Doctor Who Season 1 - in review
Mar. 2nd, 2013 09:02 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
And yes, I really do mean season 1, the original series of the show aired in 1963-4, not the first season of the rebooted show in 2005!
Some of my f-listies know that I have another journal where I've been posting reviews of classic Doctor Who adventures as I slowly work my way through them, rediscovering the old show, having grown up on it but then not watched in years. When I first started writing up my thoughts about classic Doctor Who serials, it was all a bit off-the-cuff, jumping around from era to era as the whim struck, in most cases offering little more than first impressions, without much depth of analysis. Then recently I decided to revisit the Doctor's first ever season in a more structured manner, watching and reviewing each serial in sequence. I reviewed a story I hadn't previously written about, re-wrote two reviews from scratch, and refreshed and revised the rest, with an especial focus on story progression and character development - this is the masterpost for those season one reviews.
The first season of Doctor Who is made up of 42 episodes, 8 serials – and one long ongoing story in which the coming and going of the various individual adventures is rather less important than the question raised in the first episode, asked by the Doctor shortly after Ian and Barbara entered the TARDIS for the first time. "The point is not whether you understand," he said. "What is going to happen to you?" Every episode of every adventure they have been through during this first season asks that same question; those two characters, perfectly ordinary people from contemporary London, have stepped through the Looking Glass into Wonderland, in effect, and this is the story of what happens to them on the other side.
The current fashion for TV shows is for a variety of 'arcs', both plot- and character-based, to play out over the course of each season, with clearly defined start and finishing points. Well, in 1963-4 there was no such thing as an 'arc', the term hadn't been invented, but what Doctor Who had in this its first ever season was progression, progression of both the characters and the story of their adventures together. There was no such thing as a standalone episode, or even a standalone adventure, because the show as a whole was one long ongoing story which was constantly moving forward. Each episode builds on what has come before, while the relationship between the characters evolves constantly and naturally over the course of the season, as they get to know one another better and learn from their experiences.
This is vintage television and it shows, of course it does. The production values are primitive, the narrative style outdated and the acting theatrical, all of which can appear alien to our modern sensibilities, accustomed as we are to watching shows that conform to more up-to-date values and fashions. Yet if you look past those surface drawbacks to the story being told and to the characters at the heart of that story, the 42-episode season as a whole really is gripping and great fun to watch.

1.01 An Unearthly Child
1.02 The Daleks
1.03 Edge of Destruction
1.04 Marco Polo
1.05 The Keys of Marinus
1.06 The Aztecs
1.07 The Sensorites
1.08 The Reign of Terror
Some of my f-listies know that I have another journal where I've been posting reviews of classic Doctor Who adventures as I slowly work my way through them, rediscovering the old show, having grown up on it but then not watched in years. When I first started writing up my thoughts about classic Doctor Who serials, it was all a bit off-the-cuff, jumping around from era to era as the whim struck, in most cases offering little more than first impressions, without much depth of analysis. Then recently I decided to revisit the Doctor's first ever season in a more structured manner, watching and reviewing each serial in sequence. I reviewed a story I hadn't previously written about, re-wrote two reviews from scratch, and refreshed and revised the rest, with an especial focus on story progression and character development - this is the masterpost for those season one reviews.
The first season of Doctor Who is made up of 42 episodes, 8 serials – and one long ongoing story in which the coming and going of the various individual adventures is rather less important than the question raised in the first episode, asked by the Doctor shortly after Ian and Barbara entered the TARDIS for the first time. "The point is not whether you understand," he said. "What is going to happen to you?" Every episode of every adventure they have been through during this first season asks that same question; those two characters, perfectly ordinary people from contemporary London, have stepped through the Looking Glass into Wonderland, in effect, and this is the story of what happens to them on the other side.
The current fashion for TV shows is for a variety of 'arcs', both plot- and character-based, to play out over the course of each season, with clearly defined start and finishing points. Well, in 1963-4 there was no such thing as an 'arc', the term hadn't been invented, but what Doctor Who had in this its first ever season was progression, progression of both the characters and the story of their adventures together. There was no such thing as a standalone episode, or even a standalone adventure, because the show as a whole was one long ongoing story which was constantly moving forward. Each episode builds on what has come before, while the relationship between the characters evolves constantly and naturally over the course of the season, as they get to know one another better and learn from their experiences.
This is vintage television and it shows, of course it does. The production values are primitive, the narrative style outdated and the acting theatrical, all of which can appear alien to our modern sensibilities, accustomed as we are to watching shows that conform to more up-to-date values and fashions. Yet if you look past those surface drawbacks to the story being told and to the characters at the heart of that story, the 42-episode season as a whole really is gripping and great fun to watch.

1.01 An Unearthly Child
1.02 The Daleks
1.03 Edge of Destruction
1.04 Marco Polo
1.05 The Keys of Marinus
1.06 The Aztecs
1.07 The Sensorites
1.08 The Reign of Terror
no subject
Date: 2013-03-02 12:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-03-02 03:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-03-04 09:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-03-04 09:41 am (UTC)I post my fanfic at my journal, usually, on the rare occasions I manage to get any written! But it's all archived at my website: here (http://randomness.deadly-nightshade.com/index.php)
no subject
Date: 2013-03-04 09:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-03-04 09:55 am (UTC)I tag everything, to make it easier to find, in theory - but my tags at this journal are out of hand, and that's even after re-organising them a bit! So I made a new journal just for the Who reviews so that I could keep them tidy and organised, ish...