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"Care for some meta jokes about the title of the show? I've got a few..." |
This
is also a really hard episode to talk about in a spoiler-free context
– and even more than most, it deserves to be seen spoiler-free.
Don't even watch any ads for it, or look up anything about it; just
watch it on its own terms. Since so much of it is a slowly unfolding
mystery setting up the end of the season, very little can even be
said about its central premise, as much of that is meant to be
learned as the episode goes on, in a series of revelations and
surprises. Suffice to say that the episode involves The Doctor trying
to test Missy's alleged re-learned goodness by finding a ship's
distress call so that he can drop her into a crisis situation and see
how she handles it. But the situation on the ship they chose turns
out to be far more dire than The Doctor anticipated, and soon he,
Missy, Bill, and Nardole are trapped in a dangerous predicament way
above and beyond the usual wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey stuff that The
Doctor specializes in...
The
writing in this episode is excellent: a truly unique take on the
time-paradox concept which actually manages to do something with the
idea that the show has never done before (a rarity, after a
cumulative 36 seasons). The premise itself feels loosely inspired by
a fan-favorite entry in the Big Finish Productions Doctor
Who audioplay series, which
starred Fifth Doctor Peter Davison (although I can't say which one,
as that would be a spoiler – I'll talk more about it in next week's
review). The execution, however, is quite different, and while it is
always nice to see the Big Finish audios – which kept the series
alive during its years off the air – get an homage, it is even
nicer to see this superficially-similar episode take the idea in such
a different direction, and stand on its own so well. Moffat's very
strong script is directed just as excellently by Rachel Talalay, who
has set herself quite impressively apart as one of Doctor
Who's best directors. While
Talalay's early-1990s film career leaned heavily towards goofy and
campy genre fare like Tank Girl and
Freddy's Dead: the Final Nightmare, the
intervening years have seen her grow into a very confident,
stylistically strong filmmaker, and every episode of Doctor
Who that she has done has not
only been excellent, but guided with a sure-handed artistic vision.
Doctor Who seems to be
for her what Game of Thrones
has been for Neil Marshall: a place for a director with a troubled
cinematic career to show just how great they can be, and still are,
behind the camera. And so soon after Patty Jenkins' much-talked-about
hit with Wonder Woman,
Talalay is another great example of why more female directors need to
be given the opportunity to direct high-profile stuff like this.
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A spaceship on Doctor Who... What could possibly go wrong? |
World
Enough and Time is
truly an excellent episode, which makes unique use of the
possibilities of the show's time-travel premise with highly
compelling results. It is easily one of this season's best episodes,
even without its second half. If the finale follows its examples of
quality, then Peter Capaldi's final regular-season story arc will
truly be one for the ages, which is exactly what he deserves. I still
am very much not ready for Capaldi to leave the role of The Doctor;
he really has grown into a great one, and his era could greatly benefit from one more year. But if he must leave, he needs to leave
on a story arc worthy of classic status, and while it may be too
early to say if the second half is worthy of that title, this first
half absolutely is.
Score:
-
Christopher S. Jordan
Don't
let time get away from you – share this review!