1. Kessie says:

    The Doctor seems to have these moral struggles when he’s letting a companion go. Like on Waters of Mars. Without someone to keep him grounded, he might very well become the Master instead of the Doctor. (Would the Master have been a nuts as he is had he always had a companion? Who can say?)

    • Galadriel says:

      And if you take the theory that he’s doing season seven in reverse order–having already said goodbye to the Ponds–it really intensifies that feeling.  Amy points it out; “This is what happens when you travel alone too long.”  And I think it’s gonna be worse for 11 than 10, since he’s had the Ponds for so long, as well as River’s role…

  2. Galadriel says:

    Side note about Dinosaurs on a Spaceship–it wasn’t just Tricey’s death that had the Doctor angry. It was the fact that Solomon had taken the entire crew of Silurians, woken them in small groups, and thrown them out the airlock when they refused to sell him the dinosaurs. Plus, he threatens Queen Nefertiti and plans to sell her as a slave. So it’s not quite the overreaction you’d think.

    I think what really set the Doctor off here, deep down, is this idea of atonement. He’s still trying to atone for the Time War–I could provide examples–but he doesn’t think he’ll ever reach it, so it’s a sore spot for him.  

  3. Fred Warren says:

    I found this review particularly illuminating:

  4. You wrote: “Honest touching on true justice must ultimately surrender the question. At least in this age. Our only assurance that killers will be punished or mercy shown lies beyond this life.”
     
    Thank you for this insight. As writers, and especially as Christian writers (“if anyone speaks, let him speak as the oracles of God” –1 Peter 4:11), I think it is imperative that we search the scriptures, our own souls and query the Spirit for insight as to what questions have answers that we cannot know this side of the afterlife.
     
    Stop pretending that everything is “black and white”. Stop pretending that there are easy answers to certain questions. And artfully point people towards eternity and the reality of it. Towards the questions it raises: If eternity is there, how will I spend it? How do my choices in this life matter to my eternity?

  5. Kaci says:

    I haven’t seen Dark Knight Rises, but I vaguely remember Town Called Mercy bugging me ever so slightly.  
    Oh, Doctor, who needs to learn when to stop  grandstanding about violence instead of putting a dang bullet in the villain’s head.  
    On Town Called Mercy, to me  it wasn’t a matter of revenge. The gunslinger threatened the town.  He needed to be dealt with.  That was a very weird case in which both the victim and victimizer had done something worth death.
    As for the dinosaur episode, I kept wanting them to throw the lecher out the window with the bad guy, so….
     
     
    And hi. 0=)

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