I don't recall any of this hooha for the episode "Dalek" for instance.
Once again, why is it a big deal that the BBC was attempting to reach out to the United States market? They want people to watch. I didn't feel the episode itself seemed all that different from any other episode. Sure, it had a "this is America" type admiration, but it was about at the exact same level as "this is Pompeii" and "this is Venice" in the past. So you're upset that there was a media campaign in order to get more people to watch?
Like I said, Doctor Who doesn't have to be an exclusive club.
Not really. Braga was writing timey-wimey stories long before Moffat wrote "Continuity Errors," though Moffat is a vastly more talented writer than Braga. But timey-wimey-ness isn't why I compared Moffat and Braga in my blog post.Don't you think calling him Brannon Braga-esque is a bit much?
Rather, I felt that "The Impossible Astronaut" aped a narrative structure that Braga pioneered on Star Trek: Enterprise, where Braga eschewed the traditional five act structure common to television drama; rather than having rising tension and incident, ending each act (which coincides with the commerical break) on a dramatic note to hook the audience, Braga would structure his scripts so that there was no narrative momentum and no rising tension, and the story beats would be muted. And that's what bothered me about "The Impossible Astronaut"; there are events that happen, but they don't develop the narrative and push it forward, and the episode gives us no pay offs. When I describe "The Impossible Astronaut" as "incidentless," that's what I mean.
I disagree, because there are some things that the script could have and should have done that it didn't.It's a two-parter for crying out loud. Can't really judge a two-parter based on the first part alone.
Over on Gallifrey Base, someone quotes Moffat as saying during Confidential that "What the Silents represent is a far, far bigger deal." Really? I wish Moffat had gone to some effort in this episode to make the Silents any sort of deal. As it is, other than vaporizing Joy, they're just creepy aliens with a cool power.
Yes, it is a clever narrative conceit to have a "big bad" that the audience knows about but the characters don't, which is why I'm coming around to the idea that Moffat really needed to end the episode with the characters unambiguously recognizing and remembering the Silents rather than Amy shooting at a space-suited girl. (Which, by the way, I'm not convinced is real -- a little girl wouldn't fit in that suit.)
As it is, the more I think about this episode, the more I feel like it was a wasted hour. I don't feel like the story has started yet. And that makes me think about the classic piece of editorial advice -- if your story starts on page ten, you throw out pages one through nine. They may be cool scenes, they may have fantastic character moments, you may have had a blast writing them, but if they're not in service to your plot, they're unwanted, unnecessary, and useless. And at the end of "The Impossible Astronaut," I'm not sure what the hell the plot is. Who are the antagonists? What do they want? What are our protagonists doing to thwart them? You can't answer any of those three questions at the end of "The Impossible Astronaut" based solely on what we see in the episode. You can't even prove that the Silents are the antagonists. Even Brannon Braga, at his absolute worst, didn't write a script as formless as this.
Once again, why is it a big deal that the BBC was attempting to reach out to the United States market? They want people to watch. I didn't feel the episode itself seemed all that different from any other episode. Sure, it had a "this is America" type admiration, but it was about at the exact same level as "this is Pompeii" and "this is Venice" in the past. So you're upset that there was a media campaign in order to get more people to watch?
Like I said, Doctor Who doesn't have to be an exclusive club.
Matlock did that for its second or third season. I remember thinking that was really cool.Now I'm pretty sure if a really stupidly popular American programme decided to film its season premier over here and base the episode in and around London or other "iconic" locations and then make a massive hoo ha about it being based here in our media, then there will be some who would say that, you know what, they're pandering to the Brits and not us!
I believe Bones did that a year or two back, as well.
Are you deliberately being dense because a few people have understood my own personal viewpoint? I've explained why I felt that the episode was pandering to the American market more than it's "home" market and I've explained why it felt like that to me personally.
The original question of this now merged thread was "who is Moffat making the series for?" Now I can't really speak for the rest of the series, can't speak for the rest of the planet or all the other viewers, but that is how it felt to me, The Impossible Astronaut was not written primarily for the British market.
Now I'm pretty sure if a really stupidly popular American programme decided to film its season premier over here and base the episode in and around London or other "iconic" locations and then make a massive hoo ha about it being based here in our media, then there will be some who would say that, you know what, they're pandering to the Brits and not us!
Oh and I'm not upset, far from it, I think it's brilliant it's getting more and more popular in other markets, I'm just a wee bit concerned that this is to the detriment of the programme over all and it may lose some of it's "charm" you guys seem to so like about.
You've never heard of Bones? David Boreanez series after Angel, been on the air for something like 6 seasons and one of Fox's biggest shows after House? Now on Living but was on Sky One for 5 seasons.I believe Bones did that a year or two back, as well.
Bones? Sorry, not heard of it so that media blitz must have gone well then.![]()
Are you deliberately being dense because a few people have understood my own personal viewpoint? I've explained why I felt that the episode was pandering to the American market more than it's "home" market and I've explained why it felt like that to me personally.
The original question of this now merged thread was "who is Moffat making the series for?" Now I can't really speak for the rest of the series, can't speak for the rest of the planet or all the other viewers, but that is how it felt to me, The Impossible Astronaut was not written primarily for the British market.
Now I'm pretty sure if a really stupidly popular American programme decided to film its season premier over here and base the episode in and around London or other "iconic" locations and then make a massive hoo ha about it being based here in our media, then there will be some who would say that, you know what, they're pandering to the Brits and not us!
Oh and I'm not upset, far from it, I think it's brilliant it's getting more and more popular in other markets, I'm just a wee bit concerned that this is to the detriment of the programme over all and it may lose some of it's "charm" you guys seem to so like about.
Some people are upset. Some people have been claiming it affected the episode itself. You seem to be pointing out it was related to the BBC's marketing push. That's not a big deal either way. If an American show filmed in the UK, my first thought would be that it's cool they're going all out to get an accurate filming location.
I think it's less about an inferiority complex than it is about so much of everything we see is American, and then we have a popular show and then instead of it just being imported as is it's adjusted to attract the US audience.Are you deliberately being dense because a few people have understood my own personal viewpoint? I've explained why I felt that the episode was pandering to the American market more than it's "home" market and I've explained why it felt like that to me personally.
The original question of this now merged thread was "who is Moffat making the series for?" Now I can't really speak for the rest of the series, can't speak for the rest of the planet or all the other viewers, but that is how it felt to me, The Impossible Astronaut was not written primarily for the British market.
Now I'm pretty sure if a really stupidly popular American programme decided to film its season premier over here and base the episode in and around London or other "iconic" locations and then make a massive hoo ha about it being based here in our media, then there will be some who would say that, you know what, they're pandering to the Brits and not us!
Oh and I'm not upset, far from it, I think it's brilliant it's getting more and more popular in other markets, I'm just a wee bit concerned that this is to the detriment of the programme over all and it may lose some of it's "charm" you guys seem to so like about.
Some people are upset. Some people have been claiming it affected the episode itself. You seem to be pointing out it was related to the BBC's marketing push. That's not a big deal either way. If an American show filmed in the UK, my first thought would be that it's cool they're going all out to get an accurate filming location.
That's how I would feel about it, too. I think it's neat when American shows go on-location to somewhere outside the US. I think the problem with the reverse happening is the envy and general inferiority complex non-Americans seem to have toward Americans. "They can't film our show in America! That'll ruin it!" Do Brits not like a change of pace now and then? What if it was being filmed in Canada or Mexico or Brazil? Would that also be [nationality]izing it somehow?
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