Season 7, Episode 1
“Well, this is new.”
This is, by Steven Moffat’s own admission,
supposed to be a “big” season for Doctor
Who, one that plays down the serialization that became so frustrating at
the end of last season and instead gives us lots of “blockbuster” type hours
instead. And how does one go ahead and kick of such a season? By bringing back
the Daleks, of course.
So I was fairly intrigued when the idea of the
Dalek Asylum was raised early in the episode (to say nothing of the new form of
tech, the Dalek Puppet), something that seemed to promise a look at the
“insane” Dalek. I couldn’t help but wonder: What’s it like when an alien with Nazi-like
views of purity becomes even more insane, to the point where its own people
couldn’t stomach it? Unfortunately, and quite disappointingly, this didn’t seem
to be a question that the show was all that intent on answering, instead giving
us Daleks that were more “broken” than insane (most, interestingly, due to
their past encounters with the Doctor), something that doesn’t really pop off
the screen as much as insanity might.
Well, okay, there was one exception to this fact. But that sort of depends on how you
look at it. That exception comes in the form of one Seuss-ily named Oswin
Oswald, a young girl turned Dalek whose true nature is kept hidden even from
herself, and whose existence in the Dalek Asylum raises and interesting
question. Is she there solely because she accidentally crashed landed on the
Asylum planet and that meant she was stuck? Or did the Daleks keep her there
because as intelligent as she was, she couldn’t get rid of her pesky humanity,
and that meant that they saw her as “insane” relative to their own cold logic?
Sanity may just be relative after all, and what does that say about all the
other Daleks trapped down in the Asylum?
Really, I should have seen the truth of Oswin’s
true nature coming from a mile away. This is not to knock Moffat’s writing for
the episode, which was as fleet-footed as ever. But as with the best stories
that provide a final gut-punching twist at the end, there were signs along the
way – like the fact that we only ever saw Oswin from one point of view, and the
increasingly, almost limitless bounds to her intelligence and hacking acumen –
and coupled with Moffat’s propensity for including twists in his stories, it’s
one of those things that seems so obvious in hindsight.
Yet I found myself too distracted by the fact that
Oswin was played by Jenna-Louise Coleman, who was previously and widely announced to be the new companion to take the place of Amy and Rory when their
characters get written out at the end of the season. It certainly seemed a bit
odd for the show to introduce the character so early in the season (doing it as
part of the Christmas special would have been my bet), but the pre-knowledge of
the actor’s position on the show, as well as Oswin’s engaging and vivacious
personality, made it appear as if the character was meant to stay. (In fact,
this may have been the reason that the normally tight-lipped Moffat decided to
release this bit of casting news so early, so as to make sure the usually
knowledgeable Who audience was taken off-guard.)
Anyways, while the charming and ingratiating nature
of Oswin was obviously there to help sell the shock of her Dalek nature, as
well as to make sure that she will be welcomed by a fan base that still cares
deeply for Amy and Rory, it also helps to service Moffat’s attempts to
dimensionalize and humanize the Daleks. There have been many attempts since the
show’s return to just this, to explore the psyche of this alien beyond their
need to EXTERMINATE, to look beyond their hate, but most have fallen flat or
only served to show the complex position the Daleks will wrangle themselves
into in order to carry out their xenocidal mission. Here, Moffat not only
managed to work in another believable emotion for the Daleks to express (fear,
which we’ve seen before in regards to the Doctor), but also used Owsin to
explore that complicated relationship between Dalek machinery and those that
are forced to inhabit it. In Owsin’s case, we see that it’s still possible for
free will to win out over machine programing (something that we’ve seen in the
past with the Cybermen), and that one’s humanity can remain intact. To what end
does this mean that other Daleks might break from the EXTERMINATE protocol? We
don’t rightly know just yet, but this episode certainly leaves open a door to
discuss that possibility later on down the line.
During all of this narrative chicanery and high-minded
discussion of identity, sort of lost in the shuffle were Amy and Rory
themselves, as well as their marriage problems. While this was something that
was hinted at with the “Pond Life” shorts that were released online this past
week, it was left to the episode to do the heavily lifting, and I put an
emphasis on the word “heavy”. The show has spent much of the last two seasons
showing us just how much the two love one another, that in order for them to
separate, there would have to be something quite substantial for them to seek a
divorce. And while Amy’s inability to conceive would be a large and
understandable issue for most couples, Amy and Rory aren’t most couples, and it
becomes hard to buy that that would drive such a wedge between them.
Couple that with the fact that they are back
together again by the end of the hour after merely talking it out in one conversation, and it comes off as merely a
manufactured bit of drama, another something to kick up brief interest in Amy
and Rory’s relationship, because perhaps the writers have run out of ideas.
Sure, it was neat to see it as another problem for the Doctor fix using some
underhanded trickery, but we don’t really need to see the Doctor fix yet
another problem to prove his omnipotence. He can kill a bunch of Daleks with a
single explosion, and help one particular, confused Dalek reach an important
bit of self-discovery.
Next Week:
Dinosaurs! On a spaceship!
Quotes and
Other Thoughts:
So, how do you think that Coleman will be coming
back to the show? Through some timey-wimey travel that sees the Doctor picking
her up before she crashes into the Aslysum planet? Or will she come back at a
twin-sister, cousin, or some other relative of Oswin’s, as the show is wont to
do?
Yeah, I thought time travel as well.
“What color?....Sorry, there weren’t any good
questions left.”
“Don’t be fair to the Daleks when they’re firing
me at a planet.”
“Bad combo – no sense of humor and that chin.”
“We’re all ears.” “There’s a nose joke there if
anyone wants to pick that up.”
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