(no subject)
Dec. 28th, 2013 07:31 pmTomorrow I knuckle down and Get Some Work Done, but today I've a few reflections on the stuff I've been chilling out & watching since the end of term:
Doctor Who
It's not Matt Smith's fault. He's a great actor who's done some stellar work on the show; but because of the scripts he's been given, he'll be remembered most for being a creep. For being a mouthpiece for Moffatt's problems with women.
To be honest, this bothers me to the extent that I'm hoping for fan-edits before I'll want to go back and re-watch the Clara episodes. And I always re-watch New Who, often marathoning it for full immersiveness. But I can't face doing that after "hell in high heels" and "the legs" and "don't let him see you age" and "a woman" and touching Clara while she sleeps and "naked!" and all the other things that I've probably forgotten in self-defence.
There is so much I've loved about Eleven's era! The Ponds (whether that's just Amy and Rory, a glorious OT3, or the whole family unit). Jenny and Vastra ("I'm a lizard woman from the dawn of time and this is my wife"). Gaiman's episodes. The way the plots all tie up, even though sometimes the cleverness is too smug or too thrown-away. But I can't ignore the misogyny any more; it's no longer a few OOC Moffatisms that I can circumlegate, it's become integral to Eleven's characterisation. And that makes me very sad.
Tipping the Velvet
Oh, now, this takes me back! It's so much more melodramatic than I remember, probably due to the fact that I was a teenager when I first watched it. It's a pantomime, really, the whole thing; in the oldest and bawdiest sense of the word. (The media were obsessed with this show when it first aired - with a particular focus on the fact that we (*gasp*!) see a strap-on dildo.)
It's a little discomfiting to watch through the episodes - episode one, the theatre! episode two, kink! episode three, socialism! - and realise how much this show is me. I first saw it so long ago that today when
shortcipher called it "Emma-bait" I had to question which came first, the Emma or the bait! Because really, this is one of the things that built my queer identity, along with But, I'm a Cheerleader and Velvet Goldmine and Rocky Horror.
(It's also perturbing to remember that I used to think Nan's choice at the end was hard to make, and to question if she'd even made the right decision. Teenagers, eh?)
Well worth a re-watch, though, I'd say. Once I'd managed to stop cringing at the use of camera effects and voiceover repetition to convey emotional turmoil, I still found it as moving - as joyful and as tragic - as it ever was. And the queer family unit stuff at the end: I feel like I really get that, for the first time, perhaps.
Doctor Who
It's not Matt Smith's fault. He's a great actor who's done some stellar work on the show; but because of the scripts he's been given, he'll be remembered most for being a creep. For being a mouthpiece for Moffatt's problems with women.
To be honest, this bothers me to the extent that I'm hoping for fan-edits before I'll want to go back and re-watch the Clara episodes. And I always re-watch New Who, often marathoning it for full immersiveness. But I can't face doing that after "hell in high heels" and "the legs" and "don't let him see you age" and "a woman" and touching Clara while she sleeps and "naked!" and all the other things that I've probably forgotten in self-defence.
There is so much I've loved about Eleven's era! The Ponds (whether that's just Amy and Rory, a glorious OT3, or the whole family unit). Jenny and Vastra ("I'm a lizard woman from the dawn of time and this is my wife"). Gaiman's episodes. The way the plots all tie up, even though sometimes the cleverness is too smug or too thrown-away. But I can't ignore the misogyny any more; it's no longer a few OOC Moffatisms that I can circumlegate, it's become integral to Eleven's characterisation. And that makes me very sad.
Tipping the Velvet
Oh, now, this takes me back! It's so much more melodramatic than I remember, probably due to the fact that I was a teenager when I first watched it. It's a pantomime, really, the whole thing; in the oldest and bawdiest sense of the word. (The media were obsessed with this show when it first aired - with a particular focus on the fact that we (*gasp*!) see a strap-on dildo.)
It's a little discomfiting to watch through the episodes - episode one, the theatre! episode two, kink! episode three, socialism! - and realise how much this show is me. I first saw it so long ago that today when
(It's also perturbing to remember that I used to think Nan's choice at the end was hard to make, and to question if she'd even made the right decision. Teenagers, eh?)
Well worth a re-watch, though, I'd say. Once I'd managed to stop cringing at the use of camera effects and voiceover repetition to convey emotional turmoil, I still found it as moving - as joyful and as tragic - as it ever was. And the queer family unit stuff at the end: I feel like I really get that, for the first time, perhaps.
no subject
Date: 2013-12-28 10:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-12-28 10:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-12-29 12:43 am (UTC)Haven't seen Affinity though we have it on avi somewhere. Saw The Night Watch and I think it was ruined for me by Kay - for all I love Anna Maxwell Martin she was miscast, and by various other things now that I think about it, but then it was my favourite of the books so perhaps that's not surprising.
no subject
Date: 2013-12-29 10:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-12-29 10:20 pm (UTC)(That's a really good description, actually, because at first glance Gandalf is kindly and benevolent but then there are all these undercurrents of manipulation and being Not Quite Human that, say, Seventh always gave off.)
no subject
Date: 2013-12-29 10:33 pm (UTC)And, yes, I saw TtV before reading it, and I do think it's the right way round. (If only because I generally don't have a very strong visual imagination, and that's a book that *definitely* benefits from strong mental images...)
The only major mis-step I think the adaptation makes is to have Florence be clueless about the existence of queer women's subculture, while Nan knows all about it; it really really should be the other way around.
no subject
Date: 2013-12-30 12:08 am (UTC)I'm quite torn by The Time of the Doctor - a lot of people whose views I respect love it, but an equal number loathe it for good reasons. I think the underlying idea was very strong, but I think it was defeated by the execution. I lean towards the belief that River was to be in charge of the papal mainframe, as Alex Kingston provides the voice for it in A Good Man Goes to War, but Kingston was committed elsewhere; and goodness knows what nonsense Moffat has to deal with from the various forces at the BBC with an interest in the show. I don't know if you have seen the deleted scene which BBC America released, but given it involved another badly handled physicality/nakedness gag I'm glad it went.
no subject
Date: 2013-12-30 01:24 am (UTC)I felt that all the good ideas in The Time of the Doctor were thrown away - Time Lords granting regenerations, the truth field, the loose ends of the 2010 plot - while huge swathes of the episode were wasted on nothing-much (nudity gags and "the man who stayed for Christmas").
My problem is not that the plot doesn't hold together. (I mean, it totally *doesn't* hold together, but that's not the problem.) Lots of New Who doesn't hold up to hard sci-fi scrutiny, and that's because it was never meant to; it's fantasy more than sci-fi, in a lot of ways. I often love that kind of story-telling! But for me, this episode lacked the dramatic or emotional interest that could have led me through the nonsense-plot in an enjoyable way.
(And - yes, I've seen that deleted scene, and am similarly glad that it was cut!)
no subject
Date: 2013-12-30 12:26 pm (UTC)I must admit I've not been picking up on the sexism directly this past season. I think I've been trying not to overanalyse the episodes too much and haven't bothered rewatching any. But there's been something I haven't liked and I'm guessing that's why.
I agree it did seem like the interesting bits were kind of after thoughts. Why did he have to pretend to be Clara's boyfriend?
I feel sad that Matt kinda went out on a fizzle. He was a really great doctor and deserved so much more. And I say that as someone who generaly prefers Moffatt's reign over RTDs. But the short seasons were really nothing to work with.
no subject
Date: 2013-12-30 02:08 pm (UTC)I find I'm wanting to make an aside about Moffat's 'heterosexual agenda', here!
Mostly I feel like: the things I love about Eleventh's era (and there are a lot), I love despite Moffat, not because of him.