As
the 50th Anniversary year comes to an end we come to the traditional
Christmas special. This year it is a
special one as we bid farewell to the 11th Doctor Matt Smith. Matt Smith was The Doctor for three series
spanning four years. Has it been that
long since he took over for David Tennant and will be handing over the baton to
Peter Capaldi. Seems like yesterday when
we saw him eat fish fingers and custard and declared ‘Who has the
Pandorica.” It all ends on Christmas day
when The Doctor returns to Trenzalore.
Matt
Smith had the dubious honor of taking over for the extremely popular David
Tennant. Not an easy task but one that
Matt Smith flourished in and was worthy successor and even rivalled David
Tennant in popularity. Matt Smith’s
Doctor was a madcap one who had a seriousness to him that was hidden with all
the charm and childlike innocence that shown out all the time. The closest Doctor he resembles is the Second
Doctor Patrick Troughton as there were quite a bit of similarities in their
personality. Not surprising as Matt
Smith watched The Tomb of the Cybermen as research for his Doctor. From there a Doctor was born and the 11th
Doctor as we known him took off and etched his place in Doctor Who lore.
Matt
Smith’s Doctor is one who took the Doctor to different places that we have not
seen before. For one he gets married to
River Song something that has never happened before. But more noticeably Matt Smith’s Doctor
showed an awful lot of emotion and on several occasions he shed a tear or
two. Never before has The Doctor cried
and so often. Most notably in The Name
of The Doctor when Clara tells him about Trenzalore and he just breaks down completely. What a range of emotion Matt Smith brings to
that scene and a sure sign of how good he is an actor. To go from silly goofy to sad and crying on
the turn of a dime is pretty amazing and a testament to Matt Smith’s acting
ability.
I
liked Matt Smith’s Doctor and will be sad to see him go. I really enjoyed his first season and he
really became The Doctor for me midway when he confronted the Weeping
angels. That story, for me, Matt Smith
felt like The Doctor and you could see the alienness of the character. Gone
was the temper and replaced with the quirkiness of the 11th
Doctor. I really enjoyed Matt Smith’s
first and last season. The stories where
stronger and more standalone where in his second series it was marred with the
whole Silence and Doctor dying and the whole River Song saga that it just
clogged the works more or less. Luckily
the performance of Matt Smith made a mediocre season good by being a larger
than life presence.
Matt
Smith’s Doctor had a good run of four years capped off with being The Doctor
for the 50th Anniversary special.
What a way to cap an era than to share a scene with Tom Baker as the
Curator in the special. Matt Smith’s era
was fun and frustrating as some of the continuing story makes your brain work
over time. It is an era that I have mixed feelings about but on a whole it was
really enjoyable. There were some good
moments and some sad most noticeably when the Ponds left. I enjoyed Matt
Smith’s Doctor from his madcap silliness to his little temper tantrums to the
seriousness he can get. One thing that
is for certain I will miss the way he can deliver a speech. Just go back to The Rings of Akhaten and that
speech was just so epic and powerful. I
will miss Matt Smith just as much as I have missed the eleven other guys who
have left the role and even though I will miss him I will be excited for the
arrival of Peter Capaldi. Matt Smith will go down as one
of the most popular Doctor’s in the shows history and his youthful take on the
character will be hard to beat and one
that will be memorable for years to come.
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