I constantly find
myself coping with change. Loving or hating it, change is always there and most
of the time there’s nothing you can do but embrace it. Change is also the best
remedy for boredom and for someone like me it’s a fairly useful one. For TV
especially, change is always better that a stale continuation of the same
scripts or worse, cancellation of a show in its prime. Of course that doesn't mean
that change is always easy to accept or that every little detail can be seen as
an evolution. But devolution is already considered an obsolete term in biology
so why should It be valid for a series?
Two of the shows I
wanted to watch since I heard about them but never found the chance, were
Doctor Who and its spinoff, Torchwood. They are maybe the most famous shows
from the UK and of my favorite genre, Science Fiction. Both of them have also
changed significantly since their first episodes (I’ve never watched the old
Doctor Who series so I can't really write about them) and that’s the main
focus of this post.
Let’s start from
the beginning.
As always, I
started watching the opposite way, with Torchwood, and I fell in love. The
characters were lifelike and really interesting (a rare combination) and the
script was really mature and at least for the first season quite raw. When I
found out that the third season was only five episodes I felt betrayed. I
thought I had more to watch and five were so few, but fortunately all of them
were great. They were also very different. In the first two series every
episode had a different plot (except for 3 interconnected episodes) and the
third series (Children of Earth) had one unified plot. It felt really
different but again the same. It was a little slower paced and had a lot more
minor characters with their lives and aspirations, but again it was the same
series, the same core.
Then some time
(and several Doctor Who episodes) later, I watched the forth series, titled:
“Miracle Day”. My first thought of it was that Americans have invaded Torchwood’s
production team. All these American actors felt different. Not just their
accents but their style of acting. It was always my belief that British actors
are usually on another league with better face expressions and so on, and I
finally had my proof. The scenes filmed in the UK felt like the Torchwood I
remembered, when in the US it was like, let's say Warehouse 13. Thankfully Jack and
Gwen were there to remind me that I was still watching Torchwood but I wasn’t
that convinced for the first episodes. The direction was definitely American,
and so was the script development and everything except Jack and Gwen who felt
like strangers or guest characters. Nevertheless I still craved for more and with
every episode’s end, I anticipated the next one (still waiting for the last!).
I guess I still love the series (not that I had any doubt) and not only it
beats not being able to watch it, but if there is a season 5 without the new
characters or no new season at all, I’m going to miss the new ones as much as I
will miss the rest of the characters. Because with every episode this American
invasion became more and more Torchwood and the new characters are now part of
it. Sure I would also love a return to Wales and maybe have more than one plot
per season but Miracle Day is a part of all that make the series so dear to me
and I definitely want more of that.
Doctor Who is a
very different case. To begin with it didn’t change that much. For the casual
viewer only the Doctor has changed, but that is for the second time since 2005 (or,
well, tenth), and his companions, that change almost every year. Also the newer
episodes are of a higher production value with better sets and special effects
which can only be seen as an improvement. But what has really changed is
everything. The head writer and executive producers changed and with them of
course the whole direction. The format though is the same. Everything that made
a Doctor Who fan love it is still there. That is of course because the current head
writer, Steven Moffat, has already written several episodes for the series
during the Russell T Davies era of the show. Those episodes were also some of
the best, so when Davies decided to leave the series Moffat was the best
choice. Under Moffat direction, Doctor Who feels more imaginative, spectacular
and limitless, but for me this is under a price.
Because what never seemed to amaze me in Doctor Who, was how real it felt. No matter
how many laws of physics were defied, no matter how impossible everything truly
was, you always thought: “Yeah. That could happen someday”, or “It seems about
right”. You could always see how what everything you were watching affected the people in the show and felt like that what you saw was definitely a part of a bigger picture. That’s why
it felt almost real. You could see yourself and your family, in your
home, try to shelter yourselves from poisonous gases, or alien invasions and then saved in the very last moment
by the Doctor. This is not the case for the fifth season and onwards. The
Doctor is now like an alien Peter Pan taking his companions in different
versions of the Neverland (Actually his first episode reminded me of the film
Hook).
Another issue is
how the episodes are bound together. In both Doctor Who and Torchwood there
were always just subtle hints of the “big bad” to come, really easy to spot but
also easier to miss. Most episodes had little clues part of the script and what
bound them together was revealed in the last episodes. In Moffat’s Doctor Who
this connection is always there forcing you to see it. In most episodes it is
cleverly imported to the episode script but sometimes feels out of place.
Should the crack in time for example really be shown in every episode's end?
The new Doctor is
lovable and adorably clueless but he doesn't seem as a continuation of Tennant’s
and Eccleston’s Doctors. He is like a previous version of theirs just a few
regenerations before. He is not only oblivious of every major Davies character (where
is Martha, Donna or Jack?) but of almost everything that he did in previous
seasons. The only familiar face in Moffat's creation, is River Song, one of
my favorite characters but also a fairly new one. On the other hand having a totally
different Doctor is not bad and could be revealed that he is not that forgetful
of his past adventures in future episodes.
No matter the
issues I have with new seasons, I still love it and sometimes the stories feel
more mature and thought provoking than the Davies' version. Change is, after
all, good especially if after Davies there was no Doctor Who. The show is still
at its finest with maybe a brightest future coming. I would just like to see a
familiar face. Jack is just around the corner and someone should keep an eye on
Martha and Mickey anyway.
Change is always
hard to accept and never what you accepted but after all it's here to save our
favorite series. Whether it's a cash infusion from a foreign country or a necessary change of direction, if that is what keeps the series on air, let it come. Just
keep the core of the series the same and leave something to be familiar with.
If the script is good we'll always come back for more!