I feel like this one had too many plates spinning at once. On its own, I don't mind the Doctor indulging Courtney and exploring how he interacts with kids in this regeneration. Even though he's not as friendly and cuddly, the fact that he keeps letting her IN the TARDIS is a pretty significant thing, so I like the idea of seeing what he does with her and why. On its own, I don't mind the Doctor and Clara encountering people who are at the end of humanity's rope and who are desperate to save their future no matter the cost. On its own, I don't mind creepy monsters hiding in the dark explained by shaky science.
But this one was trying to do all three of them at once and it just made all of them suffer. Courtney was sidelined so much and had so little to do with the plot she felt more like a token guest star than a character deliberately written into the episode. The other spacemen that landed in the shuttle were killed off so fast to make way for the captain/Clara dichotomy it was almost comical. They could have never existed at all and the episode literally would have been the same--just have the captain land on her own with some sophisticated auto-pilot or something. And the germ monsters got a few jump-scare moments but that was it, they never had enough presence to feel like a real threat. And I'll also say it felt a little too close to a pro-life VS pro-choice thing for my tastes. I really admire Doctor Who's proactive approach to diversity as of late and I really admire what other sci fi shows have done in the past for the sake of promoting good but controversial points of view. But abortion is one of those things that's just a little too ambiguous to have an episode about and make it feel alright. Even if it isn't intentional, it shouldn't have been much of a stretch for the writers to see what sort of themes they were dealing with.
I'm almost willing to forgive all of that because of Clara's fight with the Doctor at the end, though. They've REALLY been building this Doctor up as a jerk, to the point where you're really beginning to wonder why he even bothers trying to save people. If I'm interpreting the preview correctly it looks as though the next episode with the Space Oriental Express will lack Clara, or at least the Doctor will be on his own throughout the escapade. I have a feeling that episode is going to be about the Doctor learning something which will allow him to figure out why Clara is mad at him, and perhaps why he continues to bother. Or at least, if he knows why he bothers, it will be made clear to us the audience.
And I really like this. Tennant and Smith always did their utmost to make their charges feel safe. Even when things got bad and they didn't know things would end well, they would stick by them and tell them it's going to be okay. But Capaldi's Doctor doesn't do this--he doesn't sacrifice anything on the altar of reassurance for his charges. I think he does try just as hard to keep them safe, but he just doesn't sugar coat thing as much, which escalates some situations more and turns certain choices into bitter pills. But there is a line between letting someone make a choice on their own and not offering advice when it's needed, and clearly the Doctor has lost sight of where that line is. Clara wasn't mad that the choice had to be made, she was mad that the Doctor wasn't there to help her make the decision and that he gambled with her without her consent.
The last few Doctors have had their demons: 9 was angry and vengeful against the Daleks, 10 was eaten up by the grief for his own death, 11 ran away from his problems rather than dealing with them. And now it seems 12 is manipulative, believing his actions to be without reproach as long as he gets it all to work out in the end. As long as the job gets done, he doesn't care if he has anybody's trust or respect. And now we get to see if this trait is compatible with who the Doctor is, or if like the others this is a demon he has to conquer. And I like it--I like seeing them take away that safe reassurance we've gotten used to seeing in the Doctor and going so hard in the other direction it makes you wonder if he's still the Doctor at his core. Capaldi's Doctor seems to be epitomizing the idea of the Doctor as "a madman in a box."
But this one was trying to do all three of them at once and it just made all of them suffer. Courtney was sidelined so much and had so little to do with the plot she felt more like a token guest star than a character deliberately written into the episode. The other spacemen that landed in the shuttle were killed off so fast to make way for the captain/Clara dichotomy it was almost comical. They could have never existed at all and the episode literally would have been the same--just have the captain land on her own with some sophisticated auto-pilot or something. And the germ monsters got a few jump-scare moments but that was it, they never had enough presence to feel like a real threat. And I'll also say it felt a little too close to a pro-life VS pro-choice thing for my tastes. I really admire Doctor Who's proactive approach to diversity as of late and I really admire what other sci fi shows have done in the past for the sake of promoting good but controversial points of view. But abortion is one of those things that's just a little too ambiguous to have an episode about and make it feel alright. Even if it isn't intentional, it shouldn't have been much of a stretch for the writers to see what sort of themes they were dealing with.
I'm almost willing to forgive all of that because of Clara's fight with the Doctor at the end, though. They've REALLY been building this Doctor up as a jerk, to the point where you're really beginning to wonder why he even bothers trying to save people. If I'm interpreting the preview correctly it looks as though the next episode with the Space Oriental Express will lack Clara, or at least the Doctor will be on his own throughout the escapade. I have a feeling that episode is going to be about the Doctor learning something which will allow him to figure out why Clara is mad at him, and perhaps why he continues to bother. Or at least, if he knows why he bothers, it will be made clear to us the audience.
And I really like this. Tennant and Smith always did their utmost to make their charges feel safe. Even when things got bad and they didn't know things would end well, they would stick by them and tell them it's going to be okay. But Capaldi's Doctor doesn't do this--he doesn't sacrifice anything on the altar of reassurance for his charges. I think he does try just as hard to keep them safe, but he just doesn't sugar coat thing as much, which escalates some situations more and turns certain choices into bitter pills. But there is a line between letting someone make a choice on their own and not offering advice when it's needed, and clearly the Doctor has lost sight of where that line is. Clara wasn't mad that the choice had to be made, she was mad that the Doctor wasn't there to help her make the decision and that he gambled with her without her consent.
The last few Doctors have had their demons: 9 was angry and vengeful against the Daleks, 10 was eaten up by the grief for his own death, 11 ran away from his problems rather than dealing with them. And now it seems 12 is manipulative, believing his actions to be without reproach as long as he gets it all to work out in the end. As long as the job gets done, he doesn't care if he has anybody's trust or respect. And now we get to see if this trait is compatible with who the Doctor is, or if like the others this is a demon he has to conquer. And I like it--I like seeing them take away that safe reassurance we've gotten used to seeing in the Doctor and going so hard in the other direction it makes you wonder if he's still the Doctor at his core. Capaldi's Doctor seems to be epitomizing the idea of the Doctor as "a madman in a box."