But last night I was still pondering why its reputation has shot up in the way it has over the past 10-15 years, and it dawned on me that one reason could be the that over that timeframe there's been a shift in the way people consume television. During the VHS era, I think the tendancy (well, mine anyway) was to plonk a tape into the VCR and watch the whole thing in one sitting. I thought nothing of sitting down and watch a four-parter in one go, and even a six-parter wasn't unheard of. Once we got into Season 7 territory it becomes trickier, but I do distinctly remember watching all of Inferno one weekend night with a friend. But The War Games? Egad, even the sad teenager with no life that I was could manage that comfortably. I think the closest I ever came was to split the whole thing up into two viewings 5-and-5.
So, maybe this story had a poor reputation of being just far too long because people couldn't view it all at once. Stay with me here, this is going someplace.
In the DVD/BD era, it became far more regular for people to purchase an entire season of a show and watch it in a slow-but-steady way. For me, anyway, the practice began with Season 1 of Heroes. Instead of watching it over the course of 8 months, Tasha and I watched it 2-3 episodes at a time, over the course of two weeks or so. That was a great way to watch that specific show too, because you could actually see the plot move just fast enough to keep you hooked. (I know I'm not saying anything original here, but Heroes Season 1 holds up remakably well when viewed in this way. Characterization is very strong and the plot unfolds in a natural manner that never feels rushed or jerky).
Other things have changed too. Most specifically when Doctor Who was rebooted, the shift to a 45ish minute episode length changed my feelings on how the show should be watched. I've come to the point that I can no longer sit down and watch a 100-minute four parter in one go. Even before I decided to do this marathon, I was tending to watch the older stories two episodes at a time, which is roughly the length of one complete modern episode. For me, it's just long enough to hold my interest before I start to lose focus and my attention drifts to other things. Our modern ADD culture? Maybe, but that how it's come to be with me.
So, with these two factors, The War Games almost becomes a mini-series within the larger confines of Season 6. Indeed, watched two episodes per day over the course of 5 days, it's almost the exact same length and viewing experience as Torchwood: Children of Earth. As I was thinking about this last night, it occurred to me that each two parts each makes up a "chapter" of the larger story:
- Parts 1 & 2- Laying out the groundwork. These are set almost entirely within the WWI Zone, focuses almost exclusively on those characters with only occasional hints about the larger story going on. It's not until the cliffhanger of Part 2 that we really start to see the big picture.
- Parts 3 & 4- The story broadens to multiple time zones, and it become about the Doctor figuring out exactly what is going on, with much of the plot dealing with finding the map that reveals all the time zones. The aliens are also introduced, though the TARDIS crew doesn't have much interaction with them until....
- Parts 5&6- ...When the story moves away from the times zones to the alien base. Much of the plot is about capturing the new Mind Control processing machine so that it can be used to back in the time zones to de-hypnotize more soldiers. There's a plot thread about the War Chief and the Security Chief one-uping each other, which also starts the plot concerning the Time Lords.
- Parts 7&8 The focus shift back to the war zones, and the plot is concerned with organizing all the resistance troops into a cohesive force and then slowing taking over all the war zones from the baddies.
- Parts 9&10. The main plot gets resolved, and the focus moves to the Doctor and the Time Lords, the trial, and the forced regeneration.
So there you go. Basically, I think one reason this story's reputation shot up is because people are now more willing to watch longer story in parts and experience the plot unfold than they were in the past. The War Games, when viewed in this manner, is not unlike watching more modern, shorter British series like Life on Mars, Sherlock, or indeed, modern Doctor Who.
It's been fun spending time with Troughton. Onward to the UNIT era!
No comments:
Post a Comment