Saturday 20 April 2013

The Oldest Story in the Universe

To you, I haven't been born yet, 
and to you, I've been dead 100 billion years
Maybe my standards are getting low, it's either that, or this was an unnecessarily rushed, bust still rather nice filler. Even though, I have to admit some elements of the plot were a bit strange at times... Like why did they need Emma to open that portal (or whatever that was) to the pocket universe if they had the TARDIS? How did her psychic gift influence it so that it could pick up the Doctor? Who knows if it couldn't have worked without her... Oh, and the Whoniverse has pocket universes now? Aren't parallel universes and bubble universes enough? Do we really need to have pocket universes too? Well, apparently yes, although IMHO this is the most unnecessary complication of the already more than just complex universe-system of 'Who'. But never mind that, 'Hide' was nevertheless rather lovely. 

Do you remember that one of my first objections about Clara was that she's the first companion who does not make the Doctor actually dealing with his past? Well, this time it's the people they meet who take care of that. The Professor mentioning how he feels responsible for the lives he took and how he's trying to live on with that burden felt almost as if the Doctor had been looking into a mirror.  Because the same things haunt him too, in a way.

Additionally, this episode was not only about ghosts, or love, but Clara, and that she is to the Doctor the only mystery worth solving. The scene in the TARDIS right after Clara realises that she just witnessed the birth and death of her home planet may have been the most important one we've seen so far. Not only because of the obvious contrast between the Doctor's and her feelings. He has seen the death of several planets a thousand times, to him it's just another house which gets pulled down. To him that's how time works. To her it's home. This is the first scene in which she actually notices that he sees the world differently than she does and that time is not the same to him as it's to her And finding out if her body does lie out there buried in the ground (and if yes, how often) is a question he'd love to know as well.  If it weren't for Clara (or one version of her, anyway) he would probably still spend his days in Victorian London, inside the TARDIS which he has conveniently parked on a cloud. To him she is just a distraction, or maybe a bit more than that... But I'm not too sure if she's supposed to know. After all, it's not a too flattering remark. 

And then there is still that funny thing about Emma Grayling, which is the reason why the Doctor and Clara end up messing with pocket universes in the first place. He wants to know her opinion on Clara, instead she tells Clara her opinion on the Doctor ('Don't trust him,  there's a sliver of ice in his heart').

Anyway... next week it's the Doctor's adopted home being destroyed, with Clara still inside the TARDIS. In fact, looking at the feedback 'The Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS' has received so far, it might be one of the most anticipated episode of this season. So I for my part am looking very much forward to it.

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