Doctor Who: "The Impossible Astronaut"
Apr. 24th, 2011 09:13 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Spoiler free: Yes. That was acceptable.
My reaction to "The Impossible Astronaut":

Yeah. So basically I was Toph-facing through the whole thing. And occasionally turning to the cat to flail and go, "WASN'T THAT AMAZING?" (Harvey, however, is a hipster, and therefore believes the show got too mainstream after the introduction of the Daleks.)
(Katara can represent the people moaning about zomgmisogyny, already making noises. WHATEVS, PEOPLE, MY SPIRIT ANIMAL IS AMY POND.)
Let me try and get my thoughts in some kind of order:
I love SO MUCH that the crew has kind of temporarily gone their separate ways. It leaves a lot of room for extra, unseen adventures, and it also makes Amy and Rory seem more relaxed about travelling with the Doctor, that it's not an all-or-nothing thing for them. I was sad that Amy was no longer in her pretty house with TARDIS Blue wallpaper, but then I remembered that she has parents now, and they probably live there. (I was also amused to note that Amy and Rory have the same IKEA shelves that I assembled yesterday.)
Older!Doctor is pretty great. They worshipped him on Easter Island. He still spits out wine. I LOVE YOU, ELEVENTY, DON'T DIE!
I kind of expected that Eleven would be the character to die in the first episode, because ... okay, I didn't really expect it, I just didn't want anyone else to die. I suspect that it might be younger!Doctor in the spacesuit, shooting him, but that does leave the minor problem of, um, sooner or later we're gonna need a new Doctor. I assume the Moff does have a plan, I just can't imagine yet what it might be.
RIVER! I LOVE HER SO! She was great here -- not that she's ever not been great, but still, Alex Kingston overcame the handicap of wearing double denim and brought it. I loved her conversation with Rory, that outlines the epic quality of her relationship with the Doctor. She doesn't show Eleven that much vulnerability yet, but we saw it when she was with Ten. I was a bit eyerolly at the "I love for the times I see him" bit, but, hey, there doesn't seem to be much to do in prison beyond planning her next escape. ("She's doing it again. She's packing." One wonders how the warden of Stormcage feels about a prisoner who seems to regard the place as having a revolving door.)
(Then I pictured the warden as the Warden from the Boiling Rock.)
I do enjoy the way Rory fits in with the team, and how his basic respect for things like locks, the laws of physics and common sense contrasts with EVERYONE ELSE IN THE TARDIS. Amy's sad little "Rory, what do I do?" just broke me, because of all of them, he's the one who always goes on. Two thousand years of going on.
I accidentally got spoiled for Amy's pregnancy just before I watched the episode, but there were some nice attempts at misdirection, with River also getting nauseous right after seeing the Silence. I expect there will be wank about the fact she drinks wine and runs around and stuff. I, however, am excited for CANONICAL BABYFIC, and also hoping nothing horrible happens.
How impressive are the Silence?! I didn't expect to find them scary, but they were totally horrifying. And their ship, or at least, the ship beneath the bowels of Florida is the same as the TARDIS-a-like in "The Lodger". Speaking of callbacks, all those spacesuits were a bit reminiscent of "Silence in the Library", and there were a bunch of allusions to River's death, too. I hope there's an episode one day that starts with Eleven finding a way to upload River's consciousness from the Library back into her body. That would be a bit clever. Time can be rewritten, you know.
I was all, NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO at the cliffhanger. It was awful! A wee child! Being shot at! By Amy! But then she was all okay and un-shot-at in the trailer, and I remembered that River's bullets didn't hurt the earlier spaceman. So that's all right. Also, I'm still not sure the wee child isn't some kind of alien monster, possibly of the same kind that was luring people to their deaths in "The Lodger". I'M JUST TRYING TO THINK LIKE THE MOFF, OKAY?
(Thinking like the Moff basically goes like this: IDEA, IDEA, IDEA, SOMETHING FUNNY, SOMETHING SEXIST, IDEA, IDEA, EVIL LAUGH.)
I have to say, I think they got more sexual references into this episode than half a season of Torchwood. Starting with the opening scene. The naked portrait. The naked-under-the-lady's-skirt bit. "Mrs Robinson." The screamer line. What would Mary Whitehouse say?
My reaction to "The Impossible Astronaut":

Yeah. So basically I was Toph-facing through the whole thing. And occasionally turning to the cat to flail and go, "WASN'T THAT AMAZING?" (Harvey, however, is a hipster, and therefore believes the show got too mainstream after the introduction of the Daleks.)
(Katara can represent the people moaning about zomgmisogyny, already making noises. WHATEVS, PEOPLE, MY SPIRIT ANIMAL IS AMY POND.)
Let me try and get my thoughts in some kind of order:
I love SO MUCH that the crew has kind of temporarily gone their separate ways. It leaves a lot of room for extra, unseen adventures, and it also makes Amy and Rory seem more relaxed about travelling with the Doctor, that it's not an all-or-nothing thing for them. I was sad that Amy was no longer in her pretty house with TARDIS Blue wallpaper, but then I remembered that she has parents now, and they probably live there. (I was also amused to note that Amy and Rory have the same IKEA shelves that I assembled yesterday.)
Older!Doctor is pretty great. They worshipped him on Easter Island. He still spits out wine. I LOVE YOU, ELEVENTY, DON'T DIE!
I kind of expected that Eleven would be the character to die in the first episode, because ... okay, I didn't really expect it, I just didn't want anyone else to die. I suspect that it might be younger!Doctor in the spacesuit, shooting him, but that does leave the minor problem of, um, sooner or later we're gonna need a new Doctor. I assume the Moff does have a plan, I just can't imagine yet what it might be.
RIVER! I LOVE HER SO! She was great here -- not that she's ever not been great, but still, Alex Kingston overcame the handicap of wearing double denim and brought it. I loved her conversation with Rory, that outlines the epic quality of her relationship with the Doctor. She doesn't show Eleven that much vulnerability yet, but we saw it when she was with Ten. I was a bit eyerolly at the "I love for the times I see him" bit, but, hey, there doesn't seem to be much to do in prison beyond planning her next escape. ("She's doing it again. She's packing." One wonders how the warden of Stormcage feels about a prisoner who seems to regard the place as having a revolving door.)
(Then I pictured the warden as the Warden from the Boiling Rock.)
I do enjoy the way Rory fits in with the team, and how his basic respect for things like locks, the laws of physics and common sense contrasts with EVERYONE ELSE IN THE TARDIS. Amy's sad little "Rory, what do I do?" just broke me, because of all of them, he's the one who always goes on. Two thousand years of going on.
I accidentally got spoiled for Amy's pregnancy just before I watched the episode, but there were some nice attempts at misdirection, with River also getting nauseous right after seeing the Silence. I expect there will be wank about the fact she drinks wine and runs around and stuff. I, however, am excited for CANONICAL BABYFIC, and also hoping nothing horrible happens.
How impressive are the Silence?! I didn't expect to find them scary, but they were totally horrifying. And their ship, or at least, the ship beneath the bowels of Florida is the same as the TARDIS-a-like in "The Lodger". Speaking of callbacks, all those spacesuits were a bit reminiscent of "Silence in the Library", and there were a bunch of allusions to River's death, too. I hope there's an episode one day that starts with Eleven finding a way to upload River's consciousness from the Library back into her body. That would be a bit clever. Time can be rewritten, you know.
I was all, NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO at the cliffhanger. It was awful! A wee child! Being shot at! By Amy! But then she was all okay and un-shot-at in the trailer, and I remembered that River's bullets didn't hurt the earlier spaceman. So that's all right. Also, I'm still not sure the wee child isn't some kind of alien monster, possibly of the same kind that was luring people to their deaths in "The Lodger". I'M JUST TRYING TO THINK LIKE THE MOFF, OKAY?
(Thinking like the Moff basically goes like this: IDEA, IDEA, IDEA, SOMETHING FUNNY, SOMETHING SEXIST, IDEA, IDEA, EVIL LAUGH.)
I have to say, I think they got more sexual references into this episode than half a season of Torchwood. Starting with the opening scene. The naked portrait. The naked-under-the-lady's-skirt bit. "Mrs Robinson." The screamer line. What would Mary Whitehouse say?
no subject
Date: 2011-04-23 11:18 pm (UTC)I believe that River is in the space suit, because we know she kills the man she respects most. :(
no subject
Date: 2011-04-23 11:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-24 02:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-24 10:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-24 07:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-26 01:23 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-25 02:34 pm (UTC)But in any event it didn't seem to me like she knew *all that* (like, that she had killed him, that she was going to kill him, that he had asked her to...) But who knows, timey wimey...