elisi: (Thank you Santa Moff by jkpolk)
elisi ([personal profile] elisi) wrote2011-12-26 07:38 am
Entry tags:

DW Christmas Special

No coherent thoughts, just two images. Because that ending just glowed.


Because remember this:

WILFRED: Oh, Doctor... What about you, now? Who've you got? I mean, all those friends of yours...?
THE DOCTOR: They've all got someone else. Still, that's fine. I'm fine.


And now... He doesn't just have friends, he has family. Who always set a place for him. I can't even. The look on his face as it sinks in... He has a place where he belongs! ♥ ALL THE LOVE.

The Doctor spends all his time trying to make others happy, he forgets about himself - I am so pleased that Santa Moff is looking after him, and making sure he is happy too.

ETA: I also liked Promethia's point that now he has a wife, the Doctor is even more like Santa Claus. This is very much of the good. ♥

ETA2: How did I forget? 'Caretaker' is my favourite new name for the Doctor. Because that's exactly what he is: The Caretaker of the universe. (And Caretakers aren't Great Warriors. They take care of things. With mops. See where I'm going with this? *g*)



ETA3: OK, one thought: The Doctor didn't really save anyone. All he wanted was to give a family a happy Christmas. He couldn't save the trees - although he obviously wanted to - and happily let Madge do it. Nor did he rant and rave against the people turning the trees into fuel - he was just happy that the trees were OK. Also, he didn't save Madge's husband (and didn't plan to either) - that came about through Madge's ready acceptance that she could save the trees, so she would. And because of that, because she was ready to embrace pain for the sake of someone/something else, she in the process got her husband back. Ditto the Doctor - by trying to give the Arwell family a happy Christmas, he was given one himself. I can't think of a better Christmas message. ♥

ETA4: Oh and re. the point about the Doctor not saving the day... That's because he's not The Hero. He's a Trickster, a Wizard - the one who facilitates other's journeys. To quote [livejournal.com profile] malsperanza:

I especially like [the Trickster] because he is often not the protagonist or hero, but the other fellow--the catalyst or outsider whose unexpected arrival and unpredictable behavior turn the world upside down and get the story rolling. And sometimes even tell the story.

This Christmas Special was the perfect illustration of that.


ETA5: Nothing to do with the rest of the post, except it is Christmas related... I bought the girls the Doctor Who Annual 2012, and when flicking through it discovered that it contained 'Snow White and the Seven Keys to Doomsday'. And it is AWESOME!!!! (Also, if this is typical of a Gallifreyan fairy tale - which it clearly is - then it is NO WONDER that the Doctor sees the world the way he does!)
owlboy: (Default)

[personal profile] owlboy 2011-12-26 08:03 am (UTC)(link)
I knew you'd have something to say about the lonely god stuff<33

How many hundreds of years with no family, and now he has one? I'm getting a bit teary thinking about it. But I'm also dreading the inevitable end.

[identity profile] sensiblecat.livejournal.com 2011-12-26 08:58 am (UTC)(link)
Agreed - Christmas isn't the time to be putting the Doctor through the wringer, RTD please note. Also SM seems to have taken on board the criticism that he doesn't do powerful females, doesn't he?

Only complaint - not enough of the adorable Bill Bailey.

PS - husband got a fez for Christmas. I got a Dalek mug and a Moominmamma luggage tag, which just about sums me up.
owlboy: (Default)

[personal profile] owlboy 2011-12-26 09:16 am (UTC)(link)
>>Also SM seems to have taken on board the criticism that he doesn't do powerful females, doesn't he?

I saw someone say something similar on tumblr and Lol'd. Moffat has ALWAYS written women like Madge.
owlboy: (Default)

[personal profile] owlboy 2011-12-26 09:21 am (UTC)(link)
SO LONELY AND SADLY ALONE.

[identity profile] masakochan.livejournal.com 2011-12-26 04:49 pm (UTC)(link)
He's ALL BY HIMSEEEEEEELF~.

[identity profile] bendingwind.livejournal.com 2011-12-26 08:56 am (UTC)(link)
Yes yes YES. This is exactly how I felt. I enjoyed the overall episode but just THE END. There was a lot of squeaking and squeeing and rewatching and "OMG THE DOCTOR HAS A PONDY FAMILY I LOVE EVERYTHING THE DOCTOR HAS A FAMILY AND HE IS CRYING FROM HAPPINESS I CANNOT EVEN" etc

[identity profile] bendingwind.livejournal.com 2011-12-26 09:00 am (UTC)(link)
Yes. YES THAT THING.

Also, how awesome was the dual motherhood/feminism theme of Madge? I love that he basically said that femininity and motherhood can enhance a woman, whereas so much of the world right now insists that either of those things detract from being a Strong Woman (TM).

[identity profile] betawho.livejournal.com 2011-12-26 09:32 am (UTC)(link)
Although I think I'd like it more if he wrote a few more women who weren't defined by being sexy or being mums. Or by being sexy mums.

Or by writing the men as somehow useless in relation to their "amazing" women. He's even got the Doctor being a "useless boyfriend."

Sorry, but there is such a dichotomy in the way he writes men and women, especially in relation to one another, that it seems like there is a bigger gender gap now than there ever has been in Doctor Who. And that seems really strange since we're now living in an age when men and women have more equal rights and opportunities than ever before.

[identity profile] betawho.livejournal.com 2011-12-26 09:32 am (UTC)(link)
I guess I just feel like he's overcompensating sometimes.

[identity profile] betawho.livejournal.com 2011-12-26 09:53 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not trying to ruin Christmas, I actually liked this episode a lot. But this whole "gender politics" thing has bothered me for a while now.

Despite being "the Last Centurion" for most of the time Rory is still depicted as being the rather lame, overly-patient, "follow along after Amy and don't argue much" boyfriend.

His role seems to be to do whatever Amy wants. He actually seems to be there to be her servant. Heck, we see them out shopping and he's carrying all the bags, like a porter.

The hundreds of years old Doctor is depicted as the "harried husband" or the "nervous virgin."

When relating to their "women" the men are generally depicted as somehow the "oppressed" or lamer gender.

The RAF husband was the only one who didn't seem cowed by his wife's awesomeness.
promethia_tenk: (eleven river amy)

[personal profile] promethia_tenk 2012-01-07 11:57 pm (UTC)(link)
This Christmas Special is the natural progression, in that it's about accepting that he has a family - people who love him - and that brings obligations. He isn't alone, and he shouldn't be alone. Willful loneliness is basically coded as selfishness in Moffat's world, I think. Not noble or tragic...
That is a very perceptive point. And goes so very against the grain of what we're used to seeing on tv that I feel like it almost slips by.

Love, love your little macro with the mop up there =D
eve11: (dw_eleven_halfway_out_of_the_dark)

[personal profile] eve11 2011-12-26 03:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Although I think I'd like it more if he wrote a few more women who weren't defined by being sexy or being mums. Or by being sexy mums.

Well the mecha-pilot woman was neither of those. But I think I'd also like it if the story didn't focus on gender differences. I like Moffat but I have to roll my eyes at the men vs. women thing; he seems to use it as a humor crutch.

I was entertained though; I liked this story the way I liked season six; didn't quite all add up in the end, but worth it for the little moments :)
eve11: (Default)

[personal profile] eve11 2011-12-28 12:05 am (UTC)(link)
Ha, yeah, I will have to read that. I do like the meta; although sometimes I am not quite ready to attribute that much forethought to the Moff, that doesn't mean it isn't there. But that goes both ways too; I'm not going to abandon the show as misogynistic anytime soon, but at the same time I do roll my eyes on occasion. Then reading meta makes me feel better ;)

[identity profile] rj-anderson.livejournal.com 2011-12-30 02:37 am (UTC)(link)
I LOVED THAT TOO. It's so rare and beautiful a thing to see.

[identity profile] kita0610.livejournal.com 2011-12-26 05:38 pm (UTC)(link)
I cried like a baby. And I loved every minute of it.

[identity profile] yoshimi.livejournal.com 2011-12-26 07:11 pm (UTC)(link)
happy tears! + love those ponds.
independence1776: Drawing of Maglor with a harp on right, words "sing of honor lost" and "Noldolantë" on the left and bottom, respectively (Live your life Eleven)

[personal profile] independence1776 2011-12-26 08:40 pm (UTC)(link)
It was lovely. I have no other word to describe it. So wonderful, and the Ponds!

[personal profile] kikimay 2011-12-26 08:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I dont' have much to say except that I love Eleventh. SO. MUCH. ç___ç *yes, I'm crying of joy*
Caretaker is a wonderful definition, Matt Smith is always a genius. ♥
As you say, Eleventh may be not a hero, but he's just the stuff that dreams are made of.
Awesome!

[identity profile] kateydidnt.livejournal.com 2011-12-30 06:00 pm (UTC)(link)
My immediate reaction upon watching the Christmas Special? I wanted to dance and shout like 9 saying "EVERYBODY LIVES!"

[identity profile] mizuki1988.livejournal.com 2012-01-01 03:07 am (UTC)(link)
I'm reading your thoughts and the comments below and it seems like I'm in the minority who is completely dissatisfied with the special... ESPECIALLY the ending. My only question is this: why is there no River?! I mean, I love how the Doctor now has a Pond family who leave him a place at the table every Christmas... But for goodness' sake, River is PART of that family. WHY is she not a part of the scene? I understand that it might have been difficult to engage Alex Kingston for filming, but I'd have been happy with a distracted shout from the kitchen or wherever, and she could have done that from the States. It just leaves me frustrated and confused and disappointed. I can see that she was subtly referenced all the time (and I do hope that saving Madge's husband was a foreshadowing), but was that really so much to just include her at the end? Then I could have died happy...