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
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.
But
the real reason that Moffat should accept endings is of far more narrative
importance than his own accession to the retirement home of the show’s creative
directors. As enjoyable as ‘Hell Bent’
begins as a spaghetti western spin on Gallifrey’s most notorious prodigal son’s
return home, yet again the now quite self-harming inertia to pick the scabs of
storylines and character arcs that have already reached their natural shelf-life
raises its ugly head. It’s become a
topic long past cliché that Moffat lacks the innate writerly skill of being
able to ‘kill your darlings’, so the reappearance of Jenna Coleman’s Clara –
plucked from the moment of her fixed-point demise in ‘Face the Raven by a new
Time Lord innovation called an extraction chamber (aka ‘get out of jail free
card’) – elicits as many mocking titters as it does tired groans. Once again the Doctor’s plan within a plan
within a plan becomes an episode’s turning point (and yet another in a
long-trodden line of deus ex machine
trapdoors), perhaps robbing us of a far better story where, say, the Doctor
leads a rag-tag group of shobogans in a proletariat uprising against their
feudal Time Lord oppressors. Like I say,
‘Hell Bent’ promises just that for its first twenty minutes or so, with Capaldi
channelling more than a hint of Clint Eastwood man-with-no-name coolness, as he
banishes both Time Lord President Rasillon (here in far more grumpy regenerated
form as Donald Sumpter) and then the High Council to become both the default
President elect and fabled hero that won the Time War. Rachel Talalay’s measured, almost
dialogue-free direction and Murray Gold’s aping of Ennio Morricone’s iconic
spaghetti scores don’t exactly harm things either, and Capaldi’s gravitas and
sheer menace suggest that this new sheriff in town isn’t going anywhere. The deserts of Lanzarote match the fabled
Gallifreyan burnt orange template and the moment a squadron of Time War
soldiers toss away their guns could be the finest image of this season.
And
then things go horribly, and predictably, wrong.
That
fade to black that then rises upon Clara’s final moments on Trap Street are
perhaps the biggest narrative U-turn made yet, even under Moffat’s
stewardship. Any lingering notions of
this being High Noon, with Sheriff
Capaldi adopting the role of Henry Fonda are snuffed out, and within moments we
are launched into an alternative
finale; one that sees the Doctor go to the ends of creation and break his own
strict standards of ‘never being cruel or cowardly’ (since when is robbing a
fellow Time Lord of one of his finite regenerations akin to exaggerated male
influenza?) just because HE CAN’T LET CLARA GO.
You could be forgiven for saying that from this point ‘Hell Bent’
becomes a meta-narrative examining its own creator’s lingering issues with
closure. If ‘The War Games’ final
episode saw a Doctor cowardly desperate to avoid the consequences of his own
interference, then ‘Hell Bent’ is all about a writer who has encapsulated all
his inabilities to be brutal when required into just one character. Even Amy and Rory were given the (somewhat
dubious) exit explanation that – despite living back in 1930s New York – the
Doctor could never see them again: a tissue thin rule that you suspect
Capaldi’s Doctor wouldn’t even bless with his consideration. But seemingly from day one, the Impossible
Girl has been Moffat’s Achilles heel: the one constant in the Doctor’s life
that will never, ever let him go. She’s
been ever-present throughout his time stream, talked him down from ending the
Time War in genocide, and even provided him with a mission statement from under
his childhood bed. Impossible hardly even begins to cover it. And therein lies the problem, as finally
given the chance (again) to draw a line under Clara’s story, Moffat instead
opts for the frankly deranged suggestion that until/if she ever returns to
Gallifrey, she and her likewise immortal chum Me can have their own spin-off
adventures in much the way the Paternoster gang still haven’t. How much better, and how much more
understated, would have been that simple farewell a year ago before Jenna
Coleman’s cold feet twice got the better of the show’s chief writer.
And
Moffat’s continuing obsession with turning Doctor
Who into a clearly CS Lewis influenced combination of folklore and fairy
tale now sees its apotheosis in the notion that ‘stories are where memories go
when they’re forgotten’. In fact, the
framing device of having a seemingly amnesiac Doctor tell his story to a
stranger we all recognise (while he doesn’t) even feels the need to ramp the
point home with lines like “You like a cliff-hanger, don’t you?”, “Is this a
story or did this really happen?” and (my personal favourite) “Was I supposed
to understand any of that?” If Steven
Moffat’s main intention is indeed to rewrite as much of established lore as he
can get his hands on, or to bait fans with throwaway bon mots about Susan and the TV movie’s half-human notion, then he
is clearly of the opinion that by meticulously recreating a 1960s TARDIS
interior with painstaking detail he is exonerated of all blame. And to be fair, he may have a point –
certainly my Saturday night Twitter feed was as bloated with squeeing fangasms
praising an (admittedly) design tour-de-force by Michael Pickwoad and co, as it
was any denigration of an episode whose story came crashing off the rails once
Clara re-entered from stage left.
And
this sense that the showrunner needs answer to no one is even extended to this
year’s meme, the hybrid. Okay, the
Ashildr/Me mix of human and mire may have been a bit too obvious to those bar
the least switched on of viewer (which, admittedly, this year has become more
and more evident), but when you throw in a number of multiple choice options –
human/Doctor, Doctor/Clara, Doctor/Missy – with no clear explanation bar the
Doctor’s sudden realisation that his gone-too-far shtick has resulted in a
self-fulfilling prophecy, then you know that narratively you’re at a dead end. If you haven’t got an answer to your season
long enigma, then perhaps you shouldn’t ask the question in the first
place? But hey, look at the roundels on that baby and the painful recreation of
the double doors leading to the TARDIS’ interior. All you needed was a recreation of the food
machine, and its mars bar lumps of egg and chips, and you probably could have
had the last fifteen minutes elapse in silence for all the pretty pictures
being thrown at you in lieu of any narrative cohesion.
Like
the Doctor, I’ve gone too far. But
unlike Moffat, I know when to stop.
Season nine has been a bumpy ride, both onscreen and off, but when Doctor Who does make its likely
Christmas 2016 return (notwithstanding this year’s River Song yuletide romp)
it’s to be hoped that more lessons have been learned than just letting a controller
with a clear case of anathema schedule the timeslot. It’s a real shame that Doctor Who is now coughing out greatness in fits and starts, rather
than cruising on the well-oiled carburettor of years past. This year has seen levels of fan-pandering
plotlines to make even JN-T’s Hawaiian shirts lose their shine, and beyond
casting a bona fide household name as the new companion for series ten (Miranda
Hart, irrespective of your particular tolerance for her, would certainly fit
that bill) it’s really hard right now to see what hook can be cast to bring
back those casual viewers so crucially lost this term. Capaldi himself will likely move on after one
more year at the age of 58, and with Moffat’s seat on the throne seemingly on a
rolling basis until someone (anyone?) comes along to relieve him, the future of
Doctor Who as a cash-cow franchise
remains secure. But as a vibrant,
essential part at the heart of the Saturday night schedules? It’s gonna take more than recasting the leads
to bring fresh impetus now. And that’s
one prophecy I fear contains very little room for ambiguity...
Good points well made, Sean.
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