BBC One, Saturday 7th
November 2015 / Starring:
Peter Capaldi, Jenna Coleman, Ingrid Oliver, Jemma Redgrave / Written by Peter
Harness and Steven Moffat. / Directed by Daniel Nettheim / Reviewed by Sean
Alexander
“Why does peacekeeping
always involve killing?”
I
only really need to talk about that speech, don’t I…?
It’s
not often Doctor Who has such a
cultural resonance that you just sit there and shut up. And it’s even less often that an actor in the
lead role is given the kind of material to work with that he rises to the
occasion and hits it so far out of the park that not even that little girl in
the John Lewis Christmas ad will be able to pick it up on her telescope.
But
Doctor Who and Peter Capaldi did that
tonight, and then some.
Science
fiction always works best when it speaks of our own time, allows us to discuss
matters in the world that would otherwise be the remit of dry documentaries or
pointless political debates. It is the
window on our world that casts the harshest reflection. And some of the greatest stories in Doctor Who’s time have grasped this
opportunity and run with it.
‘The
Zygon Inversion’ isn’t perfect, but then it doesn’t need to be. Because for ten minutes it was more than
perfect, it was an expression of hope in the most troubled of times.
Pick
up a newspaper, switch on the news, scroll through your phone. Fear and war and anger and suspicion litter
our lives. Migrants, radicalism,
Trident, borders and bombs are the lexicon of our lives. The End of History begat the beginning of
another war, colder even than the one we were promised had brought all wars to
an end. The war with ourselves, with who
we are, what we believe and who we follow; a war that is truly without end.
If
only real life was as simple as a choice between truth and consequence.
But
then, for most people it is. But the
world we live in – the world of political alliances, trade agreements, special
relationships – that’s a world beyond you and I. A world peopled by politicians and generals
and accountants. Making daily decisions
that shape our lives while we are left to get on with living them.
David
Cameron and Jeremy Corbyn both gave their answer recently to the Question: Yes
or No. One man who would and another who
never would. Truth or consequence, Yes
or No. If only Trident and the thousands
of warheads primed, ready to one day fly, were as empty as the Osgood
boxes. A simple choice between life and
death that wasn’t just the stuff of science fiction.
Doctor Who is littered with
occasions when the complicated nature of politics was blended down to a simple
choice. The cold war and the nuclear
arms race loomed large over the entire span of its original run; its revival
arrived in the aftermath of 9/11 and the War on Terror. New names for old terms, perhaps. But if the wheel of conflict and bloodshed in
the name of peace and prosperity really does turn like the Mara wheel, then
what lessons can we ever learn? Is Total
War the only reality? Is there ever
really a simple choice between war and peace, life and death, yes and no? Truth and consequence?
For
every actor to play the part there is a moment that defines whoever is the
Doctor in Doctor Who. I won’t bore you with reminders of some of
those times, but instead give thanks to Peter Capaldi for giving the kind of
grandstanding speech that (if it hasn’t already) will have cemented him in the
hearts of minds of everyone watching this evening. No threats, no guns, no peace treaties. Just the simple words of a man who has seen a
dozen lifetimes worth of death in the name of colonialism, xenophobia and
genocide, and been sat in the seat of having the power of life and death over entire
species. His species. The man with
the button. The man who never would.
It’s
a simple message, but then aren’t all the best ones just that? No rhetoric, no agenda, no concession to
militaristic intelligence or political chicanery. And what do
the winners of any war do the moment victory is secured? What comes next, when nobody wins for very
long anyway. Wheel turns, civilizations
rise. Wheel turns, civilizations fall.
A
choice between cruelty that begets more cruelty, or forgiving and
forgetting. One choice that escalates a
situation. One that offers an
alternative.
If
war is indeed a game played by politicians, then we know who these screaming
kids throwing tantrums are. And thinking
really is a fancy word for changing your mind.
Like Enlightenment, the prize wasn’t the point. The choice was.
Doctor Who has a rich history of
polemical, political stories about the errors of mankind and the futility of
war. But rarely has it been such a
potent piece of propaganda for pacifism in such troubled times. If only the leaders of Amercica, Great
Britain, Russia, ISIS and dozens of others were stuck in a room with just two
boxes to choose from. Boxes which are
less about what they do than what they represent.
Of course the Osgood boxes are
empty. It’s never been about the
contents, just the choice. Always the choice.
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