Five to Six (tried to strangle Peri if my memory is right)
This, totally.The problem with Clara is that she doesn't an actual personality. She's smug, opinionated and rather full of herself, but other than that, I wouldn't say she has much of a defining personality, other than the girl-enchanted-by-Doctor-and-secretly-has-crush-on-him-but-won't-admit-it-to-herself-even thing.
I don't anticipate this at all. At all.I look forward to expanding her, personality-wise, in the eighth series.
I think we're forgetting that the Doctor has spent numerous centuries in the Christmas village? Surely you'd forget how to drive, even a bicycle, if you haven't have done so for a good number of years, at least temporarily.If the Doctor doesn't have at least partial amnesia, why would he need to ask Clara whether she knows how to fly the TARDIS? He would already know the answer.
Yeah, she's the main reason why the character works at ANY level. She manages to find ways to connect the disparate characterizations that various have had for her (like Starkers mentioned earlier) and somehow sell the concept of the character well enough, without making her too annoying. I hope they find a way to actually develop her character in the eighth series, and maybe manage to make her the Sarah Jane of NuWho (as impossible as that might seem, at least for now).I agree that Clara, so far, is not as interestingly written as Amy and Rory, my favorite companions. (Disclaimer: I am unfamiliar with the classic series.) Still, Coleman is compulsively watchable.
Well I'm sorry but you're wrongAmy was a fully realised character with flaws and failings, Clara does have a touch of the little miss perfect about her.
I prefer Amy. I like Clara but it's hard to shake the thought that to date she's been a plot device first and a character second.
In fairness, we've only really had two episodes since the point of that plot device (the impossible girl) was revealed and they were specials (50th anniversary and Xmas/Smith's departure) rather than episodes which would centre around her. Hopefully she'll get a chance to shine now.
She's also going to be the first character to co-star regularly alongside two different Doctors since Rose so it will be interesting to see how she develops alongside Capaldi's Doctor.
But what I mean is that she was set up as the Impossible Girl, who kept cropping up in the Doctor's life at different points in time and kept dying. So for a while, to me anyway, the show seemed to focus on what she was and why she was, rather than on fleshing her out as a 3D fully-formed person. She was and is, of course, played with considerable charm and amiability by Jenna.
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