Subject: My sense is...
Author:
Posted on: 2019-12-11 16:46:16 UTC

That RTD is basically a fifteen-year-old boy, giggling to himself about all the naughty things he's getting away with. Half the time, that "lol because I can" energy dominates, and things happen just because the script says so. (See my previous gripes about the bits I didn't like in S2.)

It sucks because the other half of the time, I think the show is really good. They had a great cast of characters, and when they focus on that—the tiny group of (mostly) normal people struggling with the extraordinary—it works. They're not the Doctor. They don't have the resources, or the power, or the knowledge. They have to do the best they can with what they've got, and sometimes their best won't be good enough, and it will all take a toll eventually. They're only human. Even Jack.

So, I don't mind dark, and I don't mind edgy, and I definitely don't mind it being leavened with goofy antics (sexual or otherwise) from time to time. The problem is just when it's arbitrary. There is an unfortunate amount of that in S1 and S2. I forgive a lot of it in S1, because it's pretty normal for a show to have a few weird episodes in its first season, while it's still figuring out who it is and what it can actually get away with. It's... not too surprising they didn't get another full season after S2, though. There's a lot of good stuff in there, but it also has the only episode I can totally do without.

I don't think CoE is arbitrary, though, at least not in the way that, e.g., the ending to "Adrift" is. They may not have been happy about being limited to five episodes, but it does seem to have forced them to refine their ideas and make sure the story hung together without any obvious, gaping plotholes. It's doing the thing right. I just don't get why they wanted to do the thing at all, I guess. {= P

~Neshomeh

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