Sunday 9 December 2018

Dr Who — Series 11: Episode 10 — The Battle of Ranskoor Av Kolos

9th December, 2018.


9th December, 2018.

Yes, it’s true.

Jude — my soon to be eight year-old nephew —  had his eighth birthday party, today.

Not much of a do … 

Apart from the exotic-ish animals and informative talks supplied by Exotic Explorers.

I got to hold an owl called Echo, and a snake called Katness.



And Jude had a hedgehog … 


Just in case that grabs anyone’s attention.

~≈§≈~

At any rate … ?

I don’t know about you, but I was home in time for tea.

A baked and a chicken Kiev.

Which possibly isn’t the health … thi … 

Which definitely isn’t the healthiest: but at least it’s relatively cheap.

So … 

A meal … a drink … washing up, done … 

Given all that was done … ?

It meant I was in time for this week’s episode of Doctor Who.   Episode 10 of series eleven, if you must know.

It’s a serious shame it’s the last episode or the current series.

I think Jodie Whittaker’s cracked it.

~≈§≈~

Episode 10The Battle of Ranskoor Av Kolos — opens: by showing us Andinio and Delph (Phyllis Logan and Percelle Ascott): a pair of Ux doing their equivalent of a prayer.

A prayer that turns out to be a shrine built to their creator.

A creator that surprises them … by turning up as their shrine is almost finished.

~≈§≈~

We jump cut forward some three thousand years later: where the Doctor (Jodie Whittaker) and the team — Graham, Ryan  and Yas, played by Bradley Walsh, Ryan Sinclair and Mandip Gill — receiving nine distress calls from the planet Ranskoor Av Kolos.

They find a planet that’s wrecked, after extensive battles.

A ship that’s almost as wrecked as the planet it’s on … 

And almost as wrecked as Paltraki (Mark Addy): the man with amnesia … and the large caliber gun pointed straight at the Doctor.

That’s just one problem.

The other … ?

Tsim Sha, the Stenza we met in The Woman Who Fell to Earth is back … 

And seems to have caused a lot of damage … 

~≈§≈~

Now … 

What did I think … ?



I loved this episode!

This is the culmination of a series that’s introduced us to a new Doctor, new look TARDIS, new companions … 

In THIS story?   That seems to have come to a head.   The production crew have managed round out Ryan and Graham’s relationship, AND seen Whittaker’s take on the Doctor finally hit the nailhead.

And done this in a way that reminded me of the Banksian feel of the Moffat and Davies era of the new show at their heights: and referencing both classic and new Dr Who, as well.

After all, the idea of sentencing a villain to life imprisonment in suspended animation seems have been lifted from Destiny of the Daleks, the planets moved out of their orbits a nod to The Stolen Earth/Journeys End: and the simple fact those planets have been shrunken?

A direct nod to The Pirate Planet.

About my only complaint?



The writers have managed too ignore Yas … again.

I have to confess, I’ve been watching El Ministerio del Tiempo, just recently.

The Spanish language time travel thriller has — if anything — an even bigger ensemble cast.

But, if anything, Aura Garrido, the cast’s youngest member, has more to do in the series.



I’m also very aware that there’s talk — talk, mind — that David Jackson — the actor who played Gan in the first two series of Blake’s Seven — left the show: in large part because the character was given little to do.

I’d hate to see Mandip Gill leave Dr Who on the same grounds.

Even given this is a fantastic conclusion to series 11.

~≈§≈~

Before I go … ?



There’s something else I should mention.

Yes: the show’s back on New Year’s Day: in an episode called Resolution


Something I know I’m looking forward to.

On the downside?

The Radio Times tells us that series 12 will air in early 2020.

In the midst of a fantastic introductory 11th series from Whittaker and co?

Delaying the 12th … 

Seems possibly counter-productive.

Post-New Year’s Day?

We’re going to have a frustrating wait!

3 comments:

Mike said...

So many loose ends

I agree about Yas.

The other companions have almost become a comedy duo, with one liners. Further excluding Yas...maybe she wears the security red shirt in this away team?

I thought that the story had so many gaps that it would prove hard to make a web.

Poetic justice for the real baddy, and a truncated debate about legal killing for terms of engagement.

The mislead supreme beings, and not monsters, were not entirely explained.

Will I miss the gap until the New Year and the show's subsequent return in 2020... probably not.

These scripts do not fit the format.

Nik Nak said...

I’m glad there’s something we agree on, Mike: Yas is definitely being underused!

Frankly?

I’m going to disagree on the script fronts: I think they’ve finally managed to hit their stride: and that delaying series twelve will lose the show a lot of momentum … 

Debbi said...

I thought this was, without a doubt, the best episode of the show since Jodie Whittaker came on board. It also reminded me of the old, old shows. At last! :)

I also agree about Yas. We'll see what happens.