Post-anniversary post ;-)
Nov. 24th, 2013 01:12 pmI am just at this point, a happy Who fan, who, apart from the penguins (they did not give me any penguins - sorry if that's a spoiler ;-p), got everything she asked for, and more. It was like getting a whole lot of presents and I don't feel like being critical, I just want to sit here and play with my nice new shiny things. I hope that is okay with those who'd prefer to point out the damaged casings and the slight scratches here and there...
I love The Night of the Doctor most still. (Just. I think) I don't even know quite why - somehow it was everything I really wouldn't have said I wanted, and apparently did. I think the have-your-cake-and-eat-it approach of having Eight, in the Time War, be the one who tried not to fight, and tried to help people - and who died just to make that point to Kass, that he wasn't like a Dalek or the other Time Lords - but then who at the same time is actually the one responsible for making the decision that will end in the terrible act that ends the Time War, forging himself into a warrior...
... except now the warrior was the Doctor all along, and they found another way. And again, have-your-cake-and-eat-it, with using so much of Nine and Ten's era to make that happen and yet leaving the Doctor free of that at last. And Eleven's joy at that = ♥ And also the Doctor finding another way; it wasn't Steven Moffat refuting RTD era Who, it was an answer to the worst aspects of Eric Saward: "There should have been another way." with "You're the Doctor. You always find another way." And maybe that's too optimistic, but not for the fiftieth anniversary, I don't think. Doctor Who is always, to me at least, fundamentally optimistic.
(All right, I kind of hated the Time War, last of your kind, yadda, yadda. I get why it was done, and it was probably right, but I have never liked it, or wanted to know anything about the Time War. Sorry. I am probably a terrible fan, because I'm suppose to be impressed at the angst and the dark and all that. I'm not. Not in DW. So, I feel as if there's a great gaping hole in my DW that's suddenly been given back to me, and I like what was hidden away in there, after all. Mostly, anyway)
So, generally: Matt and David were so much fun together, as I'd expected, and John Hurt was very good, too. (I was a bit miffed, because seeing it, I didn't see why he couldn't have been Eight, after all. It could have been Eight. And then I thought that, I don't know, this Doctor we haven't seen who, instead of picking on one past Doctor rather than any of the others, speaks for all of Classic Who (it's a screwdriver, not a waterpistol, not liking the timey-wimey etc. etc.) and because it's John Hurt, just does it so well, it works. So maybe I liked that, too, after all.
And my new favourite thing: Ten's wonderful uselessness at detecting Zygons. There were such negative things with him at the end, that I forget how much fun he could be. (There should totally be crackfic now of Ten Zygon hunting, because I loved that. I am stupid for fun things like that. Sorry. ♥)
And... and... then there was Tom Baker and it was random but perfect and I cried. I don't know what he said, because I cried all the way through the scene. (I wonder what it looked like if you're not such a Classic Who fan; if you don't quite get that emotiveness of the senior living Doctor quietly talking to the current about-to-depart Doctor and shaking his hand and... and... - did it look weird and pointless? Anyway, I don't know, because I was crying. I'm hopeless, but never mind me. I'm the kind of person who falls in love with random 60s TV; I know nothing.)
(I mean, plot holes... I don't even want to think about, so I'm not. I had a very nice party, thank you, with some lovely presents. I'll do the nitpicking next anniversary when I don't irrationally want to hug everything and everyone connected to Doctor Who.)
And then this morning I battled my pc overheating every 2 minutes (quite literally) and watched The Five(Ish) Doctors by Peter Davison, which if you haven't seen, you must! The good thing about the overheating was that it gave me time to catch my breath in between laughing. Peter Davison writes Doctor Who RPF now, basically, and... one of the scenes in Day of the Doctor will now be not creepy but completely hilarious to anyone who has watched it. That is... just... LOL And the only thing I can think of that might be a suitable response is not a review but that we should get a giant bit of card, fold it in half, write THANK YOU on the front in crayon, draw happy stick people and colour them in and then add lots of glitter and sparkly hearts and send it to Peter Davison with love from the fandom.
Anyway, that was nice. I liked it all very much, more than I'd hoped until Night of the Doctor suddenly turned up. :-)
Ages ago, when we were talking about what the anniversary should be, I said I wanted multiple Doctors, a party, especially Eight, and penguins. I feel as if I absolutely got everything except for the penguins. Maybe they're coming at Christmas...
(I'm sorry if I'm not keeping up with all of the things going on right now - my cunning Calufrax plan is occupying me in between the shiny anniversary stuff. But there'll be lots to look at later in the week...)
I haven't seen An Adventure in Space and Time (yet). I did record it, but I usually tend to get freaked out by things where people aren't the real people, if you follow me, and I don't know if I can cope. I hope to try, though, but I'm doubtful about if it'll work out.
I love The Night of the Doctor most still. (Just. I think) I don't even know quite why - somehow it was everything I really wouldn't have said I wanted, and apparently did. I think the have-your-cake-and-eat-it approach of having Eight, in the Time War, be the one who tried not to fight, and tried to help people - and who died just to make that point to Kass, that he wasn't like a Dalek or the other Time Lords - but then who at the same time is actually the one responsible for making the decision that will end in the terrible act that ends the Time War, forging himself into a warrior...
... except now the warrior was the Doctor all along, and they found another way. And again, have-your-cake-and-eat-it, with using so much of Nine and Ten's era to make that happen and yet leaving the Doctor free of that at last. And Eleven's joy at that = ♥ And also the Doctor finding another way; it wasn't Steven Moffat refuting RTD era Who, it was an answer to the worst aspects of Eric Saward: "There should have been another way." with "You're the Doctor. You always find another way." And maybe that's too optimistic, but not for the fiftieth anniversary, I don't think. Doctor Who is always, to me at least, fundamentally optimistic.
(All right, I kind of hated the Time War, last of your kind, yadda, yadda. I get why it was done, and it was probably right, but I have never liked it, or wanted to know anything about the Time War. Sorry. I am probably a terrible fan, because I'm suppose to be impressed at the angst and the dark and all that. I'm not. Not in DW. So, I feel as if there's a great gaping hole in my DW that's suddenly been given back to me, and I like what was hidden away in there, after all. Mostly, anyway)
So, generally: Matt and David were so much fun together, as I'd expected, and John Hurt was very good, too. (I was a bit miffed, because seeing it, I didn't see why he couldn't have been Eight, after all. It could have been Eight. And then I thought that, I don't know, this Doctor we haven't seen who, instead of picking on one past Doctor rather than any of the others, speaks for all of Classic Who (it's a screwdriver, not a waterpistol, not liking the timey-wimey etc. etc.) and because it's John Hurt, just does it so well, it works. So maybe I liked that, too, after all.
And my new favourite thing: Ten's wonderful uselessness at detecting Zygons. There were such negative things with him at the end, that I forget how much fun he could be. (There should totally be crackfic now of Ten Zygon hunting, because I loved that. I am stupid for fun things like that. Sorry. ♥)
And... and... then there was Tom Baker and it was random but perfect and I cried. I don't know what he said, because I cried all the way through the scene. (I wonder what it looked like if you're not such a Classic Who fan; if you don't quite get that emotiveness of the senior living Doctor quietly talking to the current about-to-depart Doctor and shaking his hand and... and... - did it look weird and pointless? Anyway, I don't know, because I was crying. I'm hopeless, but never mind me. I'm the kind of person who falls in love with random 60s TV; I know nothing.)
(I mean, plot holes... I don't even want to think about, so I'm not. I had a very nice party, thank you, with some lovely presents. I'll do the nitpicking next anniversary when I don't irrationally want to hug everything and everyone connected to Doctor Who.)
And then this morning I battled my pc overheating every 2 minutes (quite literally) and watched The Five(Ish) Doctors by Peter Davison, which if you haven't seen, you must! The good thing about the overheating was that it gave me time to catch my breath in between laughing. Peter Davison writes Doctor Who RPF now, basically, and... one of the scenes in Day of the Doctor will now be not creepy but completely hilarious to anyone who has watched it. That is... just... LOL And the only thing I can think of that might be a suitable response is not a review but that we should get a giant bit of card, fold it in half, write THANK YOU on the front in crayon, draw happy stick people and colour them in and then add lots of glitter and sparkly hearts and send it to Peter Davison with love from the fandom.
Anyway, that was nice. I liked it all very much, more than I'd hoped until Night of the Doctor suddenly turned up. :-)
Ages ago, when we were talking about what the anniversary should be, I said I wanted multiple Doctors, a party, especially Eight, and penguins. I feel as if I absolutely got everything except for the penguins. Maybe they're coming at Christmas...
(I'm sorry if I'm not keeping up with all of the things going on right now - my cunning Calufrax plan is occupying me in between the shiny anniversary stuff. But there'll be lots to look at later in the week...)
I haven't seen An Adventure in Space and Time (yet). I did record it, but I usually tend to get freaked out by things where people aren't the real people, if you follow me, and I don't know if I can cope. I hope to try, though, but I'm doubtful about if it'll work out.
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Date: 2013-11-24 07:14 pm (UTC)It was good for my heart, and good for my head (so much mirroring! So much reflection, so many threesomes! So much to chew on! Aaaaah, my head! I'm dizzy with concepts!)
It was good for my heart. Point blank. Full stop.
It was ... what scratches on the casing? There are none.
*flails*
(Well, yes, it would have been nice to find penguins in the corners.)
And the Fiveish Doctors? *snrk* I loved it.
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Date: 2013-11-25 05:25 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2013-11-25 12:59 am (UTC)Kamelion was on that wall of Companions. The love and the detail and just, everything Yes. Yes to everything you say. Not only were things fixed, they were fixed well, the right way (a right way). Not invalidating any of the angst or grief or amazement of Nine (and I really love Nine, partly because I can see a whole lot of what Cornell & Aaronovitch & Orman & several of the others were exploring in the Virgin New Adventures) but as you say, filling in that hole, bridging that gap between Old and New that had never properly been bridged, though the connections could be seen, were obviously there.
Night of the Doctor - oh, my heart. Because - Karn, and all the implications of that, and Eight (how _does_ Paul McGann do that?!) _being_ Eight (and now we have TWO, not just one, Eight visual things), and and and....
Happy, happy fangirl here. So happy. And weepy all at the same time. I know just what you mean about the Curator part, and then ALL OF THEM at the end.
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Date: 2013-11-25 05:27 pm (UTC)*nods*
Basically I'm YESYESYESYESing back at you. ♥
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Date: 2013-11-26 10:20 am (UTC)I think it would have made a lot of sense just to have 8 have done it, but Hurt was very, very good.
It was all very good!
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Date: 2013-11-26 01:08 pm (UTC)It was great - funny and clever and lifting a great weight from the Doctors and the fans.
Yes, I think that is a very true and good summary of it. ♥
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Date: 2013-11-24 01:56 pm (UTC)I loved John Hurt's Doctor to a quite ridiculous degree - it's such a shame we can never have him again, not even in a BF audio.
Seriously - Tennant's melodramatic speechifying at the rabbit just cracked me up so much. As soon as he started, I went "That's just a rabbit" - and then collapsed when he said, "And basically, you're just a rabbit."
I haven't seen Adventure yet - I was mostly avoiding it because it's written by Gatiss and I can't stand the man or his writing (mostly. I think I've seen ONE thing he's written that I actually thought was okay) - but I'm tempted from seeing caps and gifs on Tumblr.
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Date: 2013-11-24 03:18 pm (UTC)Also, that was the biggest rabbit I've ever seen. I can totally understand why ten thought it was a Zygon in disguise.
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Date: 2013-11-25 02:07 pm (UTC)Hurt was great and I soon forgave him for being a new-to-me Doctor. And, yes, the rabbit! :lol:
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Date: 2013-11-24 02:19 pm (UTC)Basically I loved just about all of it, and could probably point good bits out all day. :) Penguins would have been nice though, I agree.
And yes, The Five(ish) Doctors was a wonderful bit of fun. Loved the Barrowman gags, and Tennant being roped into doing things by his father-in-law. Moffat being tormented by the ghosts of past companions was a good bit too. Have you been following @dayoftheFishDr on Twitter? There have been some nice little bits in the run up to the anniversary. Particularly nice picture posted today:
https://twitter.com/dayoftheFishDr/status/404578827265134593
And I agree, Peter Davison deserves thank yous and glitter. And not having his tea cup stolen, which has apparently happened in that picture.
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Date: 2013-11-25 02:09 pm (UTC)Yes, you are right, I think. I wasn't quite clear, but I thought so too as it went on. But there was a moment or two where I was wondering why the Hurt Doctor really couldn't have been him. But, yes. I think that is true. And what it is saying here is... that the Doctor is and was never that man - he's always the one who finds another way, and who asks "Have I that right?" and decides that, no, nobody has that right...
:loL: at the stolen teacup. I'd blame Paul McGann. He's got a beard. Bound to be up to no good... ;-)
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Date: 2013-11-24 03:22 pm (UTC)Also "This interface is hot." "Well, I do try my best." I thought Billie Piper was so good in that role. That, and the War Doctor parking far away so the TARDIS wouldn't see... that kind of broke my heart.
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Date: 2013-11-24 05:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-11-25 02:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-11-24 03:34 pm (UTC)Unfortunately, I missed the ad-free simulcast, so had to see the agonizingly ad-packed repeat, but I'll be getting the DVD.
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Date: 2013-11-25 02:11 pm (UTC)And it really was lovely. Not perfect, but what is - but celebrating the past and opening the door to the future. Lovely.
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Date: 2013-11-24 03:46 pm (UTC)Overall, I feel like Doctor Who had a big party, and I was invited to it, and I had a great time! I love all my presents. "Night of the Doctor" was the surprise gift that I really loved. "Day of the Doctor" was the big gift that I knew was coming, but was worried that I might not like -- and ended up adoring because not only was it wonderful, but it had lots of extra little presents inside of it. And finally, "The Five(ish) Doctors" was the other surprise gift from that favorite relative who knows what you would never ask for but secretly really want. :D
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Date: 2013-11-25 02:13 pm (UTC)I mean, I do think the whole Time War thing worked well for Nine, back in 2005, but it was really time to find a way to be free of it for the future, and that's what this did.
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Date: 2013-11-24 03:56 pm (UTC)I really liked John Hurt's Dr. Tennant & Smith & other past Drs have a lot of energy, even William Hartnell and he wasn't.
Never liked The Time War and the resulting angst of the last time lord blah. Where there is darkness there is also light, and an old & grumpy person typing.
I've taped 'Adventure in Space & Time' too. I will watch it but I'm wary of dramas based on real things I know something about.
I'm off to see if anyone else thought the space barn looked like the one in Kate Bush's 'Suspended in Gaffa' vid. She did write 'Kinda' y'know.
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Date: 2013-11-25 02:15 pm (UTC)... and no doubt demanding they turning up the light so they can see where the typewriter keys are... ;-p
And, yes, it was pretty good, and I'm so glad so many people seem to have liked it, too.
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Date: 2013-11-24 04:25 pm (UTC)Doctor Who is always, to me at least, fundamentally optimistic.
This! Yes! 100%!
I think what I loved most of the The Day of the Doctor is that is made me really excited about where the story could go next, and it made me really want to go back and see all of the episodes I haven't yet. I thought it was a great tribute to the whole 50 years.
Surprise!Tom-Baker also made me go all misty-eyed. He was completely unexpected and that scene was so lovely.
I've only seen half of The Five(ish) Doctors (my laptop was also having a little meltdown when I tried viewing it last night) but I'm definitely intending to finish it, and watch An Adventure in Space and Time as well. And then I'll have to check out your recs on Calufrax!
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Date: 2013-11-25 02:18 pm (UTC)<I.I think what I loved most of the The Day of the Doctor is that is made me really excited about where the story could go next, and it made me really want to go back and see all of the episodes I haven't yet. I thought it was a great tribute to the whole 50 years. </i>
*nods* Yes, I think it really did combine celebrating the past, but by finally dealing with the Time War, it opened the door to a new future - another fifty years! - for the Doctor and the show, and rounded it off with the oldest Doctor and the newest, the past and the present, talking with hope of the future. Not faultless, but overall joyful and lovely. ♥
Oh, the Five(ish) Doctors - I keep laughing still at bits in it. OH PETER. *shakes head*
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Date: 2013-11-24 07:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-11-24 09:55 pm (UTC)Yes, exactly!
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Date: 2013-11-25 02:20 pm (UTC):-)
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Date: 2013-11-25 05:30 am (UTC)AND I AM A YOUNG UN AND I CRIED AT BAKER.
THAT IS ALL.
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Date: 2013-11-25 02:23 pm (UTC)AND I AM A YOUNG UN AND I CRIED AT BAKER.
Aw. *pets* I'm glad to know that. I did, but if you're old enough to know Classic Who and doubly so, if you're British, Tom Baker simply is the Doctor in a way no one else perhaps as ever been, even when he's not your favourite. (Mine is always Sylvester, because. ♥)
*nods*
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Date: 2013-11-25 02:05 pm (UTC)And the fivish doctors was pure brilliance! I LOVE that it's RPF! You are so right!
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Date: 2013-11-25 02:25 pm (UTC)The Five(Ish) Doctors i unquestionably RPF. I wonder if there will start being a rash of Classic Who RPF going on. I keep remembering bits and still laughing.
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Date: 2013-11-25 06:50 pm (UTC)There's always Christmas.
And I got everything else on my list, including Eight and having my theories on how the ending would go actually pan out so I am immensely satisfied. I'm also very impressed with Moffat. I've still got a few issues with him, but for the moment, he has done the impossible and pulled off a 50th anniversary special which has managed to please pretty much everyone, Old and Nu alike.
That's brilliant.
And if the plot is made of spaghetti and swiss chess... well... at least it's still tasty!
ETA Peter Davison's go at live action RPF is the funniest damn thing. I'm terribly amused at how many people they managed to rope into it, and at all of the lovely little references snuck in. Moffat reliving Five's regeneration scene with all of the anxious past cast members was gold.
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Date: 2013-11-25 08:42 pm (UTC)There are penguins - or one at least. (This is completely a missing scene in my head now.)
It was lovely, all told - the important bits, anyway. ♥ And I will be forever thrilled about Eight. I did love that so much, I really did. Steven Moffat can be brilliant, but I've known him since Press gang. He gave me Lynda Day when I needed her and wrote some seriously amazing pieces of TV in the process. And so I owe him, and can't really ever complain about him. :-)
Peter Davison's thing was amazing. When it started roping in people from The Hobbit and everything...! And that they just happily ruined the scene with the statues for anyone ever rewatching... And RTD relegated to a desperate 27 minute voice message... :lol: *flails at what good sports everyone must be*
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Date: 2013-11-28 09:55 pm (UTC)And I think everyone should have penguins for Christmas. ♥
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Date: 2013-11-29 05:58 pm (UTC)And thank you - yes, it was a lot of fun and set the show free for the future, so what more could you ask for?