I wish I had as little to complain about as who starts a thread on an internet BBS and the content of said thread. Must be nice.

I wish I had as little to complain about as who starts a thread on an internet BBS and the content of said thread. Must be nice.
All we need now is for Extremis to be a sex comedy.
That must be nice, too.
That must be nice, too.![]()
I definitely agree about Moffat being burnt out, but still it always seems like all his seasons had disposable episodes that contributed nothing. In fact, back in season 6 we had episodes swap places from the two halves of the season, which is how important they were to the ongoing storyline. I don't know, I suppose to some degree filler should be expected, but at times I wonder if Moffat is cut out for 12-13 episode seasons. It really feels like Sherlock gets more done in three episodes than Doctor Who does in a dozen, IMO.I think Moffat is burned out, both as a writer and as a show runner, and the show clearly needs fresh blood. Let's see what Chibnall brings to the table and then reassess.
I could have used something to remind me who Ivan was. I didn't realize until his "reunion" with Ellie that he was the guy from the opening scene.Just realized that this is the first episode this season without any kind of flashback which is a relief. Most of them have been unnecessary and distracting so I'm glad this episode held off, especially considering it could have done one with Ivan and Ellie.
I definitely agree about Moffat being burnt out, but still it always seems like all his seasons had disposable episodes that contributed nothing.
That's certainly true. I guess I just liked RTD's disposable episodes more than Moffat's. *Shrug*How is this anything different to RTD? Or classic Who, or in fact every episodic genre TV show? Was every episode of an RTD season integral to the season arc? Give me something great like Oxygen over something like 42 or The Doctor's Daughter any day. Those were disposable episodes.
I certainly don't expect Chibnall to walk on water, I just think at this point a change of perspective running the show can only imrove it and make things more interesting.I think people are already setting up Chibnall for the same kind of fall they set Moffat for to be honest, and I think people have a somewhat rose-tinted remembrance of RTD's era, but that's just my opinion obviously and I'm self aware enough to know I was never the world's biggest RTD fan.
I wonder if having the blue guy die was a joke about horror movies or not. Given the ham-fisted lampshading about being "Bluish" it's probably a coincidence.The guest characters are non-entities aside from the blue guy, and even he's mostly just a joke about racism until he becomes a zombie.
That's certainly true. I guess I just liked RTD's disposable episodes more than Moffat's. *Shrug*
Although since The Doctor's Daughter helped start a family, I'd hardly call that "disposable."
I certainly don't expect Chibnall to walk on water, I just think at this point a change of perspective running the show can only imrove it and make things more interesting.
Ironically, I failed to make the same connection until that moment as well, but I'm still glad they didn't include a flashback to the intro.I could have used something to remind me who Ivan was. I didn't realize until his "reunion" with Ellie that he was the guy from the opening scene.
I certainly don't expect Chibnall to walk on water, I just think at this point a change of perspective running the show can only imrove it and make things more interesting.[/QUOTE]I think people are already setting up Chibnall for the same kind of fall they set Moffat for to be honest, and I think people have a somewhat rose-tinted remembrance of RTD's era, but that's just my opinion obviously and I'm self aware enough to know I was never the world's biggest RTD fan.
If he were the first to go I'd give it to you. Actually, when he first showed up, I immediately thought "Bolian."I wonder if having the blue guy die was a joke about horror movies or not. Given the ham-fisted lampshading about being "Bluish" it's probably a coincidence.
I think the main problem is that the show is stuck in a rut in which writers think there has to be an alien threat and or a monster involved in some manner, and unfortunately there is only so much you can do in that setting. Also, there seems to be a habit of keeping everything somewhat sci-fi, despite the fact that IMO, some of the best Doctor Who is when it does genre-bending stuff.I mean you saw this in the classic series as well. How many base under siege stories? How many alien invasion stories? Why does there have to be a alien/monster every episode? Often its the same kind of story, only the setting/characters change.
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