alexsarll: (seal)
Alex ([personal profile] alexsarll) wrote2010-12-25 07:21 pm
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Halfway out of the dark

The Doctor Who Christmas special became a tradition out of nowhere. But more than that, the Doctor Who Christmas special starring David Tennant and written by Russell T Davies became a tradition. All five of them, same team. Charitably, two and a half of them were good. One was the worst Doctor Who story ever. Could Moffat and Matt Smith follow that and do it better?

Of course they bloody could. Best Christmas Who ever. It helped that when it wasn't ripping off Moffat's own first professional Who, 'Continuity Errors', it was reworking Paul Cornell's 'The Hopes and Fears of All the Years. But with the exception of that slightly vexing swerve at the end, it was otherwise a thing of utter beauty, unashamedly soppy but never schmaltzy, smart without confusing the casual viewers. In other words: utterly, near-perfectly Doctor Who.

Merry Christmas.

[identity profile] amuchmoreexotic.livejournal.com 2010-12-26 11:17 am (UTC)(link)
I'm pretty sure he explicitly said at one point that he didn't want to add to the surplus population. It think it was supposed to be more "coming over here, taking our jobs and our women" than ecological, but admittedly he could have been making up excuses for being grumpy.

[identity profile] puzzled-anwen.livejournal.com 2010-12-26 06:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I thought he was being fippant, there.

[identity profile] barrysarll.livejournal.com 2010-12-30 05:15 pm (UTC)(link)
I had forgotten, until listening to another Christmas Carol riff in the form of Radio 4's Marley was Dead, that the 'surplus population' line is also a direct quote from the original Scrooge.