Doctor Who – Asylum of the Daleks
Review by Ken Parker
(Mild Spoilers)
Here I was, sitting back to watch
another premiere episode of Doctor Who, hoping that the excellence of
Steven Moffat would show up in the series that he is producing. His
writing during Russell T. Davies's era was outstanding and with two
seasons of cluttered confusion under his producing belt, I am still
waiting for a return to greatness.
Right away I noticed Asylum of the
Daleks was lacking some of the loud obnoxious character moments that
Amy and the Doctor seem to have all too often. They are much more
subdued in this one and Karen Gillan acts her socks off, a rarity in
her time. Her range from mad wife to scared girl to rediscovering her
love for Rory works well in the story. Moffat reboots their
relationship of sorts by reminding the audience that they are truly
in love.
The Doctor is not as confident and
annoying as he was last season and Matt Smith seems to have a pretty
good relationship with Oswin and in a way this is the most important
and sad part of the entire story. Moffat can be great at setting up
a surprise within his stories, one that you can't quite get your head
around until the final reveal but when it does happen, you are blown
away. Oswin's fate is certainly the shock of the episode and for
reasons I will not go into (Spoilers) was shocking from the moment
she appeared. (What?.... Wait a minute...... I thought.....).
Moffat does tend to go all out and
makes things bigger than they need to be. The number of Daleks in
the story is vast but not over used. I had already mentioned that
the most scary Cybermen moments in the new series were the ones in
The Pandorica Opens. Moffat does inject some creepiness back into
the Daleks with the “crazy” ones in the Asylum and it is good to
see the RTD bronze Daleks back in the fold. We still see some of
those plasticy Moffat ones but thankfully they are in the background.
Speaking the Daleks, did anyone play
the “spot the Dalek game”? I did. If you hadn't heard, it was
suggested that every previous style Dalek was going to appear in this
story. Okay, that will be fun to see them. How many different types
did you see? 10? 20? I watched carefully and I spotted 2. That is
all. The Special Weapons Dalek was obvious and I saw, for sure, one
old style Dalek. I saw others that may have been other Daleks but
when they are all covered in dust and in the shadows, it is hard.
People online have stated they have gone back and have seen a few but
all of them? False advertising I think. How much would it have
taken to just hear in the background “Alpha!” “Beta!”
“Omega!” or something along that lines.
Okay, now what about the story? The
idea is sound. The Daleks calling in the Doctor to help them is fine
and the whole Oswin plot is logical and powerful. Some of the
Amy/Rory scenes seemed familiar as yet again Amy might be going
through a transformation (Didn't this happen to her with the weeping
Angels two seasons ago?) Amy and Rory needing reminding that they
are in love was done yet again. Still, these are only minor and
really they are more secondary to the story. The story was not
frantic and was not hidden by gimmicks and blustering dialog. There
were not many overlapping cliffhangers and questions and beyond just
one big question for the audience (Why is she.....?) Moffat manages
to give a concise and small story with plenty of emotion and
adventure. I just hope he doesn't give in to the fannish need to tie
everything in together and hopefully Amy is not still infected or
that the whole “Remember” motif is not important later on.
Beyond the obvious , keep the story where it is.
We now have a reboot of sorts with the
Daleks and the Doctor, which is definitely refreshing because the
more the universe knows the Doctor, the less interesting and fun
Doctor Who is.
Moffat has started the season off very
well and I cross my fingers that it will remain this way, although
the imagery of the Doctor riding a dinosaur is not helping my
expectations one bit.
I am a sucker for the Doctor and Daleks. I loved the whole toss-up with the question and the girl and deletion of Predator etc. I don't mind a bit of emotion, even a "remember you really love me/I love you." I think stories about loving are not out of place in a story that is also about marvelous adventures and perils. And vice versa. After waiting so long, Doctor Who is back. I am sure I will re-watch this after initial cheering, and maybe find things to poke at with a stick. Or not. Because sometimes things can just plain be enjoyed.
ReplyDeleteI used to watch every Doctor Who episode twice before the next episode aired. I have less time available to do this but in the past couple of seasons I have only had two episodes that I thought was worthy of re-watching - "Vincent and the Doctor" and "The Girl Who Waited". I may give "Asylum of the Daleks" another viewing this week!
ReplyDeleteI have watched it already a second time. I still like it! This time I watched the iTunes available prequel, which enhanced the DOctor's new Dark Side (which I confess I am embracing).
ReplyDeleteWith much of the creative visions of others, which is what Doctor Who is, I await with happy anticipation to see how the Doctor plays out in the next groups of episodes. I think the character lends itself to all manner of interpretation, and there is no one "correct" vision thereof. It cannot be. Humans are not even so, much less an alien two-hearted Time Lord.