
BBC1 - 5th July 2008 - 6.40pm
I
 bet Gillane Seaborne was livid. She's sat at home, downing another 
glass of Chardonnay, and then next minute she's plonked in the BBC News 
studio trying her best to explain to the newsreaders and anyone now 
bothering to watch what exactly that last 65 minutes on BBC1 was about 
and why, for fuck's sake, Tennant was still Doctor Who when they'd all 
convinced themselves he was going. All she wanted to do was get back to 
her glass of wine rather than try and defend the whole cop-out 
regeneration and three Doctors bollocks (not a physical aberration, more
 a creative one). I had visions of a baying mob outside the newsroom 
screaming for Russell's blood. But no, the baying mob is on the internet
 and they're mad as hell and aren't gonna take it anymore.
The problem with Journey's End
 is that, far from just being a desk clearing, valedictory conclusion to
 four years of the Russell T Davies masterplan, it ends up leaving a 
bitter taste in the mouth. With the symbolic death of Donna Noble it has
 a stark, melancholic message to declare. After bigging up how 
marvellous ordinary people are, is Davies now seriously saying, 
actually, they're never going to reach their potential because they'll 
never have the opportunity to do so? Is he telling us we should just 
know and accept our place in the world because we're nothing special? 
Cheeky sod. Donna's fate is quite honestly one of very few reasons why 
you should even bother to watch this episode. The 'everlasting death' of
 the character is heartbreaking and almost redeems Journey's End
 from being just the tartrazine fueled ravings of a writer channeling, 
nay mind-raping, his inner seven year old. I know, I know...we all saw 
it coming and knew Davies would do anything to avoid the grand scenario 
we'd actually constructed in our own heads for the finale. We're our own
 worst enemies. Still, I have to sneakily admire the use of the 
regeneration as a cliffhanger because the media fell for it hook, line 
and sinker and for a minute I thought I hadn't actually been told what would happen months ago by those in the know. For a minute there he had me going.
If indeed Journey's End
 is about the nature of reality then it's a very cruel and dark vision 
we're left with. Donna, perhaps the best of the companions featured in 
the new series thus far, has all the life building experiences and 
adventures wrenched away from her and she's reduced to facile bantering 
on her mobile phone in her mother's kitchen. Granted, the Doctor has a 
go at Sylvia for all the years that she's undermined her own daughter 
but isn't the Doctor guilty of offering false hopes too? It's an 
upsetting, moving and ultimately cruel conclusion and you could argue 
that Donna now has an opportunity to start again. But it just seems so 
crushingly sad. Here, Donna's become the postmodern symbol of all 
postmodern symbols where the Donna that bloomed in front of us will now 
be just a dead meaning and frozen form cycling and mutating into new 
combinations and permutations of the same - all the way through Series 4
 when we choose to re-watch it. Wilf's speech at the end of the episode 
does provide some salve to this wound as it does offer an ability to 
acknowledge her achievements rather than the closure that Sylvia 
suggests. Catherine Tate and Bernard Cribbins were quite brilliant in 
those final scenes. Tate superbly conveyed the horror of Donna's return 
to reality and indeed what was her 'fate worse than death'. Cribbins 
quite rightly ensures that there isn't a dry eye in the house with that 
touching final speech. He has been a real asset to this series.

The
 other reason to wade through this overindulgent mess is for that 
fantastic scene with Davros. It's a thoughtful examination of the 
Doctor's motivations and his use of the 'children of time' as weapons. 
Davros draws parallels between himself and the Doctor and exposes the 
'soul' of the Doctor. In the end, Davros argues, the Doctor is simply a 
general leading his troops into battle.  What was quite amusing here was
 that this argument was played out after both Martha and Sarah's 'final 
solutions' had been neutralised by the all seeing Caan. Julian Bleach 
certainly made Davros his own and was rather good in that confrontation,
 especially the goose-bump raising moment of recognition between him and
 Sarah. Caan's prophecies, the Daleks, Davros were an all conquering 
force at this point in the episode. And then it got a bit shit. Davros' 
plan to destroy all the realities of the multiverses just didn't have 
any reasoning behind it. Was he doing it out of spite? And in doing so 
wouldn't the Daleks then be masters of absolutely nothing? Or is that 
the idea? Masters of nothing. The Daleks trashing the Earth in The Stolen Earth
 was reduced to pointlessness as there wasn't any explanation for 
rounding up human hostages on such a huge scale when all they wanted was
 a few guinea pigs to test out the reality bomb. Now if the bomb just 
destroyed all the crap reality television in all the multiverses then 
I'd say that was a plan. But then Davros turns out to be a 'pet' of the 
Daleks in a vain attempt to make the Daleks look more important than 
their creator, which has always been something that the series has 
wrestled with, and the Crucible blows up and you wonder what was the 
point of him being there at all. Him and the Supreme Dalek.

And
 then we get the resolution from that cop out regeneration. Three 
Doctors. And a load of gobbledegook about the Time Lord energy going 
into the hand and Donna touching the hand and becoming part Doctor. We 
knew Tennant wasn't leaving so the misdirection of the regeneration 
simply turns into an excuse to create a sex doll version of Tennant's 
Doctor that Rose could then keep and a version living inside Donna's 
head. One goes all genocidal and one is forced to forget who she really 
is. This does two things. First, it pisses all over the conclusion to Doomsday
 and the ongoing angst about Rose and, second, it turns Catherine Tate 
back into the comedy-variety abomination that many had long feared would
 be her contribution to the show. Fobbing Rose off with another version 
of the Doctor was the most bizarre and perverse notion because it simply
 didn't work as an emotional closure to the relationship. Instead it's 
rather cruel of the Doctor to hand him over with the reasoning behind 
him being the war damaged version she met in Series 1 and made better 
not really ringing true. The clone Doctor doesn't need to be made better
 because surely he has all the real Doctor's memories of being with 
Rose, Martha and Donna anyway. I'm afraid that the cop-out meter just 
went off the scale again at that point.
Making Donna the 
Doctor/Donna was really stretching the concept to breaking point. 
Perhaps Russell himself needs a companion to tell him when to 
'stop'...stop writing such utter nonsense. Sex doll Doctor aside, Donna 
then becomes Reginald Dixon at the mighty Wurlitzer organ and simply 
forces the Daleks into a spot of Come Dancing. This is such end-of-the pier stuff and utterly undermines any threat that had been building in The Stolen Earth and to the half way mark here. And the cherry on the top of this particularly calorific pudding is Caan. Caan is
 RTD. Driven mad over four series he brings the Daleks back as a vast, 
all conquering empire only to want to see them destroyed...again...and 
again. This time by a shrill temp doing a David Tennant impression and 
100wpm on a conveniently placed cinema organ. No wonder the Doctor 
mind-wiped her, he obviously couldn't stand himself. This yet again is 
an example of Russell's inability to provide proper resolution to big 
action plots. He's great at character but can be really lousy at plot 
construction and denouments. You get the sense of him constantly and 
frantically pulling rabbits out of hats to divert the audience through 
the last hour of that episode.
And the rabbits and hats charade 
of ignoring Caan's prophecy, grinning companions in the TARDIS (I think 
they had more fun than the audience), the TARDIS towing the Earth in the
 series' pinnacle of bad science, bloody K9, the connection between Gwen
 and Gwyneth, an impromptu firework celebration...is just overkill. It's
 just bluster to cover Russell's continual use of the Escape key on his 
keyboard.  A frenetic, pacy, glossy spectacle, catching that sense of 
closure I spoke of last time with good, solid direction from Graeme 
Harper and splendid visual effects from the Mill, Journey's End
 sums up his era, an era full of moments of sheer brilliance colliding 
with toe curling pulp excess. Often he makes it work wonderfully but 
here it is very much an own goal. And it's too early to think it's all 
over...as bang, bang, bang...here comes the Christmas special and four 
more salvos of narrative contortions in 2009. And when Tennant does 
eventually regenerate no one will really give a shit, will they?
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 Posts
Posts
 
 
My pleasure Alec. I'll keep updating when I find anything else but the BBC seem to be playing everything close to their chest on the finale.
Just found your blog will be back - I think that "secret" that Davros was appearing at the end of the series was to keep us from a bigger secret that they have managed to keep from everyone
I agree that regeneration of the doctor was a bit of a shock to me that was kept secret quite well
David,
Thanks for visiting. I have heard that Davros isn't the only 'big bad' for the finale but we shall see tomorrow if those rumours bear out.
Jomar, I will pop over and see what it is that needs answering!