Sunday, May 01, 2005

The Daleks' triumphant return


The last Dalek seeks revenge on the Doctor but finds an identity crisis instead.

I just got done watching the latest "Doctor Who" episode, appropriately entitled "Dalek." It was fantastic -- "Who" at its best. If you've ever remotely enjoyed a "Doctor Who" episode in the past, then you need to download this episode from somewhere and watch it ASAP.

Here's what some of the reviewers had to say:

The Times

"Tonight's episode may not have the zany, off-the-wall humour associated with the ones written by Russell T. Davies, but Robert Shearman's script -and I can't believe that I'm about to say this -is strangely moving. It concerns the last surviving Dalek, which is being held in chains in an underground museum in Utah. Daleks, as we know from the lessons of history, are programmed to hate. But, amid all the excitement, tonight's episode manages to sneak in a message about the redemptive power of human kindness and the way in which victims can turn into oppressors. This new Doctor Who is an unqualified triumph."


London Evening Standard

"At its best, science fiction is supposed to be a metaphor. It's not a theory that always pans out, but here, in the conflict between a murderous intergalactic dustbin and a double-hearted time traveller, we get a powerful look at the way war- whether it's in the Balkans, Iraq or outer space- twists even the best of people. 'If you can't kill, then what are you good for?' the Doctor hisses at the imprisioned Dalek. But by the end, you're left wondering whether it is the Dalek or the Doctor who has been damaged most by the conflict."

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