1st Thoughts on the 12th Doctor

capaldi
Peter Capaldi has been cast as the 12th Doctor Who

So it has now been announced that Peter Capaldi will be the new Doctor Who.

I must confess that I don’t know much about Capaldi, but I do have a couple of initial thoughts.

 

The Right Man for the Part?

The first is that I’m glad they cast a man instead of a woman for the part.

The latter, while not out of keeping with what they’ve established about timelord biology, would have been a net negative for the show.

Changing the sex of your main character is not something to be done lightly.

In this case, doing so would have:

  • felt like artificial “stunt casting” done out of slavish political correctness,
  • invited endless discussions of sex that would have overshadowed what the program is about,
  • invite endless and unflattering comparisons to the performances of previous Doctors, and
  • made the show feel unfamiliar and different on a bunch of levels.

The time to something like that, if you’re going to do something like that, is not when a show is at the peak of its popularity–which this one is. It has never had a bigger audience, globally.

The time to do radical shakeups in a show’s formula is when it’s about to get cancelled or when it’s just being revived after a hiatus.

 

Regressing to the Mean

My second thought is that I’m glad that they went with an older actor to play the Doctor.

I’d been (mildly) concerned about the increasing youth of the actors who have been cast for the part. The current, 11th Doctor (Matt Smith), was the youngest ever.

While I don’t mind young actors in the part (I liked Smith, as well as Peter Davison, who was only 30 when he was cast as the 5th Doctor), there was a clear trend toward younger actors, and the show was in danger of becoming too young-actor oriented.

We were nearing a point at which the apparent age of the Doctor needed to regress to the mean.

I mean, could an 18-year old Doctor even try to bring the gravitas needed for the part without looking foolish (as well as teenage angst-y)?

Just for fun, I did a quick table of the ages of the various actors who have played the Doctor at the time they got the part:

doctor who ages 1

This chart covers the twelve actors who have been cast to play the role on television on an ongoing basis (even though McGann’s incarnation didn’t get picked up for a regular series).

It does not include actors cast for movies, webisodes, or on a purely temporary basis (such as John Hurt, who is playing the “mystery incarnation” of the Doctor, whose story will be explored in the 50th anniversary special).

Now here’s a chart showing what I mean about the Doctor-getting-younger trend:

doctor who ages 2

As you can see, until Capaldi’s casting as the 12th Doctor, there was an unmistakable trend toward casting younger actors.

Of course, there were ups and downs, but the overall trend toward younger doctors is unmistakable.

We needed to regress to the mean, and they did that in a big way by casting a 55-year old (that also being the age that the 1st Doctor was when the series began).

In a way, the series is returning to its roots, with the Doctor as a man of mature years rather than a twenty-something romping around space and time.

 

Getting Darker?

My third thought concerns the way that Capaldi will play the role and what kinds of stories he will be offered.

I’d have a better sense of this if I knew more about his work, but I suspect that we’ll see a couple of things that will be different than Matt Smith’s Doctor and other recent Doctors.

For one, I suspect that he will play the part more seriously–and be given fewer zany antics (though there will be some of those).

Matt Smith apparently patterned aspects of his performance off Patrick Troughton’s 2nd Doctor (who is, perhaps, my all-time favorite Doctor), and I’ve seen some online suggesting that Capaldi may come across more like Jon Pertwee’s less-playful, more action-oriented 3rd Doctor.

So this transition may feel a bit like the transition from Troughton to Pertwee, which would be fine by me.

I also suspect that the performance and the show will be getting darker because we’re apparently at the Doctor’s (allegedly) final incarnation.

Timelords can only regenerate 12 times under normal circumstances, meaning 13 incarnations total.

Assuming John Hurt’s Doctor is a previous incarnation (either pre-Hartnell or during the gap between McGann and Eccleston, when the Time War occurred) then Capaldi is the timelord’s 13th incarnation (even though he’s only the 12th “Doctor”).

That means that when it comes time to replace Capaldi there will likely be a big, pathos-filled story in which he is miraculously freed from the 12-regeneration limit.

They’ve already indicated that this can be done, as the timelords offered the Master a whole new cycle of regenerations (another 12) back in the 25th anniversary special. And, even without their help, the Master managed to get several more regenerations, leading to his appearances in the current revival of the program.

They’ll do the same for the Doctor–somehow–but they will probably (and should) milk the approaching, apparent end of his life for the drama it naturally contains.

That means that the 12th Doctor’s time should have the Shadow of Death hanging over it.

It also may have the shadow of the Valeyard hanging over it, if they don’t pay that off in the 50th anniversary special.

And, as much as I’ve enjoyed some of the zaniness Matt Smith brought to the role, some aspects of the 11th Doctor’s run were over the top (particularly Steven Moffat’s fairy tale-inspired series finales).

I’ve already been enjoying the more serious feel of the show that arrived with Clara Oswald becoming the main companion, which harks back to the way the show felt in its–uh–first incarnation (1963-1989), and the arrival of Peter Capaldi as the Doctor may bring back more of that classic Who feeling.

I *Never* Guessed What Happened to Michael O’Hare!

Goodbye, old friend . . .
Goodbye, old friend . . .

 

In 1992, actor Michael O’Hare was cast as Commander Jeffrey Sinclair, the lead character on the television program Babylon 5.

He remained with the show for its first season and then was suddenly written out.

When the second season began, Sinclair was replaced by Capt. John Sheridan, played by Bruce Boxleitner.

While I very much enjoyed Boxleitner’s performance, I–like all the existing fans–wondered what happened to O’Hare.

The truth is something I never guessed . . .

 

What People Did Guess

The leading theory in fandom was that the executives at Warner Brothers (or its subsidiary PTEN, which ran Babylon 5) had demanded that O’Hare be fired and replaced.

According to the common account, the show was struggling to get off the ground, and O’Hare’s performance was thought to be a drag on it.

A new, more likable main character needed to be brought in, and so the stoic Sinclair was replaced by the ebullient Sheridan.

It was thought that this was unfair to O’Hare, because he had been intentionally asked to play a character who was wounded.

The Battle of the Line

Sinclair had fought at the Battle of the Line, when the Minbari nearly destroyed Earth.

Something mysterious happened to him during this battle, and his memories of it had been erased.

The result left him one of the walking wounded.

During the first season of the show, cracks began to appear in the wall that had been built in his mind, and his memories began to resurface, bit by bit.

In one episode in particular, a covert group of agents from Earth put him through a kind of psychological torture in an attempt to force his memories to resurface.

Because he was mentally injured by the mysterious thing that happened to his character at the Battle of the Line, O’Hare was asked to initially play the part as solemn and reserved.

The idea was that he would open up as his character arc progressed and as he learned what had happened to him and he dealt with it.

By the end of the first season, he was less stiff and formal than he had been at the beginning. The loosening up was happening.

It seemed unfair that, just as the character was reaching this point in his personal story arc, he was written out by the executives’ demands.

Not the First Time

It wouldn’t have been the first time that this kind of thing happened in a television series–or even a science-fiction series.

In the long-running BBC Doctor Who franchise, the sixth actor to play the Doctor–Colin Baker–had been asked to play a deliberately abrasive Doctor in 1984.

When he was first introduced, he acted arrogant and erratic and physically attacked his uncomprehending companion.

He also declared: “I am the Doctor, whether you like it . . . or not!”

It seemed like a deliberate affront to the fans of the show, who immediately began to complain about the “unlikeable Doctor.”

The idea was that the arrogant, erratic Doctor would eventually be transformed into a likable one over the course of his character arc, but this wasn’t clear to the viewers, many of whom had a strongly negative reaction.

The show suffered as the result of this disastrous creative decision, and Colin Baker was fired in 1986 and the part went to Sylvester McCoy.

O’Hare’s Departure

Had the same thing happened on Babylon 5?

Had J. Michael Straczynski’s (JMS’s) creative decision to introduce Cmdr. Sinclair as an initially stiff, wounded character doomed him, just as he was starting to loosen up on the show?

This is what a lot of fans thought.

Their speculation seemed confirmed when, after O’Hare’s departure was announced, JMS took out an ad in the Hollywood newspaper Variety (if I recall correctly) endorsing Michael O’Hare, seeking to help his career as an actor.

It looked like JMS and O’Hare were on the same side against “the suits.”

Truth Is A Three-Edged Sword

But it turned out that the truth is something far stranger . . . and more tragic.

It can only be told now that O’Hare has passed away.

Michael O’Hare suffered a heart attack in September 2012 and died a few days later.

Just a couple of weeks ago, at a science-fiction convention in late May 2013, JMS revealed the truth that had been hidden all these years.

Between the Darkness and the Light

According to Wikipedia:

During the filming of the first season of Babylon 5, O’Hare began exhibiting symptoms of schizophrenia.

Halfway through filming, his hallucinations worsened and the stress of playing a character who was suffering from a similar mental illness was becoming overwhelming.

Remember that O’Hare was being asked to play the character of Sinclair, who had been psychologically wounded at the Battle of the Line and who now was suffering with breakthrough memories caused, in part, by the attempt of sinister, persecuting government agents to force his missing memories to the surface.

It became increasingly difficult for O’Hare to continue work, his behavior was becoming increasingly erratic and he was often at odds with his colleagues.

O’Hare sought treatment for his mental illness, but feared that, as the main character of Babylon 5, taking an extended medical leave of absence would destroy the show just as it was getting off the ground.

This brings us to the same point that many fans suspected: the future of the show was in question.

Only instead of it being O’Hare’s on-screen performance as judged by executives that was a threat to the show, it was O’Hare’s psychological health, as judged by O’Hare himself that was the threat.

 

Acts of Sacrifice

So what happened next?

J. Michael Straczynski, the show’s creator and main writer, offered to suspend the show for several months to accommodate O’Hare’s treatment; however O’Hare refused to put so many other people’s jobs at risk.

Straczinski agreed to keep his condition secret to protect O’Hare’s career.

O’Hare agreed to complete the first season but would be subsequently written out of the second season so that he could seek treatment.

The Long, Twilight Struggle

According to Wikipedia:

He reappeared in a cameo appearance early in season two and returned in season three for the double episode War Without End which closed his character’s story arc.

He made no further appearances in Babylon 5.

Although his treatments were somewhat successful, he was never fully cured.

On his return to Babylon 5, Straczinski promised again that he would keep his condition secret to his grave.

O’Hare told him to “keep the secret to MY grave” pointing out that fans deserved to eventually learn the real reason for his departure, and that his experience could raise awareness and understanding for people suffering from mental illness.

On May 25th 2013, Straczynski fulfilled his end of the promise and finally revealed the reasons behind O’Hare’s departure from Babylon 5.

Beyond the Rim

Here’s the video of JMS explaining what happened to Michael O’Hare and the other actors from the series who have passed, including Richard Biggs (Stephen Franklin), Jeff Conaway (Zack Allen), and Andreas Katsulas (G’Kar).

Discussion of Michael O’Hare’s departure begins at 9:40.

The Name of the Doctor

They're about to reveal Doctor Who's name. Here are some thoughts . . .

We’re just about up to the final episode of the current season of Doctor Who.

The title of the episode is “The Name of the Doctor,” and it promises to reveal the Doctor’s actual name, something that has never been revealed in the 50-year history of the show.

We’ll apparently learn the Doctor’s name–and why he’s kept is secret all this time–at 8 p.m. on Saturday, May 18, when “The Name of the Doctor” airs on BBC America (or a few hours earlier, if you’re in the U.K.).

Here are a few thoughts . . .

 

Will They Really Reveal It?

I’m guessing that they will.

This runs the risk of taking an element of the mystery out of the show, but they’ve been teasing the audience with the idea for some time, and recently they’ve ramped that up in a big way.

With all the teasing, with titling the season’s final episode the way they did, and with putting “His Secret Revealed” on the promotional poster (above), they’ll have a lot of hacked off fans if they fail to deliver.

 

How Might They Cheat The Audience?

I can think of at least a couple of ways.

KEEP READING.

What to Make of “Two and a Half Men” Star’s Outburst?

Angus T. Jones denounced his TV program as "filth" and urged people not to watch it. What are we to make of this?

A few days ago a video went viral in which Angus Jones of the sitcom Two and a Half Men called the show “filth” and urged people not to watch it.

Then there was a day where neither he nor the show’s producers could really be reached for comment.

I said to myself, “Desperate, back-stage damage control discussions.”

Now Angus Jones has come out with a kinda, sorta apology.

That didn’t take long.

Here’s the story . . .

KEEP READING.

Something Wondrous This Way Comes

Author Ray Bradbury has died in Los Angeles at the age of 91.

Bradbury is often referred to as a science fiction author, though he wrote much more broadly than that, including works of fantasy, mystery, and horror.

His titles include some of the best-known in the history of speculative fiction, including:

He worked in both short story and novel form. Many of his stories ended up in film or television form, including episodes of the Twilight Zone and his own Ray Bradbury Theater anthology series.

He is credited by some for having helped bring speculative fiction new literary respect due to his evocative, lyrical writing style that brings out the emotion of a situation rather than just focusing on technology or common fantasy tropes.

One of the things that stands out in Bradbury’s fiction is the way he juxtaposes the normal and the fantastastic. This happens across genres in his works.

KEEP READING.

Greydanus on The Lorax

Sometimes “family” films are a blow to the thorax.
So what shall we make of that film called The Lorax?
Is it preachy green screechy? Or will it be cute?
Should we shell out our greenbacks? Or give it the boot?

Have the producers delivered a definite plus?
Or should they admit they’re “Despicable Us”?
They must be concerned what the critics will say:
“Will they slam us? . . . Will they pan us?”
“And what shall be written by Steven Greydanus?”