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MORE SPOILERS.
OBVIOUSLY.
I’m going to nail my colors to the mast from the beginning
here. I think Heaven Sent is not only one of the best episodes of New
Doctor Who, I think it is one of the best episodes of Doctor Who. In fact,
*I think it is one of the best fifty-four minutes of television ever made. It’s
certainly Peter Capaldi’s finest not quite an hour.
It is a full-on exploration of grief and loss that you’d
never expect from Doctor Who, which as I’ve often said many times before, is often
quite glib when it comes to death. People die all the time in Doctor Who and
hardly anyone ever really cares. But then if they did this wouldn’t be Doctor
Who would it? It would be one of the bleakest television shows ever made. And
we get a hint of this here, although this story is also a tribute to the Doctor’s
own strength. He nearly breaks here. Nearly. But not quite. In the end, he’s arrived somewhere, and he’s emerged from his trial victorious.
Indeed, Heaven Sent truly is the Trial of a Time Lord. The Doctor is truly tested. Is he found wanting? Well, we shall see.
This story, written by Steven Moffat and directed by Rachel
Talalay features only two actors (and one small child right at the end.) And
only one of those, Peter Capaldi, speaks. The other is the slow, silent Veil
(Jami Reid-Quarrell). The Veil lurks and reaches to great effect, but this is
the Peter Capaldi solo performance and it is brilliant. I am still genuinely
raging that his performance in this story went unrecognized at any acting awards.
If there was an actor anyway in anything doing a better job than Capaldi in
this story, then I’d like to see it. It’s almost as if it was ‘just Doctor Who’,
which means it is undeserving of praise. Indeed, this just re-kindles my rage
about how the whole Capaldi era was handled by the BBC. How half-arsed the
publicity was. How no one seemed to care about it anymore. It genuinely felt –
at points – like the fag end of Classic Who when the people running the BBC
couldn’t give a toss anymore. Then up pops Jodie Whittaker** and everyone wakes
up again.
The Doctor is trapped inside a castle. It is a castle whose
walls move. There’s something of an Escher drawing about it. The castle is ‘haunted’
by the Veil. The purpose of all this is to get the Doctor to reveal what he
knows about something important, The Hybrid. To do this the Doctor’s jailers
are prepared, basically, to torture him and watch as their results play out. Then
the Doctor finds a way out that is both a real wall of crystal and a metaphor
for persistence overcoming resistance (to use a horrible phrase I learned a
long time ago in sales training.)
Talalay’s direction is superb, especially during the montage
sequence as the Doctor repeats his days over and over again creeping closer to escape.
This story establishes her as one of the great directors of Doctor Who.
You get the impression that the
Doctor might give up at some points. He wants to lose. He wants to be left alone to die. He
doesn’t want to be the Doctor anymore, but the ghost of Clara past (if ghost is
the correct term) is there to remind him of who he is. It’s the sequence inside
the Doctor’s TARDIS ‘mind palace’ that brings us some of the story's strongest moments. The
moment that always gets me is when The Doctor says, ‘But you still won’t be
there…’ It’s remarkable acting in a remarkable story.
Then when the Doctor escapes you get one of the great
moments of modern Doctor Who and a stonkingly good cliffhanger to boot. There’s a lot happening
here.
To conclude – he says clunkingly – this is one of the great Doctor
Who episodes of all time. It’s got the best performance you’ll see from any actor
who has played the Doctor in it and it has things to say about grief that
Doctor Who has ignored completely up until now. Why does no one mourn anyone in
Doctor Who (or hardly ever)? Well, because – as I said earlier – it wouldn’t be
Doctor Who anymore but here we stop to do so and as a result it makes everything
feel more real.
Watch it.
**That’s not a criticism of Jodie btw. Who I think is great.
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