For which episode?
The Trilogy of the slightly dull monks? I don’t remember titles anymore xD
For which episode?
Well, I meant which episode specifically were the Cybermen suppose to appear in.The Trilogy of the slightly dull monks? I don’t remember titles anymore xD
Well, I meant which episode specifically were the Cybermen suppose to appear in.
I see what you did there!If only they'd.... gasp!... MEDDLED.
The horror.
Ah, okay. That makes for that particular story. A pity Moffat changed it.That one. The leaked designs were for cybermen in pyramid ships etc. Interstitial cybermen designs that strongly resembled the monks.
Something I've been wondering as a possible reason why Chibnall's Doctor Who has fallen so flat, I wonder if he's not really a fan of sci-fi/fantasy outside of Doctor Who? A lot of the episodes done during his run have felt like they're from someone who doesn't really care for SF&F writing what he thinks SF&F is supposed to be. Compare it to Broadchurch, which is in a genre Chibnall is genuinely interested in. Indeed, Broadchurch started as a frustrated Chibnall just deciding to forget things like demographics and appeasing execs and all that and just write something he would be entertained by. Anyway, the difference in quality between Broadchurch and Chibnall's DW is staggering.
Well, like I said, I thought he did a pretty good job with the second season of Torchwood, though I'm probably in a minority there. The Doctor Who episodes he did in the RTD and Moffat eras weren't bad eitherI thought S1 of Broadchurch was great but S2 was dire, with S3 somewhere in between. Maybe the issue isn’t the genre, it’s just that he’s not an especially good writer.
I've absolutely hated everything I've ever seen by her - admittedly limited to (sadly) all of Last Tango In Halifax, Happy Valley (which I tried a couple but refused to watch any more of) and a few bits elsewhere. I simply can't abide her shows.In terms of non-sci-fi writers I see Sally Wainright's name cropping up a lot. Why not, she's clearly a top drawer writer who's created three (at least) shows that have been successful and there's always the possibility that she could attract someone like Nicola Walker or Suranne Jones to the role (I'd prefer Walker who's been high on my Who list for a long time, but Jones would also be a very good Doctor).
Something I've been wondering as a possible reason why Chibnall's Doctor Who has fallen so flat, I wonder if he's not really a fan of sci-fi/fantasy outside of Doctor Who? A lot of the episodes done during his run have felt like they're from someone who doesn't really care for SF&F writing what he thinks SF&F is supposed to be. Compare it to Broadchurch, which is in a genre Chibnall is genuinely interested in. Indeed, Broadchurch started as a frustrated Chibnall just deciding to forget things like demographics and appeasing execs and all that and just write something he would be entertained by. Anyway, the difference in quality between Broadchurch and Chibnall's DW is staggering, to the point it's genuinely hard to believe the same guy is behind the two. Indeed, I suspect character drama is more Chibnall's bread and butter. IMO, Torchwood improved immensely in the second season when they switched to more character based storylines.
Which is unfortunate, if true. Doctor Who is a versatile and malleable setting where anything goes. Chibnall had the opportunity to make his Doctor Who more character based and possibly knock it out of the park in terms of quality but he instead squandered the opportunity with a bunch of generic and formulaic SF&F staples.
Yes, this. Science fiction in general (IMO) works best when it uses metaphor and *makes you think*. It's part of the advantage of the genre, as Rod Serling and Gene Roddenberry and Ron Moore and the DW creators understood.The conventional science fiction action-adventure take would be to have some sort of metaphor for the real problems happening with space aliens or magic technology or something that the Doctor can solve. The Doctor can't get rid of fossil fuel subsidies, but they can defeat a conspiracy to make cars that make the atmosphere unlivable as a prelude to Sontaran invasion. They can't stop ongoing wars and ethnic strife in the real world, but they can set up a fantasy crucible that requires the leaders of the Zygons and humans to negotiate by offering the opportunity to skip directly to the devastation and heartbreak of a war on a coin-flip.
Ironically, this sums up my take on RTD. His character stuff was first rate, even down to tiny things like Nine and Rose getting chips, but he was a horrible sci-fi writer !Something I've been wondering as a possible reason why Chibnall's Doctor Who has fallen so flat, I wonder if he's not really a fan of sci-fi/fantasy outside of Doctor Who?
To me, Kerblam! is where I knew the era was in deep, deep trouble. Its not that I don't get the intent of the story as conceptualized... but the way that it comes off at the end is vastly different than how it should have been and antithetical to all of DW that has come before it. Its always difficult to portray her as the antiestablishment hero while also helping the status quo AND assist it reach an enlightenment stage. But the end of that story basically has the Doctor stand up for the corporation, and that's just wrong.
The use of Fam in the show never bothered me, because it's the Doctor. She's an alien, not really caught up in the slang and lingo. I found it endearing.
When I see someone use it online or hear it in person it makes me cringe, but not in this show.
I've seen a lot of younger fans use the term to describe the main character group though, which I guess I'm fine with.
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