elisi: Edwin holding a tiny snowman (Dangerous Doctor)
elisi ([personal profile] elisi) wrote2012-09-05 10:21 pm
Entry tags:

Asylum of the Daleks. DW S7.1

These thoughts are going to be brief - not because there's not a lot to dig into, but because this week is so busy I can't describe it. So I'll touch on the major imagery and leave it at that for now...

Eggs
First things first: Props to Moffat for not just poking at every single egg-terminate joke ever, but for also making large swathes of the audience crack up when Rory picked up what he called an 'egg' - because everyone knows that it's a Dalek bump... And if you don't know why this is laugh-out-loud funny, then make haste and watch The Curse of Fatal Death, Moffat's first outing writing DW. (It's a Comic Relief 'sketch' and beyond brilliant.)

But - there is a more serious side to this. Eggs are a symbol of life (and rebirth). A Dalek would never need an egg - it is a weapon, something deformed/mutated and dead (as in - unable to reproduce naturally). And this is where it ties in with the story: Amy and Rory's break-up might be a tad contrived (although it is the exact sort of thing Amy would do, and absolutely fits in with her reasoning), but looking beneath the surface all the metaphors fall into place: The souffle was burned (again), and Amy can't have children - eggs and milk, these are the key. Also it's about looking beneath the surface damage or issues. The Doctor wonders where Oswin got the milk, and the damage to Amy isn't just emotional, it's physical. All the eggs are broken...

Eyes (windows/mirrors)
There has always been a lot of eye imagery in Moffat's Who, and it's really drawing together now. It is tied in with all kinds of things - such as self-perception and looking out versus looking in. Most obviously we see this with Oswin, whose image of self is completely at odds with reality - but of course she is a mirror for the Doctor, whom the Daleks call 'Predator': That is, someone more dangerous than they are themselves. It also goes the other way of course - Oswin looks like a Dalek - has been completely converted - yet she has managed to cling onto her humanity. Essentially: Don't always trust your eyes. Also, I am struck by all the one-eyed-ness (Daleks have one eye, all those eye patches last season), and of course Davros' third eye... I will probably write something more on this at a later date.

Memory etc.
The theme of S6 is very much carried forward here. Then it was physical death, now it is death of a different kind - the Daleks forget him, and this is huge. They've been around since the very, very beginning, and this kind of erasure is... fascinating, and possibly not entirely good. Oh it's marvellous on many levels, but the man who could turn an army around at the mention of his name is slowly being dismantled - and where will that leave him? Which ties in with who-ever-it-is who is pulling all the strings. (Oh hai there multi-season arc, I love you.) Plz be Omega!

GIRL IN A BOX
This is the point where I have to give up. Because I could talk about Oswin forever (her name, the way she is like a nightmare version of CAL, Carmen, dancers, all that red, human/monster, souffles, dreams etc etc), but I'll have to wait. But she is a mirror absolutely EVERYTHING, and I think I know who she is, and it all ties together beautifully and I... really can't talk about it all now.

In conclusion: Moffat still owns ALL THE METAPHORS, the show is still like poetry, and I feel like I'm slightly lost in a hall of mirrors - I need to work out which ones are real and which ones are reflections, and then I can work out what's happening...

[identity profile] purplefringe.livejournal.com 2012-09-07 05:29 pm (UTC)(link)
BUT BUT BUT NO! That's NOT FAIR! You can't not say anything! That's just MEAN! Who is Oswin??

I meant it the other day when I said I was super excited about your meta - this was wonderful. It is so very like my own thoughts, but actually coherent! :D Boxes, memory, identity, perception - Moffat really got ALL his buzzwords into this one, didn't he?!

Something else I thought of (amongst other things) - tying in with the theme of perception and identity, Amy Pond is surely the most metamorphosed companion of the new series? By which I mean, she has - nearly but not quite - been transformed into a Weeping Angel, a Dalek, and a Vampire-Space-Fish, as well as having her own Ganger, and being married to a guy who spent 2000 years as a plastic Roman. Sure, Rose was turned into a faceless person by the Wire, and was temporarily possessed by Cassandra, but I'm fairly sure Amy has undergone the most near-transformations of any companion. What do you make of that?

Oswin in the Dalek also reminded me of Amy in the Tesselector....
promethia_tenk: (amy rory confuddled)

[personal profile] promethia_tenk 2012-09-08 01:54 am (UTC)(link)
You know, I'd just been musing over this the other day. It's like Rory's thing is dying and Amy's thing is being possessed and transformed.

IDK, when I think of something I'll let you know . . .
promethia_tenk: (pond family)

[personal profile] promethia_tenk 2012-09-08 02:04 am (UTC)(link)
I feel like Moff treats Amy as deeply psychologically . . . porous. In good and bad ways. Time crack flowing through her head. Memory. Susceptible to being taken over and influenced.

But she also has a very permeating effect on her surroundings. She can summon things back into existence with the power of her memory. She tends to influence things and make her presence felt--when Amy ain't happy, ain't nobody happy.

Generally the line between Amy and everything around her seems a lot more fuzzy and permeable than any of the other characters. Which is perhaps why she gets so flinty and forceful--she has no other defenses?
promethia_tenk: (kiss kiss bang bang)

[personal profile] promethia_tenk 2012-09-08 02:25 am (UTC)(link)
Her insight could be seen as a part of that. I mean she'll suss people out in a hot minute, she's very porous to what they're giving off.