Tuesday, 27 November 2018

Doctor Who: The Witchfinders


The Witch Hunts are a period not explored in televised Doctor Who before. In Bilehurst Cragg, a woman called Mistress Savage is having witches burnt. Although the Doctor stipulates non-interference she can't help but get involved and try to save a life, even if she doesn't save it. The only way out of the situation is to pretend to be a witch-finder.

They are soon joined by King James I. He is well played by Alan Cumming. Theatrical, flirtatious with Ryan, sexist towards the Doctor, and still managing to be dark  when he threatens to burn the witches. The character is definitely an interesting one to watch.

The true source of threat is revealled to be the Morax, alien war criminals that have been imprisoned on Pendel Hill. They were a well conceived alien threat. Muddy zombies. The only thing I didn't like about them were the voices which reminded me a bit of the Pyrovile Priestess from The Fires of Pompeii and the Eknodines from Amy's Choice.

The Mistress Savage was a well played villain, alternating between coldly harsh, sympathetic and evil. The girl convinced as the victim.

Jodie Whittaker was good this week. The moment she tells the others not to interfere in history and then can't help but halt the witch trial was typically Doctorish behaviour. She was also effective in the scene later on where she pleaded with King James for her life was good. It was also good to see her Doctor confronting the Morlax. She is becoming a fully rounded Doctor.

Graham was amusing when he was posing as the Witchfinder General. Although he got a serious moment to question Mistress Savage about her goodness, his funny hat meant that he always seemed comical.

Ryan didn't contribute much to the story but had comedy moments as he was hit on by King James I.

Yaz got a bit less to do this week. She did get to talk about the importance of standing up to bullying.

The episode has a very bleached out look which suited the grim subject matter. It gets a bit more colourful at the end, with lurid green trees when the Doctor stops the Morax. It is as though the Doctor fighting monsters restores the shape of the show. The music by Segun Akinola continues to be good.

While I may have preferred the previous episode, The Witchfinders is still a very decent episode of Doctor Who. It would have actually been a better Halloween Special than Arachnids in the U.K. was.

8/10

Monday, 19 November 2018

Doctor Who: Kerblam!


A gift for the Doctor contains a message for help. so she goes to Kerblam! central to investigate.
From here they could have told a story about evil business, with the two heads covering something up. Fortunately, writer Pete McTighe avoided the obvious cliches. Instead it is the worker who is attacking the system and plans to send parcels of death.

This episode was good, solid fun. Like the Tsuranga Conundrum, Kerblam is a light episode, but where the former felt unsure of itself, the latter is much moe aware of the tone, skirting between humour and seriousness.

Jodie was great this week and her Doctor was a highlight of the episode. Her giddy excitement at seeing the Keblam Man's arrival was hilarious and I loved watching her facial reactions and seeing her try on the Fez. She also got a great scene where she railed against the bosses only to say 'laters'

Ryan's background as a warehouse worker was referred to this week.He

Yaz got to use her police training against the villain for once.

Graham was fun as the janitor. It was a more comedic role but it sufficed.

The robots were good. They were more funny when they were being passive aggressive.

The supporting cast were all good. It was nice to see Julie Hesmondhalgh in the Doctor Who at last.

The music was less noticeable than last week but hte Kerblam delivery jingle was catchy

There were a lot of nods to old Doctor Who what with the Fez, the reference to The Unicorn and the Wasp as well as the Venusian Aikido.

Tuesday, 13 November 2018

Doctor Who: Demons of the Punjab


The Doctor takes Yaz to visit her nanny and finds out that she is due to marry a Hindu man called Prem. But this is during the partition and Prem's brother, Manish wants the division.

The wedding is blocked by Demons, or rather, aliens called Thiracians who the Doctor identified as assassins.  When it appears that they have killed the Holy Man who was supposed to initiate the wedding, the Doctor tries to hold off the aliens so that the wedding can take place.

But all is not as it seems. The aliens reveal that they are are innocent of the murder. Their planet has been destroyed and now they only pay witness to death. It was actually Manish who killed Holy Man and he has invited friends. Nani and her Mother get away while Prem holds the attackers off. The Doctor and friends get to witness Prem's death.

Demons of the Punjab is another episode where the aliens were barely there. The Thiracians look cool and the Doctor does stand up to them but are innocent Real monsters the people. It does leave the slight plot hole that if they didn't kill the Holy Man then why did they not find bullets?

The setting is the key here. The partition is an area that has not been explored yet in Who. This is mostly focused on a few people.

Yaz got proper character development. She is determined to find out more about her nani's past and initially shocked when she discovers that Prem and Nanny to Marry, but we see Yaz mature as she comes to understand how her nanny was thinking. By the end she is happy not to know anymore.

The Doctor comes across much better in this. She stands up to the aliens. She also engages with a wedding. The first time, I think, of the Doctor ever officiating.

Bradley Walsh is brilliant. Scene where he comforts Yaz is brilliant. His speech was reminiscent of the one Troughton gave.

Ryan got a bit less to do this week. But he's had enough for now.

The direction for this episode was good. Everything looked visually stunning. The music was also very good. Segun Akinola continues to shine. He got Indian composers to do this episode.

A pure historical like Hartnell. Shades of Father's Day as well.

Score = 8/10

Monday, 12 November 2018

RIP Stan Lee


Farewell to one of the most influential people in comics history.


When I was growing up, it was all about Spider-Man and the X-Men. The Avengers hadn't had their breakout success in the Marvel Studios film series yet. Spider-Man showed me how you could have a hero who had to alternate his superhero life with his ordinary life.

Monday, 5 November 2018

Doctor Who: The Tsuranga Conundrum


There comes a point in every era of Doctor Who where the new showrunner produces a bad episode. For Russell T. Davies, that was Aliens of London. For Steven Moffat it was The Beast Below. For Chris Chibnall it's The Tsuranga Conundrum.

The episode starts out well. After being blown up by a sonic mine, the Doctor and her friends are transported to The Tsuranga, a medical spaceship. For the first fifteen minutes of the episode, the Doctor, in a dazed and confused state, tries to work out where she and her friends are and how they can escape. It's a nice sequence of building up mystery, getting a sense of location and introducing our guest cast for the week.

The Tsuranga is soon under attack from a tiny alien called the P'ting. This little creature looks cute but is actually a deadly creature that eats anything and cannot be touched. This was a nice little creation and kudos to Tim Price, who worked on the Doctor Who writes room, for coming up with it.

The rest of the episode is about everyone on board trying to get the P'ting off the ship and make it safely to the medical station. At the same time, the other patients get their own little problems to deal with. A former General having to admit her pilot problem. A male pregnancy and Ryan and Graham coming to terms with their own dad. This is where the episode really start to go wrong.  For all that we're meant to believe the crew are in mortal danger, everyone gets time to stop for long chats. There is no sense that the Space Ship is getting worse.

Jodie Whittaker's Doctor wasn't given so much Matt Smith dialogue this week but she does lack authority. She bows down to the medical staff member, Astos when he talks about exploring. There is also a scene where she and General Cicero are trying to talk the crew and the General seems to have more authority. I never felt like Jodie's Doctor was really in charge.

Ryan and Graham get to bond this week. Ryan deals with issues of fatherhood. Graham gets to be the comic relief, hoping to deliver a baby based on watching Call the Midwife.

After all her character development last week, Yaz is the one who is once again given very little to do. She guards the reactor and kicks the P'ting and that's about it.

This episode felt like a dull episode of Star Trek. We had spaceships, an android who looked like Data and a Space Station. The tone was all misplaced. Every character was earnestly talking technobabble. There is a reference to CERN which was the only good scene.

The only other good thing about the episode was the music. Segun Akinola's score carried the episode, generating tension where there was none in the script.

Rating = 5/10