fandom top 5's, pt. 1
Top five things that would be different about Torchwood if [I] were the showrunner.
1. Solid chronology. I know that's insane in the Whoniverse, but I think Torchwood always suffered a lot from us never knowing when any event happened in relation to any other event. I've really just come to the conclusion that CoE takes place maybe a week after The Dead Line -- it's the only thing that makes sense, but I hate that we're all always left grasping around for these things. I know it rains a lot in Cardiff, but what fucking season is it?
2. More would have happened with "Ianto is a lying liar who lies" sooner. Cyberwoman was great, and letting that just sit for a while is smart. But we don't have hints of Ianto's dishonesties again except in: Fragments and From Out of the Rain, which actually just looked like a research error when it aired. We also get a sense Ianto might be a lying liar who lies because of the two different birthdays that exist for him, if you include tie-in material canon. I also always felt that the "master tailor" line felt wrong in my gut; I'm not sure why, maybe I've spent enough time on both sides of that equation that it just hit my antenna funny. But then, we never really get the confirmation of Ianto is lying liar who lies until the Debenham's moment. It's brilliant and completely re-opens the character for us. But I would have made sure it was seeded better and used it as a more significant plot point, especially since it's interesting that Ianto, the lying liar who lies, is also the only one who can bring the truth to the fore in Adam. I thought the show really wasted its possibilities on this front.
3. Play up Jack's alienness. Jack's first language isn't 20th century English, and his culture is not an earth culture. Sure he's been here a long time, and knows how to assimilate for all sorts of reasons, but we have Jack use all these awkward idioms ("the worst creatures you can imagine") and there are all these cracks about Jack's manners, and it would have been so easy with a line or two here and there, with an extra shot or two in any of the episodes that reference Boeshane, to really get the Jack is alien. I think reducing Jack being different down to either his sexuality or his immortality short-changes the character and the complexity of what Torchwood could be.
4. Have Euros Lyn direct everything. Really. He got much more nuanced performances out of Barrowman than anyone else who directs for Torchwood, and he was able to keep GDL's considerable skills focused and on target. His choices with sound and space were, I think, fantastic, and I wonder a lot about what he could have done for us in all those "monster of the week episodes."
5. Non-sexual love. This isn't about toning down the sex in Torchwood at all. This about the fact that the show is, in my opinion, at its finest in Jack's interaction with that guy that comes through the Rift on the plane. That serious, adult drama there in the conversation Jack has with him in the bar -- man to man, and more moving for Jack being queer and for it not being about that -- I would have really love to see that sort of love and affection explored in other places, including between the team (Tosh, we hardly knew you!) and being vocalized. Our culture is very "just friends" but often some of the hardest relationships are those that involve love without the expectation and recognition that comes with sex and family.
6. Yes, there's a six. I get a six, because six shouldn't even have to be on the list, but woah, less with the offensive South Asian portrayals/castings/plotlines. Torchwood is faily faily faily here, and that would not be happening if I ran the world or the show.
Top five peeves re. Deathly Hallows?
1. SNAKE BUBBLE TO THE HEAD. Really, it's not just that. It's that JKR took a narrative about outcasts and then made the popular kids into outcasts instead and threw out all the marvelous grey that was Snape's character by just making him a creepy stalker that couldn't get laid.
2. It wasn't ready for prime-time. It needed a tighter edit.
3. Remus. Tonks. Off-screen demise. WHUT?
4. Draco. Another chance for complexity in just a sentence or two thrown away.
5. One of the best moments in the book revolves around Kreacher, who explains that he did not die because his master told him not to. It's horrifying. It's brilliant (weirdly, I hate the house elves, and they get all the best moments in Deathly Hallows), but it's sort of thrown away in a mid-book bury and the people hearing the story don't even react to that part of it. There's no nice way to say this, but I felt like Book 7, in a series that's all about love, kinda proved everyone is actually a bigot, and not in a useful, teaching moment way.
Top Five Vehicles
Seriously? I don't even drive. This is hard work.
1. The Tardis.
2. An old-skool BSG Viper. Fuck yeah!
3. Okay, my favorite show when I was like eight, was Buck Rogers in the 25th Century. I don't remember what his ship was called, and I don't care, but it's going on this list, right here, right now.
4. That lovely little plane that comes through the Rift in Out of Time. Sweet.
5. The big triangular battleships in Star Wars (I am a bad geek, I don't know my terminology). There's a shot in one of the films in the first trilogy with two or three of them passing each other real close, like, it was was always breathtaking, so breathtaking to me.
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Kreacher? I hadn't noticed that so far, I think I'm going to have to go take a look at that part now because that, right there, is fascinatingly creepy.
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You know that moment in Day Two when Jack is chained to the wall and yelling, “Face me like a man”? The part of my brain that wasn’t busy admiring the view was thinking, You, sir, have spent too much in the twentieth century. Because come on, “Face me like a man” — as opposed to what, a woman? FAIL. What happened to my enlightened fifty-first-century guy?
The big triangular battleships in Star Wars
I’m guessing you mean the Star Destroyers. I always wanted an X-wing, myself. Or the Millennium Falcon — variable artificial gravity orientation FTW!
Confession time: I have not yet read Deathly Hallows (don’t worry, I’m already pretty much spoiled for the megillah), and now I don’t know that I’m going to enjoy it very much
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Dude, the wife comment, in his conversation with Hart? Not on, not on. And I could believe that Jack has assimilated, given that he's lived in linear time from 1869 on, but the fact that it didn't throw Hart leads me to believe that the 51st century is less enlightened than we're supposed to believe it is.
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Jack being alien - it's an interesting point. On one hand, the language thing goes somehow unnoticed (even in fanfiction, Ianto is always talking Welsh in bed, why Jack never says a word in his native tongue?) On the other hand, I think Jack integrated most of the Earth culture during 140 years he was living throught it. He's more Earthian now that Boeshanian, I suppose. Thought I'd love to see some hints of 51-st century culture, not only 'sexual freedom' one.
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I think Severus is far more complex than a sociopath with unrequited love issues. That Rowling dumbed him down so much was insulting to his character, and I never bought the whole idea about his joining the Death Eaters just because they were nice to him, or making moral decisions based on his selfish feelings for Lily. Snape is smarter than that, and capable of far more complex emotion, as Rowling used to show her readers in past books.
I found myself wishing that Snape and Harry had had a chance to talk before Rowling killed the guy off. I'm not sure what they would have said, but I'm sure it would have been far more interesting and significant than Snape's pensieve. And as for Draco, the fact that he faded into the background almost immediately after the focus on him throughout book six was ridiculous. He could have been a lynchpin in the story, and could have shaped a much better plot in book seven.
Oh, yeah, and the "off-screen" kill of Remus and Tonks reminded me all to much of the fact that when Sirius died in book five, I didn't even notice until TWO CHAPTERS LATER. Rowling did a great job with Fred's death scene, but she has a habit of not giving enough importance to death scenes involving characters Harry cares just as much about.
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I thought I was the only one! I was reading Remus's conversation with Harry, and went, wait, what? I had to reread the curtain chapter, and there it was. Maybe it's the reason why I never was as devastated as other people about Sirius's death, because it had been such a non-event at first (and I never was a Sirius fan, too).
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What's this one about?
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I love that the TARDIS tops your list.
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I've really just come to the conclusion that CoE takes place maybe a week after The Dead Line -- it's the only thing that makes sense
How did you work this out? Also, do you have any thoughts on when The Sin Eaters is set? I had the feeling that that was pretty close to CoE as well, since we have a reference to Rhys's new car.
Non-sexual love. This isn't about toning down the sex in Torchwood at all. This about the fact that the show is, in my opinion, at its finest in Jack's interaction with that guy that comes through the Rift on the plane. That serious, adult drama there in the conversation Jack has with him in the bar -- man to man, and more moving for Jack being queer and for it not being about that
Yes, so much this. The way that Jack and John Ellis interact is just beautiful. I wish they'd kept the deleted scene after John gets off the bus, having failed to produce the fare in the correct currency.
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And while I like his alienness, I also get frustrated with distant Jack is portrayed at times. He's lived in Cardiff off-and-on for 160 years. And at least part of that time would have been spent at ground level and sober.
It's hard to mix the two in the right proportions. The best sort of mindset I could think of was as a first generation immigrant ( or refugee ) who's lived in his new home for twenty years. Like a Hmong soldier that ended up in Wisconsin.
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Thank you! The first time I read it I came out of my room crying, "They killed my werewolf! I didn't even get to see it!"
Broke my heart. Although it did help to lend to the scope of the battle and the numbness that overtakes Harry. It was a very Whedonesque kill-anyone-no-one-is-safe kind of trope.
I still hated it though.
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If I remember correctly, then judging from the state of the vegetation, the end of S2 was in about late Sept, early October - so at least a year before.
Of course Britain has perfectly definable seasons, it's only people who never set foot outside a town who are oblivious to them.
Euros Lyn is a BBC1 director, they couldn't have had him for the previous series. This sort of thing is why a move to BBC2 and then BBC1 improved the series - it meant they had access to the better writers, directors etc.
Jack isn't an alien, he's a human. At most this makes him a long term immigrant, but given how long he's been in Cardiff even that is pushing it. The accent is more than enough to mark him as 'outsider' (I know that presumably doesn't register for you, but it does for us).
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(Private pilot here; it's one of my geekeries.)
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Ianto "Liar, Liar, Pant on Fire" Jones should have been more developed, it would have been nice to see some more of his estrangement from his family... I dunno, there was so much more to see with him.
Your #1 point regarding Deathly Hollows made me really hate the "message" JKR was trying to convey. Bah.
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Personally, I would have added KITT the black talking car from the original Knight Rider to the list of vehicles. Oh! and maybe the Batmobile! Personally I would have gone with an X-Wing from Star Wars since those big battleships are a bit hard to manuever. The Enterprise! How could I miss that!
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With you on every single one of them. On #4, the plane would be rockin' but having it flown by a hot pilot from the 50's would be even more rockin'.
jack's alieness...
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You can get a flight in one of those:
http://www.classicflight.com/theAircraft