Again,
spoilers for the identity of the Thirteenth Doctor. If you’ve somehow made it this far not
knowing, hide under a rock until Sunday.
You’re almost there!
I haven’t
seen everything that Jodie Whittaker has been in, but I’ve seen everything I
could reasonably get my hands on, and since we’re less than a week away from
her debut as the Thirteenth Doctor, I wanted to do a quick wrap-up on my tour
through her filmography.
Although
I’m still digesting my overall thoughts, one thing that strikes me about
Whittaker’s film and TV career is that a lot of it feels fairly
insubstantial. There’s no question that
she’s a strong actress – look no further than her work in Venus or on Broadchurch
or The Assets for proof of that – but
she’s been in a lot of projects that ask very little of her talents.
Not that
there’s anything extraordinary in that.
I’ve worked my way through enough actors’ filmographies to know that
everyone has nothing roles on their resumes.
I haven’t gotten very far into my Andrew Rannells reviews yet, but I’ve
already seen a lot of his work, and I know he has some parts in there that
aren’t worth his time. Tony Leung Chiu-wai is a certified leading man who’s either the star or costar of most
things I’ve seen him in, and that includes some undemanding lead roles that he
could’ve easily slept through. And
Whittaker’s predecessor on Who, Peter Capaldi, the actor who kicked off this blog to start with, has had all sorts of
thankless parts in movies or TV episodes, the roles that made him consider
giving up acting before he snagged The
Thick of It. Lean parts are nothing
new.
However,
while Whittaker has some insubstantial bit parts and larger roles in bad
projects, she also has some sizable roles in shows or films that are perfectly
solid, but that screentime and overall quality doesn’t always translate to
complexity for her character. By and
large, for instance, I like Attack the Block, and Whittaker does well enough in it, but there’s not a lot to
interest me in her character. With this
and other roles, they’re blandly written or underwritten, and there isn’t much
for a performer to work with - she has the most prominent female role in Good Vibrations, Get Santa, and Black Sea (ha!), but there's so little to say about any of these characters or her performances of them.
Even
though there’s a decent variety of projects here – the unsettling mystery of Broadchurch, the cracked comedy of Perrier’s Bounty, the period drama of Cranford – and even though Whittaker’s
most deeply-drawn characters have allowed me to see some of her emotional
range, I still feel like I don’t fully know what she’s capable of as an
actress. And I do think sexism plays a
part in that. Not that strong roles for
women are nonexistent, obviously that isn’t true, but 1) women have fewer roles
available to them than men do overall, and 2) the roles they do have available to them include a
lower percentage of complex, compelling characters.
That
angers/annoys me on Whittaker’s behalf.
I haven’t seen much of anything in her filmography that lets me see the
Doctor in her, and that’s disappointing, because it means how many talented
actresses (or other marginalized performers) could’ve been amazing Doctors that
we’ll never see because they never had roles to let people see they were
capable of it? At the same time, though,
that makes me all the more eager to see her Doctor, because I want her to have
the chance to show off what she can do.
In terms of tone, emotion, and even just plain genre, the Doctor is a
role with colossal range all by itself, and I’m ready to see Whittaker tackle
that; I’m glad her past work with Chris Chibnall made him recognize how much
more there is to her talents than we’ve been able to see so far.
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