Voyage of the Damned
Dec. 26th, 2007 03:53 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
With the proposal to work on, Christmas is something that happened to other people at a distance, but I've finally gotten to see Voyage of the Damned.
Fromage Factor: Deliciously high. The whole pre-landing lecture about "humans worshipping a god named Santa who had huge claws (and his wife Mary) through "London isn't safe at Christmas" had me laughing like a loon. And you just can't beat the glorious camp of the line "Information: You are all going to die."
(Look, it's a show about an alien with a magic wand who lives in a magic box. I don't go in expecting King Lear, and it's always a bonus to get an actual plot. If angst and introspection aren't provided, I'll happily partake of the cheese tray.)
Stereotypes: also pretty high. We start off with everyone laughing at the fat people. The fat, interracial charity people. *sigh*
Shipping: Right where I expected it to be, personally. It would have been nice for the Doctor to have at least mentioned Martha or Jack by name, but I'm not at all shocked that Dr. "if you can't be with the one you love, love the one you're with" was promptly plus-one-ing the next person who talked to him about the love of exploration. And evilly, after all the angst and predictions of the deeper meaning of The Stowaway, I thought it was hilarious that there are all of two measures of it as background, period. Ditto on the general uselessness of all the predictions of the real meaning of Astrid's name.
Wuh? Moments: Only three meteors? All that money and your "storm" is three rocks? Riiiiiiight.
General reaction: Some great moments, "eh, it was okay" overall, looking forward to the next season of both Twood and Dr. Who.
Fromage Factor: Deliciously high. The whole pre-landing lecture about "humans worshipping a god named Santa who had huge claws (and his wife Mary) through "London isn't safe at Christmas" had me laughing like a loon. And you just can't beat the glorious camp of the line "Information: You are all going to die."
(Look, it's a show about an alien with a magic wand who lives in a magic box. I don't go in expecting King Lear, and it's always a bonus to get an actual plot. If angst and introspection aren't provided, I'll happily partake of the cheese tray.)
Stereotypes: also pretty high. We start off with everyone laughing at the fat people. The fat, interracial charity people. *sigh*
Shipping: Right where I expected it to be, personally. It would have been nice for the Doctor to have at least mentioned Martha or Jack by name, but I'm not at all shocked that Dr. "if you can't be with the one you love, love the one you're with" was promptly plus-one-ing the next person who talked to him about the love of exploration. And evilly, after all the angst and predictions of the deeper meaning of The Stowaway, I thought it was hilarious that there are all of two measures of it as background, period. Ditto on the general uselessness of all the predictions of the real meaning of Astrid's name.
Wuh? Moments: Only three meteors? All that money and your "storm" is three rocks? Riiiiiiight.
General reaction: Some great moments, "eh, it was okay" overall, looking forward to the next season of both Twood and Dr. Who.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 02:10 am (UTC)He's still alternately clingy and arms'-length, and I'm looking forward to seeing how that develops next year.
As a Doctor/Rose(/Jack) shipper, I had no problem at all with the Astrid kisses - also discussed on my LJ - and really don't see what the problem is for people there, those either anti-romantic-Doctor or those who can't bear the thought of him getting close to anyone but Rose.
And, like you, I adored the humour, in particular the way the episode sent up the series itself - London deserted, the Doctor flying with the angels. Wonderful work there :)
no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 03:04 am (UTC)I'm looking forward to seeing how that develops next year.
I'm really looking forward to that. Because this is the first time he has really faced his own inadequacies with Foon wailing "You promised!" and him kicking the podium impotently even while he shouts "I can do anything!" No, he can't. He can't fix everything.
The kissing with Astrid was sweet. I loved that she got a box to stand on, and honestly - how else could he say "I'm sorry and goodbye," really?
And the Corgie evacuation! Oh, behold the power of cheese!
no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 03:19 am (UTC)That was definitely cute and plucky.
and honestly - how else could he say "I'm sorry and goodbye," really?
Although as he sets her atoms free, I couldn't help:
Doctor: "You're not falling. You're flying."
MechTurtle: "--with style!"
no subject
Date: 2007-12-27 11:22 am (UTC)BWAhahahahahahaa!