“Davros knows. Davros remembers.”
After
months of speculation and rumors The Magician’s Apprentice has arrived and Series
9 has now begun in earnest. The episode
opens up with a child who happens to have wandered into an area where there are
hand mines and is trapped and can’t get out.
The Doctor soon appears and tries to help the child from the trap until
he learns the name of the child. He then
leaves the child to his fate and leaves in the TARDIS.
We find out
that the child is named Davros and all the mystery that we were exposed to in
the prolog and the prequel have now come to fruition and we now know that
Davros is the one behind what The Doctor is running from. This was the great jaw dropping moment of the
episode and surely one of the biggest surprises in the shows history. Sure we had the whole Missy reveal of being
The Master last season but we had a whole series to come up with theories of
who she was and most of the fans were right. But the reveal that the boy running in the
battlefield was Davros was a pretty good surprise and wanting to see what
happens next was high priority. It’s too
bad we had to sit through some really silly stuff to get to the confrontation.
I really
liked how The Magician’s Apprentice started.
With the whole reveal and then with Missy asking for Clara and UNIT’s
help to find The Doctor. That was pretty
good and I really liked how Missy knocked Clara down a peg. She needed to be as she just came across too
bossy and a know it all. All of a sudden
she became super Clara and was able to figure out technology to find The
Doctor. Best line of that Missy and
Clara exchange was that she was the puppy.
I did like the chemistry Michelle Gomez and Jenna Coleman has. It worked really well and made the whole
search of The Doctor all that more entertaining especially when they were on
the top of the castle wall watching The Doctor making a fool of himself.
This brings
us to the part I’m just not so sure about.
The whole party for The Doctor just seemed too silly even for
Moffat. Really a tank and playing the
electric guitar in 1100’s England . It just didn’t seem all that funny. For one who is driving the tank and where is
the amp getting electricity from to power itself? I’m sure diehard fans will come up with a way
he did it by making a remote control for the tank and jury rigging the tanks
power supply to power the amp. Yes in theory
I guess he could have done this but was it really necessary. The story was pretty good till this point
with Missy not being way over the top but that whole sequence of the party
until Colony Sarff shows up in all his snake goodness.
Now I
thought Colony Sarff was pretty cool. I
enjoyed seeing this creature slithering around asking people where The Doctor
was. I enjoyed seeing the reveal of what
he was and seeing all those snakes appearing wreaking havoc. But there was a problem with all that. If Bors was a Dalek agent and spent three
weeks with The Doctor why did Davros have to send Colony Sarff to find
him? I mean I’m sure Davros knew this as
he would have access to the Daleks computers as he is all powerful so why send
the snake guy? They obviously knew where
he was since one of their agents was there.
Unless the snake bite transformed Bors into a Dalek agent. Then does that mean the snakes are really a
Dalek creation? Who knows I could be
over thinking this part and it is a minor thing anyway.
I really
liked the confrontation between The Doctor and the dying Davros. It seemed like a game of chess with both of
them not revealing their winning move.
Davros did seem to have the upper hand on The Doctor. I did like seeing all the old encounters with
Davros on the screen in the room. From Davison voice to the unlimited rice
pudding speech it was all there. I love
when the new series uses the classic series it is always nice to give a nod to
the past to help people remember it and hopefully go back and watch those
stories. Speaking of The Magician’s
Apprentice has a lot of influence from Genesis of the Daleks. Davros has used The Doctor’s words against
him and turned the table as we are to believe that The Doctor did eventually
save Davros or Davros somehow escaped from the hand minds. He uses The Doctor’s compassion against him
and we will see what happens in The Witch’s Familiar.
Michelle
Gomez was great as Missy especially when it was revealed they were on
Skaro. The look of horror really sold
the reveal and you got a feel of the danger they were in. She quickly changes when Clara and she are
face to face with all the Daleks and she tried bargaining for her life which
did not work. This scene was made more
for shock value as I doubt Missy and Clara were killed by the Daleks and I
highly doubt the TARDIS was destroyed.
This will lead to a lot of conversations on Twitter and in Facebook
groups which isn’t a bad thing for the show.
I didn’t mind this as we know they are not dead but The Doctor doesn’t
and it is a good way for Davros to get at The Doctor. This brings us to Peter Capaldi as he is so
good at looking shocked and in horror.
His expressions while talking to Davros really made the last part of the
story and really sell the cliff-hanger for the conclusion.
The
Magician’s Apprentice was a really good opening story that did have some
surprises that I wasn’t expecting. For
one the confession dial which will open up when The Doctor is dead. Who knows where that will lead? I did enjoy most of the story as it caught my
interest and I’m really looking forward to what happens next in The Witch’s
Familiar. It really did set things up
very nicely but what is with the episode titles. I’m sure we’ll find up in the next episode. I did not like the silliness like the 3d
Missy head coming out of the view screen but that is the overly cuteness that
Moffat likes and most of us roll our eyes to.
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