Silence in the Library/Forest of the
Dead
June 12 2008 01:47 Filed in:
Television
Series 1 brought us the first really
gritty, bare bones good Doctor Who with two part story
The Empty Child/The
Doctor Dances.
This was fantastic 2 parter that really keyed us in on the magic of
what the series can be about now. From the introduction of Captain
Jack to the gas masked face of a little boy haunting people with
“Are you my mummy?” that was some serious shit on the screen
courtesy of Stephen Moffat
Series 1 brought us the first really
gritty, bare bones good Doctor Who two part story
The Empty Child/The
Doctor Dances.
This was a fantastic 2 parter that really keyed us in on the magic
of what the series can be about now. From the introduction of
Captain Jack to the gas masked face of a little boy haunting people
with “Are you my mummy?” that was some serious shit on the screen
courtesy of Stephen Moffat
Jump ahead to series 3. The story that sealed the deal for me on
Moffat was The
Girl in the Fireplace. This really exemplifies for me the
great depth and artistry of what can be done with a Doctor Who
script in a 45 minute time frame. The structure and pacing of the
story was pitch perfect, leading us in a linear manner through a
somewhat non-linear concept. Interesting villains, a real
mystery...and a twist at the end that was not necessary to seal
it’s place as a great story. However, that little twist was a
genious and managed to tie the entire story into a completely
logical conclusion and elevate the episode to genious...for me at
least. Moffat was rapidly propelling himself to becoming to new
Doctor Who what Robert Holmes was to the classic series.
Of course, we have other Moffatish goodness in the past 3 and a
half years, so now we get another 2-parter from the man
himself.
Silence follows the Doctor and Donna to THE
LIBRARY. The ultimate repository of books in the universe. Every
book ever written in a library the size of a planet. All volumes
faithfully reprinted on paper. For good measure, we even get a
direct MONTY PYTHON reference from the Doc.
The Doctor has been summoned there by a a mysteriously brief
anonymous message.
Inter-cut with the the Doctor’s investigation are scenes of a young
girl at home and being treated by a therapist for her “delusions”
or daydreams of being in THE LIBRARY. Of course, as the viewer, we
know the library is real, and it is left to us in part one to
decide what the hell is going on with the girl.
We come to find that the Library has been infested with a
particularly nasty bacterial life form that is basically a
microscopic piranha that will strip all the flesh from a living
organism in seconds that thrive only thrive in the dark and conceal
themselves as shadows.
Enter a team of archeologists during this discovery. They’ve come
to find out what happened to the Library and why it’s been deserted
and sealed for the past 100 years. They’re a typical team of
unwitting scientists/by-standers who’s likes we see crop up in
Doctor Who throughout it’s history. This time though, they’ve
thrown in a twist and one of the archeologists, Ms. River Song
(played by Alex Kingston formerly of ER) somehow knows the
Doctor...but he doesn’t know her and it takes some exposition and
cute exchanges betwen them before they come to the awkward
realization that the Doctor hasn’t met her yet in his time line
even though she apparently has some sort of relationship that has
gone on for years starting sometime in his future. She is the one
that summoned him, only to realize that her summons inadvertantly
reaches him at a time before they had actually met for the first
time.
So there we have the three elements that make up the story:
- River Song and her
connection to the Doctor’s.
- The Monsters: the nasty
Vashta Nerada..creatures of shadow
- The Mystery: who is the
girl, what is her connection to the Library and what happened to
the people in it (evidence shows that they were not killed by the
monsters).
Moffat has been criticised for re-using similar themes here to some
of his earlier work in the series, but ultimatly, he knows what
drives a good story, and even though you could possibly define this
as familiar Moffat formula at this point, it’s still very
effective. Ultimately, the main plot of the monsters invading the
Library takes a back seat for me because of the driving force that
is unraveing the mystery of River Song. Those of you watching
series 4 may remember that early in the year, the prophecy of the
Ood to the Doctor that his “song would end soon.” The Doctor
semi-dismissed it, and many fans saw this as early foreshadowing of
the end of the David Tennant era for the show with a regeneration
at the end of the season or during the 2009 specials.
In the end, the mystery of the girl and the Library is unraveled at
a satisfactory pace with the Monsters acting as a foil to deter the
main characters from accomplishing their goal of figuring it out.
All in all, it made a pretty solid 2-parter. What really drove this
story above and beyond average was the gradual and tantalizing
journey we take with River Song and the Doctor...a subplot that
jumps into the front seat and takes the steering wheel by the last
few minutes of the 2 parter leaving the the audience taken aback
and awash from conflicting emotions. By the time credits roll we
can infer a lot from the meaning of the relationship, but we are
still let with more questions than answers...not the least of which
is will we see River Song again? I don’t think it’s a foregone
conclusion.
David Tennant gives probably one of his best performances yet,
which is high praise indeed. Catherine Tate I believe hands down
does her best work of the series so far, and the supporting cast,
particularly Kingston, is solid to great top to bottom. Tate is
really for me turning out to be a much more interesting character
than Freema ever was as Martha. This is probably a shame, because
once again we get some bad feelings about her eventual fate.
In Fires of
Pompeii we have
the ominous prophecy that she has “something on her back” and in
this two parter, not only does River Song know of Donna’s name, she
appears uncomfortably horrified about meeting her leaving a strong
impression that she knows something bad about Donna’s fate.
Top Notch Doctor Who. Among the best. I don’t rank it quite the
calibre of the Empty Child
two parter or
Girl in the
Fireplace, but
easily the best of series 4 so far.
In the end, I’m left with two impressions that make this episode
stand apart from normal WHO fare:
- We find the Doctor in a
rare position with River Song in this story. It’s rare that we see
the Doctor without the upper hand intellectually in any
relationship with other characters or situation. Usually he is the
one explaining time paradoxes and the nature of living through time
in a non-linear fashion. With the exception of multi-doctor stories
from the past, he never really seems to be on the receiving end of
these encounters that put him at a disadvantage. The tables are
turned this time around and it’s a refreshing position to see the
protagonist in
- The epilogue to the
story stands on very ambiguous philosphical ground with the
Doctor’s treatment of River Song not even to mention the question
of whether or not Donna herself is really Donna or a copied, stored
and reproduced version. Definitely food for thought and another
example of the intellectual approach that often elevates Moffat’s
treatment of the WHO universe.
Good stuff.
Tags: Doctor Who|Reviews