Expanding on our endless conversation, RC (in this thread and the Spider-Man thread), about the downfall of the superhero genre, here's an interesting article on Doctor Who's current problems:
http://www.airlockalpha.com/node/10030/doctor-who-has-not-run-out-of-gas-but-the-engine-is-stalling.htmlThe conclusions, I think, are spot on -- and something I've complained about throughout NuWho's era... It's the same problem as superhero movies. The world always has to end (or be in that sort of danger) and saved magically in the final reel, occasionally after hard to swallow mega-destruction has occurred.
Hell, we could lump our Star Trek discussion in here (and tie it all together with my thoughts that the superhero genre is more than caped crusaders and has actually infected every other genre and, therefore, will always survive).
Classic Who used to be about a wanderer, a fugitive, a powerful alien who stumbled into stories and was really just trying to get out of them. He was motivated, probably 60% of the time, by escape. He'd lost the TARDIS, or become separated from it, and all he wanted to do was get out of dodge.
The rest of the time, his curiosity would get the better of him...and he'd often regret it.
But the "lonely god" era that NuWho brought in changes all of that. The Doctor now becomes detective. Driven beyond reason to involve himself in problems and solve them/save everyone. When his regular enemies are encountered, he must fight them to save the very fabric of the universe itself...
In classic Who, let's take the Daleks... In all the Doctor's encounters, he only fought them on a large scale three times. The rest of the time the Daleks in question were basically a lost patrol, or some outpost, or some random encounter. Still scary, but the scary element was the monster, not the threat that the monster posed.
Anyway... Putting this in the superhero thread since it sort of dovetails with that whole conversation. Sorry.