Jimmy Akin, Dom Bettinelli, and Fr. Cory Sticha join the First Doctor’s quest for the keys of Marinus, a classic hunt for the McGuffins in four different worlds: a deadly island, a beautiful trap, a screaming jungle, a snowbound mountain, and city of justice without mercy. Plus they discuss the morality of enforced consciences.
Category: Culture
Secrets of Doctor Who – The Idiot’s Lantern
Jimmy Akin, Dom Bettinelli, and Fr. Cory Sticha discuss this 10th Doctor (David Tennant) story that combines post-WWII optimism, the pitfalls of new technology, and shades of Cold War intrigue with an alien and a coronation.
Shin Godzilla Review
I just finished watching Shin Godzilla–the 2016 Japanese Godzilla movie, whose name means “Godzilla: Resurgence”–and it was surprisingly good!
The movie is a complete reboot of the Godzilla franchise, meaning that it is a first contact story.
In this continuity, Godzilla has never appeared in Japan before, so we get to see people struggling to come to terms with a giant kaiju attack in a world where one has never occurred before.
This is unusual in a Godzilla film, as all of the previous sequels have at least treated the original, 1954 movie as Japan’s first encounter with Godzilla.
The film is two hours long, and the first 28 minutes are surprisingly goofy (so my inner MST3K crew was active), but then it gets quite good.
(NOTE: Apparently much of the goofiness in the first 28 minutes is due to the fact that the filmmakers are implicitly criticizing the way the Japanese government reacted to the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster, in which they were trapped by their own bureaucratic habits, said stupid things in press conferences, and dealt ineffectually with the early stages of the crisis.)
My initial impression (though I’ll need to think about it) is that this may be the best Godzilla film except for the iconic 1954 Japanese original (the one without Raymond Burr)–which is absolutely mythic.
One of the things I liked about this film is how fresh it felt. After thirty previous Godzilla films, you wouldn’t think there would be a lot of new things to do, but this film managed to find a surprising amount of virgin territory to explore.
Of course, the movie’s plot reflects up-to-date technology, so the fact that everyone has a cell phone results in things appearing online before the Japanese government is even aware of them, and it’s nice to see government officials scrambling to keep up with what the public has already learned through social media.
There’s also an interesting and fundamentally productive cooperation between Japan and the United States in the movie, though it’s clear the relationship has bumps.
Some viewers might want more kaiju action that we actually get in the film. Godzilla periodically goes into dormant periods as his body adjusts to changing circumstances, so he doesn’t mount a constant assault on Tokyo (which he really doesn’t do in any movie). This gives the human characters a chance to devise ways of dealing with him.
When Godzilla is active, though–or at least once he’s up to full steam–wow! At the midpoint of the film Godzilla mounts a devastating attack that is easily the most spectacular thing he has ever done on screen!
Despite the fact that the Godzilla action isn’t continuous, the film is surprisingly quickly paced and doesn’t get boring, even when the puny humans are the focus.
The film also more credibly establishes Big G as a global threat than in previous films. Given the way this version’s biology works, if they don’t stop him now, the human race–and apparently most of the biosphere–is toast.
Perhaps the thing I liked most about the movie was the fact that the humans–and particularly the military–is not portrayed as ineffectual.
Often in Godzilla movies, they aren’t able to even dent him until, at the last minute, a scientist comes up with a magic bullet that suddenly kills or neutralizes Godzilla, ending the film.
In this movie, however, the military is able to do damage to Godzilla before the final climax (in fact, that’s apparently the reason for his longest dormant period).
And when the final confrontation occurs, the humans have mapped out a creative, multi-stage plan to execute, in which they intelligently take down the big lizard in stages.
This plan has them doing things we haven’t seen before, such as overtaxing Godzilla’s ability to shoot rays and wear down his offensive capabilities, as well as intentionally knocking down skyscrapers onto Godzilla so that they serve as huge kinetic weapons and pummel him like giant clubs. Cool!
Of course, there is sequel potential here, and the final shot of the movie hints what the sequel will likely involve.
There are things about the film I didn’t like, but overall it was a fun watch, and I’d recommend it to fans of Godzilla films and other kaiju movies.
Everyone Keeps Missing the BIG Question About Doctor Who
In the wake of the 13th Doctor announcement, everyone is focused on the fact the next Doctor will be a woman.
But the TARDIS also has changed it’s appearance (note the St. John’s Ambulance logo that characterized Steven Moffat’s tenure is gone).
Up to now, the Doctor has referred to the TARDIS as “old girl,” but if it also has regenerated, the real question is: Has the TARDIS become a male?
Will she now start calling it “old boy”?
Discovered! The first female Doctor Who!
From “The Green Death,” season 10, serial 5, episode 4.
Jon Pertwee comically disguised as a cleaning lady to infiltrate a chemical plant where a world domination plot is being hatched.
Secrets of Doctor Who – The 13th Doctor
Jimmy Akin, Fr. Cory Sticha, and Dom Bettinelli discuss the announcement of Jodie Whittaker as the 13th Doctor. What does it mean for the Doctor to be a woman now?
How will it change the show? Is there any precedent in Doctor Who history?
And what does the mysterious word “pre-pleblican” mean?
And next time, we’ll be discussing the Big Finish audio play, “Spare Parts”.
If you want to listen before our next episode, you can purchase and download the audio play for just three dollars.
Here’s the reveal video:
Use this link to get the audio of the podcast directly.
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Pray for Terminally Ill Baby Charlie Gard
Charlie Gard is an eleven-month old baby in England. He has a rare genetic disorder known as mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome.
According to press accounts, Charlie is terminally ill at this point. His parents have raised more than $1 million to try an experimental treatment to help him, but hospital officials—backed by British and European courts—have forbidden his parents to take him from the London hospital where he currently is.
Officials have also forbidden his parents to take him home to die.
According to the British tabloid newspaper, The Sun:
Charlie’s mum and dad say he is a “prisoner” in hospital and Great Ormond Street [hospital]’s treatment has been “inhuman”.
You can read more about the treatment controversy surrounding Charlie here.
Why are officials denying the wishes of Charlie’s parents?
According to their public statements, they believe that Charlie’s condition is too grave and that the proposed medical treatments are not in his interest (meaning, they would be too burdensome, too likely to be ineffective, or both).
Consequently, rather than undertake the treatments desired by his parents, hospital authorities state that it would be in Charlie’s best interests to allow him to die.
They therefore propose discontinuing the things keeping him alive.
What does Catholic moral theology hold about situations like this?
The Church does not have a teaching addressing Charlie’s specific condition, but it has articulated principles that address situations like this in general.
The usual obligation to use medical procedures to extend life does not apply when the treatments would be “heroic” or disproportional to the good to be achieved.
In other words, if the treatments would be too burdensome, too unlikely to succeed, or both, they are not obligatory.
Experimental treatments like the one proposed for Charlie typically are riskier than approved treatments—commonly involving both a higher burden on the patient (e.g., more side-effects) and lower chances of success.
Because of this, such experimental treatments generally are not morally obligatory.
If the treatment is not morally obligatory, what’s the controversy about?
Ordinarily, a patient would speak for himself regarding whether he wishes to receive such treatments.
However, in this case the patient is a baby and cannot do so. Therefore, the parents—by natural law—are the logical ones to make the decision.
Only if the parents are incapable of making a rational decision would it be warranted for others to step in and make the decision in their place.
Note the test required for intervention by others: It isn’t that the parents must make the correct decision. People can have a legitimate diversity of opinions on which medical procedures are warranted in a case. That’s why patients are often encouraged to seek “second opinions” from physicians.
The standard that must be met is that the parents aren’t capable of making a decision that is within the pale of reason. They must be making a patently irrational one before others should intervene.
In this case, the treatment proposed for Charlie has worked for others, indicating a rational hope it would work for him.
Consequently, the attempt by the hospital officials and the relevant courts to impose their will on Charlie, against his parents’ explicit wishes, appears a monstrous and inhuman overreach.
The refusal to let the parents take baby Charlie home to die (as if palliative care couldn’t be given in a home environment!) only twists the knife.
The way the situation has played out, it looks like an Orwellian, faceless bureaucracy is determined to kill this child against the reasonable will of the parents.
That bodes ill for all of us, given the statist and anti-life trends on the loose in Western culture.
What has the Catholic Church in the UK said about this situation?
Archbishop Peter Smith issued a statement which you can read here.
He expressed sympathy with the parents and reviewed some relevant moral principles.
Toward the end of his statement, Archbishop Smith said:
We do, sometimes, however, have to recognise the limitations of what can be done, while always acting humanely in the service of the sick person until the time of natural death occurs.
The statement as a whole was carefully balanced, but this sentence could come across as discouraging the parents’ efforts to save Charlie’s life.
A much more problematic statement was issued in the name of the Pontifical Academy of Life in Rome.
What did the Pontifical Academy of Life say about Charlie’s situation?
Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of the academy, issued a statement which you can read here.
This statement also expressed sympathy for the parents. However, it went on to say:
The proper question to be raised in this and in any other unfortunately similar case is this: what are the best interests of the patient?
We must do what advances the health of the patient, but we must also accept the limits of medicine and, as stated in paragraph 65 of the Encyclical Evangelium Vitae, avoid aggressive medical procedures that are disproportionate to any expected results or excessively burdensome to the patient or the family.
Archbishop Paglia has mischaracterized what Evangelium Vitae says. It does not say that we should “avoid” such medical procedures. It says that refusing them is not the same thing as euthanasia. It says “one can in conscience refuse” such treatments, but not that one should or must do so.
Evangelium Vitae leaves open the question of what treatments can be used in an effort to preserve life. If a patient—or those who speak for him—feel it is appropriate to use aggressive or experimental treatments, that is not precluded by Evangelium Vitae 65.
Even more unfortunately, Archbishop Paglia continued:
Likewise, the wishes of parents must heard and respected, but they too must be helped to understand the unique difficulty of their situation and not be left to face their painful decisions alone.
Although this could be taken as a statement of abstract principle, in this context it comes across as a paternalistic statement regarding Charlie’s parents and how they “must be helped to understand the unique difficulty of their situation”—as if an archbishop in Rome were more familiar with it than the parents who are having to live the situation!
The statement was therefore widely criticized. It came across as out-of-touch, pastorally insensitive, and precisely the kind of thing that would drive hurting parents away from the Church.
Fortunately, Pope Francis walked it back.
What did Pope Francis say?
According to Crux:
Wading directly into a charged moral and political debate in the UK, and also appearing to recalibrate an earlier statement from the head of his own Pontifical Academy for Life, Pope Francis on Sunday expressed hope that the desire of 10-month-old Charlie Gard’s parents “to accompany and care for their own child to the end” will be respected.
“The Holy Father follows with affection and commotion the situation of Charlie Gard, and expresses his own closeness to his parents,” reads a statement issued by Greg Burke, the pope’s spokesperson.
“He prays for them, wishing that their desire to accompany and care for their own child to the end will be respected.”
Pope Francis also Tweeted:
To defend human life, above all when it is wounded by illness, is a duty of love that God entrusts to all.
Following this, the pediatric hospital Bambino Jesu (“Child Jesus”) in Rome—which also treats the popes—offered to treat Charlie.
American President Donald Trump also offered to facilitate treatment in America, saying:
If we can help little #CharlieGard, as per our friends in the U.K. and the Pope, we would be delighted to do so.
Thus far British officials have sent mixed signals regarding whether the parents will be allowed to take Charlie from the hospital where he is currently being held.
Let’s all pray for this horrific situation.
Secrets of Doctor Who – The Doctor Falls
Jimmy Akin, Fr. Cory Sticha, and Dom Bettinelli discuss and analyze the 12th episode of the 10th Season of Doctor Who entitled “The Doctor Falls.”
Cybermen attack! Regenerations amok! Teary goodbyes.
This episode has it all as it brings to a conclusion this season of Doctor Who with only the Christmas special left with Peter Capaldi and Steven Moffat. We discuss it all!
But you don’t have to wait until Christmas for more Secrets of Doctor Who. Next time, we’ll be discussing the Big Finish audio play, “Spare Parts.”
If you want to listen before our next episode, you can purchase and download the audio play for just $0.99.
Links for this episode:
- Purchase and download the Big Finish audio play “Spare Parts” before our next Secrets of Doctor Who. Then download the Big Finish app for iOS or Android to listen.
Use this link to get the MP3 directly.
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Secrets of Doctor Who – World Enough and Time
Dom Bettinelli, Jimmy Akin, and Fr. Cory Sticha discuss and analyze the 11th and penultimate episode of the 10th Season of Doctor Who entitled “World Enough and Time.”
Regenerations, two Masters, Mondasian cybermen, beloved characters in peril with a black hole and time dilation to boot.
Showrunner Stephen Moffat pulls out all the stops as he races to the finish of his tenure at Doctor Who.
Also leave us feedback on what Doctor Who topics you’d like us to discuss on the podcast in between seasons of Doctor Who: reviews of Big Finish audio productions; themed episodes about individual Doctors or recurring monsters; reviewing episodes of Classic Who; something else?
Leave us a comment below or send us an email to doctorwho@sqpn.com.
Use this link to get the MP3 directly.
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Secrets of Doctor Who – The Eaters of Light
Dom Bettinelli, Jimmy Akin, and Fr. Cory Sticha discuss and analyze the tenth episode of the 10th Season of Doctor Who entitled “The Eaters of Light.”
Hear about the real life mystery surrounding the Ninth Legion of the Roman Army, the special distinction held by the writer of this episode and our recounting of all the great Scottish jokes.
After all, as you can see below, it featured Jimmy Akin wearing Pictish face paint!
What did you think of this episode?
Also leave us feedback on what Doctor Who topics you’d like us to discuss on the podcast in between seasons of Doctor Who: reviews of Big Finish audio productions; themed episodes about individual Doctors or recurring monsters; reviewing episodes of Classic Who; something else?
Leave us a comment below or send us an email to doctorwho@sqpn.com.
Use this link to get the mp3 directly.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download