BBC One, Saturday 5th
December 2015 / Starring:
Peter Capaldi, Donald Sumpter, Ken Bones, T’Nia Miller, Malachi Kirby, Clare
Higgins, Linda Broughton, Martin T Sherman with Maisie Williams and Jenna
Coleman/Written by Steven Moffat, Directed by Rachel Talalay
Reviewed by Sean
Alexander
“At the end of
everything, one must accept the company of immortals.”
Like
the Doctor, Steven Moffat doesn’t like endings.
But it’s high time he started doing so.
Chalking up his fifth successive series as show-runner/chief writer –
now free and clear of his predecessor in the seat, Russell T Davies, not to
mention clocking up more time-travel miles than the majority of the original
series’ producer tenures – and it’s clear that even he is making exit strategy
contingencies. But for a show that
pretty much consumes your every waking moment (and when it occasionally
doesn’t, then Sherlock fills any
remaining gaps) the situation would appear to have arisen that, as of this
moment, there is nobody to step into the breach. Moffat’s tie-in interview with Radio Times
this week is telling: he claims to be actively involved with helping appoint
his successor but at the same time won’t leave the show in the lurch. Or, in 1980s speak, he has been persuaded to
stay on. Whether the delay is down to Doctor Who’s previous lustre having been
somewhat dimmed this year by a car-crash timeslot and a seemingly disinterested
general public finding World Cup rugby or TV karaoke a more tempting prospect,
remains tantalisingly unanswered. But
overnight figures of less than five million and consolidated ones well under
seven should be setting off all the bells in anyone’s cloister chambers. And it’s not just those ever so intangible
totals that should be of concern, but also the audience share and the fact that
even its same channel stable-mates are outperforming it week in, week out. Given that Christmas Day’s annual outing –
its eleventh consecutive one since 2005 – has a far more child-friendly,
adult-accepting slot of 5.15pm may in part answer that question. Because irrespective of falling figures
across the board that even bore witness last Christmas Day, if Doctor Who flops again in less than
three weeks you suspect there really will be no hiding place.