Case (
case) wrote in
fandomsecrets2013-01-31 07:36 pm
[ SECRET POST #2221 ]
⌈ Secret Post #2221 ⌋
Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.
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Notes:
Secrets Left to Post: 01 pages, 022 secrets from Secret Submission Post #317.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

no subject
(Anonymous) 2013-02-01 01:29 am (UTC)(link)no subject
(Anonymous) 2013-02-01 01:39 am (UTC)(link)He's pretty explicitly written as being a moral paragon, sometimes to ridiculous standards (refusing to use weapons, being angry when anyone else does is a pretty bad one). Fans like getting into debates about the ways he's wrong or misguided, but I think it's pretty clear the showrunners do not mean for him to come off as misguided.
In fact, I'd say it's Moffat spends way too much time addressing what he felt was a fault in RTD's writing by constantly calling out Eleven for the sort of actions he'd make as Ten and get away with.
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(Anonymous) 2013-02-01 01:52 am (UTC)(link)But yeah, IA, I have the exact opposite problem with Moffat. All the way through season 6 I constantly felt like yelling "OKAY. DOCTOR WRONG. YES. WE GOT IT THE FIRST FOURTEEN TIMES YOU TOLD US THANK YOU VERY MUCH." What would be so wrong with having just one episode centered around hammering home the nice tidy moral of "stop doing bad stuff -> bad stuff stops happening!" I'll never know...
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There seems to be a difference between Ten and Nine here too (I haven't seen enough of Eleven to tell where he fits in, but I do hope he learned something from Ten's mistakes). Nine couldn't bring himself to commit another genocide in the season finale. Ten - at least post-"Journey's End" Ten - probably would have done it.
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(Anonymous) 2013-02-01 04:45 am (UTC)(link)However, it's not. it's a sci-fi family show about a crazy alien in a big blue box who flies around saving people from megalomaniacal villains and pepperpot nazis.
Now, of course that doesn't mean a show like that can't have depth and darkness and ambiguity, but it has to be a different kind of ambiguity. A different method of conveying it, is all. You can have him do something bad that haunts him for a long time. You can have him being repeatedly forced to do bad things, while acknowledging that they're bad and feeling bad about doing those bad things. However, you can't string kids in the audience along, telling them that they should look up to and admire this amazing clever magical guy, who's becoming less and less of a good guy even though no one's saying so, and then finally, after four seasons, suddenly pull the rug out from under those kids' feet and say "surprise! He's actually not very good at all!"
That's the kind of arc you can pull off amazingly and without being annoying for half a season. Maybe for one full season. But not for four whole seasons. Not on a show like Doctor Who. Sure, you'll have come up with a really sublime ending, but the enjoyment of a lot of the glorious, goofy, wonderful, sparkly, fun stuff that comes before that ending is tainted.
(re, your last paragraph: season 5 is wonderful about Eleven systematically dialing back and avoiding repeating his mistakes as Ten and learning to accept and see things that Ten couldn't. Season 6 is awful because it decides viewers were too dumb to understand it in season 5, and does all of season 5's lessons over again, except really obnoxiously.)
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However, it's not. it's a sci-fi family show about a crazy alien in a big blue box who flies around saving people from megalomaniacal villains and pepperpot nazis.
You know, I keep forgetting that DW is supposed to appeal to children as well as adults. Yeah, from a ... producer's? perspective, it probably wasn't the best choice, even if it worked fine for me personally. It's not bad writing in and of itself, but context certainly matters. I really don't think anyone should be expected to remember plot events that took place a fourth or a third of their life ago ...
As for annoying, well, YMMV - like I said, I'm a sucker for this kind of thing and didn't find it annoying at all. Then again, I had the advantage of not watching the show over four years' time and not having to wait a week between episodes and months and months between seasons. I think RTD's Who might really be one of those Better On DVD shows.
(And from your description, it seems like the opposite might be true for Moffat's Who. Argh, I hate it when writers don't trust the viewers to get the point! I can tolerate a bit of heavy-handedness, but not repetitiveness. Both at once? That's just obnoxious.)
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(Anonymous) 2013-02-01 09:37 pm (UTC)(link)*nods* Yes yes! And IA about Better on DVD. I've learned to appreciate 10's issues and season 4 and the specials even though a lot of things about it bothered me first time around, because after rewatching a few times and digging deep into it with other fans, the meta and potential for character analysis is glorious. I could happily read and write pages about that character arc.
However, in my eyes that doesn't justify the really grating and misdirecting way the story was actually presented in the show itself. It's just kind of a bright side of a flawed idea: "hey, sorry about irritating the fuck out of you for four years and capping it off with such unsatisfying disappointment, but at least you have some really juicy meta to dig through!" Also on the bright side, the memory of the stuff that Ten went through made season 5 and the struggles Eleven goes through (especially the finale, and the nature of his relationship with Amy) really interesting before the writers broke out the sledgehammer.