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Reply Subj: Doctor Who: Revolutionary or Tool of the Man? Posted: Sat Jan 12, 2008 at 04:47:41 am EST (Viewed 547 times) | |||||||
This article doesn't take into account the Doctor's relationship to his homeland. We first meet him as a hunted exile. The Troughton ear ends with him being recaptured, tried, and punished by surely the most ultra-conservative of patrician socities (ass BBC Empire-British as they come). Pertwee is pretty much the Englishman abroad in the Colonies, solving the natives' problems with his superior breeding. Baker goes from being Time Lord radical to anarchist overthrowing his own government to staunch defender of the old ways reinstating what was there before on Gallifrey. There's also his weird encounter with the Sisterhood of Karn, at that stage the only females we'd seen associated with Time Lords. By Davison's time the Time Lords are ever more incompetent and impotent, requiring his constant help to stop renegades and correct past mistakes. Colin Baker is again tried by his own people, but by now the entire government is corrupt and out to get him and is being manipulated by secret villains. McCoy turns out to actually perhaps secretly be a founder of the Time Lords, up there with Rassilon and Omega. "You think he's just a Time Lord?" McCoy scares Time Lords and plays with their artefacts and trappings like an adult picking up childrens' toys. New series Doctors have been more about being "the Last Roman" (or "the Last Briton") in a cold world where the comforting firm hand of empire has long since passed into anarchy. | |||||||
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