11/6/2022 0 Comments Sleep no more yelpFinally, he figures out that it’s the dust that is watching them… or is it? (There’s even a picture of an artist painting a picture of an artist painting a picture of an artist painting a picture moment which predicts the truth here - that the Doctor and Clara are simply living out Rassmussen’s story.) I enjoyed/was simultaneously dismayed by the concept of Morpheus, the pod-thingees that enable the mankind of this century to get a month’s worth of sleep done in five minutes so that everyone can keep on working, get that edge over the competition, and make more money. Why were we seeing things from Clara’s point of view? Or from the ceiling? Or from the helmet cams that the characters don’t have? Of course, that’s the mystery at the center of the story, as Gatiss and director Justin Molotnikov are simultaneously poking holes in the shakier (get it?!) found-footage films that have stretched credulity with their premise while also setting up the monsters of “Sleep No More” - the Sandmen! It was fun watching the Doctor start to piece together that something was off here, as he gives Clara a double-take (which means he gives us a double-take, since we’re seeing things from Clara’s POV at that moment). But as Rassmussen says, don't get too attached to them! The astute viewer would notice early on that the found-footage aspect of this episode didn’t really make sense. Something is up at this floating lab, as it has suddenly gone silent, and this group - the untried leader, the joker, the grunt, and so on - have been instructed to investigate in true Aliens rip-off fashion. You can never un-see it.” So of course we watch it! But as it turns out, those words will have ramifications later… A motley cast of characters are introduced as they enter the Le Verrier Space Station in orbit around Neptune. We kick off with a video message from Professor Rassmussen (Reece Shearsmith) talking directly to the camera as he warns us that we “must not watch this. And yet, frequent DW writer Mark Gatiss turns the concept on its ever-watchful head, essentially making the very notion of found footage into the bad guys of the story. Obviously a show like Who has to find new and different ways to tell its stories, having been on the air for so long, but still. At first glance, the found-footage trope seems a disappointing way to go.
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