Friday, January 15, 2010

Security Measures

This is not the most profound of blog entries, but I thought I ought to explain a couple of relatively minor changes I have made to NiCK'S SANCTUARY recently.

Firstly I have finally succumbed to requesting comment verification on my posts; I know I previously made a big deal about my intention not to do this in order not to deter genuine comments from being posted. However the number of attacks from spambots visiting my blog (particularly on two specific entries), has increased exponentially in recent weeks... and I just don't have the time to police all my entries as often as it is occurring.

Secondly I've switched the widget that connects to my Twitterfeed. Blogger's official one seems to have been hacked. Despite showing up correctly in preview mode, it appears with what is apparently someone else's feed... and an unpleasant one at that. I had a look around and discovered that Twitter do a widget themselves. This one appears to function... although one wonders if even that is susceptibale to the kind of attack exhibited by Iranian hackers that Twitter and Baidu recently succumbed to. For that matter, I wonder if blogging platforms might themselves become likely targets... after all those seeking to oppress the freedom of expression and speech require liitle incentive, given that many blogs are charged with political and/or religious thinking on a wide range of the ideological spectrum.

Maybe it's something that The major blogging platforms should be thinking about.

Finally on a much lighter note, I've been experimenting with publishing posts from my iPhone. It's not something I can see me doing a lot of... but it is nice to have the facility... for those occasions when I'm a liitle "off grid".

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Thursday, January 07, 2010

Doctor Who: The End of Time

I couldn't let the week pass without a review or at least a passing comment with regard to David Tennant's swan song as the 10th Doctor (but who's betting he'll be back for a multi doctor adventure in the future... even if it's just for Children in Need).


Before I go any further I have to claim bragging rights on Wilf's involvement (albeit inadvertent) in the 10th Doctor's demise... I totally called it back in November!

In terms of plot mechanics, a lot of RTD's usual problems were there (too many plot threads coming from nowhere and leading to nothing); I happen to think this is a bad habit that has come from his pathological need to pull the wool over the eyes of the fans - he leaves too many red herrings that get in the way of the story.

That aside, I found the plot very moving (particularly the last half). I was very excited at the prospect of seeing the Time lords again and equally sad to see them return to their doom. I was hoping for a sort of reset, where the Doctor becomes a renegade on the run from his race again... it certainly looked like it was going that way. I have heard speculation that the questions left by reintroducing Rassilon (albeit temporarily), the identity of the unknown Time Lady... and what happened to The Master, may actually be a set up for future Moffat stories.

Whatever you think of the plot, Tennant and Cribbins completely stole every scene they were in together.... particularly this scene in part one:


and.... well I shall come to that in a bit.

I know that Andrew and Alastair both have reservations with regard to what they perceived as an over sentimental last 20 minutes. However, I for one am a bit of a sentimentalist myself... and due to my empathic nature, I was hooked.

During The Doctor's farewells (claiming his reward... I more than think just a little that this was RTD using artistic licence to claim his own reward by saying his own fond farewells to characters he had enjoyed writing for), I was particularly touched by the farewell to Mickey and Martha and Sarah-Jane. You could see the mark of doom and what was coming written all over The Doctor's face... kudos to Tennant there. Of course, only we as the audience... and Sarah-Jane truly perceive what the Doctor's expression is saying.

Then we had the big moment... the regeneration scene. Some say it was overdone - the TARDIS exploding and catching fire might seem wrong from a purely in universe perspective... however I think it works. I believe it's bending the fourth wall without breaking it. It's an "in universe" acknowledgement of Tennant's massive contribution and importance to the revival of Doctor Who as a franchise. Yes it became popular again with Ecclestone... but Tennant magnified and consolidated that popularity and became so well established as the Doctor in the public consciousness, that he displaced even Tom Baker as the nation's favourite Doctor.

The Doctor betrayed a slither of deep anxiety and sorrow... just enough to tug on the heart strings and let us consummate the emotional response...

"I don't want to go!"



And we didn't want you to go either...

Cue the dramatic music and the special effects and the TARDIS grieved with us as flames and explosions rocked through the console room.
 


I have to say that when I first saw Matt Smith appear, I wasn't too thrilled... but seeing that scene again and again does kind of warm you to his interpretation a little. When I look at him I do see a few of the other Doctor's in him... which stands him in good stead.

and here is a sneak preview of things to come:

 

I just wanted to finish by commenting on the scene just prior to the Doctor's farewells. Apart from the cafe scene and Tennant's last words, it's the part which had the biggest emotional impact for me:


I saw this entire scene as The Doctor's equivalent of Gethsemane. Like Jesus, he had an opportunity to escape his fate and do so much more. The Doctor was under no obligation to save Wilf... he had strayed into that booth of his own accord and yes... he was an old man. past his years.  The Doctor could have achieved countless more wonders and amazing tales in  his current incarnation. There was no rational reason why the Doctor should have elected to make the supreme sacrifice.

And yet there was the perfect reason... LOVE.

The Doctor lay down his life for Wilf because he loved the person of wilf. He saw beyond the  mere circumstances... what mattered most to him was that here was a man whose well-being meant something to The Doctor.

So The Doctor literally substituted himself for Wilfred Mott.

In the same way, Jesus Christ literally substituted himself for us.  Jesus did not have to die. He could have called legions of angels down and ruled us as a god amongst men... leaving  the countless generations of the human race to be born after him , to wilt and die in our brokenness.  Being in very nature God, he could have done whatever he wanted. We didn't deserve the sacrifice he made... and if we saw him we might tell him so, just as Wilfred pleaded with the Doctor.

But Jesus loves each one of us so much that he saw it as an honour to lay down his life for us.

Too often we think of sin in the vilest terms and perhaps when we think of it's universal consequence, that's appropriate. However Wilfred Mott was not vile... he was a good man. He just ended up in a very bad situation... the wrong place, in the wrong time. Like a sheep he merely went astray.

Most of us probably don't consider ourselves vile...

... but we are broken and we have all strayed in to a very bad place by virtue of our broken nature.

Like Wilf we find ourselves encased inside a radioactive time bomb which we can do nothing about. We don't have The Doctor to come and rescue us from our fate...

but we do have Jesus:

"You see, at just the right time, when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly. Very rarely will anyone die for a righteous man, though for a good man someone might possibly dare to die. But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us."
Romans 5:6-8

2010: The Year We Make Contact?

Happy New Year!

I really ought to get back here more often... I had a brief flurry towards the end of the year but the wheels dropped off the wagon again.

So... once again - Happy New Year!

I can't quite begin to explain adequately how I feel about 2010. I am sorely aware that for many people known to me, it's already got off to a rough start. The past couple of days have also seen me feeling a little melancholic about the way people relate to me (or rather fail to), and feeling a little sapped of energy.

However I have to say that as I took my customary post midnight walk on January 1st (I like to watch the people celebrating in the streets),  something struck me.

I looked up at the night sky... it wasn't entirely clear, clouds obscured many of the stars. As I gazed upon the celestial bodies far above me, I noticed that they seemed to be shining with a brilliance that seems to me to have been lacking for quite some time.

It was this simple sight that triggered a response, an epiphany within me. I just have this really optimistic feeling about 2010. Yes, it's a new year and yes, it's the start of a new decade (although some argue that it shouldn't be until next year), but my feeling transcends more than the resetting of a chronological system. I just have this sensation that metaphorically speaking, I have had a glimpse of a shining city on a hill in the distance.

Since that time I've had things thrown at me that seek to rob me of this experience... but in my mind that just confirms and clarifies it all the more.

I don't know what 2010 will bring, but I'm trusting that personally it will be a good one... and I hope the same for you. One things for certain, I hope to share my 2010 odyssey with you a more than I did my 2009 one.

Here's to 2010, may God bless us all!

Addendum:
Reluctantly I'm adding security to my comments as spambots seem to be picking up my blog a lot more these days. Please do not be dissuaded from commenting... I love to hear from people.
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