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What Does it Take?

A fascinating article about Maisie Williams and Ashildr/Me and what it takes to be on WHO.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/guides/z2kkqty

What sort of acting role do you want?

You’ve got your heart set on a role in Doctor Who. But what kind of role are you aiming for?

Major on-screen role

Appearing in Doctor Who is a dream shared by thousands and, although many big stars have appeared in the show, it’s also been a launch pad to success.

Supporting artist (extra)

If you want to keep your day job but still get your face on telly, why not sign up to be an SA?

A monster!

If you’re determined to play any monster from A-Z (err, Autons to Zygons) then Doctor Who is the show for you.

 

Missed?

 (Radio Times)
14 brilliant Easter eggs you might have missed in Doctor Who series 9
 

Saturday should mean Doctor Who but now that series nine is over there’s no more new Who due on our TV screens until Christmas Day – of course, that doesn’t mean there’s no fun to be had.

In fact, there’s never been a better time to look back over the last few months, rate all of the episodes from the series, and remember just how clever the little sci-fi show can be.

Take these excellent Easter eggs dotted about this year’s series, for instance…

Star Trek boldly went Under the Lake

From the Starfleet uniforms in the mural on the wall, to the shuttle-like spaceship and design of the whole underwater base, Under the Lake was basically an homage to the sci-fi classic.

And the nod to the Starship Enterprise (above) was particularly clever.


The Doctor apologised to Sarah Jane

*sobs* It was SOUTH CROYDON. 

The Doctor FINALLY apologised for abandoning his companion in the wrong city.


Star Wars made an appearance Before The Flood

May the remorse be with you too, undertaker Prentis. Pity the poor alien didn’t live to share more of his brilliant business cards after those nasty dealings with the Fisher King.


The Clockwork Squirrel had a whirl on The Doctor’s Magpie amp

In Under the Lake, Clara mentioned that the Doctor had dismantled the TARDIS radio to make a clockwork squirrel and in Before the Flood, up he popped.

And he WOULD be sitting atop a Magpie Electronics original…


The Face of Boe met The Woman Who Lived

Ashildr asked if she’d ever meet Jack Harkness, but she basically already had.

If you believed Jack was the Face of Boe anyway. Actor Struan Rodger, who played her manservant, was the original voice of the Face of Boe.


Five Doctors popped up in the Zygon Invasion

Did you manage to spot them all?

One was hiding on a UNIT safe house wall, and the rest were dotted throughout the episode, which saw The Doctor and Osgood joining forces once again.


James Bond joined the Zygon Inversion

At least that’s what it felt like when The Doctor channelled Roger Moore with that parachute.


Torchwood Faced the Raven

Did someone say they were Retconned on the Trap Street that was home to Me and her alien refugees?

We’ve heard that one somewhere before, haven’t we Captain Jack?


And Star Wars, Back to the Future and Doctor Who met for the BEST Easter egg of all time

Who doesn’t love a bit of obscure Star Wars writing on the wall in the back of a scene?

Especially when that writing actually spells out something VERY interesting indeed when it’s translated.


The writing was on the wall in Heaven Sent too

Yep, there was another hidden message scribbled on the wall of the mysterious mechanical castle prison.

We’ve ZOOMED IN so you can see that the Doctor’s opening monologue was right there, if you wanted to recite it with him.


And when the Doctor came home, he took a familiar route…

Now, where have we heard THAT one before?


…before telling the truth about Missy’s lies in Hell Bent

You might remember Missy telling Clara three things about the Doctor when asked when she’d started caring for him: “Since always. Since the Cloister Wars. Since the night he stole the moon and the President’s wife. Since he was a little girl. One of those was a lie – can you guess which one?”

During their time in the Cloisters in Hell Bent, the Doctor tells Clara that the claim he “stole the moon and the president’s wife” is utter rubbish, meaning that if we’re to believe Missy was only telling ONE lie, the Doctor was, in fact, once a little girl.

Mystery solved. Maybe.


That second TARDIS that looked a LOT like the very first

What an homage to days gone by, eh?

Even if the colour scheme was a little off.
(the original was green because that looked ‘whiter’ on a B&W TV.


And finally, that very important song played in a very important diner…

We can’t fail to mention how wonderful it is to be back in that fateful diner, first frequented by Matt Smith’s Eleven.

But could Don’t Stop Me Now hint that we haven’t seen the last of Clara Oswald just yet? It wouldn’t be the first time…

And it’s an actual Diner in the Cardiff Bay Restaurant District.

eddies

 

 


Honourable Mention: Leandro the Bread Lion

Because even The Doctor loves a nod to The Great British Bake Off.

See also, “Warrior’s Gate” (1980) for another Lion inspired Race.

 

Review: Hell Bent…

hell bent

Naturally, there are spoilers ahead…

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Before I get into my more reasoned reaction to the Season Finale, lets talk visceral.

This is what I wrote right after watching the episode yesterday:

AARGHH!
Clara Lives…Moffat’s is the one who’s cruel and cowardly.
He ruined “Face The Raven”. Made it cheap, taudry and manipulative.
Series 9. A magnificent marathon destined to win the Triple Crown of Season Arc Storied Horse racing only to come up lame in the last 10 yards. Such a pity.
I am very angry with you Steven. Very angry indeed!
Another fake Clara Death.
F*ck The Raven….

I have calmed down quite a bit since then (about 12 hours later) and I have a much better opinion of this episode in the end once the emotions have calmed down.

It is actually a good episode. Series 9/35 is one of the best seasons in many years. It is a classic of its own.

But,it was a bit like watch the “Planet of The Apes” Tim Burton remake and you get to that idiotic last 5 minutes that ruined the movie. That was the visceral reaction I had to Time-Locked Undead Clara and Ashildr/Me running off into the universe together.

Fortunately, upon reflection I have a better consideration for this episode, and the last 5 minutes of “Planet of The Apes” STILL sucks. 🙂

The Doctor Clara and her companion, the immortal Me. Off to see the universe.

Is this what the Doctor and The Master would have been like if things had turned out differently? Hmmm…

That’s where the rumors of Me being a companion in The TARDIS obviously come from.

Doctor Clara gets the Hartnell TARDIS.

The visceral reaction is gone. I went too far… 🙂

But do the Time Lords REALLY want to risk having the Hybrid, aka Clara & The Doctor rekindle at some point in the future?

And what happens when Clara and Me meet Jenny?

The mind boggeleth.

Overall, the episode is very good. The Doctor literally broke all the rules and went literally to the end of time to save Clara.

But I still think it cheapened “Face The Raven” and gave us YET ANOTHER Fake Clara Death. I’m so sick of that. That visceral reaction hasn’t gone away. 🙂

The Doctor did break every rule he ever believed in. He was cruel. He was cowardly and he wasn’t The Doctor.

And Moffat got another Gender Change thrown in for sledgehammer effect. Sigh…Unnecessary.

The opening in the diner made me want to scream “MOFFAT!” but I kept it together because the story was actually very good- I just hated that one part- viscerally. 🙂

The Doctor drawing a line in the sand (Wish our President had that much resolution) at his childhood home, Lungbarrow.

The escalation of fear from Time Lords where you get one Chancellery Guard, to the Head of the Guard and several, to The High Council and finally Rassilon himself was very interesting to watch as the fear of the unknown was ratcheted up.

Too bad Rassilon forgot to take his own advice about “immortality is a curse not a blessing” and has gone mad himself and lead Gallifrey and The Universe to the brink of extinction in The Time War.

A Time Lord Victorious.

Now, he wants The Doctor. He “was a good man once” also but fear and death have overtaken him as well.

“Get off his Planet”. So does this mean The Doctor’s The President yet again, and he ran off in a TARDIS instead?

The Doctor is a “War Hero” He won the Time War. Yeah, he committed genocide of both sides and then undid it. 🙂

Rassilon fought it. The Doctor Won it.

Maybe they aren’t so dissimilar.

The Doctor was the one that beat The Death Zone, a playground for the Time Lords to torture other beings in.

They just tortured him for 4.5 billion years because they feared his incite into The Hybrid that would destroy Gallifrey, which the Time Lords naturally consider it to be a melding of the two great races of the universe- The Time Lords and The Daleks because they are the most powerful and most feared.

But it’s the deadly combo of a Time Lord, and a lowly Human who wants to be  a Time Lord.

The Doctor & Clara, brought together by that ultimate lover of all things chaos, The Master/Missy. Also, he’s best friend. The Light and Dark in all of us.

Clara and Ashildr.

What does this say about the Cartmel MasterPlan that never finished because of the shows cancellation? The one where Ace was going to become a Time Lord on Gallifrey? 🙂

What does that say about the potentially deadly cocktail of Doctor and Companion for the future?

Peter Capaldi, over these last few episodes, has shown why he is magnificent actor and deserves to be one of the greatest. He oozes resolute menace like no Doctor ever has.

The episode itself is full of visceral reactions and elicits them also.

He “goes too far” and there is Clara, and Ashildr to stomp him back into being a Doctor.

The Time Lord Victorious, indeed. A wounded animal, acting on raw emotions and grief more like.

He’s willing to do literally anything to save her. He literally risks the fabric of time & space itself.

And The Time Lords let him because they are giving into their own fears.What could Clara actually tell them about the Hybrid? I mean really, what could she?

“Why would you even do that?” she asks him, crying, when she learns just how long it’s been since they last met, a heartbeat ago. “I was dead and gone. Why would you even do that to yourself?”

“I had a duty of care,” he says, repeating a phrase he’s uttered before.

It’s sweet and alarming. How far and how bad can things get if you “care” too much? Actually, given his knowledge of time, fixed points and the fallout of violations, it’s mostly alarming how far he’s gone and seems willing to go.

He has literally risked the Universe for her.

But she can talk him off his Time Lord Victorious Ledge and tell him to “Be a Doctor” before he effectively wipes his own memory.

It’s the reverse Donna. He forgets her, instead of her forgetting him OR DYING for real.

When did we become immune to seeing people die, for real?

But I did a fangasm when He steals a TARDIS and runs! Only this time, he takes Clara with him. And it’s an overlit (as it was back in the day) mockup of the First Doctor’s TARDIS with the original Hartnell console from An Adventure in Space & Time standing in for the original.

'Doctor Who' Season 9, Episode 12, 'Hell Bent'

The Doctor has come full circle.

He’s running away from Gallifrey, afraid and scared, in a TARDIS but it’s not his grand daughter this time.

And via the Mind Clara in the Diner he become the Doctor Reborn with a new Sonic Screwdriver.

And the adventure continues. A new Companion. A New Direction.

Run you Clever Girl, and Remember.

She is now more Impossible that ever. She was born to save The Doctor, after all, even from himself.

Run you clever Doctor, and forget.

He doesn’t like endings, after all.

“stories are where memories go when they’re forgotten.”

A Man is the sum of his memories, you know, a Time Lord Even more so…:)

TEGAN: It’ll soon be goodbye, then.
DOCTOR 5: Will it?
TURLOUGH: Well, you’re off to Gallifrey to be President. I suppose your Time Lord subjects will find a Tardis that really works and get us both home?
DOCTOR 5: Who said anything about Gallifrey?
TURLOUGH: You told Chancellor Flavia
DOCTOR 5: I told her she had full deputy powers until I returned.
TEGAN: You’re not going back?
DOCTOR 5: You know, sometimes, Tegan, you take my breath away.
TURLOUGH: Er, won’t the Time Lords be very angry?
DOCTOR 5: Furious.
TEGAN: You mean you’re deliberately choosing to go on the run from your own people in a rackety old Tardis?
DOCTOR 5: Why not? After all, that’s how it all started.

But first, he has to meet his wife again…

19 Days Until Christmas. Then we are in for a long winters nap.

 

 

The Return of Me

She certainly made an impression after her debut in series 9.

But Game of Thrones actress Maisie Williams, 18, will make her return to Doctor Who as the immortal Ashildr for the show’s season finale this weekend.

Starring alongside the Doctor – played by Peter Capaldi, 57 – it will be the first time she’s seen in the show since the Face The Raven episode, which aired November 21.

me-finale2

“You don’t see surprised to see me?”

Speaking of her return, Maisie said: ‘I didn’t know that I’d be back again but I’m glad I am because after the end of the previous episode that I’m in, it was nice to have something that would round off my character nicely.’

The show’s writer Steven Moffat, 54, added that her immortal character has lived many years since her most recent appearance.

He said: ‘She’s now impossibly ancient and quite serene. She’s far older than the doctor.

Behind the Scenes Video with Maisie:

‘She’s certainly not alarmed by him anymore as she’s not merely his equal, she’s outgrown him. 

‘They are no longer equals. She’s way ahead. She’s seen more. She’s done more.’

Peter said: ‘We’re both creatures who look into eternity. That’s how Doctor Who should be. It’s good, it’s quite haunting.’

Maisie added: ‘Every episode that I’ve been back, my character’s made such a big change in the time that she’s been missing. It’s nice to be able to portray all of that.’  

In the preview clip, Ashildr is seen sitting on a throne, as she says to the Doctor: ‘You don’t seem surprised to see me.’

The Doctor replies: ‘I know I went too far.’

In what appears to be quite the dramatic scene, Ashildr says: ‘I’ve had 800 years of adventure. Enough to fill a library if you write it all down. I think it’s time to tell the truth.’

Reflecting on her experience on the BBC1 show, Maisie admitted: ‘This is every fan boy’s dream and I get to do this as my job. I’m really grateful for that.’

Peter dropped a hint that Maisie would be an accomplished new companion in a recent interview.

He said: ‘I can’t answer questions like that but Maisie is fantastic, She’s been in Game of Thrones since she was 12 and is very assured.

‘I was doing a shot with her and when they called “action” she slightly pulled me back. When I asked her what she was doing she said, “You were in my light.” But she is lovely.’

Me

“The Hybrid is me” was the cliffhanger we all got left with last Saturday.

We all started to speculate how it could be the Doctor.

But what if it’s not?

Someone got me to speculate on this because Moffat does like word play.

Remember, “the name of the Doctor” and many speculated (not me though) that that meant he was going to reveal the Doctor’s real name and it turned out be acting “in the name of the Doctor”.

Then  you hear that Maisie Williams is supposed to be in the Finale and you go hmmm.

What is if “The Hybrid is Me” is literal, as in Me/Ashildr?

FACE THE RAVEN (By Sarah Dollard)

WARNING: Embargoed for publication until 00:00:01 on 17/11/2015 – Programme Name: Doctor Who – TX: 21/11/2015 – Episode: FACE THE RAVEN (By Sarah Dollard) (No. 10) – Picture Shows: ***EMBARGOED UNTIL 17th NOV 2015*** Ashildr (MAISIE WILLIAMS) – (C) BBC – Photographer: Simon Ridgway

The product of two warrior races, The Vikings (human) and The Mire, created by the Doctor himself. So, he in effect is the architect of the prophecy just not the literal prophecy.
What if it’s all a word game?
We’ll find out in 2 days.
Moffat, Radio Times, this week:What was the thinking behind Ashildr (Maisie Williams) and the creation of her character?
Trying to find someone who puts the Doctor on the back foot is hard, but worth doing. He’s a bluff-meister, a travelling showman masquerading as a great warrior. He’s not Gandalf in space; he’s a man who stole a time machine. So I like to find people who can cut through and by the end of this series Ashildr has completely figured him out and has him on the rack. She’s someone with enough perspective to say, “I know who you are and what you do. I know you’re amazing but I know you’re not superhuman.”

The idea was he first meets her as a young girl; he meets her again as someone formidable and gone off the rails; he meets her again in episode 10 and she’s very different; and by the end she’s way ahead of him. She’s much older than him and she can nail him and understand him.

She’s better than both combined.

Hmmm…

 

Review: Face The Raven

face the raven

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Not kidding….

Definitely not kidding…

She’s Dead, Jim!  (sorry wrong franchise)

Dead as a can of spam.

‘E’s not pinin’! ‘E’s passed on! This parrot is no more! He has ceased to be! ‘E’s expired and gone to meet ‘is maker! ‘E’s a stiff! Bereft of life, ‘e rests in peace! If you hadn’t nailed ‘im to the perch ‘e’d be pushing up the daisies! ‘Is metabolic processes are now ‘istory! ‘E’s off the twig! ‘E’s kicked the bucket, ‘e’s shuffled off ‘is mortal coil, run down the curtain and joined the bleedin’ choir invisibile!!He’s f*ckin’ snuffed it!….. THIS IS AN EX-PARROT!!

Sorry, companion… 🙂  Wrong franchise again…

The first companion to die (for real, “Kenny” Rory, Oswin Oswald, Governess included) since Adric, and no one was really sorry about that. 🙂

'Doctor Who' Season 9, Episode 10, 'Face The Raven'

And the Doctor was not happy with Ashildr/Me who set a trap for him and Clara paid the price for it.

“You can and you will  <save her> or this street will be over,” he tells Me in full fury. “I’ll show you and all your funny little friends to the whole laughing world. I’ll bring UNIT and the Zygons. Give me a minute and I’ll bring the Daleks and the Cybermen. You will save Clara and you will do it now, or I will rain hell on you for the rest of time!”

Clara did exactly what I said in my blog yesterday. She played “Doctor” and ended up sacrificing her life for her companion Rigsy.

Clara was bound to make an all too human mistake. Getting impatient and missing a crucial detail that will get her killed.

Unlike many I am not a Clara hater. But I do wonder if the amount of hatred and hot air being vented on Ms Coleman isn’t causing Global Warming. 🙂

I didn’t like the character when she was the “Impossible Girl” plot device. A living Deus Ex Machina.

Hated That.

But once they got past that, I liked her character a lot. Yeah, she’s a little too “important” in the Doctor’s life and timeline but I don’t hold that against her.

I will miss Clara Oswald and Jenna Coleman. I can’t say the same about Adric.

So the episode opens with “Doctor” Clara getting a phone call from her companion Rigsy who is in trouble and it’s the Doctor who has to save him. Only, the real Doctor, the wiser one, the one that can cheat death, is there too.

And Capaldi is magnificent. He does the “angry” “No Rules-Time Lord Victorious” much better than Tenant. He oozes menace and makes Ashildr/Me genuinely frightened of him. I would be.

Which is why I have a hard time believing Me to be the next Companion. Not to mention the whole Game of Thrones thing.

Then they find the “trap street” and the episode suddenly goes all Harry Potter!

Ashildr/Me is back as the Mayor of this little refugee camp (no politics tonight, promise) and she’s ever more ruthless,unfeeling, and largely just numb to life and death in general.

She believes she is doing the right thing, but she does it in a callous way. She has lived too long and seen too much and forgotten far more than that.

Quite why she made the deal to protect the Trap Street with what is likely to turn out to be The Time Lords is unknown at this point. The misdirection filters kept it from being noticed for over 100 years so the humans aren’t that big a threat.

More likely, it was a mafia style extortion. That is what we will find out over the next two weeks as the Season Finale kicks into high gear next week.

But dear, reckless, two cleaver-by-half,thought-she-was-a-Doctor Clara won’t be around to protect him from his darker impulses and to soften his inhumanity.

Now, that that is potentially unleashed and Capaldi’s Doctor is way scarier being dark than any Doctor before the gloves are off.

The Raven by Edgar Alan Poe (1845)

Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary,
Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore—
    While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,
As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.
“’Tis some visitor,” I muttered, “tapping at my chamber door—
            Only this and nothing more.”
    Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December;
And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor.
    Eagerly I wished the morrow;—vainly I had sought to borrow
    From my books surcease of sorrow—sorrow for the lost Lenore—
For the rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name Lenore—
            Nameless here for evermore.
    And the silken, sad, uncertain rustling of each purple curtain
Thrilled me—filled me with fantastic terrors never felt before;
    So that now, to still the beating of my heart, I stood repeating
    “’Tis some visitor entreating entrance at my chamber door—
Some late visitor entreating entrance at my chamber door;—
            This it is and nothing more.”
    Presently my soul grew stronger; hesitating then no longer,
“Sir,” said I, “or Madam, truly your forgiveness I implore;
    But the fact is I was napping, and so gently you came rapping,
    And so faintly you came tapping, tapping at my chamber door,
That I scarce was sure I heard you”—here I opened wide the door;—
            Darkness there and nothing more.
    Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there wondering, fearing,
Doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before;
    But the silence was unbroken, and the stillness gave no token,
    And the only word there spoken was the whispered word, “Lenore?”
This I whispered, and an echo murmured back the word, “Lenore!”—
            Merely this and nothing more.
    Back into the chamber turning, all my soul within me burning,
Soon again I heard a tapping somewhat louder than before.
    “Surely,” said I, “surely that is something at my window lattice;
      Let me see, then, what thereat is, and this mystery explore—
Let my heart be still a moment and this mystery explore;—
            ’Tis the wind and nothing more!”
    Open here I flung the shutter, when, with many a flirt and flutter,
In there stepped a stately Raven of the saintly days of yore;
    Not the least obeisance made he; not a minute stopped or stayed he;
    But, with mien of lord or lady, perched above my chamber door—
Perched upon a bust of Pallas just above my chamber door—
            Perched, and sat, and nothing more.
Then this ebony bird beguiling my sad fancy into smiling,
By the grave and stern decorum of the countenance it wore,
“Though thy crest be shorn and shaven, thou,” I said, “art sure no craven,
Ghastly grim and ancient Raven wandering from the Nightly shore—
Tell me what thy lordly name is on the Night’s Plutonian shore!”
            Quoth the Raven “Nevermore.”
    Much I marvelled this ungainly fowl to hear discourse so plainly,
Though its answer little meaning—little relevancy bore;
    For we cannot help agreeing that no living human being
    Ever yet was blessed with seeing bird above his chamber door—
Bird or beast upon the sculptured bust above his chamber door,
            With such name as “Nevermore.”
    But the Raven, sitting lonely on the placid bust, spoke only
That one word, as if his soul in that one word he did outpour.
    Nothing farther then he uttered—not a feather then he fluttered—
    Till I scarcely more than muttered “Other friends have flown before—
On the morrow he will leave me, as my Hopes have flown before.”
            Then the bird said “Nevermore.”
    Startled at the stillness broken by reply so aptly spoken,
“Doubtless,” said I, “what it utters is its only stock and store
    Caught from some unhappy master whom unmerciful Disaster
    Followed fast and followed faster till his songs one burden bore—
Till the dirges of his Hope that melancholy burden bore
            Of ‘Never—nevermore’.”
    But the Raven still beguiling all my fancy into smiling,
Straight I wheeled a cushioned seat in front of bird, and bust and door;
    Then, upon the velvet sinking, I betook myself to linking
    Fancy unto fancy, thinking what this ominous bird of yore—
What this grim, ungainly, ghastly, gaunt, and ominous bird of yore
            Meant in croaking “Nevermore.”
    This I sat engaged in guessing, but no syllable expressing
To the fowl whose fiery eyes now burned into my bosom’s core;
    This and more I sat divining, with my head at ease reclining
    On the cushion’s velvet lining that the lamp-light gloated o’er,
But whose velvet-violet lining with the lamp-light gloating o’er,
            She shall press, ah, nevermore!
    Then, methought, the air grew denser, perfumed from an unseen censer
Swung by Seraphim whose foot-falls tinkled on the tufted floor.
    “Wretch,” I cried, “thy God hath lent thee—by these angels he hath sent thee
    Respite—respite and nepenthe from thy memories of Lenore;
Quaff, oh quaff this kind nepenthe and forget this lost Lenore!”
            Quoth the Raven “Nevermore.”
    “Prophet!” said I, “thing of evil!—prophet still, if bird or devil!—
Whether Tempter sent, or whether tempest tossed thee here ashore,
    Desolate yet all undaunted, on this desert land enchanted—
    On this home by Horror haunted—tell me truly, I implore—
Is there—is there balm in Gilead?—tell me—tell me, I implore!”
            Quoth the Raven “Nevermore.”
    “Prophet!” said I, “thing of evil!—prophet still, if bird or devil!
By that Heaven that bends above us—by that God we both adore—
    Tell this soul with sorrow laden if, within the distant Aidenn,
    It shall clasp a sainted maiden whom the angels name Lenore—
Clasp a rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name Lenore.”
            Quoth the Raven “Nevermore.”
    “Be that word our sign of parting, bird or fiend!” I shrieked, upstarting—
“Get thee back into the tempest and the Night’s Plutonian shore!
    Leave no black plume as a token of that lie thy soul hath spoken!
    Leave my loneliness unbroken!—quit the bust above my door!
Take thy beak from out my heart, and take thy form from off my door!”
            Quoth the Raven “Nevermore.”
    And the Raven, never flitting, still is sitting, still is sitting
On the pallid bust of Pallas just above my chamber door;
    And his eyes have all the seeming of a demon’s that is dreaming,
    And the lamp-light o’er him streaming throws his shadow on the floor;
And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor
            Shall be lifted—nevermore!

 

Clara Gone?

Is Clara’s number up today?

Think about it.

The next episode is the 2-Part season finale, which starts with an episode starring ONLY Peter Capaldi.

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Go ‘ne further if you don’t want to know (or speculate)…

Official Sypnosis:

“Heaven Sent” – “Trapped in a world unlike any other he has seen, the Doctor faces the greatest challenge of his many lives. One final test. And he must face it alone. Pursued by the fearsome creature known only as the Veil, he must attempt the impossible. If he makes it through, Gallifrey is waiting…”

“Hell Bent” – “If you took everything from him, betrayed him, trapped him, and broke both his hearts…how far might the Doctor go? Returning to Gallifrey, the Doctor faces the Time Lords in a struggle that will take him to the end of time itself. Who is the Hybrid? And what is the Doctor’s confession?”

Then  add…

But actor Peter Capaldi appeared to silence reports on Friday night’s The Graham Norton Show when he said Saturday night’s Face The Raven would be ‘the end of the line’ for Clara Oswald.

Peter, 57, has been assisted by the 29-year-old companion for two years, and as he admitted that her exit would be sad and strange. (Daily Mail)

“It’s a sad one, gripping and very strange. And it’s the end of the line for Clara Oswald played by Jenna Coleman who’s been my companion for the last two years. It’s the end of her story. I don’t want to go into the details of it, but it’s sad.”

On whether Clara can return, Capaldi said: “Sometimes people can’t come back. Sometimes things happen that they can’t come back from.”

It makes since and I kind of thought that when I heard about the finale’s structure.

Will “Doctor” Clara lay down her life for her Companion Rigsy? (only she doesn’t regenerate).

Find out tonight. 🙂

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Companionship

Are you a member of the British actors’ union and have a yen to travel through time and space with a two-hearted alien in a small (but bigger-on-the-inside!) blue box? Then, we bring good news! Doctor Who executive producer Steven Moffat says that the search for an actor to play the titular Time Lord’s new traveling companion is still in the “very, very early stages.”

“There’s nothing really to report,” continues the showrunner. “We’ll make a noise when we’ve got something to say, don’t worry.”

The need for a new companion has been prompted by the looming departure of Jenna Coleman from the show. For the past few years, Coleman has played teacher and temporal explorer Clara Oswald, but in September the actress revealed that the current, 12-episode run of shows would be her last. In fact, rumor has it that Coleman’s character will depart the show in the next episode, which is called “Face the Raven” and will be broadcast on BBC America, Nov. 21. Moffat, predictably, declined to comment on that possibility but did reveal that this Saturday’s show, the 10th of the season, would kick off a climactic trilogy of interconnected adventures for Peter Capaldi’s Doctor.

“[The season] ends with three episodes, all of which cliffhanger into each other in a quite major way,” says the executive producer. “They’re very linked, but it won’t feel like a three-part story. In a traditional Doctor Who way, it builds to a huge climax in episode 12.” (EW)

Which means either the Moff is lying 🙂 or Jenna is in all the episodes and no decision will be made until early next year when they start filming for Series 10 (if they do).

The BBC has confirmed that the final two episodes of Series 9, Heaven Sent / Hell Bent will both run in extended timeslots.

The penultimate episode Heaven Sent will run for 55 minutes and has been confirmed for transmission at 8.05pm on BBC One on 28th November.

The series finale Hell Bent will then run in a 65 minute timeslot starting at 8pm on 5th December.

The two episodes will deal with the consequences of Episode Ten, Face the Raven, which can be seen this weekend.

Face The Raven: The Doctor and Clara, with their old friend Rigsy, find themselves in a magical alien world, hidden on a street in the heart of London.

Sheltered within are some of the most fearsome creatures of the universe… and Ashildr (Maisie Williams)! With a death sentence hanging over their heads, not all of the intruders will get out alive.

Meaning Rigsy bites it! 🙂

The Sandman Cometh

I found a lot of good gold for a column in this review of “Sleep No More”.

Want to really freak out a Doctor Who viewer? Find a threat the Doctor is helpless against—a threat he never fully understands, and doesn’t triumph over.

And of course the worst part is that in the end, the enemy is us. What’s scarier than the Doctor’s childhood fear, the monster under the bed? How about the monster behind our eyes? The one wearing our skin?

We are our own worst enemy. 🙂

Whatever the case, the Sandmen are living nightmares—the repressed desires and wounds and sufferings that we generally deal with and assimilate in our sleep. “Every morning, we wipe the sleep from our eyes, and that keeps us safe,” the Doctor says, “safe from the monsters inside.” But without sleep, these expressions of our basest unconscious have come to horrifying life.

Think of “Forbidden Planet”. The monster was born of The ID (sorry if that’s a spoiler) of the scientist who created it without knowing he created it.

The Sandmen may be lumbering around trying to eat people, but they’re not the real monsters here. There may be floating dust that somehow hijacks people and makes them into cameras, but that’s not the real menace either.

It’s the horror movie those dust-cameras are making—that is the actual threat here.

From the episode’s very first moment, Rasmussen (whose first name, Gagan, sounds a lot like the German for “against”) announces to us that we shouldn’t be watching it. A warning we ignore, and so we fall into its trap, revealed at the end: The movie itself is the infection, not the Sandmen or the dust. By watching it, we have supposedly ourselves become carriers of the scourge that will wipe out humanity.

The very fact that you watch the episode and ignored the warning at the beginning is a wonderful narrative device that found very compelling and well done.

And the Doctor can’t quite wrap his head around it, because he’s let himself become part of the movie. He’s inside it, so he can’t see it in its entirety. But we can. Or at least we can try.

We are the next “victims”. The Doctor is not going to save you. Sweet Dreams…

A lot of people will probably find the episode deeply unsatisfying because of this indeterminacy. Personally, I found it compelling—despite the episode not really hitting all of its most ambitious marks—because a couple of interesting thoughts jumped right out at me as I watched Rasmussen’s face blow away.

For example, the fact that the episode ended without closure—not simply the Doctor not winning, but also never quite explaining what the hell was going on—made me think about how over-reliant I have become as a viewer on the Doctor to be my deus ex machina/problem solver/master of exposition. I don’t have to figure out the mystery myself, because I have a trusty Time Lord along.

They subverted the format and “broke the rules” in an exceptionally clever manner.

One of the more “original” idea to come along in quite a awhile.

But Doctor Who has long been invested in the question of whether the Doctor makes his companions weaker or stronger by helping them out of a jam or letting them fend for themselves. What if my approach to the show is making me somehow more naïve in my approach to the world, like the gullible Wide Awakes who think Morpheus is helping them?

We’ll always have Paris… 🙂

And if Doctor Who fills me with the longing to escape this world, to be like its hero and explore all of time and space, isn’t that more than just simple escapism? Doesn’t it reveal a desire to become somehow better than lowly, Earth-bound humans? We only need look to Ashildr/Lady me (was that her voiceover in the “next time” preview for episode 10?) to see where that could lead us.(The Observer)

After all, she has all the time in the world. 🙂

Review: Sleep No More (aka Blair Witch Who)

sleep no more

WARNING! “You must not watch this. I’m warning you. You can never unsee it.”

WARNING! “You must not watch this. I’m warning you. You can never unsee it.”

WARNING! “You must not watch this. I’m warning you. You can never unsee it.”

WARNING! “You must not watch this. I’m warning you. You can never unsee it.”

It will scare the sleep out of you! 🙂

“You must not watch this. I’m warning you. You can never unsee it.” The admonition comes at the top of the episode from Professor Gagan Rassmussen, who has made a scrappy video of the events that befell Le Verrier, an Indo-Japanese laboratory in orbit above Neptune.

Mark Gatiss’s Sleep No More uses the “found footage” format favoured by that sub-genre of horror movies, kickstarted by The Blair Witch Project and perfected in Cloverfield. This is by no means as chilling, although Gatiss does break new ground for Doctor Who. For the first time ever, there’s no title sequence; there are also no easy answers.(Radio Times)

I like this episode a lot. The origin of the Sandmen, not so much.I just didn’t buy it.

But the overall episode was very engaging otherwise. The Narrator and ultimate bad guy (Reese Shearsmith-n who was briefly The 2nd Doctor at the end of An Adventure in Space & Time) was a creepy dude.

While the anti-capitalism and anti-corporate sentiment was a 2X4 to the head with nail sticking out I have no doubt it could give someone  the idea to try and create such a thing.

But I have to wonder about it from a different angle.

These days especially, aren’t we all saying, “But I don’t have enough for that.” constantly.

It’s why I’m not watching “Arrow” or “The Flash” because I didn’t start watching them from the beginning and don’t have the time off to bing watch that much back catalog. And those are just 2 TV Shows.

I have books and films and more I’d like to catch up on. I just don’t have the time. I have to get 8 hours of sleep to function.

But imagine if you could be awake for a month, what on that terminally long “to-do” list would you get done.

All of it and more I’d bet.

Which is where Ashildr probably slots into the next episode. She has that time, just not in that way.

It will be interesting to see how it ties in with this episode, if it does.

38th Century and 21st Century. Hmmmm… 🙂

I have never watched “The Blair Witch Project” but I am aware of it and it’s style.

The switching between the greyish “security cam” footage and the crisper more “regular” type footage was a bit jarring at first but the overall effect they were going for was good.

With the Narrator sounding like a victim recording his explanation for the future to camera but when you find out the footage is from the monsters themselves you start to smell a rat, but it’s not until the end when you are told the WHOLE EPISODE is a gigantic con-job by a psychopathic humanity-ending nut case!

“You must not watch this. I’m warning you. You can never unsee it.”

Ah, man!

Sucker!  🙂

Brilliant.

Loved it.

Overall, it’s one of my favorites for the season. I will overlook the “sleep dust” BS that I just can’t buy it piling up and becoming creatures.

It is formed by a combination of mucus (in the case of the eyes, consisting of mucin discharged from the cornea or the conjunctiva), nasal mucus, blood cells, skin cells, or dust. Rheum from the eyes is particularly common. Dried rheum is in common usage called sleep, e.g., to have sleep in one’s eyes). —Wikipedia

The concept and the execution of it are top notch so I can suspend that disbelief to enjoy the sheer brilliance of it.

And I have to give the line of the episode to Capaldi for the “But I get to name the monsters” gag and the very sly, very nerdy, mention of the origins of naming of The Silurians, which is a complete misnomer that even the monsters themselves use. Hilarious.

Having no Title Sequence for the episode works for the effect they wanted, but I still think a clean title sequence at the very beginning (with no pre-credit sequence) would not have hurt the episode at all.

A great episode. Many kudos to Mark Gatiss, who I still want to take over from Moffat as showrunner.

Next Week, Doctor Who does Harry Potter…And is it the end for The Impossible Girl