essaysbysean.blogspot.com
Headnote: British writer Alain de Botton points out in his The News: A User’s Manuel (highly recommended) that modern news
reports of “unbelievable” gruesome behavior serve a purpose similar to the
Greek publicly staged tragedies, serving to remind us to curb ourselves…
Call me a writer, but I am
so impressed by the new improved Doctor
Who stories. I can understand how an actor, on the DVD bonus interviews, says
he only took on the revived role of “the doctor” because he knew the scripts
would be so good. No doubt the writers know the fearsome classics of ancient
Greece …
From the British
Broadcasting Corporation, the TV series of my childhood has been re-envisioned.
Last week a young lady at an author’s reading, “open microphone” at Owl’s Nest Books,
gave me her evaluation of the new show: “It’s creepy.”
She’s right. As I
watch, I can’t help thinking of how small children would be disturbed. While
the original show aired during early Saturday afternoons, in half hour
installments, the new one runs during the evening, from 7:30 or later, in large
time blocks. Although shown before children’s bedtime, or as they say at the
BBC, “before the watershed,” the show is surely for an older audience than
before, and can carry a different freight load of meaning. The old show was nearly
as innocent as the old Bat Man series
where the villains only used knock out gas. From the new show, I recall an
episode where nobody died. The doctor was so happy; he practically danced with
joy, saying, “Nobody dies today!” I can relate.
As he travels in
his blue box, through space and time, the doctor keeps many secrets from his
centuries of living, even keeping his very name a secret.
As for the Earth of
today, someone once told me that in southern Italy, but not the north, many
people practice an “amoral familism”: They set their own family above community
standards, in order to justify their corruption. In one Doctor Who episode a murderous lady of such a family is ready to incinerate
a populated world for her family’s profit. The doctor has supper with her at a
nice restaurant, making nice conversation—and then he points out how she
justifies her self esteem by occasionally not
killing someone. She leans forward to reply viciously, “Only another killer
would know that.” Yes, the doctor has his secrets.
The new doctor
still goes weaponless; he’s still against killing. Once, when his companion points
a revolver he shouts, “Jack, don’t you dare!” Jack resorts to firing into the
sky. The new series was surely inspired by writers who know their liberal arts,
for while the doctor is as compassionate as the Madonna and as fun loving as
Dionysius, he is as merciless as the goddess of Justice. That is, after he has
removed his blindfold by discovering the facts.
In one scene, when
he learns the Truth, his face goes as grave as Abraham Lincoln: he confronts an
alien.
Dr: “(What you are doing)…is against
galactic law.”
Alien: “Are you
threating me?”
Dr: “I’m trying to
help you, Cofelia. This is your one chance. ‘Cause if you don’t call this off,
then I’ll have to stop you.”
As for his
“stopping power,” the good doctor is not without resources. As an antagonist reflects,
“I thought the doctor hid himself from us out of fear; I know now it was out of
kindness.” In his kindness the doctor differs from classical times, as I don’t remember
any famous people of Greece or Rome, nor their gods on Mount Olympus, being
known for kindness.
The Greeks said
every good citizen is expected to “have a life” meaning, I suppose, that
besides being well rounded, they should be able to think of something beyond
themselves, such as their city-state and the people around them, humble under
the gods. In one story the doctor finds an old race at the very end of its
natural life span, a race with no interests, no humbleness and no compassion,
neither for each other nor for other intelligent races. In other words, they no
longer “have a life.”
When he asks these
creatures why they would kill humans they reply, “Because it’s fun.” A fitting justice
for them, surely, would be imprisonment amongst only each other, caring for no
one, bored with everything. They are a lesson to me: When I win the lottery and
retire as a filthy rich senior citizen who doesn’t need anybody anymore, let’s
hope having a healthy interest in the world keeps me having healthy fun.
Another story drew
on a line from old wisdom: “You are only as sick as your secrets.” The doctor,
in deep sympathy, encourages a grown woman to reveal her secret. Abruptly she bursts
out with despairing tears, lonely tears, tears of time irrevocably lost. If I
been there with her? I confess I could not have cried along with her in
sympathy, not I, for I have an automatic rigid control. How I became such a metamorphic
rock is my own secret…
…As I watch the
doctor traveling out there in time and space, I feel hope from knowing that here
on Earth some BBC writers, with great sympathy, are sharing age-old secrets of
the human heart.
Sean Crawford
February
Calgary
2017
Footnotes:
~Perhaps the
Brazilians, at present, practice an amoral familism too. Here (link) a U.S. blogger with
a Brazilian wife writes an open letter calling on them to reform.
~I can remember
from my childhood, back during black and white TV, watching the first doctor,
an old man. His first adventure, which I caught halfway through, was to go back
to the cavemen days on Earth. Next he met the dreaded Daleks for the first
time, before he knew what they were. They lived in a city of steel amidst a
burnt lifeless forest. This was not
on the planet Skaro.
Captain Jack:
~He eventually got
his own TV show: The BBC writers were so pleased that it aired after the
watershed. Now they could tackle things that, for American viewers, would
“rattle their chains.” Not rattled from Jack using his revolver, for in America
there are more guns than people, but for things such as adultery, tortuous
interrogation and homosexual love. That show is Torchwood. Highly recommended.
~From the back of
the U.S. region DVD box, perhaps aimed at youth worshipping Americans: Everyone who works for Torchwood is young,
under 35. Some say that’s because it is a new science. Others say it’s because
they die young.
My enduring image from Torchwood is of two young men without helmets or armored vests. They remind me of the ancient Greek quotation, “An army of lovers cannot be beaten.” I guess this means no Greek in line of battle, standing shield to shield, would shamefully break the line and run, endangering everyone else, no, not before the eyes of his lover….
They stand in loose
shirtsleeves, these two lovers, holding pistols, shoulder to shoulder, before a large transparent
smoke-filled cube. It shelters an intelligent monster. Within the cube the
atmosphere is poisonous, while the air outside is poisonous to the creature. Children’s
lives are at stake. There is no time to
waste: If they can kill the monster right
now then children will be spared. They stand together, pistols bucking, firing
into the glass, knowing that if they succeed then the escaping gas will kill
them…
…I won’t reveal
what happened. Let’s just leave them there, firing their pistols.
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