Doctor Who: “The Girl Who Died” Review

Doctor Who: “The Girl Who Died” Review
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Maisie Williams meets the Doctor!

By Scott Collura

Warning: Full spoilers below.

First things first, I think we should get out of the way the whole question of who Maisie Williams plays in this, the first segment of a two-part Doctor Who story. There’s been a lot of speculation that the character would be someone from the Doctor’s past — perhaps one of his children or his granddaughter, Susan Foreman, regenerated into a new form. Could she be Missy’s daughter, who was recently mentioned? Or an old foe who has taken on a new body?

Nah, she’s not any of those things. Which, frankly, is a bit of a disappointment. And which, really, you can’t hold against the show or showrunner Steven Moffat. It’s not his fault that so many of us fans have been building up the character’s importance to the Doctor in our minds for all these months.

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And once one gets past the fact that Williams is not playing Susan or some other familiar character, it’s easier to embrace the story she’s in and who she is playing: the Viking girl Ashildr. And yeah, Ashildr is pretty important to the Doctor too, it turns out. Or at least she becomes important by the end of “The Girl Who Died.”

Ashildr is a cool character who fits in well with the Doctor in that she’s a bit of an oddball just like our favorite Time Lord is. “I know I’m strange,” she tells him, but strange is the Doctor’s specialty. Her love of storytelling and her puppets and her courage in the face of the invading Mire are all traits that the Doctor admires, so it’s no wonder that he’d be willing to break his rules and touch her with immortality as he does at the end of the episode.

Considering where Ashildr and the Doctor’s stories lead them here, the episode is by and large a pretty lightweight and fun affair for much of its running time. The anachronistic Vikings are a likable lot (Lofty, Daphne, Noggin the Nog, ZZ Top, Heidi, and of course, Limpy), and the Doctor’s training them to fight ala Army of Darkness is cute, even while Twelve’s translating the baby’s crying bordered on poetic. “I’m afraid, but I will sing for you…” And the design of the Mire foot soldiers was very memorable, a gross cross between a Hellraiser Cenobite and the baby from Eraserhead.

I love Video games.First system i ever got was a Atari 2600,Ever since the first time i moved that joystick i was hooked.I have been writing and podcasting about games for 7 years now.I Started Digital Crack Network In 2015 and haven't looked back.

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