Name: Anonymous 2012-09-30 13:52
Foreword:
These seasons go by way too fast. I'm not counting the christmas special, so after this, I'll have to wait until next year to see more Doctor Who, hoping to catch a few good ones among them.
I'm looking forward to this episode, though, because it features weeping angels and is written by the main writer of the show, so while I don't think that you can really do much with weeping angels that the slender games hasn't done to death already, this episode better be good. Unfortunately I've also read spoilers on Wikipedia, so I also know in advance that this is the last we'll ever see of Amy and Rory, which is strange, because the weeping angels are supposed to be the kind kind of assassins, that only send people back in time, and that's nothing that a time-machine can't fix. They even have a mobile phone to call for help with.
Well, on to watching...
Overall this episode was fantastic. It was moving in terms of shivers and tears, and seeing the tombstone made me scream out loud.
I've come to expect big leaps in-between the main writer and the episodes he gives away to guest writers to write, because all of a sudden Doctor Who has been unwriting himself from history, just like that. It's almost as if I'm watching two different shows.
However, when Rory tries to create a paradox, it feels sudden, like all the options hasn't been considered and exhausted, and there's just no reason why Amy wouldn't die from jumping with him, so she must have jumped due to a broken heart, and during the end of that scene, nobody was watching the giant angel, which is just shown in one single pose.
...but in the end, this episode was beautiful. Naturally, it was beautiful in Steven Moffats emotional way compared to Russel T. Davies thought-out way, but it was beautiful none-the-less.