Kopic's Doctor Who & Torchwood News |
| Doctor Who: Forest of the Dead Posted: 08 Jun 2008 03:52 AM CDT So often with Doctor Who these days, when we have a two-parter, the second part seems to not live up to the expectation of the opening instalment. This seems to especially afflict the 'big monster' stories which is a great shame as Daleks, Cybermen and Sontarans deserve better. The season-enders especially seem to have suffered, with the final episode in each case having to do a lot of work to try and wrap everything up neatly and failing somewhere in the attempt.Luckily, the more low-key two-parters on the whole have succeeded admirably. 'The Empty Child'/'The Doctor Dances' is a great example, as is 'Human Nature'/'The Family of Blood'. 'The Impossible Planet'/'The Satan Pit' however dropped the ball. Now we have another to add to the roster of successes, with 'Silence in the Library'/'Forest of the Dead' managing to feel like a wholly rounded story, something that Doctor Who used to do time and time again, and yet which seems to be missing from this new, fast-paced, CGI crammed, 45 minute episode format. We either get something whimsical and knockabout (eg 'Partners in Crime', 'New Earth') or something which is a glorified runaround (eg 'The Doctor's Daughter', 'The Lazarus Experiment', '42'). It's rare to come across an episode which feels like and works as a complete adventure in 45 minutes, though thankfully it has happened ('Dalek', 'Father's Day', 'The Girl in the Fireplace', 'The Idiot's Lantern', 'Blink'). What's interesting to note is that every one of these episodes which feel like 'proper' stories has not been written by Russell T Davies ... But back to 'Forest of the Dead', an episode concluding an adventure begun with 'Silence in the Library', in itself one of the best, most exciting and chilling episodes of Doctor Who we have seen to date. It had a lot to live up to. If you remember, last week we left our heroes trapped in the darkened Library, with a shambling, reanimated corpse heading towards them, Donna apparently dead, and no way out ... Of course there's a way out! River Song has her squareness gun, and so the team escape by making their own way through the bookcases. This is a little bit of a cop out I suppose, but in keeping with the nature of cliffhangers. More important were some of the revelations in the episode. Last week we had no idea who the strange little girl with her father was, who the mysterious Doctor Moon was, and what River Song's relationship with the Doctor was. Personally I wanted answers to all but the last one. I really found I could care less about River Song and this whole future relationship guff. It was interesting, and well played by the actors, but as some sort of big arc-like revalation? No, just not interested. So I was very pleased indeed that we discovered who the little girl and Doctor Moon were, but were left with no real clue as to the Doctor and River's relationship. The episode managed to fill in the blanks, with a nice televisual conceit of showing Donna apparently arriving at a hospital/home, getting better, meeting a nice man, getting married, having two kids and living happily ever after ... but all in the space of about two minutes. The idea of the cutting between scenes and locations happening in the way we see on television and on film all the time, but having Donna experience it in 'real time' so to speak was inspired, and made for fascinating watching. I did wonder what younger children watching might make of this, or how their parents might explain what was happening to them if asked. So as Donna starts to realise that all is not as well as it seems in her idyllic world via a visitation from a strange cowled figure, so the Doctor and the team of archaeologists back at the Library try and find out what's happening. Most of these scenes are enlivened by the performances of David Tennant and Alex Kingston, as the Doctor and River try to come to terms with each other. River whispering an unheard word to the Doctor to force him to realise that he can trust her was a nice touch - I hoped we would not find out what that word was ... and we didn't (it was the Doctor's real name which is a little cliched I suppose, but miles better than: 'Doctor ... I am your mother'). There's lots more running around. First Other Dave is eaten by the shadows, and the Doctor falls through a super-convenient trapdoor and ends up monkey-swinging under one of the Library building spurs. This was rather naff and I didn't really get the point aside from a chance to use some more CGI. Finally Anita gets shadowed as the Doctor races to try and get everything sorted out. The idea that the little girl was the computer core (CAL being her initials: Charlotte Abigail Lux) and Dr Moon was a virus checker, protecting and supporting the core, was well handled if a little predictable, and the performances from Eve Newton (CAL) and Colin Salmon (Moon) were exemplary. What was less believable was that the girl would throw a hissy fit and activate the destruction of the Library in 20 minutes! But then I suppose the episode needed some artificially engineered tension to give it all something to work towards. Donna meets with the cowled figure, and it's Miss Evangelista from the first part - assumed dead, but now a hyper-intelligent computer recreation, with a twisted face as a result of some data corruption as she was 'saved' by the computer from her Data Ghost. The resultant breakdown of Donna's world was nicely handled, and her reaction when her two children vanished was superb. This is the very best we have seen Catherine Tate so far - not playing some caricature of her comedy persona or overegging the pudding. I liked very much the idea that the Vashta Nerada came to the Library in the books, as the books were made from the forests in which they lived. It explains why all the books in the Library had to be newly-made reprints at least (I did wonder about this last week - surely a library would generally have actual editions of the books rather than going to the expense of printing new ones, and if you were going to print new ones, then why not just keep them all digitally and only print a copy when requested by one of the library users?) It's only right at the end that the questions start to come. When rescuing all the people who had been saved (as in literally saved, to the computer hard drive), why didn't the core have enough storage meaning that the Doctor had to try and use his brainspace as well? And they said that River's brainspace was not big enough and would kill her (which it did) so how did all the people get retrieved then? And in retrieving the people, where did their flesh and blood bodies come from? What material was used to make them? I can accept that their personalities and minds were stored on the computer, but I can't see how their bodies could be physically stored as well? Maybe I missed something. The final scenes between the Doctor and River were awesome. Pitch perfect performances from both actors, well balanced and giving nothing away. I found myself wondering how much better '42' could have been with someone decent in the lead role rather than the woefully mis-cast Michelle Collins. Alex Kingston was totally believable as River Song, taking charge, enjoying the challenges ... a true Doctor-like figure which was, I suspect, the whole point, as in her the Doctor had found himself. Of course Lux's line that they were arguing away like an old married couple was a deliberate plant to make the fans think she therefore was his wife ... personally I suspect not. That would be too obvious. So the story concludes, and there are some wonderful, soul achingly beautiful lines of dialogue. I adored Donna asking the Doctor whether 'all right' was a special Time Lord code for 'not all right at all', before admitting that she too was 'all right'. I loved the 'some days nobody dies at all' line, which is of course what happens here - everyone is saved, either literally, or on the computer hard drive. I even liked the concept that the Doctor that we see now, today, is not a patch on the Doctor from the future, the one from whom whole armies will run, and the one who can open his TARDIS doors by clicking his fingers. In the accompanying Confidential episode, this was explained as a take on a trait of fandom where fans always look back to the golden days and moan that '... it's not as good as it was in my day.' Here we have the show saying that it's only going to get better, which is no bad thing. However they have a lot to live up to. With the author of this story, Steven Moffat, now announced as the new showrunner for Doctor Who, taking over from Russell T Davies for the 2010 series, I feel that the show is in safe hands. Moffat seems to have an instinctive grasp of what makes Doctor Who good, and certainly his writing for the show has given us the best episodes of its run to date. Personally I hope he can keep up the quality, and the darkness. Remembering that Doctor Who is, at its heart, NOT a science fiction show, but a horror show, plundering the depths to bring us thrills and scares in equal measure. If he can manage that, then I'll even forgive him 'The Curse of Fatal Death'! Next week: goodness knows! Something on a space tour across a diamond planet called Midnight ... death ... horror ... screaming ... | ||
| Posted: 08 Jun 2008 03:25 AM CDT David Tennant was a special guest on the BBC1 Sunday morning programme The Andrew Marr Show. Sandwiched between the Mayor of London and the Home Secretary, and appearing primarily to promote the DVD release of the BAFTA winning Taking over the Asylum and his forthcoming appearance as Hamlet, Tennant also talked about his role as the Doctor. Asked whether he would be appearing in the fifth series, Tennant said he hadn't yet been asked, but would... | ||
| Moffat offered 'Doctor Who' job by email Posted: 07 Jun 2008 11:14 PM CDT Steven Moffat discusses the moment when Russell T. Davies offered him the role of Dr Who showrunner. | ||
| S4: Episode #9 - Overnight Ratings Posted: 07 Jun 2008 10:57 PM CDT S4: Episode #9 - Overnight Ratings The Overnight Ratings are in for 4.9: Forest of the Dead. Overnight Ratings show that the episode achieved 7.1m viewers with a 40.0% audience share. Doctor Who was the most-watched programme on Saturday. [Source: Andy Parish] | ||
| Forest of the Dead - Overnight Ratings Posted: 07 Jun 2008 10:02 PM CDT Doctor Who was back at the top of the list with unofficial figures showing that episode nine of Series Four, Forest of the Dead, was watched by 7.1 million viewers, giving it a 40.0% share of the total television audience. The programme was by far the most watched of Saturday, beating the second placed Casualty by 1.6 million viewers. The quarter hour figures show that the only time any of the networks got over 6 million viewers watching was the... | ||
| Posted: 07 Jun 2008 10:02 PM CDT Underground Toys is set to release two more special edition figures this year at the San Diego Comic Convention being held July 24th to the 27th at the San Diego Convention Center. As with last years release of the Assault Dalek and Damaged Cyberman, this year's figures are limited to 3,000 pieces each. Each figure is individually numbered and include the unique SDCC 2008 logo. The figures are: A Ninth Doctor in the Green Jumper from "Fathers Day"... | ||
| Trial of a Time Lord DVD Box Set Update Posted: 07 Jun 2008 07:21 PM CDT The Restoration Team has released details of the forthcoming four-disc release of the Trial of a Time Lord DVD box set in the UK. The 14 episodes, comprising season 23 of the classic era, originally aired between September and December 1986 and featured Colin Baker as the Sixth Doctor. There is a host of extras with the set, including extracts from Blue Peter, Points of View, Children In Need, Saturday Picture Show and Open Air. It will also have... | ||
| Torchwood From Underground - Pop Culture Zoo Posted: 07 Jun 2008 01:29 PM CDT
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| Jake Gyllenhaal Tops Gay Icon Poll…. - Fashion.ie Posted: 07 Jun 2008 01:19 PM CDT
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| Fans Want Rhydian to Be New Phantom - RedOrbit Posted: 07 Jun 2008 12:31 PM CDT
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| 6 Free Doctor Who Stickers Every Day This Week - Glasgow Sunday Mail Posted: 07 Jun 2008 11:53 AM CDT
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| Barrowman to Return to Torchwood Mini-Series - Wired News Posted: 06 Jun 2008 04:20 PM CDT
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| Posted: 06 Jun 2008 01:00 PM CDT Episode 73: Make sure you straighten your bookmarks and have your library cards stamped, the DWO Whocast is your library of wonder this week as we review the latest Episode 4.8: Silence in the Library. The 2Ts offer their thoughts on the opening part of this two-part story. The team also announce the winner of the fandom corner competition, the comp in which we turned to our listeners to give a good name for our fandom spot. Did your entry win? After our inaugral phone-in last week, this podcast sees the inclusion of the listeners we chatted to. Tim and Luke get on the line and share their thoughts on all things Who. Along with news, general chit chat and emails from our listeners to read out, the DWO WhoCast is just what the Doctor ordered! Don't forget to send in your feedback to Trevor and Tony at: feedback@thewhocast.com This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now | ||
| Aliens sighted at shopping centre - Doncaster Today Posted: 06 Jun 2008 06:21 AM CDT
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| News in brief: Diploma loophole; NHS offer accepted - Times Online Posted: 06 Jun 2008 03:46 AM CDT
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| Jake Gyllenhaal Tops Gay Icon Poll - Showbiz Spy Posted: 05 Jun 2008 10:51 PM CDT
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| News - Music, movie, Entertainment GYLLENHAAL TOPS GAY ICON POLL - PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung) Posted: 05 Jun 2008 10:31 PM CDT
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| Gyllenhaal Tops Gay Icon Poll - Showbiz Spy Posted: 05 Jun 2008 10:21 PM CDT
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| Jake Gyllenhaal tops gay icons list - Stuff.co.nz Posted: 04 Jun 2008 12:05 AM CDT
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| 'Torchwood' cut down for third season? - Digital Spy Posted: 03 Jun 2008 04:38 AM CDT
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| Five episodes?! Those pesky and increasingly legit-sounding ... - AfterElton.com Posted: 02 Jun 2008 11:28 PM CDT
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| Torchwood: Season 3 Confirmed - BuddyTV Posted: 02 Jun 2008 10:31 PM CDT
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| It's Confirmed: 'Torchwood' Only Five Hours In 2009 - SyFyPortal Posted: 02 Jun 2008 09:12 PM CDT
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| Find Out Which Aliens Turn Up In JJ Abrams' Star Trek Movie - io9 Posted: 02 Jun 2008 08:07 PM CDT
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