So today is the final story for Matt Smith as the Doctor
(although not his final appearance). Another thing that is worth noticing is
that this is the 800th episode of Doctor Who. The 700th episode
was Aliens of London and its amazing to think how much the show has changed
since then. This story is the final part of the Doctor trilogy and it was
always going to be difficult to match what was seen in Day of the Doctor and
what I think Steven Moffat has done is to not try but to forget about that story
so that this story gets the chance to say goodbye to Matt Smith. Matt Smith up
until this day had been Doctor for 1,454 days which is 14 days short of David
Tennant and is now the fourth longest serving Doctor in terms of days served
and seventh in terms of episodes.
The Doctor starts the episode with a Cyberman head called
Handles and it has a different voice to a normal Cyberman. When handles dies
later on in the episode its quite a sad moment. I cant quite believe that I
find it sad that a head has died. There is a moment where Matt Smith reveals
that his hair is in fact a wig and this was because he had to have a buzz cut
(shrugs shoulders) for a film he was doing and I didn’t realise this at the
time but he isn’t the only one wearing a wig because Karen Gillan wears a wig
because she had to shave her head because of being in Guardians of the Galaxy.
The Silence make a returns as do the Weeping Angels and of
course there is a final appearance of the crack in the wall. It’s like Matt
Smith’s greatest hits which is probably what Smith deserves. The Silence aren’t
the Silence that we have seen because now they appear to be religious members
of the silence which I don’t understand personally but what the hell. The
Weeping Angels get to have their moment to shine and it was short but sweet. There
is a wooden Cyberman that appears. I like the look of it but sadly because its
impractical it doesn’t last very long in the story but from a visual point of
view, it was a success.
The Doctor arrives in a town called Christmas on Trenzalore.
The Doctor remains on Trenzalore to defend it from the aliens that are orbiting
it. He cant leave without sacrificing Gallifrey and he cant leave because they
will destroy the planet and the Timelords chance to come back. The Doctor
becomes really old and this is where the Doctor defeats the Daleks but it is
also where he is forced to regenerate.
This story deals with the small issue of regenerations
because due to the War Doctor and the Doctor using a regeneration back in
Journeys end, this is the final Doctor. However Steven Moffat being the smart
cookie that he is uses the crack in the wall as a way of basically breaking the
rules that have been around since The Deadly Assassin. Even though it was a
throwaway line by Robert Holmes, it has become an unbreakable rule until now
and I love that it must have annoyed a lot of people. The Timelords using the
crack to reset his regenerations and I like that one story after they returned
they are interfering.
The final scene is really nice and isn’t overly sentimental
like Tennant’s was. Smith’s final speech to Clara about change coming is a good
one and it’s the latest in a long line of good speeches from Smith because
Smith has a way that makes you forget everything that is going on around him
and just focus on him. Its one of the things that I will miss about Matt Smith.
Jenna Coleman is quite good in this episode but for large portions of this
story she seems to be on her own or at least without the Doctor. On a separate
note, Sheila Reid returns to Doctor Who after previously appearing in Vengeance
on Varos back in 1985.
It was a surprise that Amy Pond came back for a cameo. For
some reason Karen Gillan sounds different and when she says raggedy man she doesn’t
sound Scottish. It could be argued that because its in his head, she wouldn’t sound
the same but I just think it would have been nice if she had sounded more Scottish
which isn’t a line I think has been written in a blog review before.
Some people were quite surprised that the actual
regeneration was so short. There is no rule that it has to be long but it was
still good that they went with something different because people would
probably have complained that the regeneration effect was repetitive. Peter
Capaldi’s brief moment in the episode is perhaps a little less bonkers than
Matt Smith’s first few moments back in 2010. I think that there was a clearer
indication of what Capaldi’s Doctor would be like which wasn’t the case when
Matt Smith first appeared.
I don’t think that this story was one that was heavy on a
plot and just seemed to try and tie up all the loose ends that Steven Moffat
had started during the Matt Smith era. I think that Smith’s era has been a good
one and whilst there have been a few bumps along the way (Curse of the Black
Spot for example), this era of the show has been a consistently good one and
one that is partly down to Matt Smith and partly (perhaps more) down to Steven
Moffat. As I embark on the final part of this marathon, I do so knowing that
there are some good stories coming up and also a good Doctor coming up.
No comments:
Post a Comment