The Parting of the Ways
All I can truly say about The Parting of the Ways is WOW!!! My previously unmovable favourate, Genesis of the Daleks, has finally been toppled!
I am not saying it was completely perfect (I dare anyone to find an episoe of ANY show that was completely flawless) yet the final episode just had that right 'zing' to it that made it the best 45 minutes of television I have ever seen.
With no quick pre-titles cliff-hanger resolution we have grown used to from the second parts of the previous two-parters, Parting of the Ways offered a simple recap before launching into the beloved theme music - at this point I felt a tad sentimental that this will be the last time I feel the excitement of a new episode until christmas.
From here we are treated to an almost bond-style teaser in which the Daleks fire their missiles at the spinning TARDIS, which blocks it using new shields (though I did come up with the idea part way through this that the TARDIS chamelion circuit could turn it into a fighter ship - Jack in a X-Wing vs Space Daleks anybody?)
Rose and a Dalek are brought into the ship and Jack blows the Dalek up. Doctor Who finally reaches the X-Files and Stargate audience I believe it should have captured from the beginning.
From this point I became a little disappointed. Though I half wanted Davros to make a return at this point, despite the nagging belief that the Daleks deserve to be menacing without him again, my money was on the Daleks resurrected through the lone survivor from Episode 6.
My world fell apart as the re-vamped Dalek Emperor enters. Though according to Doctor Who Confidential it was a model, it still seems to look CG to me. The voice may be cannon with the 1960s version but in form it just lacks the looming majesty, I will however congratulate the design team with showing the Dalek itself within a clear capsule - no illusions that it's Davros in disguise again.
The story gets underway with true Dalek carnage. The tried and trusted Doctor Who classic of running down corridors in fear makes a welcome return and the Daleks wipe out every human on the station.
Character development goes in different directions with Jack making a great leader in Rambo-style, whilst Rose's Weakest Link team-mate from Bad Wolf abandones his clever scheaming gameplay and just comes across as arrogant and thoughrally dense.
The Doctor's aim of generating a Delta Wave, can't he just reverse the polarity of the Dalek's beam instead of coming up with more ridiculous gobbledigook?
The emotions between the Doctor, Rose and Jack were spot on. Though some may be against the kisses I think they had to be and the characters were all the better for them. Having said that I think Jackie and Mickey's stories have beeen told and their repeated re-occurance, whilst good at first, is beginning to wear thin.
And now we come to the final revelation and Bad Wolf is...ROSE?!!! I can't deny I was surprised. Fairly original - and not with any of the fan theories - it was only let down with the crude way in which the console was opened.
The regeneration, boy I was so hoping for it, was (can I bear to say it?) Fantastic! Truly dramatic and emotional, if you ignore Eccleston's insistance on grinning like a bafoon in every scene. Tennant had from those few lines the right querkyness to make the part work and I only hope that he doesn't follow his Casanova routine in Doctor Who.
In short, it didn't meet all my expectations in terms of plot but for action and general screen presentation it was great.