Subject: It’s not just you. (CW: suicide)
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Posted on: 2019-12-11 10:01:10 UTC

(Apologies for any typos, I’m sneaking in a reply on my phone before a field trip.)

Doctor Who is... dark. Obviously not on the level of Torchwood, but we’re talking a show where Amy committed suicide not knowing if she was in a dream or not, the Time Lords deliberately drove a child to murderous insanity, the Doctor thought he had committed double genocide, the Doctor deliberately setting off the Vesuvius eruption to preserve the timeline, that whole situation in Midnight where that group of humans was willing to throw an innocent victim to whatever the hell that thing was because they thought it would save them, the Time Lords trapping the Doctor for four and a half billion years in a neverending loop of terror, grief, guilt, and suicide...

But they usually don’t get shown on-screen. The Doctor saves the day or someone else saves the Doctor, or the Doctor finds a clever way out, or the really dark moments are brushed under the rug because hey, it’s a family show—we’ll let the adults stew in the horror while the kids are entertained (or pants-wettingly terrified).

In Torchwood, we don’t have the luxury to ignore and forget. We’re presented with it right in front of us, and the camera lingers, the story lingers, and we have to watch these characters every step of the way as they have to live with the consequences of their decisions.

(Side note, Jack, how stupid were you, just waltzing in and telling the 456 to GTFO without a backup plan? It is 100% your fault Ianto died.)

I think that’s partly why I love Torchwood so much when it’s actually written well. when it’s not that’s when we get the flaming dumpster fire that is Cyberwoman but that’s neither here nor there...

Also, do let me know when you’ve seen Miracle Day! It’s not as tightly written as CoE, but it’s my favourite season of Torchwood for, uh, several of the reasons I listed above.

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