BBC One, Saturday 31st
October 2015. Starring:
Peter Capaldi, Jenna Coleman, Ingrid Oliver, Jemma Redgrave, Rebecca Front,
Jaye Griffiths. Written by Peter Harness, Directed by Daniel Nettheim. Reviewed
by Sean Alexander.
Once upon a
time...there were Three Doctors, Two Osgoods and One Peace Treaty
Irrespective
of whether your politics come with a capitalised P or not, you’re probably a
long-term Doctor Who fan because of
its subversive nature. If your own
political awakening came from the likes of Malcolm Hulke, Robert Holmes or
Andrew Cartmel (probably the only man to profess a desire to bring down the
British government as a job clincher) it’s safe to say the show that first set
out its soapbox stall during the socio-political upheaval of the 1960s has
always attracted the more militant minded, and politically aware, sections of
the viewing audience.
Which
works both for and against ‘The Zygon Invasion’, Peter Harness’ sophomore entry
that (like last year’s ‘Kill the Moon’) uses its sci-fi trappings to examine
fundamental issues of morality and human fear.
But where the abortion metaphor of the moon laying its apocalyptic egg
had to be looked for, the current world climate of radicalised extremists,
migrant exodus and pre-emptive distrust and paranoia is here barely disguised;
hiding in plain sight much as the 20 million Zygon doubles have been doing
since the peace treaty that was all but glossed over during the celebratory
finale of 2013’s ‘The Day of the Doctor’.
It’s
great to see the show once again engaging with its inner polemic, but it just
seems to me that Peter Harness has almost been instructed to make his
Zygons-as-immigrants subtext as plain and obvious as ‘Kill the Moon’s
embryocide wasn’t. Case in point: do we really need to have the Zygon training
camp - wherein all those impressionable young Zygotes are being radicalised -
based in a middle eastern country? Or
even have the fascistic Walsh be so gung-ho and militant as to scream with Starship Troopers levels of
xenophobia? Surely Doctor Who - a show that once made a story about gay pride couched
in a copyright infringing liquorice monster remember - is capable of more
subtlety than that. There’s much to laud
in ‘The Zygon Invasion’, but its apparent mandate to crack an acorn with a
sledgehammer, sadly, isn’t one of them.
So,
for the Islamic Fundamentalism 101 class we’re given, in turn, Osgood being
forced to deliver a hostage message as propaganda speech; homemade videos of
political executions as a statement of intent, and the Doctor pointing out the
obvious – namely, that to focus on a minority splinter group at the price of
radicalising an entire species is never a great idea. ‘The Zygon Invasion’ does have that almost
supernatural poignancy in that its broadcast comes in the same week former
Prime Minister Tony Blair sort-of-admits-to-perhaps-maybe contributing to the
rise of Islamic State by playing such a key role in the West’s ‘War on Terror’,
and the looming albatross of the Chilcot report once again raising its
much-delayed head above the media parapet.
You can’t buy publicity like that.
I wonder how many were in fact struck by the cutting satire of the
piece, seeing as this was more an investigation enacted by chainsaw than laser
scalpel.
What
does work – and not for the first or (you suspect) last time this series – is
in the matter-of-fact highlighting of the ramifications of the Doctor’s runaway
lifestyle, a modus operandi
increasingly based on consequences and collateral damage. That peace treaty does seem to be more of a
wishy-washy liberalised concept of utopian peace than it would ever resemble
something sanctioned by the UN, and perhaps the Doctor’s biggest fault is in
believing too much of humanity at times.
Not for the first time have the Doctor’s clay feet been alluded to this
year, and there are several occasions where the story’s political mandate comes
perilously close to realism over cosmopolitanism. Walsh’s fear that her emotionally blackmailed
platoon are walking into a trap being as much a vindication of her right-wing
politics as it is an indictment of her own sense of morality.
Back
in 1975, when ‘Terror of the Zygons’ still ploughed a rich vein of
Commies-under-the-bed, Cold War paranoia the nearest genre touchstone for all this
was the novel ‘Who Goes There?’, or rather its more palatable form the
post-McCarthy Invasion of the
Body-Snatchers (itself remade by Philip Kaufman for the dehumanised
existential world of the late 1970s).
And of course evil double stories have become something of a trope not
just of Doctor Who but science
fiction allegory at large – so as well as being treated to yet another
variation on the doppelganger motif
(Jenna Coleman getting her chance to play a more playful and steely-eyed Clara)
the very nature of ‘The Zygon Invasion’s paranoiac remit demands scene after
scene of transformative revelation, recycling its own season nine theme of the
friend in the enemy, the enemy in the friend.
Elsewhere Harness is very much getting posterior splinters from all his
fence-sitting, preaching both for nations to retain their cultural diversity
irrespective of geography (clearly drawing inspiration from the modern day
proliferation of mosques and burkha-wearing women in our towns and cities) as
well as the need to prevent such differences escalating into ethnic and racial
antagonism; something which Osgood’s living embodiment of the fragile peace
treaty was supposed to prevent.
But
the biggest praise I can lavish on ‘The Zygon Invasion’ is that it’s far better
and more conscience-minded than the similarly themed but largely played for
laughs ‘Aliens of London’. Where Russell
T Davies’ subtext of MPs hiding alien monsters who can train ‘Mass Weapons of
Destruction’ within 15 seconds was polemic-lite,
Harness instead goes for the jugular with (if anything) extremist results,
fittingly so for an episode that preaches caution about tarring the many with
the same brush as the vocalised few.
This is Doctor Who desperately
trying to ape the urban thriller meme of the likes of 24, with its lexicon of neutralised, radicalised pre-emptive
buzzwords. Of course it doesn’t come
even close, but then for a show that will always gain more resonance from
showing the tortured reality of being emotionally blackmailed by enemies wearing
the faces of familial loved ones, I guess that’s one failure we can all learn
to live with.
While
it might occasionally seem to be appealing to the tunnel-vision politics of the
average Daily Mail reader, with its simplified approach to topical events, ‘The
Zygon Invasion’ should be applauded for instilling Doctor Who once again with a socio-political conscience that treats
cultural diversity and political security with equal balance. It’s not going to win any awards for subtlety
but if it gets people talking about issues all too clouded by media agendas and
political chicanery, then this is one invasion well worth surrendering to.
Next Time – the enemy
of my enemy is my friend
Hi John, I loved Invasion, and Inversion as well, looking forward to reading your take on it as well. In fact, I'm hoping I can interest you in checking out a proposal for a sort of traveling, cross-blog DW discussion group for the rest of Series 9. If at all interested, please see the details at: http://www.cdogzilla.net/p/informal-dw-blogger-network-proposal.html Hope I can persuade you consider it :) Cheers, Chris (aka cdogzilla)
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