I didn't know this episode was available for free online from BBC America. Normally, I have to wait for the box set to sound off on this stuff.
TimeLord said:
How is Davros even alive? That explosion in season 4 was fairly big. Ok, teleportation, escape pod, etc I can get behind that, but for god sake explain it to the audience how he still lives.
This being a sticking point is one that baffles me from both old and new Who fans. unexplained returns seem like they would make an awesome drinking game. As such,
"Was dead, now I'm not, get over it"
This could actually be a rather fun nod to the overall continuity of the series.
Alternatively, people have theories that this is going to be explained either in this series or the next. People have gone so far to speculate this may deal with Omega or Rani. Omega's already been technically name checked in the Day of the Doctor. And Davros, we don't even really know he was dead. Really, it's best to assume people aren't dead in TV unless it's declared or the rules of the show or it's in some way declared (and even then, not really). I'm not sure how this is specific to Doctor Who or Moffat.
But since we're on the subject, I think no explanation is better than bad explanations. At least here, we can fill in the gaps.
Beyond those issues, the original reason for this episodes characters coming together is the Doctor dying. Again.
And this alsol baffles me. Even if you're just a fan of New Who, Davies had like 500 returns of the very absolutely totally for realz this time last Daleks. He did the "you can never come back from this dimension" thing three or four times. He brought back the Time Lords (or at least some of them) repeatedly, and even created new ones just to have a mini-holocaust.
More to the point, Clara and Missy come together because The Doctor
believes he's going to die. There's a difference between this and the series six plot already. A pretty freaking large one.
Moffat can write single episodes great, but can't write an over-arching plot to save his life.
I disagree. I thought series 5 was the best over-arching plot in New Who (despite not loving the ending). I also think that he's capable of writing great episodes, but he's rather hit or miss. You mention Blink. I adore Blink. I haven't loved a single other use of the Angels in the show. Not a single one. A couple were okay, but still. Moffat displays just how hit or miss he is. This actually is a problem with him as head writer, because he has more power than he did before.
I would argue his arcs aren't particularly worse than Davies, and that he seems to have a plan in mind. I can't imagine it being worse than Bad Wolf or Rose "dying" or The Doctor activating God Mode. Maybe it will be, though. I just don't think he's as bad at overarching plots as people say--especially fans of Davies' plots. This is still not to say it's going to be good, but then, what's good is going to vary from person to person.
But at the same time, maybe that's more the issue. Maybe you're just not as enamoured with a show that's been on the air for a decade as you were at the time it first aired. Maybe this has less to do with quality and more to do with nostalgia glasses. We're talking about a show that first aired 50 years ago, and people have constantly invented new ways for the show to have declined. The best days of the show are usually with your first Doctor, and people will complain about elements even if they existed in other periods (The Doctor never uses guns!).
Honestly, I enjoyed the first episode of series nine. But I think this bumps into one of Moffat's other writing problems: he can only write like 3 different (loosely) female characters. Missy, Tasha Lem, and River Song all have similar voices. If you like the OTT, almost cartoon psychotic, then this is awesome. Missy more or less makes the episode for me. I can get why people wouldn't like that, though.
But none of these writings problems have anything to do with losing anything from Doctor Who. Which is still a weird concept to me, when you consider how much it's changed in each iteration.
Part of me know that young Davros isn't going to die. It complicates too many thing to kill him and erase everything he's done. It would take out the Daleks, his threats to every previous Doctor and the general mayhem the Daleks have caused over the years. Even the validity of the Time War itself. On top of that, I loved the call back to 'Genesis of the Daleks'; "If someone who knew the future pointed out a child to you and told you that child would grow up totally evil, to be a ruthless dictator who would destroy millions of lives... could you then kill that child?"
I find it interesting that you can suspend disbelief here, but not in the realm of your prior complaints. It's like the part where Davros isn't going to die (the destination) isn't as cool as the journey, but then, that's always been the story with The Doctor's Death, as an example. Yeah, The Doctor isn't going to kill Davros, despite the teaser. He's also not going to die.
But watching an episode today compared to series 1s 'Dalek' or 'The Parting of the Ways', I don't feel the same emotion in the characters, the thought put in the story or the excitement to sit down and watch an episode every Saturday. It's not the same as it once was, and while that's not a bad thing, it's not the same program I sat down and drooled over 10 years ago.
Alternatively, you've changed. And comparing one of the best episodes to any given episode will create problems any time you do it, not just with Dalek v Moffat. Hell, most of series 4 sucked compared to the already-mentioned Blink, but it didn't lose anything. I mean, Donna's one of my favourite companions, gets my favourite companion story arc (Amy and Rory could have taken that if they had ended in series 5 or if they had any direction after), and I think series 4 is the best plot arch of the RTD era. But if you compare Partners in Crime to Blink, omh my god the show has gone downhill and I just didn't have the passion to watch anymore.
It just seems like that's the metric you're using, and it seems an unreasonable one.
And while we're at it, there's been nothing Moffat has yet come up with to match the awfulness of Love & Monsters.
This isn't to defend Moffat from all takers, but the animosity for things I think are likely out of his control always astound me. Or for things that are just a part of the show. Especially with a show that's all about the nostalgia goggles. I've spent years doing the exact same defense to people who hate "Nu Who" and seem to think the classic series was full of nothing but treasure, or just ignore anything wrong with it--even to the point where elements that originate in the classic series are used as weapons against the new series.
It's sort of puzzling and to me looks like the working backwards to justify a conclusion rather than following logic to a conclusion.
I mean, it's okaynot to like the stuff anymore. It's been on the air for a decade, and that's still almost a third of my life. More for a huge chunk of the site. But I'm not sure these issues are even new or different enough from RTD or Classic Who to raise an eyebrow, and so the repeated complaints straight-up baffle me.