khaosworks: (Doctor Who 2006)
khaosworks ([personal profile] khaosworks) wrote2005-12-27 05:18 pm
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The Christmas Invasion

What can I say except... fantastic? It was fun, it was moving, and David Tennant just slides into the role of the Doctor like a second skin. Bits of Tom in his grins and nattering on — especially when he was grinning with delight over the "blood control" console — and shades of Chris showing through in his "no second chances" look, but definitely his own man.

I don't think I was the only one that, when he winked at Rose while asking if he was going to be "sexy", had a flash back to Richard E. Grant and his "lick the mirror handsome" Doctor in "The Curse of Fatal Death". Or maybe I was. Sorry.

It was Christmas, so I'll even forgive the idea that regeneration trauma can be solved with a good hot cup of tea, and the confusion about whether the Sycorax were here for the Doctor, or the planet... or both? But they seemed to forget about the Doctor rapidly enough. But I digress. Poor Harriet. I hope they'll follow up on this in Series 2, or Torchwood. She is supposed to be elected for three terms, after all.

Ultimately, though, this was scene setting. Torchwood, check. Mickey and Jackie becoming more welcome in the Doctor's world, check. UNIT, check. Rose learning to trust the new Doctor, check. The new Doctor using his predecessor's catchphrase to assure everyone he is the same guy, check. And so it comes as no real surprise that the real treat was the Coming Soon trailer, of which I will provide screenshots for those who haven't seen them yet.

Keywords for the trailer: Oh, Sarah! K-9! Christ, the new Cybermen look very powerful, very heavy... and very scary!

It's gonna be another long wait.

Mmm. No further comments on "The Second Coming"? Not even to tell me it's crap?

[identity profile] khaosworks.livejournal.com 2005-12-28 01:58 am (UTC)(link)
One thing you need to keep in mind about the Faction Paradox universe is that the Faction Paradox you read about in the BBC books and the Faction Paradox you read about in the Mad Norwegian Press books (and everywhere else) are not precisely the same.

Lawrence Miles created FP for the Doctor Who universe, but after a point disagreed vehemently with what the other writers and the editors were pushing FP to be. By the time the FP storyline in the books ran its course and ended with the destruction of Gallifrey in "The Ancestor Cell", Miles had basically left the project.

So all the stuff he did with FP outside is spun off from the same continuity as the BBC books and even uses some of the same characters that Mad Larry created for the line, but at the same time it's more properly an alternate universe (I believe Mad Larry rejects the FP as portrayed in "Ancestor Cell" as an abberation and it's not part of his continuity).

For example, while Mad Larry intended Grandfather Paradox to be a future incarnation of the Doctor, Lance Parkin turned the Grandfather into everyone's future incarnation, which is a neat little twist but I'm not sure it's one that Miles would have approved of or agreed with, and is still probably not the case in his own FP stories.