the non-bankrupt politicians are back-benchers...they wouldn't be in COBRA
It just doesn't add up and yet again RTD demonstrates his inability to actually think his stories through.
I think that Gwen's speech that opens Day Five was meant as a repudiation of the Doctor-as-Jesus mythology that RTD has constructed over the past few years. Against some monsters, even gods themselves are impotent.I, for one, loved this season of Torchwood. Loved it. Love. I mean...fuck...Russell Davies, this makes up for Fear Her, and might even soothe the "Jesus-Doctor" wound.
I think that Gwen's speech that opens Day Five was meant as a repudiation of the Doctor-as-Jesus mythology that RTD has constructed over the past few years. Against some monsters, even gods themselves are impotent.
Actually, in many ways, I think this story as a whole was meant as a repudiation of the Doctor's methods. The tragedy of Day Four shows that the Doctor's bluster simply doesn't work in some situations. Had the Doctor attempted what Jack did, because that's the Doctor's playbook, the end result would have been precisely the same, only the Doctor might've regenerated outright; the Four-Five-Six ambassador simply didn't care and would have released the virus.
I've been pondering this, The.That's a very precise, and keen analysis Allyn. Props man, because I couldn't agree more.It didn't even occur to me, but you're exactly correct. That is how he writes The Doctor. I wonder, then, why the sudden shift or turnaround from that stance? Why the 'loss of faith' on RTD's part then? Maybe just a chance to explore the opposite of Doctor Who?
...what would the Doctor do in a world like Alan Moore's V For Vendetta.
Hmmm.Saw Eve Myles yesterday at an event in London, and she said that it looks good for another series....
Hmmm.Saw Eve Myles yesterday at an event in London, and she said that it looks good for another series....
I've always imagined the new Doctor making a guest appearance somewhere in Torchwood... perhaps even in a Children In Need mini-episode?![]()
I was impressed by the level of suspicion with which "Children of Earth" regarded government. From misuse of ubiquitous surveillance against the heroes to the use of military might to forcibly drag children from parents, the whole series played out like a warning against trusting government too much. While the threat was pure fantasy, the abuse of power shown felt all-too realistic; once government decides you are a threat, it uses any power you've granted it against you.
Davies accomplished a lot with CoE, and it serves as a fine coda on the work he's done expanding the Doctor Who mythos. He has turned light, children's fare into serious science fiction addressing real world issues in brutal honesty. One look at PC Andy's face pressed against the pavement after trying to distract the troops from the escaping children shows how tightly science fiction can be coupled to reality.
Except that Ace didn't spend half their relationship thinking she was going to mudered and raped in no particular order.
not sure if it's been asked, but did they ever say how the aliens found out that children could be a source for their crack? only reason i ask is because is because the most likely reason is they've had access to a child before and that's how they found out. but if that's so, that negates the need for humans to "give" them children. they could simply take them. did they explain why they didn't just take what they wanted? better yet, synthesize the chemical from the children they already had?
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