A topic for the discussion of Doctor Who, Arrow, and The Flash. Beware possible invasions of iZombie, Sleepy Hollow, or pretty much any other "genre" (read: sci fi, superhero, or fantasy) show that captures our fancy. Expect adult content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
Marvel superheroes are discussed over at the MCU thread.
Whitefont all unaired in the U.S. ep discussion, identifying it as such, and including the show and ep title in blackfont.
Blackfont is allowed after the show has aired on the east coast.
This is NOT a general TV discussion thread.
I liked the smaller scale, and the production values felt like a short feature film rather than episodic television. Maybe it was the mostly location shoot and lots of night time scenes, but it felt more real than Doctor Who usually does to me. I'm interested to see if it keeps that quality moving forward.
I found the dark feel to be a bit grim, and I'm not sure what it was in service of; but I do agree about the realism, and am pretty certain that'll continue. With Rose (and to some extent with the subsequent companions), Russell T Davies basically mashed Doctor Who with a British soap opera, with real people with a life and relationships outside of the Doctor. That was not a trick in Moffat's toolbox, his world was always more insular and turned towards the Doctor.
Last night felt like a return to having fully realised characters. Not that they're quite fully realised yet, it's been one ep and there's quite a lot of them. But they're people grounded in real relationships and having their own dramas completely outside the weirdness the Doctor brings. Per Broadchurch, it's central to what Chibnall does well, so I'm pretty certain that'll continue.
Thanks. ltc just turned three. So maybe I'll try next year with some of the less scary episodes.
I think that'll work with her. Ryan is a particularly cautious kid. I'm pretty sure ltc is going to be bolder in her Doctor Who-watching habits.
Incidentally, a couple of weekends ago Ryan had a playdate with a classmate and his younger brother (I think about seven). They both have been watching all of new Who, without skipping any episodes, and apparently are loving it. (I made the younger brother's eyes bug out when I told him I owned over 110 of the classic series adventures.)
Graham (stepdad) looked familiar, and I looked at his acting credits, couldn't place him. Then I checked the credits under "Himself" and realized I'd seen him as the host of a British game show. I would not have thought, "And next step, Doctor Who companion!"
I am glad for the new vibe, not Man Doctor and Female Companion.
She is more cautious about TV than about real life things.
She is more cautious about TV than about real life things.
With Ryan, I find that's quite helpful in deciding what he watches, because he's not about to try to take on more than he can handle. If something is too much for him he'll give it a wide berth off his own bat, so I don't need to police it so much. (On the other hand, his grandfather was quite happy to have him watching violent Chinese dramas set during the Japanese occupation with him, so there may be other family members who warrant a touch of policing.)
It's amazing the things kids will do with their grandparents that they'll never do with us. ltc won't actually say something scares her, but she'll start walking around and saying, "I don't like this. I want another show."
'
It's amazing the things kids will do with their grandparents that they'll never do with us. ltc won't actually say something scares her, but she'll start walking around and saying, "I don't like this. I want another show." '
When Day of the Doctor got too much for Ryan (the Zygon design is really quite unsettling), he announced that we had been watching too long and we should turn it off because it was bad for our eyes.
When my nephew was three, he told me that he was going to hold my hand as a scary scene was on (Lion King). He assured me that HE wasn't scared but he didn't want me to worry.
When my nephew was three, he told me that he was going to hold my hand as a scary scene was on (Lion King). He assured me that HE wasn't scared but he didn't want me to worry.
Tom Baker in interview once opined that grannies loved him, because he was responsible for innumerable cuddles from frightened tots. Oh, and he did a sort of PSA before one adventure, advising children that their parents might find it a bit scary, so they should hold their hands to reassure them.