doyle: tardis (doctor - 10th (time will change me))
[personal profile] doyle

Clearly sensing my mood, my iPod has gone emo. Four songs in a row about loneliness and losing true love. Maybe it is telepathic, like a TARDIS? Hurrah, it will let me understand French!

Anyway, The Girl in the Fireplace. My immediate reaction, posted earlier at [livejournal.com profile] time_and_chips:

My only complaint is that it really needed to be a two-parter. Mostly so Mickey could get something to do on his first run as companion, and that we could see more of the Doctor's relationship with Reinette.

I was shocked when he leapt through the time window to save her, knowing that he'd be trapped for three thousand years (and that Rose and Mickey would have to spend the rest of their lives in the TARDIS! Emergency Program some-number-or-other would presumably have kicked in and taken them back to Earth, I suppose). I thought the scene at the window was beautiful: he seemed saddened but strangely content as well.

Oh, and the android under the bed: I jumped. Jumped hard. Scalding tea all over myself. I'm 23 years old. How do kids watch this, how?!

--

Having had a couple of hours to read everyone else's reaction, things that come to mind...

- The Doctor drunk, with sunglasses on, tie round his head (we used to do that in my primary school!) singing "I could have danced all night" would have justified the episode all on its own. Steve Moffatt loves taking the piss out of the Oncoming Storm thing, doesn't he? In one of his short stories he says that the Dalek name Ka Faraq Gatri is more accurately translated to "nice guy, if you're a biped". That's the same story "what do monsters have nightmares about?" "Me" is from. He likes to borrow from himself, he does.

- "I snogged Madame de Pompadour!" That's one crossed off his little black book of fanciable historical figures, then. When she led him to her childhood bedroom I thought, just for a second, they were going to shag. My jaw was on the carpet.

- I'm firmly of the 'books and audios are apocrypha rather than canon' camp but I loved the parallel to the Earth arc in the EDAs, where Eight is trapped on Earth for a hundred years after he destroys Gallifrey: here, he chooses to save Reinette knowing he'll be stuck there. Choosing exile. A lot of people have a problem with him leaving Rose and Mickey - which is fair enough but I have to wonder whether the reaction would have been as strong if it had just been Mickey left on that ship, like Jack was on the Gamestation - but I choose to fanwank thusly:

* it might take him 3000 years but he'll get back to them eventually, especially if he can chat up a passing Time Agent in the 51st century. Yes, there's a chance he'll die before he makes it that far and they'll have to live out the rest of their lives on the TARDIS, but that's up against the certainty that Reinette will die if he does nothing.

* or, there's another Emergency Program to take them home.

* or, he's written "Fast Return Switch" on the console in felt tip.

Whichever, the window scene's still so melancholy and beautiful. (I like the humour, too - "where does money come from?" - being light about it for her sake.)

- Devastated at the ending. You idiot, did you forget the bit where time moves differently on the different sides of the fireplace? According to the commentary, the moment when he looks back as the fireplace closes is the exact moment he realises he's in love with her, which is bound to break me into even more pieces next time I see it.

- The commentary's hilarious, by the way. Especially Steve Moffat's take on how the Doctor would have explained to Rose that he was bringing his girlfriend with them. ("Great news, I know it was getting a bit blokey in here, so I brought you a girl!") I love Noel Clarke and his insistence that Mickey and Rose are doing some 'dancing' immediately before and immediately after this episode.

I will probably think more things later when I've seen this again. Right now I need to think about a reality where he really was trapped on Earth, because I love that idea far too much.

ETA: "I'm not even going to try spelling her stupid name..." Pompadour. Say it with me, fandom. Nine letters, it's an actual word (the hair style? That's where it comes from, it's named after her) it's not that hard to at least attempt to spell.

ETA2: And while we're at it, can the phonetic spelling of Rose's accent in fic please, please stop. Or at least get its own little warning category in the headers so I can avoid it. "An' then we wen' to the pictures an' we were havin' a right laugh" etc. We know what accent she has. There's no need to turn her into fanon!Spike.

Hmm, going off-topic in my own posts, that's got to stop.


Hurry up, torrent.

on 2006-05-10 01:00 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] pbristow.livejournal.com
Hi! Ducking in here via catching up on the debate in "time & chips"...

I think the petals were a very deliberate set-up by Reinette. She knew that, for her own peace of mind, she had to offer him the hope of getting back through the fireplace and see if he took it... But she was gonna do her utmost to make the alternative as enticing as possible! That moment she leads him into the room, she was presenting him with the choice: Fireplace, or bed. Go off to continue being a lonely angel, or stay here and become a fulfilled man (she thinks/hopes).

Notice she doesn't actually say *what* she "had moved here"... And it takes him a moment to register the fireplace.

That moment when he's ferreting around the side of the fireplace, I think she realises, "he didn't come back to be *with* me, he came back to *save* me. Being with me would just have been a bonus." That's why she uncharacteristically says "no" to his "wish me luck". Which is when, as SM says, he suddenly realises he *is* in love with her - just as she's concluded he isn't - But too late. Only just in time to make a rash promise, which he then can't fulfill; Instead of merely breaking her heart once, at the moment of her choosing, when she was steeled ready for it, he offers her fresh hope... and then breaks her heart a second and much slower, more torturous time.

"Don't it always seem to go
that you don't what you've got 'til it's gone..."

=:o{

on 2006-05-10 01:05 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] doyle_sb4.livejournal.com
*blubs* Excellent thought, especially about her offering an obvious alternative to going through the fireplace.

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