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2.9 The Satan Pit (2)
Review by Paul Kelly
Beast: "The lost girl. So far away from home. The valiant child, who will die in battle, so very soon."
When this episode first aired, it was widely rumoured that Billie would be leaving the show at the end of the season. But this was our first real hint as to the nature of her character's departure. Whatever happened to a nice gold watch and a box of chocolates?
So, who or what is the Beast? Is he the fraudster the Doctor seems to think? Or is he the real deal? Whoever he is, he can clearly read minds. Virtually everything he said seemed to touch a nerve with the crew. He also seemed able to predict the future. How else could he have known about Rose's impending doom? When the Doctor asked the crew "what makes his truth any better than mine", I found myself thinking... err... he seems to know everything and you seem to know zilch. That's what makes his "truth" more compelling. The Doctor's strength usually lies in him being ahead of the game, but tonight he was hopelessly on the back foot.
So his fall into the chasm was symbolic of his descent into the unknown. Usually, he's brimming with self-confidence, but tonight sees him uncharacteristically subdued. He has no plan. Nor does he have any knowledge of the Beast on which to base a strategy. Hence his unwilling journey into the pit. To learn. Even to be proved wrong, if necessary. Whatever it takes to conquer, arguably, the most perplexing foe of his career.
And what an ugly creature the Beast turned out to be. The Beast's design (according to Doctor Who Confidential) was based on the artwork of Simon Bisley. Coincidentally, Bisley is one of my favourite 2000AD artists ever -- responsible for such "zarjaz" strips as Sláine (The Horned God) and The ABC Warriors (The Black Hole). His muscular grotesquery is clearly in evidence. I wonder if Bisley got paid for the compliment? Probably not. But a memorable monster nonetheless. Massive too!
And in traditional fashion, as soon as the Doctor leaves the base, Rose takes over the mantle of leader. Her rousing rhetoric was undoubtedly more effective than the Doctor's "aren't humans brilliant" tosh. It took her no time at all to rally the troops. Would the crew realistically have responded to her leadership so readily? Hmm... I'm not so sure. Zach may well have been the reluctant captain, but he was far from incompetent. Maybe, after finding himself isolated in control room, he saw Rose as their best chance of survival and decided to roll with it. Whatever the reason, Rose did a pretty decent job of shutting down the Ood and saving the crew. Apart from poor Mr Jefferson. But his character was so two dimensional, I really wasn't affected by his death.
Rose's grief at the Doctor's "death", however, I did connect with. Even in death she refused to leave him. Until Zach finally took charge and forced her into abandoning the base with them. And what a gripping last ten minutes. Top marks again to Will Thorp for his portrayal of crazy Toby. He went totally mental in the escape rocket. And Rose, again, saved the day by bolt-gunning the rockets window and sending Toby out into space.
And a great reunion scene between the Doctor and Rose. The "stuff of legend" indeed!
Bits and pieces:
-- Danny Webb (who played Mr Jefferson), for some reason, reminded me of Bill Nighy; except he wasn't funny.
-- The crew represented the Torchwood archive.
-- Tonight was the Doctor's first attempt at articulating his feelings for Rose. He makes make a similar failed attempt in "Doomsday". For such a verbose man, he really struggles to say things.
-- The Time Lords invented black holes, apparently.
-- If the Beast was imprisoned before time, and before the universe was created, how was he imprisoned on Krop Tor? And next to a black hole? Both would have come into existence after the universe's creation, surely?
-- If killing the Beast was part of the system failsafe, why wasn't he just dumped into the black hole in the first place?
Billie says...
The science fiction answer for myth and legend thing is always fun. Except we never really got an answer. Other than that the Devil of many cultures and religions actually did exist, and someone was smart enough to booby-trap him.
I liked the Doctor pacing back and forth, completely fearless, talking to that immense beast, figuring things out. And I liked the pockets of oxygen chase in the "ventilation shafts" (rather like Aliens, with poor Jefferson playing the part of Vasquez). Yes, it wasn't all that logical with the airtightness -- especially when Rose looked up and saw a grate leading to a corridor -- but it made for some effective suspense.
With the Doctor falling for miles into the pit, and Rose in a rocket ship getting sucked into a black hole, it really did feel like the end of *something* was coming. And something is. Rose is going to die in battle. Has to happen, I suppose. She and the Doctor are obviously in love, and we can't have that.
Quotes:
Doctor: "No, sorry, I'm fine. Still here."
Rose: "You could have said, you stupid..." (radio feedback)
Doctor: "Whoa! Careful!"
Beast: "The lost girl. So far away from home. The valiant child, who will die in battle, so very soon."
Rose: "Doctor. What does that mean?"
Doctor "Rose, don't listen."
Doctor: "That's why I keep traveling, to be proved wrong."
Doctor: "If you talk to Rose, just tell her... tell her... oh, she knows."
Rose: "I'm not going."
Zach: "Rose, there's space for you."
Rose: "No, I'm gonna wait for the doctor, just like he'd wait for me."
Zach: "I'm sorry, but he's dead."
Rose: "You don't know him. 'Cause he's not... I'm telling you he's not. And even if he was, how could I leave him, all on his own, all the way down there?"
Rose: "Go to Hell!"
Rose: "It said I was going to die in battle."
Doctor: "Then it lied."
Ida: "You two, who are you?"
Doctor: "Oh, the stuff of legend."
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