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Spoilers It Takes You Away grade and discussion thread

How do you rate It Takes You Away?


  • Total voters
    75
Hey, I got a kick from the frog as well (as did the Doctor, though in a very different way)!

The visual in combination with Grace's voice was what sold it for me.

Maybe some viewers are not so much "put off" on the notion of a frog "avatar" as they are by the technique to visualize it, obviously a puppet. Personally, I thought it was quaint, but I wonder if some thought, "Why not use a real frog with a bit of animation for the mouth?" Maybe the effects team considered that and for whatever reason, it just was not working as well as they hoped? Remember, the frog gestured much like "Grace" and the dead wife to hurl the Doctor back into the "bridge". It could be protection groups objected to the crew doing nothing more harmful than lifting its foreleg. I mean, when some YouTube commenters have sh!t fits from a clip of a kitten simply meowing, claiming animal cruelty, mercy only knows what objections the crew faced? "You probably broke that poor frog's leg! You monsters!!!" So the effects team was probably limited to either a puppet or CGI.

Considering the concept itself, this is the kind of thing the Doctor might have described in passing, "Sarah? Did I ever mention the time I encountered a sapient universe? Took the avatar of a humble frog. Spoke with a Sheffield accent. Great conversationalist, odd taste in tea..." Here, we finally see one of those Adams-esque encounters.

Apropos of nothing, but that lil' pond hopper sure kept wriggling her hindquarters, didn't she?
 
Hey, I got a kick from the frog as well (as did the Doctor, though in a very different way)!

The visual in combination with Grace's voice was what sold it for me.

Maybe some viewers are not so much "put off" on the notion of a frog "avatar" as they are by the technique to visualize it, obviously a puppet. Personally, I thought it was quaint, but I wonder if some thought, "Why not use a real frog with a bit of animation for the mouth?" Maybe the effects team considered that and for whatever reason, it just was not working as well as they hoped? Remember, the frog gestured much like "Grace" and the dead wife to hurl the Doctor back into the "bridge". It could be protection groups objected to the crew doing nothing more harmful than lifting its foreleg. I mean, when some YouTube commenters have sh!t fits from a clip of a kitten simply meowing, claiming animal cruelty, mercy only knows what objections the crew faced? "You probably broke that poor frog's leg! You monsters!!!" So the effects team was probably limited to either a puppet or CGI.

Considering the concept itself, this is the kind of thing the Doctor might have described in passing, "Sarah? Did I ever mention the time I encountered a sapient universe? Took the avatar of a humble frog. Spoke with a Sheffield accent. Great conversationalist, odd taste in tea..." Here, we finally see one of those Adams-esque encounters.

Apropos of nothing, but that lil' pond hopper sure kept wriggling her hindquarters, didn't she?

I suspect a real frog wouldn't have been very dynamic. It would've just say there or... worse... hopped off the chair. Then, they would've had to animate the whole frog.

Which I'm glad they didn't. CGI still feels unsubstantial to me. Animators and the directors overseeing them, I feel, over animate the characters. Rather than have a little movement attached to stillness, it's "LOOK WHAT WE CAN DO!" and the frog would've been all wiggly and shit.

I liked the frog puppet. I thought it was charming as hell.
 
Probably the first episode of the season I properly enjoyed. Loved the bonkers ending with the sentient Universe manifesting as a talking frog.
 
This season has been loaded with long, boring and confusing exposition dumps.

And yes, the father was a real piece of shit who put his child's needs last.

I enjoyed when the Doctor called him an idiot. I thought she was going to resign herself to leaving him and then whisk Hanne away to Oslo where we'd get a quippy survey of her cool life going to bands her mom liked.
 
That episode was brilliant. Great mystery in the beginning. And I loved the wacky scifi and metaphysical conclusion.
 
I guess the fans will be left wondering if it's seven different grandmothers, seven different INCARNATIONS of the same grandmother, or somewhere in between...

Mark
Well, the Doctor did say Granny 2 and Granny 5 didn't get along, and that 5 accused 2 of being a Zygon. I guess that doesn't necessarily rule out the possibility of them being different incarnations of the same person, nd the conflict between Grannies 2 and 5 wasn't a subplot in The Seven Grannies.
 
Well, the Doctor did say Granny 2 and Granny 5 didn't get along, and that 5 accused 2 of being a Zygon. I guess that doesn't necessarily rule out the possibility of them being different incarnations of the same person, nd the conflict between Grannies 2 and 5 wasn't a subplot in The Seven Grannies.
Okay, now I need the super special episode "The Seven Grannies," starring Maggie Smith, Judi Dench, Helen Mirren, Eileen Atkins, Miriam Margolyes, Zoë Wanamaker, and Joanna Lumley, with special appearance of Diana Rigg as The Peace Granny. And I need it NOW.
 
Okay, now I need the super special episode "The Seven Grannies," starring Maggie Smith, Judi Dench, Helen Mirren, Eileen Atkins, Miriam Margolyes, Zoë Wanamaker, and Joanna Lumley, with special appearance of Diana Rigg as The Peace Granny. And I need it NOW.
With a special cameo shot of the attack earrings of Granny 8.
 
I suspect a real frog wouldn't have been very dynamic. It would've just say there or... worse... hopped off the chair. Then, they would've had to animate the whole frog.

Which I'm glad they didn't. CGI still feels unsubstantial to me. Animators and the directors overseeing them, I feel, over animate the characters. Rather than have a little movement attached to stillness, it's "LOOK WHAT WE CAN DO!" and the frog would've been all wiggly and shit.

I liked the frog puppet. I thought it was charming as hell.
Frogs are difficult to work with, total divas. Kermit is generally a good egg, but you should see his contract.
 
Sorry, this ep did nothing for me. I think it sagged in the middle, which let down a reasonable start and end. The dad leaving his blind daughter alone probably did it for me, no caring parent would do that, no matter how lonely they were.
 
This one didn't grab me. 6/10. It had some intriguing possibilities but it all didn't work for me. Another non-villain. It was a misunderstood conscious universe. Didn't buy the Dad's actions. He would've taken his daughter through right away and tried to live as a family again. It sounds like most liked it more than I, but it just didn't work for me. A jumbled mess. I'm glad for those who liked it.
 
Sorry, this ep did nothing for me. I think it sagged in the middle, which let down a reasonable start and end. The dad leaving his blind daughter alone probably did it for me, no caring parent would do that, no matter how lonely they were.
Yep, no way. He would've taken her with him right away. He'd want them all to live as a family again.
 
The sentient universe storyline reminded me a lot of Omega in the Classic Series. While Omega was a Time Lord, he had ultimate control of his universe. Additionally, he and our universe were incompatible. His goal was the same--to return because he was lonely.
 
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