“The Girl in the Fireplace” stars David Tennant as the
Doctor and Billie Piper as Rose Tyler with Noel Clarke as Mickey Smith and
Sophia Myles as Madame de Pompadour. It
was written by: Steven Moffat and directed by: Euros Lyn with Helen Raynor as
Script Editor, Phil Collinson as Producer, and Russell T. Davies and Julie
Gardner as Executive Producers. It was
originally broadcast on Saturday 6 May 2006 on BBC One.
Steven Moffat’s contributions to Russell T. Davies’
time as showrunner are fascinating as he is the only writer other than Davies
to contribute scripts to each of the four series, immediately after
contributing “The Empty Child” and “The Doctor Dances” he was approached to
write “Madame de Pompadour” with ideas from himself about evil statues
attacking a library in space that would materialize in future series. Moffat became enamored with the idea of the
Doctor falling in love with the historical Madame de Pompadour throughout her
life in a non-linear fashion. Moffat was
largely inspired by The Time Traveler’s Wife which he would later go on
to adapt as a miniseries, a work that would also reflect later aspects and characters
in several of his other Doctor Who episodes. “Madame de Pompadour” went through several
titles including “Every Tick of My Heart” and “Loose Connection” before becoming
“The Girl in the Fireplace” and slotting as the second episode of the series,
before being moved to the potential opener, and finally the fourth where Moffat
would add the character of Mickey Smith to the proceedings. “The Girl in the Fireplace” is an episode
that provides an examination of Doctor Who through the eyes of Steven
Moffat. His time as showrunner is often
described as having a fairy tale quality with the Doctor as a mythic hero, and
this is the episode where that originates.
The juxtaposition of setting the episode in pre-Revolutionary France
throughout the life of Madame de Pompadour, played by Sophia Myles, and a dingy
spaceship that has broken down in the 51st century may not sound like
a fairy tale, but the presentation is what cues these comparisons. Euros Lyn’s direction is lavish in the
historical setting despite being shot on location in Wales and in studio. This is amplified by the antagonists of the
episode being robots made from clockwork, camouflaged in period clothing. Striking images and beautifully crafted from
the costume and props departments for the episode. The cold logic of why they are opening these
portals into the life of Madame de Pompadour is fascinating and only fully
explained to the audience in the striking final moments of the episode.
The Doctor under Moffat was written as the only child
left out in the cold in “The Empty Child” and “The Doctor Dances” which is
brought further in “The Girl in the Fireplace” to be the lonely angel. Dialogue is taken directly from Paul Cornell’s
1992 novel Love and War to describe the Doctor as the person who the
monsters get nightmares about, though in this context it is less a critique of
the Doctor’s character but a mythical figure coming in to be the imaginary
friend and savior. The moment where the
Doctor and Reinette link minds and she sees the deepest insides is fascinating
from a perspective as it still casts the Doctor as an outsider, something that
is more apparent with the loss of his home and people, it also casts him as a
god which is a characterization that does not fit who the Doctor should be. The premise of the episode’s romance is one
that leaves quite a few poor implications as the relationship is one that
should be outright negative: it’s an obsession based on these brief dalliances
with the Doctor in the role of a protector, not lover, Reinette falling in love
with the idea of the Doctor. Tennant does,
however, play it incredibly well with this, “School Reunion”, and “The
Christmas Invasion” being the three major defining episodes for who the Tenth
Doctor will be. It’s amplified by the
fact that the time between meetings for the Doctor is only a matter of moments
and not the several months and years, as well as this detached attitude towards
the danger. Moffat, while writing Reinette
as the precursor to several of his other female characters in a number of ways,
really plays the danger up by allowing her into the Doctor’s world, represented
by the spaceship, for just one brief moment, one that sees her actively
repulsed by the danger. There is also
some souring by the choice of casting Sophie Myles who actively defended Noel Clarke
against the several allegations of sexual assault by several different
women. Speaking of Clarke, he and Billie
Piper as Mickey and Rose are sadly pushed to the background which for the
character of Mickey is a shame as this is his first trip in the TARDIS. Rose gets to at least be his guide which
leads to some very fun scenes and interactions, with her one scene against
Myles’ Reinette being a highlight on how the Doctor can affect people, but
other than that this is an episode focused on the Doctor and Reinette and
really nobody else.
Overall, “The Girl in the Fireplace” is an episode
with issues. The lavish production,
imagery, and ideas are great on the surface, but when investigated further have
some worrying implications and in particular play the Doctor as the highest
authority, something that they should never be portrayed as (at least not
uncritically). David Tennant and Sophia
Myles are the two that carry the episode, though it’s often the visual details
that elevate several of its elements.
It's essentially Steven Moffat’s Doctor Who boiled down to one
episode with many of the flaws and strengths that come with it plus the issues
of being moved around in the series order multiple times caused multiple
rewrites that make it a distinct step down from his previous story for the show.
It’s a further indication of the issues surrounding the second series of the
revived Doctor Who and its inability to have a full plan for where the
show is going. 7/10.
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