Postby rrwerner » Wed Jun 30, 2010 9:05 pm
The actors are great and Matt Smith does a great job. But some of the episodes had awkward pacing or direction and I felt they are still trying to define the direction of this Doctor. The Moffat episodes were the best but I hoped the whole season would be lifted up by his leadership. Someone posted it once that what they needed was this season's Moffat, meaning the new stand out writer who wasn't running the show (like what Moffat was for RTD, his clean up hitter, if you will). Maybe we got a little of that with AMY'S CHOICE.
Forcing the crack into every episode was, well, forced. Linking all the episodes with cameos in the finale was a much better way to link them.
I wondered why the Doctor wasn't more anxious to solve the crack thing. Crack in time and space destroying the universe? What do you do? Go visit the art museum and Van Gogh!! That doesn't sound like the Doctor.
I did like how they took some chances. Some of it didn't work with the humor and pacing like wrapping up the episode early to spend more time with next week's tease or character development in the Tardis. Sometimes they went too long before the opening credits. But that was all about trying something new. And I do appreciate something different like where they left off the two companions at the series end (spoilers in effect here) or not answering all the mysteries and saving a couple for next season as a tease.
I was also was glad they made this a Back-to-the-Basics Doc with the look. The Daleks, their ship, episodes in the northern towns rather than London and Wales, all hark back, for me, to classic Who from the Pertwee and Troughton era.
I give the season a B+.
Matt Smith an A.
Karen Gillan an A.
The Writers a B.
Moffat, as a writer, an A. As a Producer, a B.
Directors a B.
"If at first you don't succeed, keep on sucking until you do succeed!" - Curly Howard