Saturday, October 29, 2022

#28: Eve of the Daleks.

Dan confounds a Dalek.
1 episode. Running Time: Approx. 58 minutes. Written by: Chris Chibnall. Directed by: Annetta Laufer. Produced by: Sheena Bucktowonsing.


THE PLOT:

The Doctor initiates a TARDIS reset to repair the damage left by the Flux. The plan is for her, Yaz, and Dan to enjoy a beach vacation while the timeship resets. But the TARDIS has materialized off course (again), leaving them in a far less luxurious setting: a storage facility on New Year's Eve.

They are not alone. The Daleks have tracked the time travelers, resolved to execute the Doctor and her companions. Which they manage with great efficiency within minutes of finding her...

Only for everyone to be resurrected, back where they started.  They are in a time loop, repeating the brief interval between their arrival and the New Year. This leaves the Doctor only a few minutes at a time to figure out how to stop the Daleks, save all of her friends, and escape the storage facility. And with the loop gradually collapsing, her time is running out...


CHARACTERS:

The Doctor: In the midst of the crisis, she tells Yaz: "My actions are catching up with me, time is catching up with me." Once the situation is resolved, she immediately returns to her increasingly strained show of cheerful obliviousness, however, claiming that she doesn't remember saying that. I'm actually glad that that Thirteen has emerged as the most guarded of Doctors. It's a note that builds on her first season (whether intentionally or not, Series Eleven saw most of her best character bits happening when her companions were not present), and it's both more interesting than the early "Dr. Fluffy" characterization and better suited to Jodie Whittaker's acting strengths.

Yaz: The most notable character beat for Yaz is that she finally confesses that she has feelings for the Doctor... to Dan. In fact, in this episode, all of Yaz's best scenes are opposite Dan. The two share an enjoyable bickering sibling vibe, with her lightly mocking him when a Dalek labels him as "the inferior human," yet leaping to his defense when the storage facility's owner, Sarah (Aislin Bea), snaps at him.

Dan: After being basically "the extra companion" for the entire back half of Series Thirteen, he finally receives some strong material here. I love his "delaying tactic" against the Dalek; there are echoes of Morton Dill in The Chase as he confounds the metal monster by treating it as if it's an employee and asking to speak to its manager. He gently coaxes Yaz into admitting her feelings for the Doctor, and later takes on the Rory role of calling the Doctor on her BS when he grumbles that he knows she notices things: "You do, but for some reason you pretend to me and to her that you don't."

Sarah/Nick: The two bystanders. Aisling Bea is terrific as Sarah, the grumpy owner of the storage facility, who would rather be anywhere else even before the Daleks show up. She behaves in a refreshingly human fashion, taking one Time Loop to run for her life instead of staying to help the Doctor. Nick (Adjani Salmon) is a long-time customer who always comes by on New Year's Eve. It's instantly apparent that he fosters a massive crush on Sarah, though it takes that being shoved in her face for her to actually notice. Oddly, both characters parallel the Doctor in different ways. Sarah is grumpy and keeps Nick and her mother at arm's length, the same way the Doctor does to her companions; Nick is more than a little odd but is also fundamentally decent, descriptors that could be applied to all of the Doctor's incarnations.

Jeff: The offscreen Jeff becomes both the episode's running joke and possibly its key character. We never see him, not even a photograph, but his presence is a constant through the episode. Sarah and Nick are both at the facility because Jeff never shows up to work on New Year's Eve. As the Doctor and her friends explore the facility, they discover that he bunks in a storage unit, and that he keeps canned food and other items in further empty units - including a few items that play a key role in the resolution.

Daleks: Targeting the Doctor for her actions during the Flux crisis... although the Doctor has thwarted them so often that she has to stop and ask exactly which action prompted them this time. Though treated comically, particularly in the scene with Dan, they aren't made into jokes. The entire episode sees them ahead of the Doctor, thwarting her plans and escape attempts. When the Doctor tries to stop them using old tactics, they are ready, telling her with audible smugness, "Daleks learn!"


THOUGHTS:

"Groundhog Day!"
-Dan's first words upon realizing that he, the Doctor, and Yaz are caught in a time loop.

With only a few exceptions, I have never been a fan of the New Series' Dalek stories. One of those exceptions was Chris Chibnall's own Resolution, the first of his New Year's Dalek specials... but even that one fell apart at the end, while I found his following Revolution of the Daleks to be entirely competent but utterly uninteresting.

Which makes Eve of the Daleks all the more pleasant a surprise. This is easily the best of Chibnall's three New Year's episodes, a well-paced, fun, and funny story that held my attention from the first scene through to the last.

"Daleks learn!" is intoned at the end of the teaser, and that one line sets up much of the rest of this. All the characters - Doctor, Daleks, and even humans - retain the memories of each loop, leaving them to use their knowledge to try to succeed in the next loop. The Doctor has jammed Dalek weaponry with her sonic screwdriver once before; the Daleks have upgraded to circumvent that. Sarah tries to change her route to avoid getting killed (again); the Daleks anticipate that change and intercept her on a higher floor. Even the episode's resolution plays into this, with the Doctor using the information gathered over each loop to set a trap for her enemies.

There is one "Doctor speech" about three-quarters of the way through that fails to land for me. It goes a little too heavy-handed in making sure we don't miss the (already well-established) theme of learning and adjusting to challenges - and while Jodie Whittaker is very good through the rest of the episode, her delivery of this speech was a bit too earnest for my tastes.

Outside of that one nitpick, this episode is great fun. Performances are good, dialogue (not always Chibnall's strength) is sharp and often amusing, and the pace doesn't flag.


Overall Rating: 9/10.

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