Lively Doctor Who podcast commentaries, plus reviews and discussions of science fiction and fantasy in books, TV, films and more!

Game of Thrones Review – 1.03 ‘Lord Snow’

HBO’s adaptation of the best-selling fantasy novel has been winning an army of fans on both sides of the Atlantic but reviewer Kieran Mathers hasn’t quite been won over. Could that be about to change? Read on, find out and let us know where you stand in the comments section.

New to Game of Thrones? Check out our primer! 

I’ve been looking forward to reviewing this one. Finally, after two episodes of faintly stilted action, it seems the show has managed to find its natural rhythm. It also produces its strongest scene so far.

The first thing to note is that there has been a change of director and the difference is marked. From the very first arrival of the party in Malta King’s Landing, the dialogue feels right and the pacing spot on. Even Sean Bean has discovered a little more ability.

In a great opening scene, Ned Stark is confronted in the throne room by Jamie Lannister. The two characters being who they are, it’s all threats, but the direction allows the scene to grow naturally, avoiding the pitfalls of the previous episodes and the entire exchange is skilfully laden with subtext. It’s great to see the series begin to match up to its potential.

Continue reading

Article: Doctor Who’s Story Arc of Infinity (and Beyond?)

Are you a fan of Doctor Who‘s new format? Podcast commentator Swithun Dobson (a.k.a. “The Great Intelligence”, a.k.a. “The Beast”) certainly isn’t and turns his critical eye on the past to suggest how the show might evolve in future.

Deafening Silence, River Melodies and “shenanigans”. Are story-arcs the future of Doctor Who? Since Steven Moffat acceded to the showrunner’s throne, the series has tended toward more heavily-arced narratives. Last year it was the Crack, this year it’s the not-so-silent Silence.

For the purpose of this article a story-arc will be defined as a continuing narrative which is directly related to each individual episode over a significant period of time, normally a single series. This definition should be treated as the gold standard against which other series can be compared, to determine their arcedness. (Bad Wolf, for instance, wasn’t an arc – it was an afterthought).

Continue reading

Game of Thrones Review – 1.02 ‘The Kingsroad’

Reviewer Kieran Mathers returns to examine HBO’s new epic fantasy series. Have things improved after last week’s disappointments? Read on to find out! Once again, we’re issuing a mild spoiler warning. If you missed Kieran’s review of Episode 1, you can find it here. New to Game of Thrones? Check out our primer!

It’s very much an episode of two or possibly three halves this week. While Bran lies unconscious in the tower, looked after by Lady Haversham Stark, the rest of the family plan to leave the boy and head towards King’s Landing.

Meanwhile, we’re treated to the on-going trials of Daenerys Targaryen and her marriage to Khal Drogo. This is depicted very graphically in the books and I like how the show manages to hint at the difficulties she is facing without being overly graphic. The strongest scene of this episode is probably the conversation between Daenerys and Ser Jorah, which ends with his line, ‘It gets easier’. You really get the impression that the actors are beginning to find the meter of the language and, although the show still has a tendency to deviate into strange moments of exposition, some naturalism is beginning to creep into the performances.

Continue reading

Tolkien Discussion: Fantasy, Wales, The Hobbit movie and more!

Caleb Woodbridge and Olivia Cottrell are joined by fellow Tolkien-geeks Gwen Williams and Alex Zens to get the literary lowdown on all things Middle-Earth related.

We chat about why we love Tolkien, plus those things about his writing that perhaps aren’t quite so great. We also discuss Tolkien’s impact on the fantasy genre, his relationship with Wales, and what it’s like to study Tolkien at university. And to round it off, we talk about the upcoming Hobbit movie and what we liked and didn’t like about The Lord of the Rings movie trilogy.

Play
Mentioned in this podcast:

Let us know what you think about all things Tolkien-related in the comments!

Game of Thrones Review – 1.01 ‘Winter is Coming’

Reviewer Kieran Mathers brings us the first of his episode-by-episode reviews of the year’s biggest fantasy series. This review comes with a mild spoiler warning. There will be some comparisons between the events of the book and the show.

New to ‘Game of Thrones’? Check out our primer!

For those of you who live on Mars and may not have heard, HBO have adapted the first novel in G.R.R. Martin’s ongoing fantasy sequence, A Song of Ice and Fire, into a ten part mini-series: Game of Thrones. The word they are using in much of the press is “epic”. That’s a big word to be throwing around, even in our age of superlative inflationary pressures but the opening scene is suitably cinematic in scale. In a visually stunning sequence, the brave rangers of the Night’s Watch have their first deadly encounter with the white walkers at the Wall, a seven hundred foot high barrier of ice.

While the imagery is brilliantly rendered (and deserves to be seen on a big screen in HD) the scene does not mirror the book and I don’t think it is any stronger for it. The fighting is suitably brutal – a gory gallery of severed limbs and heads, which certainly reflects the violence of Martin’s prose – but I found it difficult to care for the characters because, at this point, one of the episode’s two major issues raised its head; the script is not as Shakespearean as it wishes it was.

Continue reading

Doctor Who – A Good Man Goes to War – Review

Amy and Melody Pond

James Willetts reviews the mid-series finale, with a somewhat less positive take than that of this week’s commentary team. Who do you agree with? Let us know in the comments!

If the first half of the episode was all about building the Doctor to be an all-destroying Action Hero, crushing everything in his path, the second was all about drawing him back from that path.

I’ve written a couple of times this season about my unease at the way the Doctor seems to solve problems with battles, and I’m glad that it was addressed here. I recognise that there is an intrinsic problem in television in showing conflict-resolution which doesn’t involve stuff blowing up. The problem many people have with much of Star Trek is the endless diplomacy. No one wants to see the Doctor changing people through dialogue and mediation with no running around and shouting. That’s boring, even if it is a better, more realistic route.

Continue reading