I'm not actually disagreeing with you about any particular point. I guess I'm just having a hard time envisioning a story where Jenny comes back and it doesn't seem convoluted and bizarre. If she was going to come back, it would have been during Tennant's run. The show has such a different feel to it now that it's almost like a spin-off of itself.I guess for me there's a difference between bringing back an old friend/enemy (like Sarah Jane, The Master, etc) and bringing back a one-off character that was in a random episode that otherwise had no impact.
Again, my point is that many stories "bring back" characters who had never been seen before at all. Again, when the Master was first introduced in "Terror of the Autons" in 1971, he was already an old nemesis of the Doctor, even though he'd never appeared in the show before.
So how many times a character has appeared before -- or if they've ever appeared at all -- should have no bearing on whether an effective story can be told about their return. Ideally, the story should be written for the benefit of viewers who aren't familiar with the character anyway, so that they won't be confused or left out. As long as you explain any relevant backstory in the episode itself, what came before or didn't come before should be irrelevant.
Of course, the corollary of that is that you ideally don't bring a character back just for nostalgia's sake, but do so because there's a story worth telling about them, a story that would be just as meaningful even if they'd never been seen before. Like how Moffat handled the Great Intelligence. Aside from a couple of subtle in-joke nods about snowmen and the London Underground, and the Doctor muttering something about finding it familiar, there's no real indication in "The Snowmen" or "The Name of the Doctor" that the Intelligence is an old 1960s foe being brought back; it feels like a newly created villain, and its presence was driven by the story being told in the then-current season, not simply by reminiscing about a couple of Second Doctor tales. If it's meaningful to the present story, then past appearances or lack thereof make no difference.
I hate that the companion is part time. The Doctor picks her (them) up, has an adventure, drops them off home. All the companions from the beginning up to Donna stayed in the Tardis. Amy (and then Amy & Rory) did until the end of season 6. Until that garbage stops, you won't get companion character development as before.
Moffat IMO seems to misunderstand the idea behind a companion, they're meant to be us the audience, by taking the companions out of the Doctor's day to day life it takes us out it as well.
I'm not actually disagreeing with you about any particular point. I guess I'm just having a hard time envisioning a story where Jenny comes back and it doesn't seem convoluted and bizarre. If she was going to come back, it would have been during Tennant's run. The show has such a different feel to it now that it's almost like a spin-off of itself.
I don't understand why Jenny in particular has been picked up? Except for the aspect that appeals to geeks, what is actually interesting about the character?
I think it would be more interesting to see her appear as a villain myself. Left to her own devices for a few hundred years and convinced she is immortal. . . who isn't likely to go a little mad and maybe take over a planet or two?
I'm not actually disagreeing with you about any particular point. I guess I'm just having a hard time envisioning a story where Jenny comes back and it doesn't seem convoluted and bizarre.
Or married to Porridge.I think it would be more interesting to see her appear as a villain myself. Left to her own devices for a few hundred years and convinced she is immortal. . . who isn't likely to go a little mad and maybe take over a planet or two?
I never thought of that, but you're right, that would be an interesting dynamic to explore. And we wouldn't be saddled with any romantic pining between them either.I could even see them bringing Jenny back as a companion after Clara, recreating the family dynamic that the First Doctor and Susan had. That would certainly be interestingly different than the usual Doctor-companion relationship. I think there's plenty of potential there.
I never thought of that, but you're right, that would be an interesting dynamic to explore. And we wouldn't be saddled with any romantic pining between them either.I could even see them bringing Jenny back as a companion after Clara, recreating the family dynamic that the First Doctor and Susan had. That would certainly be interestingly different than the usual Doctor-companion relationship. I think there's plenty of potential there.![]()
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