Initially I did not like Smith as The Doctor, but as the show has gone on I feel that he has grown into the role and fits it rather well with the quirkyness.
SciMal said:Yes.
-Killed the entire Racnoss species because the Empress insisted on eating humans, who were like cattle to her.
-Doesn't mind obliging a sick man's request for euthanasia by using a moon-powered laser to disintegrate him instead of finding a cure for his illness.
-Insists that an alien-caused obliteration through asphyxiation of an entire human civilization is perfectly acceptable (this is after the Racnoss encounter), and then changes his mind - saving a single family from destruction (because wibbly-wobbly whatever).
Nope, her entire species. The Empress got killed when she teleported back up to her star and she was shot down by the army, and she was awakening all of her children which were hidden in the Earth's core after the rest of her kind went extinct billions of years prior.CrazyBlaze said:I'm pretty sure he didn't kill the entire species just the Empresses. And he only made her run away. It was actually Harold Saxon who gave the order to blow up her ship when she started attacking London.
Tooth and Claw. He was a Werewolf, which was apparently an inheritable bloodborne disease.I don't remember the sick man euthanasia episode.
Nope.I feel like you are mixing up the two part Sontaran episodes and the two part Silurian episodes.
I still see where you are coming from though and I agree. Towards the end Doctor Who had gotten really weak in writing. Moffat is a far better writer than RTD and I really like Matt Smith as the Doctor.
What you actually want is a new writer.GrimTuesday said:I didn't mind Matt Smith at first, but I started to watch the second season and I just got so sick of his "oh look how quirky I am" routine that I had to stop watching. I'm not going to watching another episode until we get a new doctor, because the character sucks, the companions suck, and the story lines are trucking retarded (seriously, fuck River Song practically forcing her way into be a central part of the story, wost character ever).
Would you rather he just goes doe-eyed some more and gets depressed while they wait for the Deus Ex Machina? The thing is he does care about his companions, but he usually has to focus on the task at hand, he's aware of the gravity of the situation he is in.theLadyBugg said:I'm not suggesting that either of the previous two Doctors were the pinnacle of heroism -- and I'll admit that by the fourth between-series special for Tennant to say goodbye, I was wishing he would just get on with it and regenerate already. But during his three series, yeah, I saw a better dedication to protecting/defending friends than I see in Smith. How many times has Rory or Amy turned up, demanding to know where the other is, and he brushes it off insisting they step back so he can work on some other part of the plan?
The problem with this is that he has had an issue with ego many times. The Third Doctor was a haughty and condescending git to UNIT staff, the Sixth was the most egotistical of them all. I'm not very sure where you're getting the arrogance of Eleven from myself, I just saw him as more tired and fed up with the recurring villains like the Daleks or Cybermen.I see the Doctor, in all of his regenerations, as one long character development. Obviously there are some personality changes with each new iteration - but I see a particular kind of irresponsible egotism from this Doctor, and it feels like a step back in terms of character development.
I disagree with this, I'd say Eleven is far consistent than Ten's later persona. Eleven, having finally been able to move on from the Time War, is now looking to enjoy himself and have fun. He is an old man given youth again and determined to make the most of it.The antics of a younger man type of thing. Not because the last Doctor was better, but because the last Doctor isn't supposed to be better. I don't think the attitude would even bother me so much if I felt like it was the consummate of all the Doctor's previous experiences.
I understand how you feel, but I'm baffled with the people who want Davies back despite his glaring writing flaws and being overall the worst writer of his on run of the show.EDIT because I feel like in my point-making this is going unsaid: I don't think Smith is a bad Doctor. I'm just tired of his Doctor, and the Ponds, and (most of all) BBCA's marketing of Doctor Who. It's been two full series with the same cast, spanning over two years now (I think?), and I'm beginning to see why the show hasn't done this before.