The WOM aliens were initially quite spooky, but they just got sidelined too quickly and there seemed to be a disparity in how they were acting that wasn't explained.
The thing in Midnight however, that was really scary and truly alien.
It was one of those episodes that truly had little or nothing to do with anything. It reminded me a lot of the disappointment I felt with Isaac Asimov's empire novel "The Stars Like Dust"
It was one of those episodes that truly had little or nothing to do with anything. It reminded me a lot of the disappointment I felt with Isaac Asimov's empire novel "The Stars Like Dust"
I'm not sure what you mean by this.
I think it might have been a Marmite episode (Midnight). I was truly frightened and completely blown away by the awesomeness of Lesley Sharp but I remember coming on here after it aired and reading how some fans thought it was rubbish.
I thought it was a very well written piece on claustrophobic paranoia, desperation, sacrifice and the breakdown of civilities in a survival situation.I think it might have been a Marmite episode (Midnight). I was truly frightened and completely blown away by the awesomeness of Lesley Sharp but I remember coming on here after it aired and reading how some fans thought it was rubbish.
I think it might have been a Marmite episode (Midnight). I was truly frightened and completely blown away by the awesomeness of Lesley Sharp but I remember coming on here after it aired and reading how some fans thought it was rubbish.
It was a good episode with a really high concept but nothing it with the except of the Rose cameo never went anywhere afterwords. That's where my disappointment stems from really.
I think it might have been a Marmite episode (Midnight). I was truly frightened and completely blown away by the awesomeness of Lesley Sharp but I remember coming on here after it aired and reading how some fans thought it was rubbish.
It was a good episode with a really high concept but nothing it with the except of the Rose cameo never went anywhere afterwords. That's where my disappointment stems from really.
In other words, you were upset it wasn't a plot-centric episode that advanced a season-long story arc, but was instead a single episode telling its own, self-contained story?
In other words, you were upset that it did the same thing as every episode of RTD-era Doctor Who other than the last two or three of a season?
It was a good episode with a really high concept but nothing it with the except of the Rose cameo never went anywhere afterwords. That's where my disappointment stems from really.
In other words, you were upset it wasn't a plot-centric episode that advanced a season-long story arc, but was instead a single episode telling its own, self-contained story?
In other words, you were upset that it did the same thing as every episode of RTD-era Doctor Who other than the last two or three of a season?
I wouldn't say upset, that's a bit over dramatic but I was disappointment that I didn't personally get much out of it.
-the Doctor's breakdown at the end: yes, I realize it had to happen somehow, in order to push Brooke and for RTD's intended end-show goals, so I can forgive its necessity. How it was executed though, seemed really out of character, artificial, and overwrought for Ten. Yes the Doctor is arrogant, yes he's powerful, but the way he quickly and rapidly descends into believing his own mythology seemed psychotic without much explanation as to why or how he got to the breaking point (esp. for a character whose usual MO is to always come up with the right plan at the last moment).
That is ultimately what destroyed this episode for me. Since I couldn't buy into the sudden personality change of the Doctor the whole episode rung hollow for me.
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