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Doctor Who Episodes

Name: Anonymous 2011-05-08 3:27

Maybe I'm spoiled with Moffats great episodes, where the intrigue is clever and solid, but Steve Thompsons The Curse of the Black Spot made me question why I was watching Doctor Who at all (so naturally I come to 4chan to whine, because I know that you all care very much). It was clear that it was a filler episode even before Wikipedia confirmed it (as it was previous scheduled as the ninth episode, but later easily moved) but very sloppily(?) done.

There was nothing wrong with the basic premise, but the line is crossed when the Doctor "invents" that parallell universes can be linked through reflective surfaces. I'm not a nerd boy expecting everything to be canon, but this was handwaving a solution: "X can be a portal to alien spaceships sometimes."

The Doctor previously mentioned that the myth about sirens was persistent for a valid reason, so this implies that derelict spaceships ROUTINELY seeks out ships at sea with reflective surfaces to project their holographic medical AIs through. The alternative is that... ...the ships somehow crashed into eachother for some reason? ...and the boy infected them with typhoid fever? This is never explained, and yet this is most likely an obvious filler that will never be referred back to or explained further.

...but all these insane things doesn't compare to the finale, where they find Rory strapped to a medical table, because he's been kept alive so that he doesn't drown. His condition is easy to cure: His lungs are filled with water. I can understand that the ship doesn't know how to cure him, but the Doctor is known for his TREMENDOUS skills with alien computers, so this is where he should point his sonic screwdriver to the ships medical bank and explain to it that fluid doesn't belong in human lungs. Alternatively they could manually resusitate his heart and lungs while he's being kept alive.

Instead we have yet another cliché lifesaving scene where Rory magically gets better once Amy has stopped breaking his ribs, all because the series wants to explain to the viewers that she loves him and that he matters. It's so cliché and horribly contrived that what this scene does, is making Rory into an annoying burden.

Name: Anonymous 2011-08-29 14:28

Let's Kill Hitler

This episode was marvelous in pretty much every way except for one. When a Doctor Who episode enters drama territory, it stays there, slowing down things like death scenes into agonizing boring, sappy moments. First time viewers may percieve this drawn out sequence of dying as of appropriate length, but if you're a regular viewer, drawn out demises are getting to be fairly common and very repetitive, and that it's pointed out that the Doctor doesn't actually die there, doesn't really help (although I guess he actually does die).

How River Song goes from being a lost girl in the middle of New York, to being a schoolgirl in England, isn't explained, but I'm guessing she can travel at least in space.

The best part for me, was that they not only managed to save Hitlers life, but also put him in a cupboard and completely forgot about him, because he just wasn't significant in the scope of things.

I couldn't be happier. Well actually, I could be much happier if Moffat wrote more episodes for the show, because now I have to wait until the last episode of the season. Would he have fleshed out these twists and turns into twice the episodes, he could have made the series richer. Well, except for the drawn out death scene.

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