So, my wife is an extremely intelligent and perceptive science fiction fan. She loves the new Doctor Who. I got her hooked on Star Trek: TNG and DS9, and she loves movies like Children of Men, Moon, and District 9. After we watch some program or movie of science fiction, we can generally have a thorough and interesting discussion about it. We agree on most things regarding what makes good sci-fi. We both loved The Fountain and hate Transformers. We hate Star Trek: Voyager. We love Firefly.
And so, after all this, I finally decided to try to get her hooked on the classic Doctor Who. Because she likes things done in an orderly fashion (as I do), she wanted me to start at the beginning, and skip the bad episodes. So, that's what I did.
We started with Hartnell, and skipping most of Jon Pertwee, we've just finished Castrovalva. She's now seen most of the great classic Doctor Who episodes, and has missed all the awful ones.
And you know what?
She just doesn't dig it. She quite liked the Hartnell stuff, especially The Aztecs, but over the episodes, she started showing less and less enthusiasm for it. And I showed her only the supposedly great stuff, mind you - in Troughton, both Tomb of the Cybermen (she hated it) and War Games (she quite liked it.)
Then, after a couple of episodes of Pertwee (although she very much liked Spearhead from Space), she announced that Pertwee was a boring Doctor, something I agree with, and she wanted me to skip right to Tom Baker, which we did.
And by the time she got to Davison, she was entirely bored with the whole show. She watched Genesis of the Daleks, Pyramids of Mars, Robots of Death, Talons of Weng-Shiang - nothing. Bored through all of them. The only one from the Hinchcliffe years she liked was Planet of Fear. The others, she said were slow-moving, cheesy, badly scripted, badly-acted, vague, silly, and with lots of useless scenes. I then showed her City of Death - stupid, she called it. Although she liked John Cleese's cameo. Since she thought that episode was stupid, I skipped the rest of the Tom Baker comedy years, including Key to Time.
Then, I said, okay, fine, you like real science fiction, I bet you'll like season 18.
Full Circle - she said it was "okay," but, again, badly acted.
Warrior's Gate - totally cheesy, B-movie sci-fi, didn't even watch the 2nd two parts.
Logopolis - she loved the first part or 2, but as soon as the Master became a bigger part, it lost her.
Castrovalva - stupid. Might be entertaining for 10 year-olds.
I have been shocked by her response. She is absolutely bang-on in most of her responses to sci-fi, and her reasons for liking or disliking certain examples of it. And she always has specific reasons why she thinks most of these classic Doctor Who episodes are simply not good, wouldn't survive in today's television landscape, and she frankly has no idea how it lasted so long.
Here's what I'm thinking: what if she's right? Could it be that I am simply hooked on the old show because I grew up with it? And that I'm too biased to objectively see how simplistic and silly and boring the whole thing is? Doctor Who fans always go on about how, beneath the bad special effects and acting there are great ideas, but you know what? In rewatching the show, we couldn't find very many! Where are the so-called "great ideas" in Pyramids of Mars or Talons of Weng-Shiang? Where are the great ideas in the Master episodes? She's right - it's all cackling mustache-twirling comic book evil people with no motivation, and it's a variety of silly ways to defeat them - that's the show, she says, for the most part, a low-brow comic book good vs. evil kid's show, with not much depth or intelligent social commentary, or anything. Just a lot of running around in circles to defeat bad guys who aren't developed in even the most basic way. And having rewatched these episodes, I fear that she's right! Don't get me wrong - I still loved them, and were entertained by them, even as she sat there rolling her eyes. But my suspicion, again, is that she's actually right....
Sigh. Anyway, she still wants to finish the series, at some point, but she's taking a break from it.
Has this happened to any of you? Where you've been simply incapable of getting an intelligent sci-fi fan to like the old Doctor Who?
And so, after all this, I finally decided to try to get her hooked on the classic Doctor Who. Because she likes things done in an orderly fashion (as I do), she wanted me to start at the beginning, and skip the bad episodes. So, that's what I did.
We started with Hartnell, and skipping most of Jon Pertwee, we've just finished Castrovalva. She's now seen most of the great classic Doctor Who episodes, and has missed all the awful ones.
And you know what?
She just doesn't dig it. She quite liked the Hartnell stuff, especially The Aztecs, but over the episodes, she started showing less and less enthusiasm for it. And I showed her only the supposedly great stuff, mind you - in Troughton, both Tomb of the Cybermen (she hated it) and War Games (she quite liked it.)
Then, after a couple of episodes of Pertwee (although she very much liked Spearhead from Space), she announced that Pertwee was a boring Doctor, something I agree with, and she wanted me to skip right to Tom Baker, which we did.
And by the time she got to Davison, she was entirely bored with the whole show. She watched Genesis of the Daleks, Pyramids of Mars, Robots of Death, Talons of Weng-Shiang - nothing. Bored through all of them. The only one from the Hinchcliffe years she liked was Planet of Fear. The others, she said were slow-moving, cheesy, badly scripted, badly-acted, vague, silly, and with lots of useless scenes. I then showed her City of Death - stupid, she called it. Although she liked John Cleese's cameo. Since she thought that episode was stupid, I skipped the rest of the Tom Baker comedy years, including Key to Time.
Then, I said, okay, fine, you like real science fiction, I bet you'll like season 18.
Full Circle - she said it was "okay," but, again, badly acted.
Warrior's Gate - totally cheesy, B-movie sci-fi, didn't even watch the 2nd two parts.
Logopolis - she loved the first part or 2, but as soon as the Master became a bigger part, it lost her.
Castrovalva - stupid. Might be entertaining for 10 year-olds.
I have been shocked by her response. She is absolutely bang-on in most of her responses to sci-fi, and her reasons for liking or disliking certain examples of it. And she always has specific reasons why she thinks most of these classic Doctor Who episodes are simply not good, wouldn't survive in today's television landscape, and she frankly has no idea how it lasted so long.
Here's what I'm thinking: what if she's right? Could it be that I am simply hooked on the old show because I grew up with it? And that I'm too biased to objectively see how simplistic and silly and boring the whole thing is? Doctor Who fans always go on about how, beneath the bad special effects and acting there are great ideas, but you know what? In rewatching the show, we couldn't find very many! Where are the so-called "great ideas" in Pyramids of Mars or Talons of Weng-Shiang? Where are the great ideas in the Master episodes? She's right - it's all cackling mustache-twirling comic book evil people with no motivation, and it's a variety of silly ways to defeat them - that's the show, she says, for the most part, a low-brow comic book good vs. evil kid's show, with not much depth or intelligent social commentary, or anything. Just a lot of running around in circles to defeat bad guys who aren't developed in even the most basic way. And having rewatched these episodes, I fear that she's right! Don't get me wrong - I still loved them, and were entertained by them, even as she sat there rolling her eyes. But my suspicion, again, is that she's actually right....
Sigh. Anyway, she still wants to finish the series, at some point, but she's taking a break from it.
Has this happened to any of you? Where you've been simply incapable of getting an intelligent sci-fi fan to like the old Doctor Who?