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the doctor meets yet another historical figure
Well, that was a lot of silly fun, wasn't it? And wow, was Shakespeare HOT. Seriously.
The Rose references are getting a little heavy-handed, but I think that's a point of the season ... yes, I've probably read too many of Jacob's recaps over on TWoP, but my guess is that 'family' and those the Doctor has left behind is the underlying arc of the season. Specifically, dealing with what he's done in the past, things that can't be undone, and moving on. We'll have our ultimate resolution of this when Jack shows up at the end of the season, and possibly an even more serious thread of this if John Simm is playing the character everyone thinks he is. (Which I think is a certainty, but I've been avoiding specific spoilers, so I'm still allowing a small bit of wiggle room. :)) So, we start out the season with the Doctor still dealing, emotionally, with the actions that led to Rose and family living in the alternate universe. Martha's presence will help him move on. And then, we get more faces from the past to deal with. If that's the way we're heading for the season, then I think we've got a really good story coming.
I like the way that Martha takes all this in stride. I was a little skeptical at first, but then I remembered - the world Martha knows is very different than the one Rose knew when she signed on, isn't it? Spaceships over London and Daleks and Cybermen and all that ... enough evidence for someone logical and unwilling to take the easy answer to somewhat easily accept that there are more things in heaven and earth, et cetera. Though, you know, I would have liked a bit of a nod to the same thinking that had him putting Rose in a dress in "The Unquiet Dead", and the same attitude that had everyone remarking on Rose's nakedness in "Tooth & Claw". Red leather and jeans should have caused even more of a stir than her skin color, really.
So, he's pissed off Queen Elizabeth, eh? He apparently needs to find a playing ground that isn't historic England. Heh.
All in all, a good romp. Loved the Harry Potter references and bisexual Will and more electric interactions between the Doctor and Martha. I wonder, though, how we're going to explain the fact that Martha doesn't go home after this? TARDIS malfunction? Perhaps the TARDIS knows that he needs a companion, and makes sure he keeps a good one? Okay, now I have a plot bunny about the Doctor trying to take on a companion that the TARDIS doesn't approve of, and suddenly the companion keeps getting bonked on the head and locked out. "I swear, that key worked yesterday!" Hee.
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And, hey, wasn't the lead witch the chick from Hex? How appropriate.
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I need to go hunt down Shakespeare icons now ...
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