Logline
Traps are sprung and old enemies unite as the Doctor and Belinda finally arrive home to find a very different world. Can the Doctor see the truth before midnight arrives?
Written by: Russell T Davies
Directed by: Alex Sanjiv Pillai
I’m not sure what I just watched, but it was a pretty amazing bridge from the ISC into the season finale.
I thought there was going to be more of a payoff to the surname Zufall (“coincidence”), which seems to contradict the wish granting thing we got. And at this stage, the Rani doesn’t seem particularly scientific, but more like a magician transforming people into
newtsanything except newts.The bone beasts were an impressive visual, but I’m not sure what purpose they served other than spectacle? Maybe that’s something to solve next Saturday. If not, they seem to be so superfluous the show went to great lengths to show us they literally didn’t even leave footprints.
I was not sold on Rogue’s love letter from hell, he could have been kept on ice for a later season. Maybe I’m just more sparing with declarations of love, but it seemed a little overblown considering their brief history? Looks like Susan got thrown into the same scene in post, and I think she would have made a weightier messenger.
However, along with all the other barbs about men absolutely not loving other men, and the “girl>wife>mother” sequence of a woman’s life, it adds another creepy shade of beige to Conrad’s ideal world. I had a good chuckle that all of that is intended to fail in the Rani’s larger scheme. Fuck off Conrad, have another pink fat sandwich for the road.
So this episode’s deity is just randomly born of humans, and anyway just lies giggling in a cot to feed Conrad’s delusion? That was underwhelming, but okay. On to the next theme.
The undercurrent that questioning dominant narratives can crack their grasp on reality is more powerful and relevant than it felt at a first viewing. Where there’s doubt there’s hope. Especially when the narrator (literally doing a Cee Beebies storytime) is a fascistoid influencer who could have been drag’n’dropped from youtube or tiktok.
And it’s of course very RTD to place one of the perspectives through cracks in (normative) reality with the marginalised dispossessed — besides the disabled in the camp I’m pretty sure I spied at least one person in drag. What is the line, “it’s easier to see things from the outside”? Glad Ruby found her tribe, and some purpose for her “73 yards” trials.
The bone palace was an amazing set, and the “doubt precogs” (I forget what they were called) clashed nicely with their steampunk Borg design. Why do their elongated tar pit hands remind me of Micky the idiot getting eaten by a bin?
The little things set up for next time:
- What’s up with Poppy? Like an inverse Pinocchio, she was a real child all along, and that’s somehow important?
- Were the Doctor and the Rani lovers once, or something else? That’s new, I’m interested how it’ll play out, though it feels like saddling the Doctor with a nuclear family, a male heartthrob, and a distant female ex is a bit much for one episode?
- Considering Mel’s bin was full of doubtful former mugs, I’m guessing she has more of a role to play with the dispossessed than we saw here.
That big reveal: Omega. Really? I thought he was an empty suit of armour in a black hole. Guess not 🤷
Sutekh had a bunch of story potential that wasn’t cashed in on in last season finale. Maybe this will be the opposite, but right now I couldn’t care less about Omega. There are so many other fish to fry in this story, and he’s just leftovers from
3050 years ago.This may sound overly negative, but as a whole I actually enjoyed the episode a lot. The middle third is never going to be as impressive as the start or end, but “Wish world” kept the mystery going and raised the stakes a good deal in the process.
Can’t wait until the final episode.
[Edit: forgot just how long ago “The three Doctors” was]
I thought there was going to be more of a payoff to the surname Zufall (“coincidence”), which seems to contradict the wish granting thing we got.
Oh, interesting - I didn’t realize that was the translation. I guess that ties in to “The Church on Ruby Road” and how luck and coincidences can affect reality, in this case leading to Desidirum. A bit of a deep cut that I barely remembered.
The bone beasts were an impressive visual, but I’m not sure what purpose they served other than spectacle?
That’s sort of my issue with episodes of this nature in general - we know it’s not real, it will (probably) be undone by the end of the season, so a lot of it is just there to be weird.
I was not sold on Rogue’s love letter from hell
Me neither, though I was not as high on “Rogue” as many people were last year. Hopefully it’s leading to a more significant return soon, and doesn’t fizzle out like the Captain Jack cameo during the Chibnall run, though I’m sure that one imploded for very different reasons.
Fuck off Conrad, have another pink fat sandwich for the road.
I really did enjoy the ways in which Conrad’s shitty worldview infested this world. I’m sure the Rani was all too happy to let that happen, fostering doubts in those whose lives were less than ideal.
The undercurrent that questioning dominant narratives can crack their grasp on reality is more powerful and relevant than it felt at a first viewing.
Agreed - this is one of those episodes that throws some really compelling ideas out there, without really slowing down to examine them.
And it’s of course very RTD to place one of the perspectives through cracks in (normative) reality with the marginalised dispossessed
The line about Ruby walking past their encampment every day and ignoring it was…not subtle (and that’s a good thing - I’m over subtlety).
Omega
Another classic thing that I’m aware of, but will have to do some homework on.
On the whole, I’m with you. It was a decent episode, I was entertained, but by its nature it’s mostly an exercise in table-setting for the big finale.
Catching up on Omega is as easy as Rani homework was. His broadcast appearances are pretty scarce.
It’s “The three Doctors” and “Arc of infinity” — and again the second one really does feel like homework — plus “Remembrance of the Daleks” for additional credit, even though it’s only the Hand of Omega that appears there.
But you sort of owe yourself any chance to watch Sylvester McCoy dropping clues to the Cartmel plan, so do take “Remembrance” if you can!
Let’s see, “Arc of Infinity” and “Remembrance of the Daleks” are both four-parters - I should be able to manage that.
Yeah, and “The three Doctors” is 100 minutes as part of Tales of the TARDIS. Should be possible in a week or so 👍