Not perusing a lot of Who forums, I'm actually quite surprised that a lot of fans dislike Rose.
Rose is my favorite, hands down.
I don't see how.Really, her return could only help the show, at this point.
My mom (Doesn't even know how to use a computer) commented during Rose's tenure that she was her favorite Companion (Haven't asked her since then about anyone after Rose) and she's been watching Dr. Who since the 1980s on PBS, so, she's seen most, if not all, of Pertwee through Matt Smith's 1st season (Haven't loaned her this season yet)Not perusing a lot of Who forums, I'm actually quite surprised that a lot of fans dislike Rose. I can see them not warming up to Martha though, she had a tough act to follow.
I did like her though (and still do...since I'm going through Series 4 she seems to still be around). Not sure about Donna though, she's different than Rose and Martha.
Still doesn't make much sense to me, but hey, you like what you like.Rose-era RTD Who > Rest of RTD Who > Moffat Who.
That's how.
Still doesn't make much sense to me, but hey, you like what you like.Rose-era RTD Who > Rest of RTD Who > Moffat Who.
That's how.
Not perusing a lot of Who forums, I'm actually quite surprised that a lot of fans dislike Rose.
Rose is my favorite, hands down.
Same.
Really, her return could only help the show, at this point.![]()
Rose is my favorite, hands down.
Same.
Really, her return could only help the show, at this point.![]()
What a frightening thought...there were moments in the second series where I considered stopping watching because the giggling schoolgirls routine she and Ten had was so grating. Shame as she'd been really good with Eccleston.
Sadly it wouldn't surprise me to see her and 10.5 return in 2013...with luck it'll only be briefly though.![]()
That makes perfect sense. Thank you for posting it.Well, I can offer this much insight:
I fell in love with nuWho in Series One, and I fell in love with it because of Rose and the Doctor. I didn't care about the fact that the character of the Doctor had been paired up with other leads on the original series; the show now was about the relationship between Rose and the Doctor, just like any other modern TV show, and it was that relationship that caught my eye. There was really nothing else like it on TV -- a romance that dressed itself up as an adventure show. Most sci-fi shows, if they do romance, they do it as a very boring sort of cliche where the characters are supposedly in love but it feels fake, and it's really a distraction from what the show's really about. Whereas, when nuWho started, Doctor/Rose was what the show was really about; everything else was just there to show how they related to one-another.
Obviously, nuWho has since evolved to more closely resemble DW TOS, insofar as it's not about the relationship between the Doctor and any one character anymore, but, rather, it's about the Doctor as he goes through his very long life establishing, building, and then losing relationships (be it romances or friendships) over and over and over again while he has adventures. Which is perfectly fair and just fine and dandy. But it lacks the sense of adventurous romance that it had during the Rose/Doctor era, and I do miss that.
Though I loved Rose at first I got a bit tired of her. I loved her mother forever though. I was weirded out by Rose's return and the way she talked as though she had a bunch of marbles in her cheeks. What the hell was up with that?
Obviously, nuWho has since evolved to more closely resemble DW TOS, insofar as it's not about the relationship between the Doctor and any one character anymore, but, rather, it's about the Doctor as he goes through his very long life establishing, building, and then losing relationships (be it romances or friendships) over and over and over again while he has adventures. Which is perfectly fair and just fine and dandy. But it lacks the sense of adventurous romance that it had during the Rose/Doctor era, and I do miss that.
Though I loved Rose at first I got a bit tired of her. I loved her mother forever though. I was weirded out by Rose's return and the way she talked as though she had a bunch of marbles in her cheeks. What the hell was up with that?
I'm uncertain if this is true or not, but word on The Intertubes is that when Billie came back to do Rose again in Series Four, it had been so long for her since she had played Rose that she was not certain if she could get the accent right -- Billie's natural accent is more "upper-class," and she went and re-watched a bunch of her episodes to try to get the accent right again. So if you found her accent in Series Four different, that might be why.
Obviously, nuWho has since evolved to more closely resemble DW TOS, insofar as it's not about the relationship between the Doctor and any one character anymore, but, rather, it's about the Doctor as he goes through his very long life establishing, building, and then losing relationships (be it romances or friendships) over and over and over again while he has adventures. Which is perfectly fair and just fine and dandy. But it lacks the sense of adventurous romance that it had during the Rose/Doctor era, and I do miss that.
That's part of the problem I have with nuWho: the over emphasis on assistants (and to a lesser extent, their families). It's a change I don't like, as IMO they were merely supposed to serve as an expositionary tool so that the Doctor didn't have to talk to himself all the time. I think with the nostalgia of the original series and those assistants, there is too much focus on who was the best/worst, etc. when in my view as long as the assistant isn't annoying or the unproclaimed spotlight of the stories, then I can enjoy (almost) any of them.
I liked Rose during the Eccleston season, but apparently he wasn't "cute" enough for her to fall in love with. It wasn't until the Roger Moore of Doctors--Tennant--came along that the deep friendship became an ill-conceived and soap opera-style annoyance. I'd much prefer The Doctor be grief stricken over losing her in that he feels responsible over the human race that fascinates him so, rather than the giggly and Middle-School crush garbage the romance was. Rose's successor should've been someone totally unlike her, which would've made any kind of deep friendship impossible and in its place a more adversarial but grudging respect kind of connection, which is (sort of) what we ended up getting with Donna--the savior of "No-Love" assistants.
I really admire RTD (flatulent aliens and ill-advised romances aside) but felt his love of manipulative emotionalism to be detrimental to what Dr Who was about.
Obviously, nuWho has since evolved to more closely resemble DW TOS, insofar as it's not about the relationship between the Doctor and any one character anymore, but, rather, it's about the Doctor as he goes through his very long life establishing, building, and then losing relationships (be it romances or friendships) over and over and over again while he has adventures. Which is perfectly fair and just fine and dandy. But it lacks the sense of adventurous romance that it had during the Rose/Doctor era, and I do miss that.
That's part of the problem I have with nuWho: the over emphasis on assistants (and to a lesser extent, their families). It's a change I don't like, as IMO they were merely supposed to serve as an expositionary tool so that the Doctor didn't have to talk to himself all the time.
I liked Rose during the Eccleston season, but apparently he wasn't "cute" enough for her to fall in love with. It wasn't until the Roger Moore of Doctors--Tennant--came along that the deep friendship became an ill-conceived and soap opera-style annoyance.
Rose's successor should've been someone totally unlike her, which would've made any kind of deep friendship impossible and in its place a more adversarial but grudging respect kind of connection, which (sort of) what we ended up getting to with Donna
I really admire RTD (flatulent aliens and ill-advised romances aside) but felt his love of manipulative emotionalism to be detrimental to what Dr Who should've been about.
Well, to each his own, but I cannot even begin to understand why someone would prefer simplistic, more two-dimensional characterization to a more fully fleshed-out character. To me, that's literally akin to saying you'd prefer to watch, say, Superfriends rather than Bruce Timm's Justice League, or that you'd prefer the Adam West Batman to Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight. There comes a point where too much simplicity of characterization means inferior quality of the show -- and it's hardly as though even the nuWho companions are the height of sophisticated characterization on modern television.
Are you the kid from The Princess Bride?It was positively sickening at times. Sarah Jane Smith and The (fourth) Doctor had a wonderfully affectionate friendship, but thankfully the "love" angle was never considered.
Are you the kid from The Princess Bride?![]()
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