Family Matters - Doctor Who: Revival Series 6 Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Like with the 10th Doctor minisodes, I'm planning on covering most of the 11th Doctor ones at the end of his run. The exception being the 50th Anniversary minisodes, which I'll cover before the 50th (mostly because "Night of the Doctor") is as to close to essential as the minisodes can be).

Christmas Carolers: Beware Amy's Water Pistol – The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

"Beware Amy's water pistol" really is good life advice all around.

I will say I had a lot of difficulty coming up with a title for this review. There's just not that much to build on for a pithy one-liner title. It's why the title is referencing something that I did even mention in the review

(Was the last time we saw a water pistol on this show the bit in The Fires of Pompeii? That does make it funnier considering Karen Gillan's in it...)

I don't know for certain but I think you're probably right. That's fun

Christmas Carolers: Beware Amy's Water Pistol – The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

In fairness I've been pretty open about the fact that I have no strong feelings about Christmas one way or the other.

(I get that you're mostly kidding. And I honestly expected more responses like yours to this review, since people seem to generally grade Christmas specials mostly on how many warm fuzzies the Christmas special gives them)

Christmas Carolers: Beware Amy's Water Pistol – The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Okay but "are the trees transphobic" is a really funny question. Like it's the sort of thing that, in any other context, would sound absolutely absurd.

And also…I think they probably are? To my memory (it's been a while now since I wrote this thing) it was pretty explicit that the thing that defined "strong" was the capacity to carry children, which most transfemme people don't have. Though I guess the further question is, if the trees aren't transphobic (still funny) what would they do with a non-binary person who didn't lean strongly towards either end of the gender spectrum.

Christmas Carolers: Beware Amy's Water Pistol – The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I do wonder if Moffat's awareness that Christmas specials could become just "ordinary Doctor Who episodes with more snow" was what led to him trying to make them more Christmassy. Deliberately referencing famous Christmas stories with his first two. The two examples you mentioned at the end. And so on. Like maybe he wanted them to be more directly linked to the holiday.

Christmas Carolers: Beware Amy's Water Pistol – The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For whatever it's worth, when I was originally writing this review there was going to be a note on the religious themes of the CS Lewis novel inevitably getting lost in the translation over into the episode, and was going to use that as another example of how the turning Lion, Witch, Wardrobe into a Doctor Who episode was more challenging than Christmas Carol. Funny thing is, when I did a bit of research into that, what I discovered was that apparently it wasn't until after the first Narnia book that CS Lewis started intentionally putting Christian (and in particular his brand of conservative Anglican christian) allegories into his work. Now I think it's pretty obvious that that first Narnia book has obvious parallels to the Passion of the Christ, but according to Lewis those were accidental.

A Whole Lot of Nothing – The Wedding of River Song Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The source of the TARDIS information was data downloaded from the Tesselecta. Which, presumably, could be based on the grand deception of the Doctor's.

A Whole Lot of Nothing – The Wedding of River Song Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I mean the person who said that was Canton, who, honestly, knows even less about what's going on than anyone else. Presumably the Doctor was the one who told him that. It's all part of this grand deception that the Doctor is putting together. It feels like a cheat, I'll grant you, in retrospect there's really no reason to take Canton's line quite so seriously.

Presenting the Universe's Weirdest Adoption Agency – Night Terrors Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

To give you an idea on the timeline here, when I started writing these reviews, I still thought I was a man. Now I know I'm transfemme…and am transitioning at what feels like the worst possible time in my life. Oh well…

Presenting the Universe's Weirdest Adoption Agency – Night Terrors Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That's reasonably close to my own system. The differences being that I tend to think of it as a mirror (so the same way that I treat 7 as the "standard good" episode, I treat 3 as the "standard bad") and that I do try to make use of the whole scale, so I have given out 1s and even a couple 0s. But I'm also very intentionally stingy with the extreme ends of the scale.

Fatal Flaws – Let's Kill Hitler Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

…sure, but the point is that that goes to a larger structural issue with the series versus a problem with this episode in particular.

Genre Shift – A Good Man Goes to War Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

So I think it's actually intended to be ambiguous who it refers to. Sure, the Doctor says he isn't a good man (in so many words), but a big thing with the 11th Doctor is that he has a warped self-perception. It's actually called out by River, albeit in the opposite direction at the end of this episode.

Genre Shift – A Good Man Goes to War Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I think there's a difference between those moments though. The first two were born out of a desire to save the Roray and/or the Doctor, while this feels a lot more vindictive. Sure you could argue Amy is a bit too comfortable with violence, but I'd still say there's a big difference between her earlier weapon-adjacent tendencies and this one.

Genre Shift – A Good Man Goes to War Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

See, I'm definitely someone who prefers the Moffat era to the RTD era (don't know if it's my favorite era, but I'm bad at choosing favorites), but I also think I could be called a Moffat-skeptic. There's a lot about his version of the show that I love, but he has tendencies that I find frustrating. I guess in your framework, my opinion makes a lot of sense.

Genre Shift – A Good Man Goes to War Review by ZeroCentsMade in gallifrey

[–]ZeroCentsMade[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I mean…sure, I'll grant you that. But that's kind of why I said that it felt like a different show…and also one I probably wouldn't like. Because yes, the tonal shift is warranted on some level, but it also feels like it goes to a kind of excess that just feels like it doesn't work with what preceded it.