Tuesday 30 October 2018

Doctor Who: Arachnids in the UK

Doctor: 'I call people dude now.'

Four episodes in, I think it safe to say that the show's found its style and rhythm. Despite a few glitches, the Doctor's personality is pretty much established; Yaz, Ryan and Graham have been given rudimentary backstories; and we now know what sort of stories Chibnall wants to tell. The question is: are they stories we want to see and hear?

As far as plots go, this was as basic as it gets. The core concept was a partial retread of 'The Green Death' (without all that pesky complexity and engaging character nonsense), there was some running around, some creepy spiders, some light character development for the supporting cast, and one of the most straightforward endings known to man. (Robertson just shot the spider and fucked off home.) Add an all too on-the-nose Trump-hating Trump clone, a spider expert stood conveniently outside the door, and that was pretty much the nuts and bolts.

I freely admit, I didn't understand the Trump stuff at all. Robertson was a character who allegedly hated Trump, yet was like him in every way. What was Chibnall trying to tell us here? If it's that guns are bad, then we know dude—so why let them win the day? If it was that being like Trump is bad, then we're right with you—but why is Trump currently president, and why did the fictional Robertson get to claim he's 'what the world needs' without rebuttal? I get that parody can be a useful tool in teaching, but what did such a broad-stroke caricature actually convey in terms of message, and was that message coherent?

Robertson was just too big for the episode. The rest of the cast played it comparatively low-key in an attempt to get across the gravity of the situation, only for Robertson to undermine their efforts in establishing tone with his Trump quoting, cliche-ridden bollocks. What were his scheduled bathroom breaks, incessant attempts at belittling the show's female characters, and obsession with guns all about? And to end Robertson's story with him walking away unpunished after a failed scolding by the Doctor, really did seem like the final indignity. Is she going to let everyone get away scot-free this season?

The sad thing is, I agree with the sentiment: guns, knives, racism and Trump's values are bad... but you need to do more than just say it. You need to explain why, otherwise people who think differently won't understand. In fact, I'm pretty sure that viewers of a certain political persuasion will have watched tonight's episode and thought that Robertson won. He undermined the Doctor's authority throughout, saved the day, and then walked away more sure of his twisted values than ever before. Some people on Twitter have suggested that Robertson will be back later in the season. I fucking hope not! Once was more than enough.

Graham interacting with Grace's 'ghost' was more successful. After offing her back in episode one, I was ready to see some fallout from her death, and seeing Graham deal with the physical and emotional emptiness of a flat without Grace was a moving moment. Him wanting to travel with the Doctor made absolute sense in light of his loss. Yaz's reasons made less sense to me. Yes, her family were a bit irritating, but not so dysfunctional that she just had to get away. Even her rubbish-hoarding father seemed less bonkers after having his conspiracy theory authenticated. In fact, for an episode heavily focused on Yaz, I don't feel like we learned much about her at all.

The CGI spiders were cool, the atmosphere was excellent, and I liked the final scenes aboard the TARDIS. At last, it feels like we have a crew again. Apart from that, this felt like another shallow episode. 'Rosa' made up for its wafer-thin plot with a healthy dollop of history, but mutant spiders just don't carry the same emotional weight. And the Doctor really needs to start taking control. Tonight she promised that Robertson wouldn't kill any spiders, yet he did. This does not feel like a Doctor in charge. Whether that's intentional or incidental, we'll have to wait and see, but I really hope she starts holding people's feet to the fire soon.

Other Thoughts:

—A rubbish collection every Friday?! Where is this fictional utopia of which Grace O'Brien speaks?

—I'm not entirely sure what sort of humane death Jade was referring to. Suffocation? Starvation? Or did she have some other 'humane' death in mind?

—It's the little things that really undo a scene... like Ryan leaning against the wrong side of a door which opened inward to hold it closed.

—So, the other spiders around town: what happened to them?

—I can't see many people under 30 getting the Sex Pistols title reference.

—I know you can't account for these things, but Robertson's 'Why don't you do what normal people do?' line was a bit too close for comfort after the Pittsburgh shooting.

Quotes:

Jade: 'This doesn't make any sense. This isn't what spiders do.'

Robertson: 'Who are you people?'
Graham: 'A word of advice, mate. Run now, ask questions later.'

Doctor: 'Are you Ed Sheeran? Is he Ed Sheeran? Everyone talks about Ed Sheeran about now, don't they?'

Ryan: 'She's in charge, bro.'
Robertson: 'Says who?'
All: 'Says us!'

Doctor: 'I eat danger for breakfast. I don't, I prefer cereal. Or croissants. Or those little fried Portuguese... never mind, it's not important.'









14 comments:

Chronotis said...

Hands down the worst episode of the season so far. Why must Chibnall insist on creating these over the top cardboard cut-out characters that serve no purpose other than to be a huge unrealistic target at which to aim his half-baked moralising? Robertson won tonight. He outclasses the Doctor in every department, ignored her gun warning twice, eventually shot the spider, and then stomped out like he owned the place. If this show's new brief is education, then why didn't Chibnll educate the viewer on why Robertson was wrong? When you have these over the top villains, it's easy to think they don't exist in real life. They do. Right now these men exist and the Doctor did nothing to stop him, nothing to reason with him, and ended up losing to him.

AndroidKat said...

This was "Dinosaurs on a Spaceship" levels of shitness. So much for the fabled fourth episode lift in quality. Another Chibnall episode next week you say? My heart is full of fucking joy.

Anonymous said...

Honesty, it's all well and good telling a "simpler" story, but there's a thin line between simple and facile. This frequently dipped into the latter camp.

Besieger said...

Watching with the kids, it's fine. Watching as an adult, there's just nothing of substance. For all their faults, at least the Davies and Moffat eras entertained. This feels like I'm being preached at. As everyone says, they keep telling us how we should feel, without explaining why.

At this point, I wish Chibnall had spread his episodes more evenly. Five Chibnall stories in a row feels like far too many, especially when they all suffer from the same core weaknesses.

Under Moffat we got used to the showrunner stories being the best and the guest additions being of mixed quality. If Chibnall's are the best of the bunch this season, then I'm not sure I'll be around for next. I'm not even sure I'll be around for the finale.

Tommy Krasker said...

On the plus side, the spiders looked nice. Also… Also… Aw shit, I got nothing. It was a piece of crap from start to finish. Paper-thin plotting, endless contrivances, mixed-message moralizing, clumsy attempts at humor and (I'm guessing) satire, and a preposterous non-resolution. Plus a Doctor who essentially doesn't function as the Doctor anymore, but more like someone's eccentric aunt. It's dispiriting and demoralizing how much of what made Doctor Who magical has been willfully and woefully removed; I'm not even sure I have the will to keep watching.

Besieger said...

I'm starting to think that three is too many companions in a ten episode season. I think the Doctor and either Yaz or Ryan would've been enough. Jodie's Doctor needs to grow, and it's just not happening with all this companion stuff going on.

taiey said...

—A rubbish collection every Friday?! Where is this fictional utopia of which Grace O'Brien speaks?
*blinkblinkblink* ...New Zealand???



I liked it. It was funny. The companions felt mostly like people. (@ Ghost Monument) I liked Yaz's family, I liked the spiders woman.

Niccaman said...

This is starting to feel like the the BBC's Atlantis: random people you don't particularly care about, doing uninteresting things in bland places. For a show that looks so good, with Jodie Whittaker at the helm, how is it so ordinary?

Potter said...

Do you think they're trying to pair Yaz up with Ryan? There were several references to the two of them being together tonight, and last week his 'punching above his weight' comment elicited a smile from Yaz. Is this where they're going with their relationship?

sunbunny said...

"In fact, for an episode heavily focused on Yaz, I don't feel like we learned much about her at all." !!!! THIS.

Also, does trash not get picked up every week in the UK? We have trash, recycling, and green waste picked up weekly in the US, at least where I am.

Depressingly unimaginative plot. Give Jodie something worthy of her! PLEASE!

Paul Reed said...

@sunbunny In all the places I've lived for the past 15 years it's been recycling one week and general rubbish the next. Weekly collection sounds like some sort of impossible dream. I can barely imagine a world when I don't have to climb on top of my bin on day ten in order to compact the rubbish with my body weight.

Chronotis said...

And now rumours that there'll be no Xmas episode this year! It's like Chibnall's changing absolutely everything about the show. I hope it's not true, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was.

Anonymous said...

Chibnall's vision of the Doctor is darker than Moffats or Davies. I just can't picture Jodie running around in a Santa hat.

Chronotis said...

Anon, the Doctor already dresses like Noddy from Toyland. What makes a Santa hat too much for you to imagine?