A Christmas Carol Soundtrack Mega-Review

“I love deadlines. I love the whooshing noise they make as they fly by.”                                                   – Douglas Adams

I think I can say that the following post has become my own personal Duke Nukem Forever. What started out as a quick little review to fill time until The RTD Roundup – Rose Part III has now mutated into a 16,000 word monster, making it the longest post I have ever written for this site. Month after month of toil, blood, sweat, the bedevilled temptress that is Internet surfing and a hefty glob of procrastination has meant promise after promise to get it done has been broken. Hell, after a while I stopped saying when I’d get it done and kept the deadlines I set for myself to myself, since I knew in all likelihood I’d just break it. Still, if you’re reading this, then it means I’ve finally managed to get my act together sufficiently to polish off this gargantuan mass of a post.

But enough of that, what of the purpose of said post? Well, if you’ve somehow read this far without knowing what said purpose is, I congratulate you on your lack of peripheral vision. The rest of you should know that this is a review of Murray Gold’s score to A Christmas Carol. If you’re wondering whether I mean “the one with CG Jim Carrey or the one with Kermit the Frog”, then I’m wondering what the hell you’re doing coming to this site. Continue reading

Is Doctor Who in decline?

It’s the end of 2009, and Doctor Who fans are riding out the last few moments of their tenure as Russell T. Davies’ many beaten wives, and boy was The End of Time an arrestable offence. I don’t know what RTD got out of giving The Master the ability to fly, shoot lasers from his hands and consume vast amounts of food at lightning speed like a Friedberg & Seltzer superhero ‘satire’, nor do I know how much he got for having The Doctor instigate human race circle jerks at every available opportunity, but it should have been ten to fifteen years.

The Whovians took this final mauling in their stride, knowing that Steven Moffat was primed and ready to breach the production office with two bandoleers of brilliance strapped across his chest, canisters of genius gas lining his buckle. Doctor Who was to do away with convoluted, epic for the sake of epic stories that you couldn’t get a rope around, let alone your head, and introduce some sound, logical and entertaining storytelling. After all, Steven Moffat penned the outings of the gas mask boy, the clockwork robots and the weeping angels, while Russell T. Davies created a cross between E.T. and Zippy from Rainbow (or the Slitheen as he insists on calling them). It made perfect sense that Moffat would be the one to eradicate the cloying sentimentality and full blown cobblers that the series was belching forth with aplomb by that stage.

But like his stories, Moffat’s handling of Doctor Who subverted our expectations. Steven Moffat is being hailed for his superiority over Russell T. Davies, because RTD allowed the monstrous Love and Monsters, the fearful Fear Her and the idiotic Idiot’s Lantern to be filmed. Moffat, on the other hand, gave us Victory of the Daleks, in which the Daleks are thwarted by a Professor remembering how much he loves his old girlfriend, Closing Time, in which the Cybermen are thwarted by James Corden asserting his love for his son, and Night Terrors, in which the Dutch dolls are thwarted by a father emphasising the love he has for his son… notice a pattern, here? It was also the power of LURVE that resolved the plot to Moffat’s The Big Bang. LURVE is fast becoming a shamelessly flaunted throwaway resolution that takes Doctor Who out of the realms of sci-fi and unceremoniously stuffs it into the fantasy genre—a square peg in a round hole that Moffat is pioneering.

Yes, Moffat has undone the perception that the TARDIS is a big blue comedy bus, and has worked hard to replenish Doctor Who’s creepy, unsettling air for the 21st century, but the optimistic thunders of his openers aren’t followed by the flashes of lightning the audience anticipates. The tone is better, but the former focus on the Doctor as some kind of demigod has been shifted to the next extreme, and the story-arcs are now barely about the Doctor. Instead, we have to ponder Amy’s highly improbable connections to the latest spree of universe fuckups and her largely dull relationship; taking the “you’re married to the force” sentiment of crime dramas and giving them to Rory to inflict upon Amy (and the audience). We get it, Amy and Rory love each other very much, and every time there’s a bit of doubt as to who Amy loves the most, it’ll always be Rory no matter what because he was ‘the only one out of all the boys that I liked’ and he was the thousand year centurian (he got through that with the power of LURVE, no less) and he died sixty eight times and cut off some of his hair just to be with her; this does not need to be the centerpiece of every arc and every plot. Simon Nye’s superb Amy’s Choice got all of this across in 45 minutes, even managing to balance it out with some Doctor-centric dilemmas along the way; any more flogging of this idea and we might well end up with a hole in the Universe and Moffat’s next plot.

Steven Moffat has made a good start—he is a better writer than Russell T. Davies, but he needs to do away with story arcs that are never satisfyingly resolved and focus on delivering a series of 13 standalone episodes, linked only by continuity, that are scary, funny, sound and pleasing. That way, we might have a consistent stream of excellence on par with episodes such as The Doctor’s Wife, The Rebel Flesh, The God Complex and Flesh and Stone, and not mind molesting carnivals like Let’s Kill Hitler thrown in purely for the sake of having something to expand upon in a later series.

(Reprinted from SCAN Online with permission from the author.)

Characterisation in The God Complex

Dw611 1The first thing that struck me about this episode is how honest and sincere it came across. No longer is the Doctor waving his hands around needlessly and gurning pointlessly into the camera for sheer entertainment value. Instead, he actually responds in a manner worthy of the situation he’s in. Yes, he’s cracking the odd joke, but it’s in sync with the events around him, and not outside of what we would expect someone—anyone—in that situation to be expressing. The Doctor can be funny, angry, aloof, emotional, even outrageously pessimistic, but if all these reactions happen as though they are meant for audience pleasure rather than dramatic plausibility then the whole performance is nullified. And the jokes, told by the Doctor in this episode, are of a man within the believable realms of someone with an experienced sense of humour for a Time Lord of 900+ years to the type of situation presented. We can all make a leap of faith with regards to projecting our own beliefs to sync with that of a traveller who has experienced so much, but to make leap of faith that asks us to believe that any conscious being with a healthy fear of death would just start dancing around and cracking the sort of jokes one would expect to hear in a Saturday night sitcom is just asking too much.

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Miracle Day: First Impressions

My, it has been a while, hasn’t it? Six months may not seem like a long time, but if you look at the Cybermen box set review below and think back to when you first read it, it seems like an eternity ago. In fact, let’s think back to what the world was like when that last post went up:

  • The Big Bang was the most recent episode. We didn’t even know A Christmas Carol’s title, let alone it’s plot.
  • Series Six was still some vague entity off in the distant ether.
  • David Tennant fans were still bitching about how Matt Smith wasn’t as good.
  • Haters of the 2010 theme still had their fingers crossed that it would prove to be the 21st Century equivalent of the Glynn theme (the TV version at least), a one-season mistake that would be looked back on and laughed at.
  • The Sarah Jane Adventures had a bright future, looking set to take the lead over new Doctor Who in season numbers.
  • Torchwood was still dead and looked like it would remain so.
  • Bow ties and fezzes were (and still are) cool, but Stetsons were not.
  • Uh… Osama bin Laden was still alive…
  • Erm… the economy… no, that’s still in the toilet…

Actually, that’s pretty much all that’s changed during Eye of Harmony’s little break. Huh.

But, more importantly, what of the future? Well, I’ve had several projects on the back burner since last December, but due to other commitments I’ve just not had the time to finish them. Now though, with a four month vacation until the start of the new term in October, I’ve got plenty of time to get them all posted for your reading pleasure. In order of priority, here’s what you can expect from me in the coming weeks. Continue reading

Big Finish

From their humble beginnings in the fan community, Nicholas Briggs and his Whovian chums have come so very far. Big Finish continue to produce some of the greatest audio dramas ever, and aren’t showing any signs of letting up yet. As well as their long-standing monthly Doctor Who range, they have also branched-out into other areas, creating original, spin-off and tie-in series.

I think one of the key factors in the success of Big Finish Productions’ output is the quality of the writing. Every story the company produces seems to be lovingly polished and worked into a tight, presentable product, helping along the rest of the production process. Those guys have always pushed the envelope, delivering rich stories with unconventional plot twists and characters. The Doctor Who Unbound range is a case-in-point. Each of these stories presents a possibility that is interesting because of its desire to be unpredictable and brave, taking us out of our comfort zone.
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