Tuesday 6 November 2018

Doctor Who: The Tsuranga Conundrum

Back in 2010, being a Doctor Who fan was like being in a beautiful relationship. It was exciting, invigorating, and despite sometimes having no idea what was going on, you were never less than engaged. Even as the years rolled by and the rough patches came and went, you still knew why you were together. The good times still materialised with unerring frequency, and when they did you felt that familiar flutter in your stomach which could only mean one thing: you were still madly in love.

Then season ten came along and Moffat seemed far less interested in making it work, so we agreed to start seeing other people. Sure we didn't want to, but what else can you do when your significant other throws up the deuces and peaces out on you? So we swapped Moffat for Chibnall, and after five nightmarish dates, let me unequivocally state that I should never have agreed to the break-up. This is my fault, I was a fucking idiot, and I swear I can change. Just give me a second chance. Please!

Halfway through the season and the potential of episode one, and the slight lift in quality of episode three, have now well and truly been flushed down the toilet of banal stories, and it's time to admit that the show is currently... well, a bit shit. Tonight we were 'treated' to the most preposterous looking villain since the Adipose (sans discernible satirical context), some aimless running around, an emotional payoff less convincing than Bradley Walsh's background acting, the reemergence of the dreaded countdown, and another dreary non-ending where the villain managed to get away without consequence. In short: it was a typical Chibnall script.

One thing Doctor Who should never be is boring, and tonight, regrettably, it was. People on Twitter were making cups of tea half way through, I inexplicably found myself outside looking for my cat, fully aware that she was fast asleep in the bedroom. This was not an episode which held your attention. I seem to be saying it a lot these days, but there were too many contrivances, too much exposition, too many questions, and too little thought-provoking sci-fi. Which is sad because the show has never looked better. Well, apart from the ship interior, which looked like it'd been constructed by primary school pupils with just cardboard and felt-tip pens at their disposal. And the Pting which looked far too cute to be one of the most dangerous creatures in the galaxy, bore a suspicious resemblance to half a dozen already existing fictional creations, and were probably better suited to a CBBC show. Apart from those things, it looked fabulous.

But just too much dumb shit happened. The only reason the gang ended up aboard the Tsuranga is because they were out looking for something Chibnall couldn't even be arsed to give a name. Then the Doctor and Co. coincidentally bumped into all of the episode's main players whilst looking for the ship's exit, Astos did the very thing the Doctor told him not to do and died, a thousand questions were asked, and Dirk somehow managed to fly the ship home because he was a Cicero? Why he didn't pilot it in the first place, rather than throw his ailing sister under the bus, is anyone's guess. Presumably so we could have an emotional ending. Except we didn't. Sadly, it fell as flat as one of Chibnall's jokes on account of it being so utterly predictable.

The incessant questioning thing I'm finding particularly irritating. Why doesn't the Doctor know anything any more? A couple of episodes ago she knew nothing of currency, and now we're supposed to buy that she required an infodump on the Pting? It used to be that the Doctor was the smartest person in the room, due to age, experience, and sheer genius. Now she's less intelligent than half of her previous companions, seems to have a mere surface knowledge of things outside the human experience, and relies far too heavily on those around her. Perhaps it was a creative decision to tone down her brilliance and make her more accessible, but it comes at the risk of stripping her of everything that made her unique. God, how I miss the Doctor randomly pulling solutions out of his ass.

Jodie did her best with some shockingly bland dialogue, but Chibnall really hasn't given her character any memorable traits. She's also too passive. How is feeding and then airlocking the indestructible Pting punishment for killing two people? (One albeit indirectly.) What's stopping it from doing the exact same thing when it's hungry again? And remember how different Tennant's Doctor seemed to Eccleston's, or Smith's to Tennant's, or Capaldi's to Smith's? Jodie's Doctor seems to have kept some residual traits of both Ten and Eleven—which most often manifest when she's at her most rambling—but Chibnall really hasn't added much else. Plus, he doesn't do humour as well as his predecessors. Nine seems like a comedy genius in comparison to Thirteen. If in doubt, look how quotable the Doctor's dialogue was prior to this season.

Worse still, when Chibnall does try to break out the funnies, he does it through tonally incongruent comedy characters. In episode one we were forced to endure the 'hilariously' special Karl, last week it was Donald Trump-lite, and this week it was the bumbling Yoss. It's like Chibnall deliberately makes these characters larger than life just so we know they're the comic relief. But do we really need these visual and aural clues? Are we really so confused? And considering male pregnancy was supposed to be particularly intense, Yoss seemed to sail through it. Most of his anguish came from external issues rather than internal discomfort. Ask any woman that's had an intense pregnancy what it's like, and I highly doubt she'll respond with: 'Have you ever seen "The Tsuranga Conundrum?"'

It's Vinay Patel's turn next week, and in the same way that Malorie Blackman's influence seemed to give 'Rosa' a modicum of depth, here's hoping Vinay manages to do the same. Assuming the new writers room format allows for adequate deviation from Chibnall's house style. Honestly, I'm not hopeful.

Other Thoughts:

—I struggled to imagine what Yoss found so disturbing about one sex giving birth to another. How would it differ from what he was used to?

—The Doctor and Co's reaction to the Pting seemed wildly over the top considering how ridiculous it looked. Obviously they hadn't seen the finished CGI. Even Mandip Gill said they were cute on Twitter. Cute?!

—Doctor of Hope? Oh, for fuck's sakes....

—I was a bit confused by Ryan this week. He started out by seemingly sympathising with his absent father, only to see Yoss go through childbirth and change his mind about giving away his baby. Are we to assume that this event had no effect on Ryan whatsoever?

—I wish Ryan would just fist-bump his granddad.

Quotes:

Doctor: 'I'm the Doctor.'
Astos: 'Are you kidding?'
Doctor: 'Sometimes. But not right now.'

Doctor: 'And you. Off this ship, back into space, right now, else you'll have me to deal with.'
Graham: 'It just sort of ignored you there, Doc.'

29 comments:

sunbunny said...

It was bland. Not bad. Just...not memorable at all. It reminded me of middling RTD episodes but it didn't really click until I read your review about how passive the Doctor is being. And yeah what happened to consequences? That and Yaz STILL hasn't been developed beyond "girl. police officer. eager." And the set was just a series of corridors. Classic Doctor Who. Literally. Straight out of Classic Doctor Who.

The Doctor has seen Hamilton 900 times with different casts. Mark and I decided (hi Mark, if you're reading this) that the Doctor who most likely did this was Ten and Donna was dragged to at least a few performances and kept flirting with Daveed Diggs backstage. And who can blame her? He's crushable.

I think the episode was partly ruined for me because I saw a picture of the Pting before I saw the ep and I was like oh it looks like an Adipose crossed with Stitch from Lilo and Stitch. So the whole "SOMETHING IS IN THE SHIP" bit lacked menace. Cause it was just a cute lil alien who couldn't help but be an unquenchable ship eating monster.

ALSO I DID NOT KNOW YOU HAD A CAT.

Paul Reed said...

@sunbunny They were saying pre-season that each character would be get plenty of development as the season went on, but that hasn't really has happened yet. Which is annoying, as all three of them are fairly likeable, they just don't seem to do or be much.

Terrible photo of my cat Jess coming soon to your Twitter :)

Broken Altar said...

I can't believe we're five episodes in and Thirteen's had hardly any character development. It's almost as if the showrunner thinks he has no work to do because we already know who the Doctor is. The development they've given her is so awful, I almost wish they hadn't bothered. I'm not really sure what the show's meant to be at the moment. Take away the sci-fi and there isn't enough there for a drama, take away the drama and there isn't enough there for a sci-fi show. It's like they've given up the worst of both worlds.

Anonymous said...

Honestly, are you not expecting too much from a children's show? I agree that this wasn't great, but maybe you need to lower your expectations?

Paul Reed said...

@Anonymous Hmmmm! It just feels like a cop out to blame its lack of quality on it being a children's show, when it's been a children's show for 50+ years and I've found plenty to enjoy up until lately. Even the most positive reviewers have commented on how trashy the plots are and how poorly the characters have been developed. It's just some choose to overlook it, whereas I don't because I don't think I should have to.

Chronotis said...

This 'it's a children's Show' excuse really needs to die. So what if it is? That doesn't mean it should serve up poor quality food to its younger viewers. Why should a children's show be watchable for ten seasons and then suddenly become unrecognisable? Clearly something is wrong with the vision here. I know people who've loved the show for decades just stop watching. Chibnall doesn't understand the show, nor does he know how to write for it. This is so annoying when there were better qualified writers than him to showrun, yet some idiot from the BBC chose Chibnall. Did nobody watch his earlier contributions?

Anonymous said...

Chronotis: Better qualified writers? Such as?

Chronotis said...

Toby Whithouse? Jamie Mathieson? Peter Harness?

Tommy Krasker said...

Thank you, Chronotis. Yes: Whithouse, Mathieson and Harness. They were my three top choices for new showrunner, and instead we got Chibnall, and instead we got "The Tsuranga Conundrum," an episode as unmemorable as its title.

Deborah Cox said...

So the Doctor could vaguely remember a 67th century hospital ship, but not an indestructible ship eating penis?

Anonymous said...

@Chronotis You think the author of Kill the Moon should be running the show? Surely you're joking? The moon turned out to be an egg!!!!!!

Paul Reed said...

The moon being an egg feels like a triumph in storytelling compared to teeth wearing dude, racist from the future, and as Deborah above called it 'indestructible ship eating penis'.

BrettC said...

Watching Doctor Who at the moment feels like when you go abroad and watch a foreign remake of your favourite show. The names are the same, the scenarios are familiar, but it's not the same show. I keep hoping that next week will be better, but now we're half way through the season this feels like a forlorn hope.

ChaosCat said...

I just think that everyone's being too negative. Jodie's doing a great job, the show looks the best it ever has, and the viewing figures are almost triple what season ten was getting. Can we not just appreciate the show for what it is, instead of complaining that it isn't what we want it to be?

Paul Reed said...

Hi, ChaosCat. I don't really have a problem with Jodie. She's a great actress and, as I said in my review, I think she's doing her best with what she's been given. It's just a shame that what she's been given is so poor at times. Tennant had a similar problem. Great actor, great Doctor, awful scripts. I've always approved of Jodie's casting and want to see her thrive.

I also think the show looks great at the moment. Yeah, I criticised the ship interiors and the CGI-ed frog, but that's because they were comparatively lesser work than previous weeks. Generally, the show looks and sounds great. Again, it's just the scripts that are the problem.

As for viewing figures being high: well, they're usually high when there's a new Doctor. And high viewing figures don't necessarily mean quality content. Look at the recent figures for the BBC's Bodyguard. Freakishly high ratings, freakishly low quality.

I want the show to be good. That's all. Currently it isn't (obviously in my opinion), and I desperately want it to be. I don't want Jodie to leave, I don't want Chibnall to leave, I just want the scriptwriters to stop making the same basic mistakes every week.

Chronotis said...

@ChaosCat The form is pretty standard: every new Doctor arrives to viewing figures of 9-10 million, and this drops off towards the end of their stint to the tune of 3-4 million. The current figures are exactly what we'd expect them to be. The speed at which they deflate will be the interesting part.

Christina P said...

Yoss's pregnancy was baffling. He was in hardly any pain for most of the episode, and then when the pain did start to kick in, he was given an injection and it all went away. Not exactly what I'd call intense, nor did it seem connected to the main story in any way. It felt little more than a ploy to give half of Team Tardis something to do.

The humour surrounding it was also weird. I have no idea why Yoss turned his nose up at the idea of a man giving birth to a woman, nor why Ryan and Graham's names were so objectionable. It just felt like they were trying to make jokes out of unfunny things. I don't know :(

taiey said...

I struggled to imagine what Yoss found so disturbing about one sex giving birth to another. How would it differ from what he was used to? He's used to men giving birth to men and women to women. He said that. Weren't you listening? The biology's bizarre but it is established.

And what you called "passivity" is what's been added—it's true, shocking pacifism.

I didn't think much of the episode. But come on.

Paul Reed said...

@taiey Yes, I was listening, but I fail to see how this is 'bizarre biology'. Girls and boys are virtually identical at birth, so Yoss asking how it would work was redundant. It's not as if baby girls are substantially bigger or something, and that giving birth to one would pose a unique set of physical challenges. Why the look of disgust on his face? Maybe culturally it was weird, but his question seemed specifically related to logistics.

Re: the Doctor being a pacifist, that would depend upon how you define pacifism. I'd define it as a rejection of war and violence, but the Doctor's clearly not against killing. She killed the Remnants back in episode two, and lured the spiders back to Robertson's panic room in episode four with the specific goal of administering a humane death.

I'm also not sure that pacifism = passivity. You can be non-passive and still a pacifist. In fact, many pacifists are incredibly proactive and outspoken about their pacifism. When I say the Doctor's too passive, I mean she's slow to react, sometimes doesn't react at all, and relies too heavily on other people doing her job.

Chronotis said...

@taiey @Paul Reed Actually this attempt at humour demonstrates perfectly one of the weakness of Chibnall's writing. It's the perfect example of a joke that's supposed to be funny for reasons that aren't adequately explained. We learned nothing about Yoss' culture, so we knew nothing of his background to give his revulsion context. We were supposed to laugh at the weirdness of his reaction to multi-sex birthing - just because. We never found out why it was weird to him, nor where the baby comes out of a man, so we never really understood why he was so shocked.

Deggy said...

The guy with the comedy stomach made me cringe. Not only did it look unrealistic, the fact that he went into labour just as shit was starting to go down, was such a cliched way of using him. Chibnall really is picking that low hanging fruit this season.

Anonymous said...

Ratings?

Anonymous said...

@Deggy At least low hanging fruit would be nutricious ;)

Chronotis said...

Anon: I think they were around 7 million.

Paul Reed said...

Close, but it was 6.1. Will probably get pushed up into the 8s by next week.

DoEA said...

As a non-English person I'm finding Jodie's accent in particular difficult to understand. Ditto Ryan's. Does anyone know whether it's his actual accent?

Paul Reed said...

Don't think so, DoEA. I think he's from Sowf Landon.

DoEA said...

Where?

Paul Reed said...

South London. Sorry, I was putting on an accent.