Hell, Ten directly killed the Sycorax leader ("No second chances. That's the kind of guy I am"), and Nine DID try to execute the imprisoned Dalek.
Hell, Ten directly killed the Sycorax leader ("No second chances. That's the kind of guy I am"), and Nine DID try to execute the imprisoned Dalek.
The Doctor wants Davros to order the shutdown of the Dalek babies' life support system. I think that slowly suffocating is a worse death than getting blown up.I'm not necessarily advocating ruthlessness. I'm saying that if you must kill someone, at least have the gall to do it yourself, rather than hatching some kind of Rube Goldberg-style execution plot.
Unless it's one of the main villains, of course.
The Doctor didn't specify suffocating the Dalek babies, the life support systems in question were Davros'. That said, he is aware of what he's forcing Davros to do while threatening his life, and he's not specifying doing it in a "humane" way, so I get your point, I just don't think it's entirely as clean cut in Genesis. I would say that it is much more ill conceived in the most recent season, where 13 does think a suffocation or starvation is better than being shot.
On the specific subject of "Genesis", I agree that the whole debate was treated in much too shallow a manner, but them's the breaks.
Of course, not-Trump is thoroughly unlikeable and what he did doesn't come across as a positive thing at all, but the Doctor's handling of the situation left a lot to be desired as well despite being portrayed as the correct thing. It could've been neat if the Doctor stopped him from shooting, then he protests and the Doctor concedes that she understands, but that she cannot let it happen since there has to be a way to help save the creature. The way Genesis handles the dilemma isn't exactly groundbreaking or well developed, but it is an early example of the Doctor noting that things are not always so simple. Were it not for the fact that the story had to follow its structure of six 24-minute episodes, I think that there could've been more emphasis put on giving that thread a satisfying conclusion rather than just kinda paying lip service to it then moving on. It's something that I think RTD and Moffat were pretty good at doing in episodes like Midnight and The Beast Below, and it's something that I think Chibnall stumbles with despite bringing up morality so often. In Torchwood and, to a lesser extent, Broadchurch, he was able to put to screen characters with challenging ideas and I hope that he can channel that back into the next season.
Let's not forget that the Doctor's solution to the spider problem at large was to lock them all in a panic room where they presumably suffocated/starved.
Mr.Big did nothing wrong. :/
"Here's a bangin lil' tune about takin' on The Man!"
(Check out my Super Special Awesome Servant Compendium here)
Eh, Beast Below was terrible. Suddenly, everything is hunky-dory because, you see, the slaves - sorry, the space whale had been happy to help all along, never mind the centuries of slavery - I mean, of the space whale being tortured, or the fact that space!UK was a police state who sacrificed its undesirables!
Yeah, the resolution is pretty unsatisfactory, but I am very keen on the Doctor's scenes. For me it's kinda like Kill the Moon, where I find the final part of the episode near unwatchable, but the buildup and stakes were great.
A new FGO NP table
funny vamp ends 7 years of gacha torture
YT: FGO Gameplay , YT: FGO OST, Twitch FGO Gacha, Chaldea Archive Project - Complete
But will it be bigger on the inside?
Tempted to check one out...
"Here's a bangin lil' tune about takin' on The Man!"
(Check out my Super Special Awesome Servant Compendium here)
The only good Daleks are the one who never leave Skaro.
Wow, somehow Chibnall managed to do what Moffat couldn't in all his seven years...in just one episode - completely destroy the canon of the show beyond any recognition.
I haven't touched the new season yet, how does it stack up compared to other new Who?
Binged All Of Gundam In 4 Years, 1 Week and All I Got Was This Stupid Mask
FF XIV: Walked to the End
Started Legend of the Galactic Heroes (14/07/23), pray for me.
Spare yourself the torture.
Go watch better Sci-Fi.
But I need to know. And so far I've yet to find Farscape on Netflix.
Binged All Of Gundam In 4 Years, 1 Week and All I Got Was This Stupid Mask
FF XIV: Walked to the End
Started Legend of the Galactic Heroes (14/07/23), pray for me.
Farscape is on Prime, if you have it.
That said, the new season is pretty good so far (I'm at "Fugitive of the Judoon"), though I say this as someone who liked Whittaker's first season. Unfortunately, I had the big end-of-season twist spoiled for me... Anyway, the twist itself seems fine, and it seems to be based off somewhat common fan speculation, some of which was actually going to be used in the show proper in the 80's before cancellation (there were hints that the Doctor had somehow taken part in the founding of Time Lord society with Omega and Rassilon during McCoy's run, for instance).
Taken in a vacuum, sure it sounds good on paper. But the problem is that DW is a show with 50+ years of history and lore, thus when you flip the goddamn table as this episode did, the proverbial porcelain ends up smashing into pieces and we're left with one hundred and eight plot holes. Arguably even worse is the fact that this revelation retroactively destroys drama and tension from previous episodes because established "facts" that they created entire narratives around are now non-existent thanks to this episode.
*sigh*
Y'know, the thing that truly infuriates me is that Chibnal thought he was so clever by including a reference to "The Brain of Morbius" in this episode...but he was too busy inhaling his own farts that he didn't seem to notice that it directly contradicts the entire plot of this episode. To quoth Star Trek: Picard - "Sheer F****** Hubris..."