strange_complex: (TARDIS)
strange_complex ([personal profile] strange_complex) wrote2007-04-21 07:30 pm

The Lonely God

Well, that was a very biblical episode, wasn't it? White angels and red devils dancing around on stage, a worker's wife thinking the Empire State Building is like 'a spire reaching into heaven' (like the Tower of Babel, maybe?) and Daleks hanging out in a basement with random bursts of fire shooting out for no reason.

I noticed a bit of a white / red theme going on in the previous episode as well, actually, when two of the cars the Doctor dropped through had a red and a white inhabitant each living in them. Continuity = nice - and there's certainly a continuation from the last episode of the dissonance between overground and underground, privileged and desolate New York.

And what about the character names, eh?

Diagoras, a fifth-century BC philosopher famous for his atheism. Nice enough touch for a character primarily driven by money and ambition - especially if you apply a fairly modern definition of atheism. And how ironic that he should worship, and eventually become one of, the Dalek-devils. (ETA: although, as I just realised while talking to [livejournal.com profile] pickwick, since this is a two-parter perhaps in fact his character has yet to manifest its atheism, and the Diagoras-Dalek hybrid will do so next week, with important plot-advancing consequences?)

Solomon. 'Nuff said. Though I loved him being given the line, 'I'm not a fool, Doctor.'

Tallulah (who's very insistent about how her name should be spelt) I think must be based on Tallulah Bankhead - she's about the right age, although I think Bankhead's career was a bit further advanced in 1930. Famously, Bankhead said "I read Shakespeare and the Bible, and I can shoot dice. That's what I call a liberal education." Neat.

And Laszlo made me think most of all of Victor Laszlo, the fugitive resistance leader from Casablanca. Well, the Daleks with their 'Final Experiment' certainly carried resonances of the Nazis. So will his character live up to his namesake's role? Find out next week!

taimatsu: (Default)

[personal profile] taimatsu 2007-04-21 07:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Tallulah reminds me of the Jodie Foster character of the same name from 'Busgy Malone' right down (iirc) to the silver dress (though the Bugsy version was longer).
ext_550458: (Kamakura Buddha enlightenment)

[identity profile] strange-complex.livejournal.com 2007-04-21 07:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Ah! I've not seen that. So if the Doctor Who character is based on Tallulah Bankhead, then it may actually be at two removes - i.e. through Bugsy Malone first. Or maybe it's meant to recall both - I can't help but think the writers must have been aware of both the Shakespeare reference and the Bible reference in the quotation I linked to.
taimatsu: (Default)

[personal profile] taimatsu 2007-04-21 07:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, Bugsy Malone is an absolutely fantastic, wonderful film. Very much worth finding and watching, especially if you like musicals/silliness. It was a favourite when I was little.

It's possible Bugsy's Tallulah is based on Bankhead - I don't know enough about the latter to know. The Dr Who/Bugsy link makes sense because both are nightclub singers (with backing dancers, though Bugsy's are dressed in silver, not red!)