“Dalek” (Series
1, Episode 6)
When I
first saw this episode, I was a novice to Time Lords, Daleks, the works. But you know what? Didn’t matter. I absolutely bought into the Doctor’s anguish
over the events of the Time War, and seeing that even a single Dalek had made
it out alive ravaged him. In other news,
the “lone monster terrorizes a secure base” trope is used excellently here, and
my introduction to Daleks made me completely understand why small British
children are so afraid of them.
“Father’s Day” (Series 1, Episode 8)
Rose’s
request to go back in time and see her dead father doesn’t go as planned when
she prevents the hit-and-run that killed him in the first place. Though she gets time she never had with her
dad, changing the past has serious consequences, and Rose realizes the
responsibility that time travel demands.
The ending wrecks me every time. Plus,
young Jackie! Couldn’t you just die?
“The Empty Child” / “The Doctor Demands”
(Series 1, Episodes 9-10)
“Are
you my mummy?” So much to love in this
two-parter. A genuinely horrific monster
in the gasmask zombies, great London Blitz backdrop, and terrific supporting characters
in Nancy and the one and only Captain Jack Harkness. Another great ending – this one gets to me in
a good way. “Just this once…”
“The Unquiet Dead” (Series 1, Episode 3)
New Who’s first celebrity episode features the
Doctor and Rose fighting ghost-like creatures with Charles Dickens. How could you not love that? Dickens and the accompanying Dickens-related
talk (the Doctor is such a fanboy) are awesome, the Gelth are intriguing
aliens, and the Doctor and Rose get into their first real argument, showing
that, as close as they are, Rose isn’t a fawning devotee who simply falls in
line and lets the Doctor make all the decisions.
“Bad Wolf” / “The Parting of the Ways”
(Series 1, Episodes 12-13)
Yes, it
started RTD’s penchant for bombastic finales with zillions of alien menaces and
resolutions that are more than a little deus ex machina, but I don’t care. The Doctor, Rose, and Jack make a stand at
the Game Station, and it’s wonderful.
These three love each other so much, they’re so brave, and there’s
nothing they won’t do for each other. I
love everything about the Bad Wolf, and the ending is one of the best in the
entire show. Really and truly –
fantastic.
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