It’s time to start at the beginning. It’s time to open up the box
and take a look at the madman inside.
He is a titan, bestriding the stars. He is the saviour of the
universe, plucking thousands from the brink of disaster in the nick of time. He
is the destroyer of worlds, annihilating all those who dare to spread the
gospels of death and destruction. He is the immortal chess-master, moving
pieces to and fro in a cosmic game. He is the last of his kind, a lonely god
wandering the universe.
He is the Doctor.
Isn’t he?
There’s something of a debate on this point, you see. There are
those who cry foul, who see this mythologizing as completely over the top and,
worse, a complete departure from the essence of what makes out favourite Time
Lord so compelling. And when we have the Doctor ascending heavenwards in the
arms of a couple of (admittedly robotic) golden angels, you can sort of see
their point. But – and it is a big but – the Doctor is a heroic character and,
more than that, he is a superhuman hero. He is an alien, with knowledge and
intellect that far outstrips that of any normal human, a whole host of
fantastic abilities and the habit of coming back from death. However you look
at it, he is the stuff myths are made of. In fact, that is exactly what he is.
At least two species refer to him as the Oncoming Storm, his people were seen
as gods by another and there is a whole universe of folklore centred on his
actions. He is a legendary figure and has the skillset to match.
And what’s the problem with that? Well: what’s the fun of a
character who can do anything? If the Doctor can fix everything with a wave of
his hand, nothing matters. Everything will always come right in the end, so why
bother watching? Luckily, writers are fairly good at seeing this one coming a
mile off, so it is quite rare for the Doctor to pull a solution completely out
of nowhere. And, let’s be honest, his frequent feats of scientific brilliance
are – now – perfectly justified: as the 7th Doctor once said, it’s easy to
rewire a piece of advanced alien technology in five minutes when you’ve had
nine hundred years’ experience. In general, the Doctor is portrayed as being
extremely knowledgeable with a knack for making things up as he’s going along
and reacting to the circumstances, rather than as actually being omniscient.
The only real caveat on this is that the Doctor is a time traveller. He knows
the future as well as the past – in many cases, the future is his past – giving him an added insight into the events of a
story. But this is allowed. After all, it is easy to make it as much a curse as
a blessing.
There are, truth be told, very few instances where the Doctor
‘magics’ solutions out of thin air. Leaving aside Deus Ex Machina that come
from outside without the Doctor’s direct influence, the endings that threaten
to make him into a boring cure-all are blessedly rare. The destruction of the
missile in Timelash is the only one
that springs readily to mind. But there are many that have skirted close, where
even the technobabble is little more than lip service to the idea that we’re
not just watching an all-powerful wizard to whom nothing is a barrier. The
ending of The Last of the Time Lords,
with its ‘sparkly floating Doctor’ might be said to be more a case of ‘the
writer spake and thus it was so’ than a well-thought-through ending. Trapped
and beaten, our hero suddenly gains a new power that allows him to effortlessly
break free and overcome his enemy. In one special effect, the Doctor has gone
from a madman with a box (without a box) to physical godhood. And that is
somehow less satisfying than, as the same incarnation once rather flippantly
said, saving the universe with a kettle and some string.
The 2nd Doctor provides perhaps the best examples of world-saving without
resorting to throwing lightning bolts. He fumbles through the denouement to his
first adventure, beating the Daleks by pulling every lever on the control panel
in front of him until they are all blown to high heaven by an overloading power
grid (a trick, it seems, he remembered later). He mocks and undermines Klieg,
niggling away at the man’s ego to induce carelessness. He disables the Ice
Warrior’s homing beacon without them knowing, dashes about to stop them
realising and then tricks them into cutting each other down. He rewires the
Great Intelligence’s brain-drain device and would have destroyed one of his
most powerful foes if it weren’t for his companions’ well-intentioned rescue
attempt. On the Wheel in space, he used the equipment he had available to stop
the Cybermen in their tracks, similarly foiling their invasion of Earth by
employing UNIT’s vast resources. There were no handy get-outs here, merely
honest bodging and a lot of comic antics to cover up a mind like a steel trap.
And, fittingly, that is exactly why the Time Lords capture him with such ease.
He is no all-powerful superhero – he is a man and, like all men, must be
answerable to the higher powers he has defied.
This was not the last time the Doctor found himself helpless
before those existing on a truly mythic level. The Pyramids of Mars
finds him on the floor at the feet of an ancient and all-powerful god. Before
Sutekh, our hero really is a grovelling insect and only eleventh hour trickery
saves the universe from being devastated. Later, the Guardians, black and
white, would emerge as higher beings; earlier, the Toymaker displayed awesome
powers that, one on one, the Time Lord simply could not match. Nothing sums up
the limitations of the Doctor in the face of these entities quite so effectively
as the words of the Eternal who appeared in the form of Captain Striker during
the race for Enlightenment. His
response to being informed that the Doctor is a Time Lord? “Are there lords of
such a small domain?” Compared to these higher beings, the man who has trounced
hundreds of alien invasions is indeed a mere Ephemeral, which of course makes
his victories over them all the more impressive.
And here we run up against the reason writers mythologise the
Doctor in the first place. He has
triumphed over powers far greater than his own. For all he might be the funny
little man, the prattling jackanapes, his deeds tell a different story. He is
nothing like as stupid as he tries to present himself. He has defeated gods and
demons. He has driven back armies and stopped apocalypses. He has saved every
planet in the known universe a minimum of twenty seven times. Even we, the
viewers, who have seen the events unfold without the exaggeration, have to
admit that this madman has done remarkable things. Is it any wonder that UNIT
officers treat him with awe or that the Daleks are terrified to be in the same
room with him? Frankly, it would be ludicrous if they didn’t. Unrealistic, one
might say.
Does that matter? After all, whatever the press, he’s still going
to be right there with the kettle and the string, muddling along. Just because
people talk about him doesn’t mean that he’s not doing what he has always done:
making it up as he goes along. But then you see him annihilating armies at the
push of a button and trapping alien murders in mirrors and suddenly it does
seem like he is the all-conquering goblin, not a mere wandering eccentric.
This isn’t a new phenomenon, of course. The 7th Doctor gets a
reputation as the cosmic chess-master, though this is initially only partially
justified. He did set traps and out-manoeuvre foes straight out of the realms
of myth and magic but the element of making it up as he went along remained.
There was another set of Daleks to deal with, random Nazis and if he knew what
was really going on in the Greatest Show in the Galaxy before the final act,
I’ll eat my panama hat. The traps were more elaborate but they bore more than a
passing resemblance to those sprung by the Second Doctor, replete with amusing
buffoonery and funny voices. But thanks to the Hand of Omega, we were
introduced to the idea that he was involved with his own people’s past and by
the time Fenric springs from his bottle, the Doctor looks increasingly like far
more than just another Time Lord. The novels written after the TV show’s original
demise reinforced this, painting the Doctor as an all-knowing,
not-entirely-moral manipulator and, eventually, the reincarnation of one of the
architects of his people’s power. The Time Lords too took on a more mythic edge,
less squabbling old men and more asexual elementals, wired in to the heartbeat
of the universe. Death Comes to Time
went the whole hog and gave them genuinely god-like powers – that they dare not
use, naturally. Back then, it wasn’t just what they were called: it meant
something deep that should be spoken of with reverence. And the Doctor was the
greatest Time Lord of all. His dead body was fought over, his guidance was
sought and it was by his hand that his people were destroyed and remade.
With that kind of baggage, it makes perfect sense that he would become
the lone survivor of a war that shook the cosmos. The destroyer of worlds, in a
war against endless horrors, ending the conflict by wiping it from existence. A
far cry from the strange old man in a junk yard with a doorway to adventure but
perfectly in keeping with a member of a race that could erase planets simply by
ignoring them.
Doctor Who’s mythology – a far, far more apt word than
‘continuity’ – is an unfortunate millstone around the neck of any writer on the
series. On the one hand, it is rich and wonderful, full of interesting facets
to conjure with. On the other, it lends itself to a lead character far beyond
any kind of understanding and totally without decent hindrance. Of course armies
run from him. Wouldn’t you? Not dwelling on it means we can have the same kind
of adventures we had forty years ago, won by wit and ingenuity and general
cleverness. But would that be true to forty years’ worth of depth? Hardly.
Incorporating it gives us a richer, fuller universe to explore but risks
undermining the very things that make the stories exciting: tension, drama, threat.
I don’t think there’s a solution to this dilemma. Making the foes
bigger and badder certainly isn’t the way forward (though it can be done well).
Neither is taking away everything that makes the Doctor so powerful a force for
good (though this can be chilling). Turning the tables and having his
reputation come back and bite him is not a trick that can be pulled too often
and remain effective (though it has been done spectacularly well of late). The
mythology exists, it cannot be ignored. Addressing it head on is a recipe for
the Doctor ascendant. Deflecting it can only last for so long. And undoing it
all is simply not an option. All I can say is that any writer hired to write for
Doctor Who has their work cut out for them, especially if they intend to use
that long and snarled history as part of their plots. If I have any advice, or
felt I had a right to give it, it would be this: absorb as much of that history
as you can but don’t feel as if you need to reference or explain any of it,
don’t be afraid of adding to the history (because you really can’t make it any
more complicated and contradictory than it already is) and, most of all, give us
a Doctor who is fun to watch.
Because when you get right down to it, that’s the key. That’s why
we’re here. Because of that crotchety old man, that cosmic hobo, that dashing
adventurer, that boggle-eyed bohemian, that fair-faced Englishman, that
blustering humanitarian, that funny little chess-master, that romantic alien,
that emotionally scarred northerner, that lonely god, that madman with a box.
He is the Doctor.
And for good or ill, he’s really sort of marvellous.
So here you are, most excellent librarian-bot! I must say I like the new digs, all decked out in TARDISdiary blue.
ReplyDeleteI've *still* not made it through all the seasons (one day!), but I do like reading your rambling thoughts so I'll come back, and I've had similar myself when it comes to the whole GodDoctor conundrum. It's part of why I think it was the right time for 10 to regenerate, he'd just been bigged up so much that there was nowhere left to take him except down endless roads of angst (everybody loves a tortured soul, right? ...Right?) With 11 the writers have tweaked it slightly and gone more down the route of "Well even if he is a god it's probably Loki or the Native American Crow", the kind of guy who isn't the biggest or bestest, gets by on quick thinking, mindless banter and a good amount of running, and is really more of a folk myth than a universal deity. They even play on the fact that the Doctor has been trading off his name for far too long, and actually a lot of his reputation is just pomp and circumstance. Much as I loved 10, I prefer that approach because it allows for a more relateable Doctor and therefore smaller, more intimate storylines. That's just me though, I like character-driven narrative over blockbuster action.
Anyway, hi!
Hello there! Long time no chat, as they possibly say. Sorry for the delay in replying - stuff kept getting in the way, most recently my art being nicked by the makers of Doctor Who Monopoly...
DeleteI agree with character over blockbuster action - although it's more than possible to mingle the two effectively. And I most certainly agree that 10 reached the limits of all possible angst - possibly of all time, never mind within Doctor Who.
The Trickster Doctor goes right back to the First Doctor, although it's known more as the 2nd's thing. He's always been mischeveous, willing to put his own wanderlust above his and everyone else's safety, but he developed a streak of morality that most tricksters don't seem to have. He became a hero. Which makes for an interesting contrast with his inherently chaotic nature.
Anyway, that's a ramble for another time. Hope to see you around here again some time!