into getting such a brilliant actor as Christopher Eccleston for the role - and I seriously can't think of another actor on earth so perfect for the part, though I can imagine a few who might have done it adequately - well, that just make the resulting package so much better.

But before series 1, and without any knowledge of how successful it would be, there would have been no need to work on a series 2. By the time they knew, I think the luxury of open-ended time had passed and the intensity of thought was different - RTD had maybe not used up all the ideas he'd already had, but he'd used all his best ideas to their strongest dramatic effect. So series 2 is 'variation on a theme' and series 3 is 'aftermath'. I wonder what series 4 will be.

As for series 5 - if it has another writer, I hope it's one with ideas as strong as RTD had in 2003 or so, when DW was still in the formative stage. I can imagine them going on with 'more of the same' ad infinitum, but that gets stale, even if the actors and the individual scripts are always good - and that may not be impossible but it's certainly unlikely. It became the Star Trek problem: more of the same, over and over. Until people stopped watching because it was so unfresh.

Torchwood series 1, on the other hand, has the flavour of "a good idea hastily thrown together", which is why I hope next series shows more thought and care. And depth.

Anyway, I think it is entirely plausible that Davies saw how perfect Eccleston was in his interpretation, and made a one-series deal with him. I'd like to be able to imagine series 2 with Eccleston, and with Nine continuing through, but I really can't... I wish I could. I can't imagine what it would have been like.

I saw someone saying today in a comment on a fic that "Rose clearly had accepted Ten by the time of the swordfight" - [snip] it sickens me - it makes Rose look shallow and it negates Nine.

I'm not sure quite how to address this. My feelings are mixed. I think I deal with it by not looking too closely - and if I do look closely, I am horrified by Rose's careless forgetting of Jack. But I also wouldn't want a show that expended all its emotional energy of regrets and losses of the past, and I am accustomed of decades of reading comics like X-Men where last month's ultimate tragedy is forgotten (at least temporarily) as we go on with the next storyline.

Re: Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 1

Date: 2007-11-26 11:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nina-ds.livejournal.com
Thank you so much for indulging my passion for character discussion.

I could say the same. So I will!

It helped that even though I felt obsessively addicted, I didn't want to come to the end too fast.

I had some of that, but I couldn't stop myself. The worst case of that, though, is Our Friends in the North - I always say, "Just one episode. 1964. One episode, and I'm done." And I'm still sitting there eleven hours later. I'm not exaggerating - I started one Saturday afternoon and ended up in the wee small hours of Sunday morning. Thank God it ends on at least a hopeful note, but I'm almost afraid to watch it again anymore, knowing that I'm going to end up watching the whole thing.

hough I had to get beyond the lava-creature in "Rose" and the Gelth and the Slytheen, all of which remain my least favourite DW villains, all of which trigger my deep contempt of plastic monsters.

I can understand that, although I think I have a very high tolerance as long as I like the concept. I blame it on my love of Blake's 7, which was the show I was really hooked on. I think it would be nice if the TW folk had a look at the previous DW "adult side project". It really was adult - dark, intellectual, sexy, subversive, but not in the slightly leering way that TW could get to. I'm rediscovering my love of B7 because someone on my f-list is watching it for the first time and reviewing; I know it's cheap and tacky-looking, with disco fashions, but it's good stuff.

I love Margaret in "Boom Town". It just goes to show what a difference a script can make.

Yes, and I think director, too. Keith Boak did Rose, AoL, and WWIII and there were reports that KB and CE had some real dust-ups because of the liberties KB was taking with some of the scripts, even in scenes CE wasn't even in! And those episodes do have a very high "cheese" and slapstick level. I can imagine how much CE loved that... But he and Annette Badland are fantastic in that dinner scene. And her voice when she says, "Dinner and bondage" is brilliant.

When he lucked into getting such a brilliant actor as Christopher Eccleston for the role - and I seriously can't think of another actor on earth so perfect for the part,

I've seen (in DW Magazine, maybe?) RTD's initial pitch, and it included an "intense, dark, athletic" Doctor in a leather jacket, stripped down, military but rock'n'roll, and "about 40, sexy". Hmm. Now, who could that be? He's been writing for CE since QAF, I can't imagine that he wasn't hoping for him. I do actually hope they work together again, I think they work together well on RTD's darker side. CE actually is able to ground some of the flightier elements in ways that other actors can't quite do. Well, Lesley Sharp can, too.

And yes, I can see that S2 definitely had "sophomore slump" written all over it, just covered over by the presence of the new Doctor. S3 was the experimental third album that had some knockout pieces (interestingly, all written by people other than RTD!) and quite a lot of filler. I do think RTD is pretty much worn out creatively and I think it will be great for them to have a change of team. Obviously, I'd also like an another Doctor, but it may take an elephant tranquilizer gun to take Tennant down.

Re: Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 4

Date: 2007-11-28 04:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
The worst case of that, though, is Our Friends in the North - I always say, "Just one episode. 1964. One episode, and I'm done." And I'm still sitting there eleven hours later.

I still haven't seen all of that show - I'm seriously rationing myself. I started watching episode one while doing my exercises. I finished the exercises and then just sat down and watched the rest of that episode and the next.

I blame it on my love of Blake's 7, which was the show I was really hooked on.

I watched some of that - ! Watched the first three or four episodes, loved Avon, but hated Blake so much I couldn't go on watching. I was persuaded by friends to watch the final episode, which was... interesting. I'm not sure what to make of it. I'd try watching it again, if only Blake wasn't in it. You know how sometimes there are characters you just can't bear to see? (I stopped watching "Deep Space Nine" for that reason, too.) I rather liked the style of B7. I certainly liked the costumes and the situation. Outlaw freedom fighters - my kind of guys. I don't remember any plastic monsters. Maybe I did't get that far. It was the plastic aliens that turned me off Farscape, even though the characterization and scripts seemed good.

Yes another reason for my inordinate love of Firefly - the stuff they didn't have. Mind you, Firefly has aspects I would normally hate, and I loved it despite them.

those episodes do have a very high "cheese" and slapstick level.

Yes. They ought to be way beyond my tolerance level for that sort of thing, which is almost non-existent at the best of times. But for some reason (script? Eccleston? whatever) I feel in love with the show instead.

her voice when she says, "Dinner and bondage" is brilliant.

I love that line. But there are so many such lines and moments in that episode.

Who is Lesley Sharp?

Re: Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 5

Date: 2007-11-28 04:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
S2 definitely had "sophomore slump" written all over it, just covered over by the presence of the new Doctor.

Featuring novelty over substance is always a retrograde move - one step away from the situation "no plot ideas? I know! We'll add a new character!" - which never works.

Perhaps the extreme adaptibility of theme of Doctor Who was working against it. The Doctor can be anything/anybody, within a margin. The plots can encompass a wide range of styles and situations. That's good when they have a good story, but it leaves them at loose ends when they don't.

Torchwood is an interesting situation where the opposite is the case. They have a tight situation (alien-hunters in a secret high-tech organization) and a narrow set of characters, but then tried to inject variety by making each episode a different genre - and to my eyes, it didn't work, though I love the show anyway. I love it without think it's of high quality writing or concept. With exceptions for certain episodes, scenes and situations. Doctor Who is usually written with much more polish and flair and intelligence and wit.

But Torchwood has still managed to be true to itself, while Doctor Who in some ways has not.

I do think RTD is pretty much worn out creatively

I think so too. Sometimes I think he is grasping at straws, extolling ideas - as he does so well - not because they have merit but because he can't come up with better, and because he is focussing on the business aspect of the market - 'what will bring up ratings' and 'how can we compromise becaase we can't have this actor/budget/writer'.

I also think that the 'writing for children' aspect that Davies made such a strength in series 1 is now a mixed blessing - inclining him to silliness and a lack of direction, or an excess of excess. The show was built on excess, but ever-escalating excess doesn't work, you have to reign it in or you lose it.

I'd also like an another Doctor, but it may take an elephant tranquilizer gun to take Tennant down.

I think he's enjoying his success with fans, and he's got it made. I don't think he's so ambitious an actor or thinker (despite wanting to play Hamlet, to which one can only think, 'doesn't everyone'?) to be eager for a change. I don't think Tennant is in any way stupid or even limited, but some actors live to stretch themselves and I don't think that's his approach. I think also that it's borne out by the roles he takes.

Let's see if this works: <3 and <♥>.

Re: Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 5

Date: 2008-01-11 03:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nina-ds.livejournal.com
I have been meaning to get back to you in forever, but I've been trying to limit my LJ time while I'm writing (two stories on the go! at least the Heroes one is about half done), and these posts just keep getting further and further down in my inbox! It's not through lack of desire, just lack of energy and time.

I do think RTD is pretty much worn out creatively...

I think so too. Sometimes I think he is grasping at straws, extolling ideas - as he does so well - not because they have merit but because he can't come up with better, and because he is focussing on the business aspect of the market - 'what will bring up ratings' and 'how can we compromise becaase we can't have this actor/budget/writer'.

I also think that the 'writing for children' aspect that Davies made such a strength in series 1 is now a mixed blessing - inclining him to silliness and a lack of direction, or an excess of excess. The show was built on excess, but ever-escalating excess doesn't work, you have to reign it in or you lose it.


I have to say, I think VOTD just emphasized this. It wasn't that it was baaaaad in the way LOTTL was, it just seemed tired and bit retready. Enjoyable on its own, but looked at in the overall scheme of things, it's all things we'd seen before. I do think RTD gets awfully pleased with himself very early in the game and really needs someone to rein him in. I think on QAF (to some extent, since he left before shooting), Second Coming, and the first series of DW, that was CE. He really seems to "work" a part from all angles, and if that means telling the writer to "do it better", he's not shy about that. So far, the only person who's not welcomed that with open arms was the guy who wrote Elizabeth, and from what I've heard from both sides, CE was right. The writer hadn't really grasped the symbolism of his own script, which is not that uncommon.

But basically, I agree that both RTD and DT are very comfortable with their current success, and that's not really where great work comes from.

I don't think he's so ambitious an actor or thinker (despite wanting to play Hamlet, to which one can only think, 'doesn't everyone'?) to be eager for a change.

Re: Hamlet, I think that's true. And from the moment this was announced, I thought, "Ah. The RSC is looking for a way to get bums on seats." Because any performing arts group these days is looking for ways to keep money coming in, and the more classical, the more they're strapped for cash. Anyone who thinks the RSC is different is living in a fantasy world!

I don't think Tennant is in any way stupid or even limited, but some actors live to stretch themselves and I don't think that's his approach. I think also that it's borne out by the roles he takes.

I don't think he's stupid, either, but I have to say, I do think he's limited. In part because he doesn't stretch. He's limiting himself, and not exercising the other muscles. Most of his characters have been in quite a narrow range - I suppose Brendan in Secret Smile was supposed to be a stretch, but it didn't work for me. But he's got a fanbase now, and he can probably coast for the rest of his career.

This reminds me obliquely of a bit of praise I remember reading of CE ages ago - probably mid-1990s. The critic (I think it may have been in one of the London papers) said that he couldn't imagine CE being miscast. That's an amazing compliment. I don't even know that I agree, I can't imagine him in Jane Austen (maybe Colonel Brandon? or Captain whatsits in Persuasion?), but he might well surprise me. I've been listening to him do some radio programmes recently, and he is so precise with language, he might pull it off with the right costume, make-up, and hair. He's so elegant in Othello, you could easily imagine him being a public school boy, even with the accent.

Re: Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 5

Date: 2008-01-21 09:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I have to say, I think VOTD just emphasized this. ... Enjoyable on its own, but looked at in the overall scheme of things, it's all things we'd seen before.

I loved it thoroughly, but I would agree it wasn't innovative. It was shallow - in a good way, but at its best, Doctor Who does better. At its best, it can be watched on a light level of what-you-see-is-what-you-get, and a deeper level of subtet that can have any level of moods. This was... unidimensional. Not a bad thing, but not a sign for renewed creative energy on Davies' part either.

But basically, I agree that both RTD and DT are very comfortable with their current success, and that's not really where great work comes from.

I'd say that series 3 had great moments and some great characters, but failed to reach its own promise, and was therefore frustrating.
Series 2 again had great moments, but never reached the levels of series 1, and was stonger in the realm of ideas than actualization of them.

Re Tennant:
I do think he's limited. In part because he doesn't stretch.

Well - self-fulfilling prophecy, isn't it? Unless he streches, he'll never know (and we'll never know) where his limits are. He may appear to be more limited than he actually is because he doesn't take risks to extend. Remember when he was talking about how he was unsure whether to take the part of the Doctor, because he wasn't sure he could do a good job? That doesn't imply a character who wants to leap at an artistic challenge, even the challenge of playing the demanding role of a popular figure he has always loved. He took the role despite those fears.

The critic ...said that he couldn't imagine CE being miscast. That's an amazing compliment.

Oh my goodness. It certainly is.

I can't imagine him in Jane Austen

I think he could do Wentworth rather well. Not Darcy, certainly. He could also do any of the secondary/comic/annoying Austen parts. And it might even be fun to see what he could make of Mr. Darcy.

He's so elegant in Othello, you could easily imagine him being a public school boy, even with the accent.

Yes. Interesting thoughts.

Though I love Ralph Fiennes, I think CE should have had the role of Voldemort in Harry Potter. He would have made it real: I think Fiennes is just walking through it.

Re: Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 5

Date: 2008-01-11 03:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nina-ds.livejournal.com
Oh, and how did you make the little heart?

Re: Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 5

Date: 2008-01-21 08:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
The little heart.... waaah! I don't remember!

I hope I wrote it down somewhere.

Re: Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 5

Date: 2008-01-21 08:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
Okay, okay, I checked back and found it. The little heart was made by typing

"&" followed by the word "hearts" followed by "; "


Re: Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 1

Date: 2007-11-27 12:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nina-ds.livejournal.com

I'd like to be able to imagine series 2 with Eccleston, and with Nine continuing through, but I really can't... I wish I could. I can't imagine what it would have been like.

I think that's further proof that Nine was always meant to be a one-series Doctor. Even the episode that I would have loved to see him in, School Reunion, is based on Rose realizing that her relationship with the Doctor is clearly not what she thought it was. And while Ten plays it that way, Nine never did. I think I've said this before, but one huge difference I see in them is attention/emotion span. Ten flits from one thing to the other; Nine seems to gather rosebuds, no pun intended. I genuinely could see Nine with a huge, full TARDIS with SJS, Jabe, Nancy and Jamie, Cathica and Suki, Lynda, Jack, and Rose, etc., and have him be able to love each of them in a complete but unique way.

My feelings are mixed. I think I deal with it by not looking too closely

I wrote a fairly long dissection of Time Crash, what did and didn't work for me, though I haven't posted it. But I ended it with something that I think is at the heart of a lot of my problems with what happened to DW after S1 - the show taught me to read it complexly, and to feel these deep emotions that were consistent over a long arc. But then, it punked out. It could have - and should have, I think - gone back to the stand-alone episodes, the weekly adventures, etc., but it kept trying to do an emotional arc that it couldn't really sustain. And the gap kept causing me to fall in to deep chasms between what was written and what I saw.

And I thought getting Martha would also be a reset button, but it wasn't enough of one, so...yeah, it's awkward and why I can't just "let go" the way I probably should. I loved it for that one series sooo much, and I don't want them to ruin it for me, but I want to watch to see if they do. It's masochistic, really.




Themes and their resolutions (or lack of)

Date: 2007-11-28 04:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I think that's further proof that Nine was always meant to be a one-series Doctor.

I agree.

Even the episode that I would have loved to see him in, School Reunion, is based on Rose realizing that her relationship with the Doctor is clearly not what she thought it was. And while Ten plays it that way, Nine never did.

Could you explain a little? What did she think it was? How was it different? How did Nine play it? I'm probably missing nuances in the show. I don't want to jump to conclusions about what you mean here based on what I made of the show.

genuinely could see Nine with a huge, full TARDIS with SJS, Jabe, Nancy and Jamie, Cathica and Suki, Lynda, Jack, and Rose, etc., and have him be able to love each of them in a complete but unique way.

I can imagine that, too. I don't think this is accidental: I think the scrips have chosen to emphasize Ten's loneliness - and have given him an insoluble dilemma: he wants to be alone, but he doesn't want to be alone. Not so much a paradox as an ongoing inner conflict. Sometimes it works emotionally, usually briefly; often it makes no sense at all.

I wrote a fairly long dissection of Time Crash, what did and didn't work for me, though I haven't posted it.

Why not? Are you planning to? I'd like to hear it.

I ended it with something that I think is at the heart of a lot of my problems with what happened to DW after S1 - the show taught me to read it complexly, and to feel these deep emotions that were consistent over a long arc. But then, it punked out.

May be true. I'll have to think about that. Clearly it changed its emotional map, and the set-up in series 1 was more to our taste. Perhaps the problem is the lack of consistency - my inability to trace continuity of emotion from Nine to Ten. Since my notion of 'what the Doctor is and what he's all about' was entirely based on my observations on Nine, that set up a certain irritation factor when my expectations were not met.

it kept trying to do an emotional arc that it couldn't really sustain.

It certainly failed to do so in series 3.

Another thought: the character growth in series 1 was equally balanced between Nine and Rose. Separately, they each had their growth as a character. Partly it was learning to know them, partly it was, once we'd learned their situation, emotionally and circumstantially, it was a matter of seeing how they resolved it.

Nine was lost in guilt and grief with the memory of the Time Wars, but still felt himself to be protective of Earth. He met Rose, fell in love, almost lost her for various reasons at various times, helped her to find herself and found himself again through her, and then sacrificed himself to save her from the destructive strength of the Time Vortex. A nicely crafted theme.

Rose was lonely and bored, not sure what she wanted in life but not finding it. Nine brought her adventure and moral perspective and renewed her life, and she fell in love with him - and, I would guess, with his lifestyle. In "The Parting of the Ways" she found she couldn't go back to her old life, and preferred to sacrifice herself (at any cost) for the Doctor's sake, and to life/die for something bigger than herself. So she did the Bad Wolf thing and the Doctor saved her by sacrificing himself.

Another nicely crafted theme.

But in series 2, they're together, they love each other, she's accepting his lifestyle - there's no growth or change until the end, when they are involutnarily parted. It's the flip side of the 'finding each other' theme of series 1, which was partly a romance theme and partly a finding-oneself theme, or, in Rose's case, a coming of age theme.

In series 3... we have none of these things. Martha loves Ten, but doesn't grow from the experience - she's mature and self-realized when we first meet her. Ten is at loose ends, and continues to be so, and is at even worse emotional loose ends by the end of "The Last of the Time Lords". No resolution there.

So what do we have? What did they intend the theme to be? If it was just a series of adventures, why have Martha fall in love with the Doctor? Just to give her motivation for what she does for him?






Series 1, Rose and consequenecs: part 2

Date: 2007-11-24 06:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I can just as happily argue that Rose had no choice but to either accept or pretend to accept Ten in Nine's place. This begs the question of her inner feelings on the matter, which the show doesn't talk about anyway. Her love is generally kept at the non-conversational level, which is IMHO a great strength of the show even in - or especially in - series 1.

Because its market is kids, it has to be subtle about adult matters of sex and romance. Because it is subtle, it can hint at implications and feelings that TV normally won't touch, simplifying all relationships to identical monotony. But we have a 900 year old male who takes a 19 year old girl into dangerous situations in faraway places, taking advantage of her total and starry-eyed (pun intended) love and devotion. That's just the surface issue, dealt with fairly directly in the show - we've also got the relationship with Mickey, with Jack, with the Doctor's domestic issues, with his past, with their lifestyle, and so on.

So while I loved the Rose/Ten relationship, it doesn't have the depth and clarity and realism to me that the Rose/Nine relationship had. It has glaring holes all through it, and the most interesting bits - dealing with Mickey and Sarah Jane and Reinette, for example - mostly just rip those holes wider and bigger without repairing them. Which is both good and bad: it becomes more complex, but less real, and more demanding of the explanations that we just don't get.

that song was excruciatingly annoying. It was like, "I'm an obnoxious teenager, YEAH!"

I have no idea what the song sounds like, but your comment makes me think of Catherine Tate.

Mickey (obviously) and Jackie (less obviously) had the best character development in S2. Sometimes - often, even - in ways that reflect rather badly on Rose and the Doctor.

For example?

I love your list re Jackie, and I'm now composing my own list of her great scenes.

I adore your Jackie icon.

Re: Series 1, Rose and consequenecs: part 2

Date: 2007-11-27 12:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nina-ds.livejournal.com
I can just as happily argue that Rose had no choice but to either accept or pretend to accept Ten in Nine's place. This begs the question of her inner feelings on the matter, which the show doesn't talk about anyway. Her love is generally kept at the non-conversational level, which is IMHO a great strength of the show even in - or especially in - series 1.

I do agree with all that - and for me, I always thought she was willfully ignoring the differences and telling herself that nothing had changed because she had no choice, though I would have liked a little grieving (I know why they didn't, but it makes her look fickle). That squeeful "I love travelling with you" in New Earth really read to me as if she were trying to convince herself as much as anyone. I think in the stated incident, I was reacting to the idea that anyone really would just immediately transfer the kind of connection she had with Nine to someone new - especially that fanon idea that Ten was made in the perfect image for her. Which doesn't even make sense given her past taste in men, Mickey (car mechanic) and Jimmy Stones (rock and roller, which is about all we know). Nine actually fits better than Ten does in that regard. But I know a lot of it is fangirls projecting their own "OMG he's so CUUUUUUUUUUUUUTE!!!!" onto Rose. I do think there's more hesitance there, and a faint edge of desperation that is only heightened by SR and GitF.

I agree that they have to be subtle about these things and that a lot of it is fandom having its way with canon, but then again, they do feed us a lot of subtext.

It has glaring holes all through it, and the most interesting bits - dealing with Mickey and Sarah Jane and Reinette, for example - mostly just rip those holes wider and bigger without repairing them. Which is both good and bad: it becomes more complex, but less real, and more demanding of the explanations that we just don't get.

Yes, this is a part of my feeling that the show and TPTB may not actually see some of the implications of things that they think will be really cool or interesting to do. This is compounded for me when I don't think the actors pull off the emotional effect they seem to be trying to project.

Mickey (obviously) and Jackie (less obviously) had the best character development in S2. Sometimes - often, even - in ways that reflect rather badly on Rose and the Doctor.

For example?


Well, I suppose they aren't really character development moments so much as springboards for them - Rose's general insensitivity in treating Mickey; Rose and Ten laughing at Mickey for holding the button down; Rose not "getting" Jackie's fear of being left behind (human, perhaps, but a bit selfish); Ten's "old Rose" stunt, which gets up my nose in a big way because it's meant to be funny inside and outside of the show.

With Mickey, what's interesting to me is that he did have his character development in AOL/WWIII - the Doctor accepted him, gave him the chance to come along, and covered for him when he knew he wasn't ready. And if you look at Boom Town, it's Rose and Jack who give Mickey a hard time; Nine banters with him (a form of acceptance), only after Mickey has insulted his ears. So in that respect, Mickey's treatment in TCI and RotC/AoS is somewhat retrograde.

I have no idea what the song sounds like, but your comment makes me think of Catherine Tate.

Here are the lyrics (http://www.stlyrics.com/songs/b/billiepiper527/becausewewantto23528.html). And it really is just as obnoxious as it appears to be. It sounds kind of like a football cheer. Luckily, I had never seen Catherine Tate before Runaway Bride, so I had no preconceptions, but I did warm to her, and she did show good timing and more chemistry with Tennant than with any of his other companions so far, even if it was a bit antagonistic. I do think he's better at light and comedic, and that could be a strength if they go that way - would also go along with the stand-alone, non-arc way that I think is more sustainable.

I love Jackie. I would make that little heart sign, but I don't know how.

Re: Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 2

Date: 2007-11-28 03:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I always thought she was willfully ignoring the differences and telling herself that nothing had changed because she had no choice, though I would have liked a little grieving

But if she grieves, it's an admission she's lost something. If she accepts, as she seems to, that this is Nine with a new face, then there is nothing to grieve. She hasn't lost anything.

When I watched "New Earth" the only episode of Doctor Who I'd seen that mattered was "Rose", and that possibly coloured my interpretation.

When I watched it all through in order, I was much more disturbed that Rose didn't seem to give Jack another thought.

It was only muchmore recently that I have come to think of Ten as being unlike Nine. Perhaps this is another reflection of my long experience with comic books - if a character looks different becuase he has a new artist, or has changed his costume, it still isn't a different character. You just learn to look at him or her differently. And maybe say, afterwards, "I liked him so much better before they changed artists." Or not.

I was reacting to the idea that anyone really would just immediately transfer the kind of connection she had with Nine to someone new

He didn't seem like someone new, to me. It was just the Doctor. Only now do I see him as 'someone new', and that's because of the way the storyline has gone. And judgements he has shown.

I was reacting to the idea that anyone really would just immediately transfer the kind of connection she had with Nine to someone new - especially that fanon idea that Ten was made in the perfect image for her.

Since I wasn't around at the time, and have never heard this except in quotes from you, it never affected my viewpoint. If I'd have heard it, I'd have said dismissively, "Fft, what nonsense, Nine was umpteen times sexier and more attractive than Ten, and it wasn't his looks she loved anyway. So that argument just doesn't work."

I have since come to also see the sexiness of Ten, though he still doesn't have the charisma or sexual power of Nine. And sadly, at the same time I was coming to see Ten's sexiness, I was losing respect for his morality and his judgement. Maybe even his good-will. I'm still juggling all of this.

Perhaps a certain part of our assessment of the Rose/Nine and Rose/Ten relationship depends on our interpretation of when/whether she started sleeping with one or both of them.

Re: Series 1, Rose and consequences: part 3

Date: 2007-11-28 03:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
Rose's general insensitivity in treating Mickey

Which I love. I love the way the Rose/Mickey/Doctor relationship is handled, and the way it develops, especially in "Boom Town" - at least where Mickey himself is concerned. I also love the reunion in "Rise of the Cybermen". In a few episodes - like "School Reunion" and "The Girl in the Fireplace" - I thought Mickey's presence was entirely unnecessary. Not a bad thing, but not an enhacement to the plot or the show.

I'm not sure I quite understand the Jack/Mickey relationship, which starts from nowhere and goes nowhere, but I take it as Jack copying the Doctor's attitude to Mickey, or believing that Mickey has treated Rose carelessly or selfishly. As for the 'selfish' angle, where does the selfishness lie? With Mickey and Jackie for wanting to keep Rose with them? Or with Rose for wanting to leave because she loves the Doctor more? I see all this as a part of Rose's maturing and aging, and brilliantly done - Mickey and Jackie both end up adjusting to the changes in her, and accepting them, and letting go - as much as they are able. While she in turn makes it clear that her choice is made, she's not going back to the way she was or the life she led, but she won't cut ties.

In fact, where Mickey was concerned, she should have cut ties much earlier. Her reasons for not doing so were normal enough - especially since she had no reason at first to think that her time on the TARDIS would last a long time, or be a lifetime commitment to the Doctor. And I think that when she did realize this, the notion that she had Mickey and Jackie waiting for her at home was a comfort through the difficult times. Now, that part, I grant, was selfish, but probably necessary for her.

Refresh my memory: what was Ten's "Old Rose" stunt? Do you mean with with Jackie in "Doomsday"?

As for Catherine Tate: we'll see what she's like in series 4. On consideration, I think I quite liked Donna's relationship with the Doctor - I particularly loved it (and I'm sure I've mentioned this before, only too often) whenever she called him a Martian. It was Donna herself I didn't like. I wouldn't want to spend any time in her company in real life and didn't really want too much of her on screen - though I was able to tolerate her for the timespan of "The Runaway Bride", which still, I might add, isn't an episode I ever feel the urge to watch over again.

I love Jackie. I would make that little heart sign, but I don't know how.

I don't know either. I should learn, because how else can I keep up my image as a starry-eyed fangirl?

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