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Hail to the Doctor: the leader for these times

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Doctor Who: Resolution

BBC One

★★★★☆


Having upset some traditionalists by skipping a Christmas Day special in favour of a New Year's Day spectacular, Doctor Who's show-runner Chris Chibnall compensated by bringing back the show's most famous enemy.

The episode was a Dalek origin story. Hairy blokes in coats that looked recently ripped from goats stood around wood fires on war-torn land. A growly voiceover explained that the ancient Britons had fought an enemy so terrible that his conquered corpse had been sliced in three, and the portions stored around the world, starting at a Pacific island and a Siberian freeze-scape. I made a mental bet that the rest of the super-warrior would be under Sheffield, which turned out to be the case, showing that after only 11 episodes in charge, Chibnall is already growing his own in-jokes.

As well as audibly coming from Yorkshire, Jodie Whittaker's Doctor is returned there at every possibility. So the squid-like innards of a Dalek, usually hidden within that man-sized pepper mill on castors, were inevitably dug up by archaeologists working in the Si. postcode.

As well as making the series more earthbound, especially around the West Riding, another mark of Chibnall's tenancy has been topical commentary. The first season was explicitly pro-ecology and anti-Trump, and implicitly anti-Brexit. So liberal-friendly has the show been, it was a surprise in this special that the Dalekian inner jelly didn't turn out to be called Jacob Rees-Blob. With 88 days to go until Britain is supposed to leave the EU, however, there was one pointed political reference.

When the Doctor tried to call on a cross-border Unified Intelligence Taskforce to help save Sheffield from extermination, she learned that Britain was no longer a member after falling out with her "major international partners".

Presumably coincidentally, the overall theme overlapped with this year's Queen's Christmas message by stressing the need for national and community unity. The final scoreline was: United Sheffield 1, Daleks 0. Another Chibnall signature was entwining the extraterrestrial with the domestic. The absence of Bradley Walsh's Graham from one key Tardis mission was so odd that you initially assumed a filming clash with The Chase, but it transpired that the character had been grounded in order to discuss responsible parenting with guest actor Daniel Adegboyega, as absentee dad of sidekick Ryan (Tosin Cole).

Having shown in Broadchurch an exceptional skill in writing family dynamics, Chibnall now extends this exploration into the broadest church of all - the universe. The show ended with a parent-child hug.

That interaction poignantly wasn't open to the main character, in a performance that gave us a bonus extra day of some of the best TV acting of 2018. Between intermittent radiant smiles and sharp one-liners, Whittaker's dominant note in the role is a sense of lonely responsibility - carrying the cares of the solar system on her shoulders which the scripts keep underlining.

This Doctor feels like the world leader we want for these times. Sadly, though, she won't be on screen again until 2020. Quality control is the reason for the delay, and the classiness of this first series finale gives Chibnall a high bar to beat, but ensures that viewers will want to watch him try.


Caption: Jodie Whittaker and her team take on the Daleks menacing Earth

Disclaimer: These citations are created on-the-fly using primitive parsing techniques. You should double-check all citations. Send feedback to whovian@cuttingsarchive.org

  • APA 6th ed.: Lawson, Mark (2019-01-02). Hail to the Doctor: the leader for these times. The Guardian p. 13.
  • MLA 7th ed.: Lawson, Mark. "Hail to the Doctor: the leader for these times." The Guardian [add city] 2019-01-02, 13. Print.
  • Chicago 15th ed.: Lawson, Mark. "Hail to the Doctor: the leader for these times." The Guardian, edition, sec., 2019-01-02
  • Turabian: Lawson, Mark. "Hail to the Doctor: the leader for these times." The Guardian, 2019-01-02, section, 13 edition.
  • Wikipedia (this article): <ref>{{cite news| title=Hail to the Doctor: the leader for these times | url=http://cuttingsarchive.org/index.php/Hail_to_the_Doctor:_the_leader_for_these_times | work=The Guardian | pages=13 | date=2019-01-02 | via=Doctor Who Cuttings Archive | accessdate=19 April 2024 }}</ref>
  • Wikipedia (this page): <ref>{{cite web | title=Hail to the Doctor: the leader for these times | url=http://cuttingsarchive.org/index.php/Hail_to_the_Doctor:_the_leader_for_these_times | work=Doctor Who Cuttings Archive | accessdate=19 April 2024}}</ref>