Fun and melodrama - Dr. Who
Jul. 5th, 2008 10:20 pmThat was great fun - which pretty sums up Doctor Who since its reinvention a few years ago. As ever, Russell T. Davies has fused old and new well. He's also very good at making connections between separate episodes, dropping in enough clues to make the final episode be a true climax for the whole series - something which works much better than American SF shows such as Lost or Heroes, which never tell a single story in one episode and finish in anticlimaxes. (In addition, the American shows are way too earnest).
The previous three series all had one or two truly excellent episodes, mostly written by Stephen Moffat. This wasn't the case for this series: Moffat's story was no better or worse than the average. The best episodes were written by Davies himself.
I've also had a lot of fun this series from laughing at the comments from too-serious fans who critise the programme on various blogs. Some of them seem to like everything about Dr. Who apart from the actual television programme. I can't work out why they don't just admit to themselves that they don't like it and spend their time doing something else.
The previous three series all had one or two truly excellent episodes, mostly written by Stephen Moffat. This wasn't the case for this series: Moffat's story was no better or worse than the average. The best episodes were written by Davies himself.
I've also had a lot of fun this series from laughing at the comments from too-serious fans who critise the programme on various blogs. Some of them seem to like everything about Dr. Who apart from the actual television programme. I can't work out why they don't just admit to themselves that they don't like it and spend their time doing something else.