Zarf Updates
73 stories in the engine yard
We talk about story characters who are "genre-aware" or "genre-savvy". Although it's more like trope-savvy, right? The horror movie protagonist who gets off the property rather than smooching someone in a dark cellar. The manor-house murderer who knows not to talk to elderly Miss Lacetatter.
I think about this while watching Doctor Who. Of course! I've noted (and I'm not remotely the first to say it) that the TARDIS is less a time-travel machine than a genre-travel machine. The Doctor can crash into a war story one week, a cozy mystery the next, flee to a haunted house on Mars, and then get chased around by dinosaurs on a spaceship. This might not have been the show's original concept but it arrived there in short order. And the modern-era show-runners (Davies and Moffat and that other one) have very consciously taken genre as their playground.
Characters on Doctor Who aren't notably genre-savvy. They're not notably genre-blind either -- except in the sense that the companions are new to the Universe whereas the Doctor has seen everything twice. The show isn't meta in that sense. But, just occasionally...
I was brought up short by two particular episodes -- perhaps my two favorite episodes of the (very strong) Ncuti Gatwa era. These were the episodes where my first reaction was "That was amazing!" and my second was "Wait, that was ridiculous." And my third reaction -- because I refuse to reject either of the first two -- was to pace furiously around my apartment, trying to figure out why that hour of ridiculous television was amazing. The story made no sense, and yet the story worked. What worked? Why can't I pin it down?
I think I've pinned something down.
Spoiler warning: all the spoilers. I will give extremely brief recaps, but I'm assuming you've watched both Gatwa seasons. If you haven't, well, you can manage your own spoiler policy, but this discussion might not mean much to you.
73 Yards
The recap, as brief as I can:
The Doctor and Ruby arrive in Wales. The Doctor steps on a circle of string and charms, breaking the thread. The Doctor is now somehow gone; the TARDIS is locked; a white-haired woman is watching Ruby from a distance. Ruby cannot approach the Watcher nor leave her behind. Anyone else who speaks to the Watcher flees Ruby in apparent terror. Alienated from her family, Ruby tries to live her life; the Watcher remains eternally present, always 73 yards away.
In 2046 (aged 40-ish), Ruby sees a man named Roger ap Gwilliam running for office. She knows (spoiler) that ap Gwilliam as Prime Minister is going to cause a nuclear crisis. She maneuvers her way into ap Gwilliam's campaign and arranges to stand 73 yards from him. ap Gwilliam speaks to the Watcher and runs away, abandoning his political career.
Ruby lives the rest of her life as a recluse. As she approaches death, the Watcher appears close enough to be seen clearly. Ruby dies and experiences her life from the Watcher's point of view. She conveys the message "don't step" to her younger self, who prevents the Doctor from breaking the charm circle in the first place.
Whew! That was surprisingly difficult to summarize. It's a dense script. It doesn't feel rushed but it shifts gears a bunch.
It also never, ever bothers to explain anything. Nor does the plot link intricately back on itself -- we are denied the usual time-loop pleasures of "oh, that's why that happened!" This leaves 73 Yards wide open to cranky why-the-hell criticism, e.g.:
- What does the charm/fairy circle actually do?
- Why does the Doctor disappear?
- Why 73 yards?
- Why does everybody become terrified of Ruby?
- What allows Ruby to travel in time?
Not only are these questions unanswered, they're unanswerable. You can't construct a message the Watcher could impart that could cause "the fear effect". (A later episode suggests that the TARDIS has a perception filter with a range of 73 yards, which signally fails to retcon this story in any meaningful way.)
If these questions bother you, the episode doesn't work. Fine! But it worked for me. So I am honor-bound to figure out why -- thus this post. And if you didn't bail out in the middle of the episode recap, you are now honor-bound to finish reading it.
So, if 73 Yards isn't a tick-tock clockwork time-loop story, what is it? The story initially presents itself as supernatural. The Doctor explicitly calls the string circle a "fairy circle"; the pub denizens give Ruby a rural-horror ghost story about "Mad Jack". Of course they're joking. Right?
The fairy-or-ghost-story reading has one great advantage: such stories are driven by something. (Beyond their own cleverness! Not that there's anything wrong with that!) Ghost stories are revenge or justice -- the ghost's, of course, but it should be personal for the narrator as well. (In a murder ballad, it's generally revenge against the narrator.) Fairy stories are harder to pin down, but wandering into Faerie is a fault; it's inattention or greed or disobedience. Getting out is the reward for faith or generosity or out-clevering the Devil.
The emotional core of 73 Yards is Ruby's fear of abandonment. We'd really like that to be the mainspring of the plot as well. The Doctor breaks a fairy circle and is stolen away. The Watcher figure is alien, outside of human society. Everyone who speaks to it...
...This doesn't quite work. Is Ruby punished for the Doctor's trespass? Or is breaking the circle implicitly Ruby's fault? Is everyone else punished as well, Ruby's mother and Kate Stewart and all? The vanished spouse implied by old-Ruby's wedding ring?
Really it's better if Ruby is the one stolen away to fairyland. She lives in an imitation world, a glamour of normality 146 yards across. Everyone outside that circle becomes a changeling. Not always in a moment of Watcher-drive terror, but inevitably all the same. "Everyone has abandoned me my whole life."
It's worth considering Groundhog Day, which is not a fairy tale by symbolism but which follows the same logic. Phil Connors is trapped outside the world by his self-centeredness; he escapes by recreating himself. Okay, maybe it's the converse logic -- Phil stops running away from everyone else -- but you see the comparison.
But this isn't quite right either. Groundhog Day ends when Phil's story is resolved. Tam Lin is freed by Janet's devotion, cue the wedding bells (or diapers anyhow). Rose accepts her father's death and everybody (else) lives. (Davies knows how this goes.) Ruby does her thing, and...
We should talk about Ruby's thing. It is, after all, the answer to my original question. Why do I love this story? Because Ruby kicks ass. She grabs the Watcher by the inscrutables and drags her off to save the world.
(Everybody loves a companion who can Doctor it up in the Doctor's absence. "Come on," says Ruby, quoting Seven, "we've got work to do.")
But if that were the answer, saving the world would end the story. "Is that it?" Ruby asks. It's not. The Doctor doesn't step out from behind the camera. The Watcher is still there and so is the next forty barren years of Ruby's life. Of course! She hasn't erased her fear. She hasn't connected with anyone. (Not even Marti Bridges, the only actual character to enter the script since UNIT bailed.) She hasn't had a heart-warming moment of character growth. She's just... saved the world. Instead. Isn't that better?
In other words, this isn't a fairy tale any more. (Fairy tales, up to Groundhog Day, are about saving yourself -- never the world.) It's a sci-fi puzzle-box. The kind of story where the protagonist figures out the trick, applies the rules in a clever way. That means living with the rules, afterwards. A tick-tock time loop story after all -- but only in retrospect, at the end.
My diagnosis: 73 Yards is a story about choosing your genre. Ruby gets dropped into an eerie-faerie ghost story about her life-trauma, and she's just not having it. She walks out of that story into one that gives her more agency and a better goal. Of course the end of the script doesn't resolve the beginning! It's a different story. Maybe there's a waking-up-with-Rita, everybody's-back happy ending in the original script -- but Ruby walked away from that to prevent a world crisis.
That's a genre-aware character.
Well, I said, after half an hour of furious pacing. The episode does work. It's a one-off, though. You can't do that sort of trick twice.
Smash cut to:
The Story and the Engine
But first, let me say how wonderful it is to see a Doctor Who episode that visibly, joyfully emanates from an African tradition. Our show is not visiting Lagos; it is of Lagos. The storytelling rhythms of a Nigerian barbershop will prevail, out of a Nigerian-born writer by way of TARDIS translation magic. You can hear Gatwa changing up the way he speaks.
The show is amazing just for that. It requires no further explanation. But I have my own rhythm going now...
The Doctor goes off to find his old friend Omo, a barber in Lagos, Nigeria. He finds that Omo and several friends are trapped in the barbershop. The new owner, a nameless man, requires them to tell stories while he cuts their hair. A woman named Abi brings them food every day; only Abi and the Barber can leave.
The Doctor tries to unseal the door but it opens on outer space. From this side, the shop is part of a giant mechanical spider-vehicle that traverses a web towards an unknown destination.
The Barber claims to be various gods (Anansi, Sága, Dionysus) but the Doctor denies it. The Barber then claims to be a scribe who told stories of these gods and thus gave them their power. The spider, powered by the barbershop stories, is carrying him to the center of the web where he will overthrow the gods.
Abi (actually Abena, Anansi's daughter) tells a story while braiding a map into the Doctor's hair. The Doctor and Belinda follow the map to the story-engine. The Doctor overloads the engine with his own manifold life-story. He tells the Barber that if he doesn't unlock the door, they will all die. The Barber does, and everyone escapes to Lagos as the spider-vehicle explodes.
Yikes, that was even harder to compress than 73 Yards. I had to leave more out, and what's left barely makes sense.
- Why does the TARDIS sound an alarm when the Doctor is kidnapped? (That's like twice a month in the old series.)
- Why does it sound again when Abi merely scans the magic door for damage?
- What happens if someone tells a story and the green bulb doesn't light?
- How did the Barber go from unemployed scribe to hyperspatial spider captain?
- Did the Doctor have a plan all along? Was Belinda part of it? (We get two unsupported "Took you long enough" lines.)
- How exactly does the spider stick its head through a door bolted to its back? (From the inside, even!)
I'm bypassing the Unexpected Space Baby -- that's a season-arc hook. Also the question of why Belinda stays in the TARDIS for the first half of the show, which, I'm afraid, is mostly to disguise the fact that she has absolutely no role here beyond backstory. (I didn't notice this until my second viewing. And to be fair, the story is foregrounding six guest characters.)
But, again, it's hard to assemble a list of plot holes because the plot barely hangs together in the first place. The plot beats aren't when things happen; they alternate between people walking in the door, and people telling stories. Not just the chair stories! The Barber tells one story about himself; then he tells a different story. Apparently they're both lies, and he admits to a third story, which upsets Abi...
Maybe we should stop kicking and accept that this is a storytelling event. It's not an action-adventure script, no matter how many giant spider robots explode at the end.
Listen to that first exchange. The Doctor unrolls a story. You can see him settling into it. "They're all scared of him... he, who hides his identity like a coward." You know this one, right? The Doctor reveals the pathetic truth behind the curtain. (Or behind the mural of Jon Pertwee.)
The Barber responds in kind. "I go by many names" and a naming of gods. It's a different dramatic reveal: the mastermind unmasked. A bit early for it, mind you. The Master wouldn't spill the beans like that until act four.
...Except the Doctor isn't buying it. He laughs, Belinda laughs. Everybody laughs. The Barber mumbles defensively. The dramatic-reveal music drops out. And then the Barber takes the floor back with a new story and different dramatic music.
(Nothing signals that the music is diegetic, but it's fruitful to imagine that the characters are deliberately invoking it. Intense stare into the camera, monologue, cue the music! Really, try watching the episode this way.)
That's four story-postures in a row, each a strategic attempt to undercut the last. And we're not halfway done. Remember the hypnotism duel from 5000 Fingers of Dr T? It's that!
It's impossible to avoid the idea that the stories are stories, that we're not meant to take them as reality. When the Doctor says "We drank so much wine we caused a drought in Athens," that's not a lost Who episode, that's a brag. "I played chess with Bastet, I let her think that she let me let her win" is, yes, the most Doctor-y line in TV history, but the Doctor doesn't historically pal around with gods. The Doctor meets a god, generally the god gets sent packing. Right?
I'm not exactly saying that these stories are lies. The Doctor's comment about Anansi's daughter comes back on him from Abi; that's a real moment. When Omo, at the beginning, talks about the Doctor extinguishing a forest fire, the Doctor follows up by saying (to Belinda) "we met in a fire." (But had they always met in a fire, or only after Omo said so...?)
But the logic of the story is entirely as a series of top-this, yeah-no tales. When the Doctor gets everybody laughing at the Barber, it's real -- but it's also a move in the game.
The game continues. Abi throws down: "I'm here because of you." The Doctor rolls with it, and brings on the Fugitive Doctor to promise us, eyes to camera, that she's still got a story to tell. (Still the best Who move of recent years.)
And of course the final act is the pure-quill Doctor turnaround. (Once Abi opens the way with her final story.) Sonic the lights, out the door, run, you clever boy! Wib-wobbling the whosis engine while Bel yanks wires. It's absolute nonsense, but it's Doctor nonsense; it's exactly what we expect from the show. The Barber staggers in (he knows he's lost already), and the Doctor hits him with his finisher -- the regeneration face parade. Unbeatable.
...and then the Doctor hands it back, lets the Barber take the stage for the closing solo. "What would your six-word story be?" This is the Barber's story. It's not about defeating a monster. (The spider robot is a monster, and it goes out as a grace note.) Abena is allowed to bow out on her own terms. The barbershop quartet, well, we're tight on time but we do our best to see them off.
The Story and the Engine is two genre-conscious characters going at it with the tools of their trade.
I don't think you can do that trick again either. I can't wait to see what Davies pulls instead.
Closing notes
The maze-and-hearttree layout of the spider-engine is so very TARDIS that it invites a reading of the Barber as a Time Lord. Genre Lord? The episode doesn't go there, so I haven't either, but there's another whole essay in that. Particularly if you look at the African-fetish symbolism in that room and connect it to Faction Paradox's voodoo-loa-Rassilon worship. Anyone?
Come to think of it, 73 Yards does some TARDIS mirroring of its own. The shrine that accumulates around the locked TARDIS is made of the same charm-and-memorabilia material as the original fairy circle. I'd happily read that circle as built from that shrine material, directly. Was the TARDIS a fairy circle to begin with? In its own BBC style?
Also
This post started as a response to Elizabeth Sandifer, a Who blogger I've been reading (and Patreoning) for years. Sandifer had no time for 73 Yards: "a nothing—a trifle". She rated it the worst episode of its season. Again, I don't disagree with anything she says, but I have a different angle.
Then my post got a bit out of hand. So I still can't claim to be arguing with Sandifer, but maybe it's a better angle now. A solid angle?
I promised myself I'd finish writing this before reading Sandifer's Story Engine post. For reasons. Sandifer has described herself as a follower of Sága, so I expect some fireworks there. (It's not impossible that RTD also follows Sandifer's blog, but I haven't inquired into this!)
(That second essay I linked to, Exiting the Draugr Castle, is not a Doctor Who post. It's a tale of events at the 2024 Northeast Thing, a Norse pagan convocation. It goes pretty hard. It's a good post.)