It occurs to me that Jodie is the first modern Doctor to return every single one of their companions alive and well right where they found them and with all their memories intact.
It occurs to me that Jodie is the first modern Doctor to return every single one of their companions alive and well right where they found them and with all their memories intact.
Even if the last group didn't end up in Croydon?It occurs to me that Jodie is the first modern Doctor to return every single one of their companions alive and well right where they found them and with all their memories intact.
The theory is that this was supposed to air instead of Legend of the Sea Devils but then the BBC realised they'd have no Doctor Who for the 100th so the Sea Devils was done in a rush (and it shows) and Power was reshot and ADR'd (some bits you can tell it was obviously supposed to continue the Timeless Child stuff).I do wonder if Chibnall was given something of a laundry list and a bigger budget. "Make it 90 minutes, lots of 'splosions, it has to celebrate the BBC so bring back as many classic Doctors and companions as you can, and the Master, and Daleks, and Cybermen, oh and we can get you Bradley Walsh back as well, and Captain Jack...no, hang on scratch him, oh you've already written him in? Well swap him for someone else, no one will notice...
Oh, excellent observation. I definitely didn't suss onto that distinction.It occurs to me that Jodie is the first modern Doctor to return every single one of their companions alive and well right where they found them and with all their memories intact.
The theory is that this was supposed to air instead of Legend of the Sea Devils but then the BBC realised they'd have no Doctor Who for the 100th so the Sea Devils was done in a rush (and it shows) and Power was reshot and ADR'd (some bits you can tell it was obviously supposed to continue the Timeless Child stuff).
The Ninth Doctor didn't have any of his companions killed or memories lost. Jack Harkness was alive and made essentially immortal at the end of his tenure, and Rose was still around for the Tenth Doctor.
I mean, I get it. Not everyone dislikes this era, but this special is examplary of all of Chibnall's worst insticts as a Who writer, with clear disdain toward the extended universe (and really, for DW, which the BBC even claims there is no canon and all of it counts, unlike any other franchise out there, INCLUDING Trek, means something), ignorant characterization (so Yaz was apparently never told about the Fugitive Doctor, ever?!), including the campiest, most pantomime iincarnation of the Master (WHY WAS HE POSING AS RASPUTIN?!) as Dhawan seemingly goes for broke and throws away all subtlety in the Master's stupidest plot ever: to become the Doctor (!!!!!). Like, (a)did he actually think anyone would buy into this and (b)why do it? Was he running out of regenerations? Its never explained. And frankly, I don't understand what happened there at all - he he steal her body or fuse with it? Help me out here, Chibnall!She did definitely feel peripheral to the plot for far too much of it.
I do wonder if Chibnall was given something of a laundry list and a bigger budget. "Make it 90 minutes, lots of 'splosions, it has to celebrate the BBC so bring back as many classic Doctors and companions as you can, and the Master, and Daleks, and Cybermen, oh and we can get you Bradley Walsh back as well, and Captain Jack...no, hang on scratch him, oh you've already written him in? Well swap him for someone else, no one will notice...
Basically it was one of those throw everything at the wall and see what sticks episodes, and to be fair some of what stuck was gold, mainly involving Tegan and Ace and the classic Doctors (plus Jo Martin).
In the end it kinda summed up the Chibnall era, I still remember that bizarre trailer at the end of The Woman Who Fell to Earth which didn't say "Look at the cool stuff we've got coming" but instead said "Look at all the cool guest stars we've got coming" Chibnall has always seemed obsessed with surrounding the Doctor with as many guest actors as he can and it's rare that Whittaker was able to force her way to the fore when that happened ( The Haunting of Villa Diodati a rare example of what Jodie could do given decent writing)
He was still alive and back home when The Doctor left him.
including the campiest, most pantomime iincarnation of the Master
There's a bit more to it than that. I think the original plan was for Legend of the Sea Devils to be the Centenary special, and for Power of the Doctor to be a New Year's special, but BBC wanted the regeneration to happen in the Centenary special, which meant Sea Devils had to air earlier, which is what caused its production to be rushed the way it was.The theory is that this was supposed to air instead of Legend of the Sea Devils but then the BBC realised they'd have no Doctor Who for the 100th so the Sea Devils was done in a rush (and it shows) and Power was reshot and ADR'd (some bits you can tell it was obviously supposed to continue the Timeless Child stuff).
Callbacks and returning characters aside in "Power," I agree. And not just for the amazing Aisling Bea.^ interesting that Eve was, for me at least, the best of the final three.
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