Formally "Media Engagement", I'm expanding to write my thoughts etc. on other subjects and interests.
Saturday, 23 August 2014
Brief: Doctor Who: 'Deep Breath' (Series 8, Episode 1, 2014)
SERIES: Doctor Who
EPISODE: Deep Breath (Series 8, Episode 1)
REGULAR CAST: Peter Capaldi (The Doctor), Jenna Coleman (Clara)
SCREENWRITER: Steven Moffat
DIRECTOR: Ben Wheatley
TX: 23/08/2014, 19:50, BBC1*
*also presented in cinemas
In Brief:
This is the second (albeit feature-length) "episode" of Doctor Who to be featured in the cinema (and the fourth Doctor Who theatrical presentation if you count the two 1960s Dalek movies adapted from their first two serials) and it's perhaps the best that Doctor Who has looked on the big screen since the trailer for 2007's Voyage Of The Damned (which accompanied the film adaptation of Philip Pullman's The Golden Compass).
The production team have more-or-less delivered on the promise in slowing down** with this new Doctor Who that actually manages to feel new, rather than a continuation (some of last year's efforts may now seem dated in comparison). There is still some phasing out to do (Murray Gold has, with some exceptions, managed to calm down in his scoring), such as some choice slapstick (a scene in which Sontaran butler Strax performs an examination of Clara that, unless it hints at something yet to come later on in the series, should have been left on the cutting room floor. One pretty good gag though, is based around the revealing of a map. They have also touched on previous more possibly romantic tensions between the Doctor and Clara, such as with the new, much older looking man declaring "I'm not your boyfriend."
**although in this case, that may have been due to the extended running time and it will be interesting to see how the pacing goes in the remaining 45 minute installments.
A sequel-ish to 2006's The Girl In The Fireplace and featuring cyborgs with human faces (whom may reminded old-schooled fans of 1976's The Android Invasion) that harvest human body parts (perhaps not an intentional callback to the Aunt and Uncle in Neil Gaiman's The Doctor's Wife), this is perhaps the grimmest episode since, say The Unquiet Dead (also a Victorian-set episode) and the climax isn't too far off from Mark Gatiss' The Crimson Horror meeting Russell T Davies' The Next Doctor, with a hot air balloon made from human skin launching out of a Victorian restaurant. It is also a debut episode for a Doctor that doesn't dwell too much on post-regeneration trauma - Capaldi's Doctor has a fuzzy memory rather than outright amnesia, for instance). There are hints laid out for the series ahead (the apparent existence of 'Heaven' in the Whoniverse, one where cyborgs go when they die, even if by 'suicide') and mysteries brought up that reference (or at least hint at) previous episodes - who was the woman in the shop that gave Clara the Doctor's number last year in The Bells Of St. John? Why does the Doctor now look like Capaldi's Roman character from the David Tennant story The Fires Of Pompeii? And will the answer also explain by the Sixth Doctor looked like the Time Lord security commander Maxil (c.f. The Arc Of Infinity, 1983).
This is, as far as I can tell, the first debut episode in which the new Doctor's features knowingly become a plot point. With perhaps the exception of Troughton, each 'new' Doctor's face didn't seem noticeably aged (due in part to the actors they cast). Jon Pertwee's case is understandable as his face was perhaps selected for him by the Time Lords (his response was, after all, "Oh no! That's not me at all!"). It is interesting to note that the latest regeneration was technically bestowed upon the 'last' Doctor (Matt Smith, who makes a lovely cameo in what will most likely be his last appearance in the series for at least another nine years) by the Time Lords and perhaps there is some vague literary connection. Would it be too much to theorize that he is being punished for his absence in Torchwood's Children Of Earth (perhaps due to running from death after his actions in The Waters Of Mars) by taking on the face of Capaldi's character Frobisher (who, perhaps coincidentally, shares the same name as the comic strip companion, a shape-shifting penguin), who ends up killing himself and his family?
And in most cases, with a new Doctor, comes a new title sequence and theme arrangement. The visuals in this intro were based off the work of a fan (must have been a Blue Peter competition I missed) and the latest theme tune is more stripped down than previous efforts by Murray Gold. The oo-ee-oo (not, oo-ah-oo as in some arrangements) now has a more shrieking, alien-y sound to it. The visual elements focus on the theme of travelling through time (a counterbalance to Sid Sutton's early-to-mid 1980's flights through space). This is also the first series since 1989 to present the end credits in a "slideshow" format rather than by scrolling.
When I rewatch this one, I'd look to look more at Capaldi's performance, particularly towards the end. His confrontation with the "half-face man" is quite Bond-like and him and Coleman seem to make an interesting odd couple (not in the same way that Tennant and Catherine Tate were). His Doctor admits to not being the "hugging" type (the scene, by the way, calls back to Eccleston's first "date" with Rose in The End Of The World) and I like how awkward it seems at first. There is something of Troughton about the area around his now-famous eyes and for the first time since Eccleston (or John Hurt if you want to be picky) here is a more grown up Doctor, and one that one can look up to at that, and isn't simply your "space pal".
Friday, 22 August 2014
Film Brief: 'Lucy' (2014)
TITLE: Lucy
YEAR: 2014
DIRECTOR: Luc Besson
SCREENWRITER: Luc Besson
LENGTH: 1hr 29 mins
BBFC RATING: 15 ("strong bloody violence")
COUNTRY: France
In Brief:
Limitless (2011) meets Altered States (1980) then 2001: A Space Odyssey (1969) with a possible bit of Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) as well. Basically, when Scarlett Johansson's brain capacity reaches 100%...
Brief Thoughts: 'What If' (Film, 2013)
Title: What If
Year: 2013
Director: Michael Dowse
Screenwriters: Elan Mastai (based on the play Toothpaste And Cigars by T.J. Dawe and Michael Rinaldi
Country: Ireland/Canada
Rating: 15 ("frequent crude sex references") (UK); PG-13 (US)
Premise: Boy meets girl. Girl is already taken. They decide to be "just friends".
There is a lot of likeable material here and it's beautifully played by the two leads. Daniel Radcliffe plays the very decent, likable guy and you need to see Zoe Kazan in the very likeable Ruby Sparks (which she writes and stars in) if you haven't already. It also manages to be funny, both acerbic and crude (but not obnoxiously so). One and ask whether the more slapstick humour has a place (one plot point featured in the trailer featuring Radcliffe sending Rafe Spall out the window doesn't seem to do much for the story except to perhaps suggest an underlying attempt to break him up with Kazan). Some may also question the conclusion the film takes but it at least can bring up a discussion opportunity. There is also one perhaps slightly suspicious line of dialogue that I may well have misheard. The main problem though, is with the editing. There are scenes in which Zoe Kazan's Chantry talks to her sister about what's going on in the film while Radcliffe's Wallace's own family interaction more or less bookends the film with his own sister played in an entirely unexpected (but entirely welcome) appearance by Jemima Rooper. It would be interesting to read the script for the original play on which the screenplay for this film is based, and indeed to read the screenplay itself to compare with the finished product. It would also be interesting to watch any deleted scenes that end up on a home release. But if you're looking for a youth-targeted, witty, feelgood romantic (or is it?) comedy that is actually funny, this is serviceable enough. One to seek out for Valentine's Day if it's available by then.
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