And Remember...
Series Seven is seeing a very definite theme emerging at
this point, and it is one that builds on a key Steven Moffat trope from his
first two seasons as show-runner.
That theme is memory.
Series Five’s main plot arc concerned the crack in time
caused by the destruction of the TARDIS. The crack erased people from time and
thus made all those who knew them forget they ever existed. This was
illustrated most obviously by the heartbreaking (second) death of Rory, and
Amy’s doomed attempts to hang onto her memories of him. When the Doctor himself
was erased from time, it was only Amy’s memory of him, planted in her head by
the Doctor when she was eleven years old, that brought him back.
The many deaths of Rory Williams (Part Two). |
Series Six introduced the Silence, a race who had long-since
invaded Earth, whose modus operandi involved making people forget they had ever
seen them the moment they turned away from the freaky-fingered felons. Even the
Doctor was unable to picture them the moment they left his sight. Only through
a subliminal message could the Doctor order mankind to kill the Silents, an
order that could well have caused the aliens’ genocide and started the Doctor
down his current path of letting his foes die rather than offering them a way
to save themselves. Fast forward to the end of the season, and we discover that
Madame Kovarian’s eyepatch was in fact a way of externally storing her memories
of the Silents. The only way to remember the Silence is to store them on a
computer drive. Once all the drives are destroyed who will remember the Silence
then? Yes, they and Madame Kovarian are eventually defeated, but only in a
parallel reality where time has stopped. For all we know, they are still out
there, waiting for their moment of revenge, forgotten by the Doctor and his
friends.
The Silence often abused their powers by lurking in women's toilets. |
The Silence were revealed to be a religious order devoted to
the stopping of a question that must never be asked. Namely ‘Doctor Who?’ In
the very final moments of Series Six, the Doctor made the decision to step back
into the shadows and become a myth once more. Did this choice put the Doctor
onto the path to where that question will be answered? The answer appears to be
yes.
Series Seven has brought us three stories so far, and each
one has in some way touched upon this theme of memory. Asylum of the Daleks has Oswin, a girl who has forgotten, or rather
is suppressing the memory, that she had been converted into a Dalek. She is no
longer the person she thinks she is, a condition which may or may not apply to
the Doctor at this point. Certainly it is to the Doctor we need to look. Oswin
wipes all knowledge of the Doctor from the Dalek pathweb, so that when he
returns to the Dalek saucer at the end of the story, the Daleks have no idea
who he is. And what do they ask? ‘Doctor Who?’ of course, a question repeated
over and over and celebrated by the Doctor. But this is the question that,
according to the Silence, must never be asked; a question that terrified them so
much they attempted to kill him (and in the eyes of the universe succeeded). Oswin’s
last words, said directly to the camera are ‘And remember...’ Remember what
exactly? Has she manipulated the Doctor’s memory too? Is she aware of the
Doctor having memory problems? After all, she did scan him earlier in the
episode. Then we have the slightly odd line as the TARDIS team prepare to face
the Parliament of the Daleks. ‘What do we do?’ Amy asks. ‘Make them remember
you,’ the Doctor tells her. Amy’s puzzled expression shows that this line makes
no more sense to her as it does to the audience. It’s too strange a line not to
mean something further down the line as Moffat’s arc starts to reveal itself
properly.
'And remember...' |
Dinosaurs on a
Spaceship teases us with the belief that Solomon knew who the Doctor was on
three occasions. Firstly we hear him perk up when he hears the word ‘Doctor’,
but this turns out to be because he has been badly wounded by velociraptors and
is in need of medical attention to keep his mangled legs. The second moment is
when Solomon has his computer scan the Doctor, only to discover that he doesn’t
exist. We fully expect the Doctor’s identity to be revealed here, and that
absence of information again causes Solomon to question who he is; although Solomon
doesn’t actually ask the forbidden question in this instance, we can assume
that he at least thought it. The third tease occurs when Solomon discovers
something else on board more precious than the dinosaurs, something unique. All
indications are that he is talking about the TARDIS, but in fact he means
Nefertiti. The Doctor and the TARDIS have been forgotten by the universe, but
not by everybody. Riddell, Amy and Rory clearly know who he is, and quite
probably the Indian Space Agency, although it is equally likely that, after
monitoring the space news service, the Doctor simply inveigles his way into
their confidence in his usual manner.
'You don't exist...' |
In A Town Called Mercy,
the Doctor reveals his age as 1200, indicating that a lot of time has passed
since the events of Series Six, and in all that time the Time Lord has hidden
in the shadows. We can imagine that he has used the better part of half a
century proactively wiping himself from the history books rather than merely
hiding away. Again the idea of memory comes to the fore when Isaac says of the
Doctor (and Kahler-Jex): ‘You’re both good men. You just forget it sometimes.’
That’s a mighty perceptive comment from a man who has only just met the Doctor,
so is it part of the theme? What leads Isaac to believe the Doctor has
forgotten he is a good man? At this
time, we can’t be sure. However, it is Amy’s confrontation with her lifelong
friend that is most revealing. ‘What have you turned into?’ she asks him at
gunpoint, essentially asking ‘Doctor Who?’ If his most loyal companion doesn’t
know who he is, then nobody does. The Doctor’s response is ambiguous; he
appears for a moment not to know himself either.
'What have you turned into?' |
The question has been asked three times now in three
episodes. That isn’t coincidence. The signs are beginning to point to a future
revelation that the Doctor has forgotten who he is as well. His merciless
behaviour is at odds with his previous moral code. Could it be that two
encounters in close order with memory-altering beings and space-time events
have damaged his memory, as well as that of the universe as a whole? Could this
be leading us into the anniversary year with the Doctor forgetting his identity
and requiring the help of his former selves to restore it? Could this be a way
of setting up a general reset of the series to allow it to continue for another
fifty years? Are we leading to the forbidden question being asked by the Doctor
himself?
One thing is clear; the imminent departure of Amy and Rory
is only going to accelerate this process, as another two of the Doctor’s
closest friends are lost to him and consigned to memory, and a new friend,
already met, is remembered...
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