Ten Little Bullets in my Hand

Posts tagged martha jones

Reblogged from puzzleofshards

series: david tennant i fucking hate you and your perfect fucking face
part one: the doctor squees over shakespeare and is a dick to martha

I still fail to see how anyone could BLAME Martha for wanting to shag this man rotten.  I mean, look at him.

(Source: gallifreyfieldsforever)

Reblogged from doctor-doctorwho-justdoctor

(Source: doctor-doctorwho-justdoctor)

Things that need to happen: Martha Jones, River Song, and Ace McShane walk into a bar.

No wait, scratch that. River and Ace get into a bar fight after a vehement disagreement about weaponry, Martha is the only one there with the brass cojones to wade in and break it up, and the three of them end up comparing battle scars over drinks.

On Martha Jones hate, and Martha being “needy”

Reblogged from orbitingasupernova

cyruspotnoodle:

tenlittlebullets:

[snip]
the most telling moment is when he goes “Martha, when I say now, push the button!” and she says “Which button?” and immediately runs for the instruction manual.  Would Rose have immediately gone for the biggest most prominent button?  Probably.  Would it have been the wrong one?  Quite possibly, given that this was basically how the writers kickstarted half the plots in s1—

Except this was the end of the episode and also s3 so Rose had grown REMARKABLY… carry on.

Point!  Though I do think it’s more fair to compare Martha’s début to the beginning of Rose’s run.  It would barely be worth mentioning, except that “Marfa suxx0rz in comparison to Roes because she doesn’t hit Satan Pit levels of badassery on her very first trip” is a meme that Ten himself spends a good chunk of Shakespeare Code indulging in. To say nothing of the legions of Martha-bashing Rose stans.  Your comment about rose-colored glasses is spot-on—comparisons between the brand-new companion and the companion who’s just had two seasons of character development are inevitable, but I think some people forget that Rose was also a newbie once, and attack Martha for not immediately being a champ at things that Rose only learned to tackle with confidence mid-s2.

Also, I sort of find the wary love of Rose all over fandom pretentious, but I’ll skip it because IMPORTANT POINTS ABOUT MARTHA FUCKING JONES!

Can I ask for more elaboration on this? :) Just curious—I follow the shit out of the Martha Jones tag but I am less up on fandom’s various reactions to Rose.  I know in my case, the love is wary because the show pushed the One True Companion thing so hard, and seemed to be setting Rose up as some universal archetype of female humanity that everyone could relate to.  As a writing strategy it backfired spectacularly in my case, because Rose is pretty much the opposite of me—which would otherwise be cool, but if she’s supposed to be my viewer avatar, suddenly I’m being assumed to have weaknesses I don’t have and expected to have strengths that don’t come naturally to me.  Add in the breakdown along stereotypical gender lines and yeah, I resented the shit out of Rose my first time through the show, because I generally resent the shit out of the assumption that I’ll relate to social/emotional intelligence and compassion over analytical intelligence just because I have a vag.

It wasn’t an intellectual decision or some sort of principled stand, though, it was an instinctive reaction that I only managed to tease out the reasons for while I was in the process of deciding those reasons were absolute crap as justification for disliking a character.  (Justification for fuming at the writers, on the other hand…) Half of them disappeared anyway when I got further into the show and realized Rose wasn’t the One True Companion, and the other half died a slow and ignoble death when I settled in for a rewatch and started liking Rose-the-person once I’d stopped worrying about Rose-the-ideal.  Like… I doubt I will ever share in the wholehearted adoration that Rose fans have, because I don’t instinctively connect with her and that was the whole problem at first, but just because I had to work though some hangups first doesn’t mean I’m not genuinely fond of her now.

Martha is different than Rose. Naturally, fans have preferences. Just… don’t be a douchebag while explaining those preferences. Don’t talk about how Rose’s class makes her cheap or stupid or unfit to be with the Doctor. Don’t talk about Martha’s falling in love with the Doctor as a BAD thing if you’re okay with Rose or River falling for him. Please.

And seriously? Don’t call ANY of them sluts, whores, skanks, bitches, pigs, fat, ugly, cunts, dogs, slags, chavs (for you British classists out there), hoes, etc.

AMEN.  God, classist Rose-bashing irritates the shit out of me—it’s just so trivial and mean-spirited and contrary to the whole ethos of the show.  I will fucking cut the next douchebag I see calling her a chav, and then I will go punch the next douchebag who criticizes Martha for pining after Ten and in the next breath calls her a slut for trying to keep her options open and flirt with other people.

On Martha Jones hate, and Martha being “needy”

Because I apparently have some inner fount of Martha Jones meta that wells over periodically.

- On Martha hate: the vast, vast majority of this seems to come from people who not only got their introduction to the show with Rose’s seasons, but weren’t… familiar with the way the show works, the revolving door of companions, and the way the Doctor and the TARDIS are the only true constants.  It’s a perception shift: Rusty billed the series so hard as The Doctor And Rose Show, probably trying to get as broad an audience as possible, dispel the old stereotypes of DW being fanboy fodder with disposable eye-candy companions, and grab female viewers who weren’t necessarily sci-fi fans already.  And so he gives us Rose, an everywoman character who knows and cares about sci-fi shit about as much as the audience Rusty’s trying to reach, but who is totally in love with all the aspects of the show that transcend genre—and he reassures us that she is integral to the fabric of the show.  She’s not going to get sidelined so the boys can play.  She is just as central as the Doctor himself.

Which is great for getting the show re-established, but then Billie Piper leaves.  And I can easily see how, if s1 and s2 are all you’ve got to go on, this is tantamount to trapping the Doctor in a parallel universe and letting Jack Harkness step in as the main character, or grinding to a halt halfway through Romeo & Juliet and replacing Juliet with some girl we’ve never heard of.  It’s the same principle that drives hatred of Mary Sues in fandom: “I don’t care what this new character is like, I’m in this fandom to read about the further adventures of the characters I love, not to watch your OC skip in and steal the show from them and warp the fabric of the fictional universe so everything revolves around her.”  It’s the exact same “damned if you do, damned if you don’t” fault-finding that produces ludicrous “is your OFC a Mary Sue?” checklists and causes Rose stans to excoriate Martha for all the ways she’s similar to Rose (“you’re just trying to replace her, but you’re not as good at it!”), then criticize the ways she’s different from Rose as character flaws.  The only difference is that in fanfic, no offense, we are all here bonding over an existing fictional universe and not over your OCs, but Martha hate is caused by a skewed perception of how that fictional universe itself is constructed.

Full disclosure: it took me a while to warm up to Rose.  Partly because I was always one of those sci-fi geeks that RTD specifically wasn’t aiming for with Rose, because he guessed (rightly) that we’d all be latching onto the Doctor instead.  And you know, that’s cool and the Doctor is awesome, but it annoyed the piss out of me that the female lead was there to be the pathologically non-genre-savvy ~emotional core~ of the show, which usually translated into the person making me yell advice at the screen as the writers tossed her the Idiot Ball yet again.  I did warm up to her, and will even confess to crying like a baby the first time I saw Doomsday, but the instant Martha walked onto the screen I was bouncing and punching the air in glee, because she articulated all the things I’d been yelling at the screen all this time.  It was a huge relief to discover that Rose was the emotional core of the show because she was Rose, not because that’s the only thing the writers knew how to do with the female lead.

- Anyway!  On to my girl Martha.  One of the accusations frequently leveled against her by the haters is that she’s “clingy” or “dependent.”  For the longest time I thought this was utterly bonkers and they couldn’t be watching the same episodes as I was, but I think there… could be some kernel of truth in there?  In the sense that the haters are taking legitimate character development and casting it in the most negative possible light.

Here’s the thing: Martha relies on external validation and guidance.  This is not necessarily a bad thing!  It’s a double-edged sword, like Rose’s reliance on gut instinct and snap judgements.  Martha is fiercely analytical, and if she feels like she doesn’t have enough information to assess a situation, she’ll go after that information like the dickens but she’ll also be at a bit of a loss until she obtains it.  And if she thinks there might be a higher authority or someone more knowledgeable than she is, she won’t necessarily defer to them, but she will seek out information and advice.  Martha needs to feel like she knows what she’s doing.

Think I’m pulling this out my ass?  Smith and Jones.  Yeah, she’s endlessly speculating, trying to figure out what’s going on, questioning the Doctor, but the most telling moment is when he goes “Martha, when I say now, push the button!” and she says “Which button?” and immediately runs for the instruction manual.  Would Rose have immediately gone for the biggest most prominent button?  Probably.  Would it have been the wrong one?  Quite possibly, given that this was basically how the writers kickstarted half the plots in s1—but this is not a companion pissing contest, it’s an illustration of how differently Rose and Martha react to things.  Rose might’ve gone for the wrong button, Martha might not have found the correct instructions in time—double-edged swords all ‘round.

Shakespeare Code.  Martha gets her first chance to time travel, and spends the first ten minutes grilling the Doctor on how time travel works and what the rules are and how she can operate safely without causing a fuckton of paradoxes.  Ten is flippant to the point of rudeness even though these are all valid, intelligent questions, because he’s used to traveling with someone who trusts herself to wing it and trusts him to warn her if she’s about to fuck something up.  And here we have prior examples of how Rose approaches this stuff: Father’s Day.  In an analytical light Rose did something incredibly dumb, but what matters to the Doctor isn’t that it was smart or dumb, it’s that she acted on instinct and did something incredibly human.  One of the other accusations leveled against Martha is that she’s a “stuck-up bitch” or a “know-it-all” or “thinks she’s better than everyone else,” and while I have yet to see any TV canon that supports this, I do see where the defensiveness comes from.  If you judge Rose by the things Martha values or the standards Martha sets for herself, Rose comes off pretty poorly.  On the flip side, if you judge Martha by the things that made Rose awesome, Martha starts looking insecure (because she has to analyze before she can act, because she looks to the Doctor for knowledge and validation) and overly willing to go along with the Doctor’s views instead of stubbornly wandering off and looking at things from her own perspective.

I could go on. “Blimey, did you have to pass a test to fly this thing?” “Yes, and I failed!” The mere fact that he thought to leave video-recorded instructions for Martha in 1913, and her frustration when she encountered problems way beyond the scope of the video.  But we’re not talking blind deference to authority or lack of initiative here—if Martha knows she’s the most competent person in the room, she will totally step into a leadership role, going right back to the scene where she tells everyone to shut the fuck up and calm down when her hospital ends up on the moon.

And she analyzes.  She puts pieces together.  Once she has a sense of what’s going on, she and Ten can pull off brilliant two-prong plans: he can just wink and pass her the psychic paper and let the Daleks take him prisoner, and she will figure out they’re off to the Empire State Building and bluff her way in to investigate what the Daleks are using it for.  She can lure the Lazarus monster up into the belltower to put it in a position where Ten can get at it, in symmetric payback for that one time she figured out he was using himself as bait to get the plasmavore in a position for Martha to bring smackdown.  As the series goes on, he starts abusing the privilege somewhat, and Martha ends up on her own for long periods—not executing half of a two-prong plan, but doing all the work while he’s incapacitated.

And that right there is Martha’s character arc.  She starts out needy, yes, and desperate for the Doctor’s validation.  Because she needs to feel competent, she needs to understand things in order to deal with them, and she’s just been tossed into a whole wide unknown universe where her only guide—her only external source of knowledge and context—is a moody overgrown teenager who keeps weighing her in comparison to his ex and finding her wanting.  What she learns over the course of the season is that even if she doesn’t know the rules of time travel or the customs of the time period she’s in, she is good.  She can figure shit out on the ground and come up with a plan, and she doesn’t need 900 years of experience to be a brilliant fucking badass.  The Doctor’s validation?  It’s nice when he gives it, but she doesn’t need it, and if he wants to be an ungrateful ass that’s his problem.

And yeah, her crush is fuelled by desire for validation more than anything else.  It also only happened in the first place because Ten spent half a season being Mr. Mixed Signals Alien Tease and Martha, true to form, didn’t reject the possibility of a romantic entanglement until she had enough evidence to be sure he wasn’t interested.  By then it was waaaaay too late to nip it in the bud.  I don’t like the unrequited-crush subplot and I think it distracts from what’s really going on with Martha, but it develops for reasons that are consistent with her character, and she sure as hell deals with it like a mature motherfucking adult.

s4 rewatch continues

Okay, skipping how utterly barf-worthy Planet of the Ood is, and the fact that the Sontaran two-parter and Doctor’s Daughter both needed to go through at least two more revisions to be anything approaching decent scripts… we’ve got three episodes in a row featuring mindless war, terraforming, and clones/duplicates/offspring.  A bunch of episodes in a row about Ten’s horribly fucked-up dead-Gallifrey coping mechanisms, on which I intend to write more meta later, but they all seem to be centered on choice: who has one and who doesn’t.  A lot of Ten manpain about losing people, which I only enjoy this time around because true to form, Martha is the Doctor’s mirror, and gets to hold out her hand and say “come with me” and take someone on an adventure and then cry ugly tears of manpain when the other person snuffs it.

At any rate… Rusty, you have themes.  You have themes and a budding season arc that is careening like an out-of-control freight train straight towards a New Gallifrey and a race of artificially-created Time Lords.  God only knows how you would’ve used that idea, but based on your themes so far and the sheer amount of id bleed-through and uneven writing you managed to pack into s4, it would’ve been like Last of the Time Lords on steroids: brilliant and twisted and unexpected on so many levels, full of flat-out fail on so many others.  And you know, I would be okay with that.  I love the shit out of Last of the Time Lords, uneven writing and eleventh-hour failsplosion and all.

The real tragedy here is that I know what’s coming.  Rusty, you’re headed for something huge and brilliant, and I want to scream because I know you pulled it out from under us and gave us Stolen Earth/Journey’s End instead.  And I do remember those episodes being fun, but… it’s like spending all season building up to the World Series and getting the all-star game instead.

Meta anvil o’ the day

I maintain that of all the NuWho companions, Martha is the one who is most like the Doctor, and that that’s probably the reason her dynamic with Ten never really settled—they’re too alike.  Clever, competent, analytical, a bit emotionally closed off, far too experienced in cleaning up other people’s messes, compassionate but willing to do some heavy shit to save the day.  (See: Martha coming up with a plan to electrocute their attackers in about thirty seconds flat in Evolution of the Daleks, then having a muted freakout when it actually works.)  And since she was like him in so many ways and also never really got the appreciation she deserved, she modelled herself off of him in a way none of the other NuWho companions ever did, just in the course of striving so hard to prove herself.  Rose (at least s1 Rose) and Donna spent a lot of time being the Doctor’s human counterweight and going “what the fuck do you think you’re doing? we are turning this TARDIS around right now if you don’t knock that off!”  Martha spent a lot of time being the Doctor’s human shadow and going “okay, so what needs to be done?” which I think made Ten uncomfortable on some level—he hates himself so much that he doesn’t want a companion who’s too much like him.

My s4 rewatch is still stalled out after Fires of Pompeii (because I think I will need to be really drunk to make it through Planet of the Ood), but the Metalicious Anvil of Clobbering whacked me over the head today, because what was everyone doing in Journey’s End when the Daleks unveiled their reality bomb?  Rose and Ten were sticking together like glue, Jack was threatening to blow up everything around him, Donna was off taking her first steps towards having all her agency stolen by RTD, and Martha… Martha was standing there with her hand on the big red button, radioing the entire Dalek fleet to say “I AM WILLING TO BLOW UP MY OWN PLANET AND ESSENTIALLY COMMIT GENOCIDE AGAINST MY OWN SPECIES IF THAT’S WHAT IT TAKES TO SAVE THE UNIVERSE FROM YOU SONS OF BITCHES.”

And of course Ten’s immediate reaction is “Who the fuck thought up that plan?”  Oh honey.

Things I fucking adore about DW season 3

Little threads running through the whole season that don’t even count as foreshadowing, because you don’t notice them until afterwards.  Yes, yes, RTD’s other seasons have them too, but it’s more developed in s3 than it ever was before or after.

Florence: But that’s a mistake, it’s got to be, I’m human, I’m as human as they come—
(Smith & Jones)

Martha: It’s Monday, November 14th, 1913. And you’re completely human. As human as they come.
(Human Nature)

Shape changer. Internal shape changer. And yet who the fuck would’ve ever seen it coming in Utopia?

-

Cheen: I’m sorry, but that’s not a real gun.
Martha: Yeah, well, you would say that.
Cheen: Where do you get a gun from, these days?  I wouldn’t even know how to fire.
(Gridlock)

Tallulah: (throws down the gun) Oh, c’mon. It’s not real. It’s just a prop. It was either that or a spear.
(Daleks in Manhattan)

Master: What? What’s so funny?
Martha: A gun?
Master: What about it?
Martha: A gun in four parts.
Master: Yes, and I destroyed it.
Martha: A gun in four parts scattered across the world? I mean, come on. Did you really believe that?
(Last of the Time Lords)

-

And let’s not forget RTD’s favorite habit, reusing dialogue in new and horrifying ways.

Rose: Is that the end of it? The Time War?
Doctor: I’m the only one left. I win. (laughs bitterly) How about that.
(Dalek)

Doctor: It can’t end like this.  You and me, all the things we’ve done.  Axons, remember the Axons? And the Daleks. We’re the only two left, there’s no one else. Regenerate!
Master: How about that. I win.
(Last of the Time Lords)

And again—

Doctor: They all died. Do you know who that leaves? Me! It’s taken me all these years to realise—the Laws of Time are mine, and they will obey me!
…for a long time now, I thought I was just a survivor, but I’m not. I’m the winner.
(The Waters of Mars)

A 100% accurate summary of The Shakespeare Code

MARTHA: Doctor, I have an extremely clever and relevant question about the mechanics of time travel.
TEN: Pfffft, stop worrying about it.  Don’t you watch Doctor Who?  You should know this show’s handwavey approach to time travel already, silly.
MARTHA: Doctor, I have an extremely clever and relevant question about whether my skin color makes me eligible to get carted off as a slave in this time period.
TEN: Martha, stop trying to understand things, it takes all the wide-eyed wonder out of them.  Rose was full of wide-eyed wonder.
CARRIONITES: WITCHCRAFT! MAGIC! MAYHEM!
MARTHA: If I could interject with a couple of observations that happen to be spot-on even if they don’t solve the case right away—
TEN: Martha, why don’t you immediately understand what’s going on?!  Rose would understand things!  You’ve been here an entire episode and a half, you suck for not being as clever and relevant as Rose was after a season and a half of character development.
CARRIONITES: WITCHCRAFT! MAGIC! MAYHEM!
TEN: Ah-hah, you call it magic, I call it a different but equally valid form of science that happens to be based on words!  Your voodoo doll is in fact a DNA replication module!
MARTHA: Doctor—
TEN: Martha, what have I told you about wide-eyed wonder and trying to understand things?  TIME TRAVEL IS MAGIC, OKAY.
MARTHA: Doctor, it’s not that, it’s just that we’re going the wrong way.
TEN: No we’re not.  God, why did I even bring you along when you never say anything worth listening t—HOLY SHITBALLS WE’RE GOING THE WRONG WAY.

/just stares
/srsly, how so fucking hot, it is not fair
/yes tonight is Martha Jones appreciation night, haters to the left

/just stares

/srsly, how so fucking hot, it is not fair

/yes tonight is Martha Jones appreciation night, haters to the left

Extraordinary Things: Martha Jones.

Reblogged from evilbambi--deactivated20110923

evilbambi-:

Never can it be said that Martha was anything less than a useful companion. She showed kindness and bravery again and again, and she spent an entire year travelling the earth to save it, all whilst knowing her family and friends were being held captive. To say that Martha was useless would be a…

Okay, this is a much more balanced and reasonable post than the one that set off the wankstorm, and I totally respect your right to not like Martha—if by “not like Martha” you mean “she’s really not my cup of tea,” rather than “she sucks and I want to punch her ugly bitch face every time she appears onscreen.”  There’s… rather a lot of the latter, unfortunately, often couched in really ugly racist or sexist language that takes the show’s own race/gender issues and magnifies them to truly vitriolic proportions.

That said, while everyone has characters who just don’t do it for them, can I take a minute to explain why I adore Martha and try to give another take on the jealousy/love interest situation?

I think I must’ve watched season 3 in a different headspace from most of fandom, because the jealousy accusations baffled me—it was always clear as air to me that Martha was being told, over and over again, “You suck because you are not Rose,” and that most of her frustration was a reaction to being treated crap.  It was never about Rose herself, or even about the Doctor being in love with someone else; it was about constantly being treated like a worthless cut-rate replacement.  Martha didn’t know jack shit about Rose except that Rose was the Doctor’s excuse to put her down, and to her credit when she blows off steam it’s against the Doctor’s behavior, not against Rose.  It’s not until Human Nature/Family of Blood that we see honest-to-god jealousy welling up, and at that point Martha keeps it to herself and refuses to blame either John Smith or Joan Redfern for the situation—as painful is it is to watch someone she has feelings for fall in love with someone else, she doesn’t act like she has any claim on his romantic affections, it just hurts to watch.

As for her seeing the Doctor mostly as a love interest, I think this is another case where I watched season 3 more from her point of view than his.  And from her point of view he is blasting mixed signals all over the place and generally leading her on.  The audience knows the unspoken “Thou shalt not perv on the Doctor” rule, but to Martha he’s this completely daft and oddly hot alien boy who helps her save the world, kisses her, unconvincingly claims it’s a genetic transfer, promises her one trip just one and it’s completely platonic no really, shuts down her flirting not by going “no, I’m a 900-year-old entity of ancient cosmic power and that’d just be weird and vaguely wrong” but by moping about the last human girl he was involved with, and well okay maybe more than one trip but it’s platonic I promise… Martha has no idea what the boundaries are, and which ones (“just one trip”) he’s practically jumping to renegotiate and which ones she should stay away from.  And every time she tries to clarify (like the bed in Shakespeare Code, where she pretty much asks him flat-out “So is this situation full of awkward sexual tension or is that sort of thing not even in the ballpark for you?”) the answers she gets are never “thou shalt not perv on the Doctor,” they’re always “if only you were as good as Rose.”  Right up through Lazarus Experiment he is intermittently flirty enough to drive Martha half-crazy trying to figure out his intentions, and by the time she realizes that’s not in the cards it’s too late, she has a stupid crush she can’t get rid of.  And worse, her stupid impossible crush is fueled by a very reasonable desire for validation and affection—maybe it’s unreasonable to expect any romantic interest (and she seems to realize that), but all her astounding feats of competence and badassery get her treated like something smelly the dog tracked in.  With an eventual grudging upgrade to “okay, maybe you’re not rubbish after all.”

And the thing is that the Doctor may be the main character but he is a terribly unreliable narrator of character and morality in s3 and s4.  But alas, as obvious as it’s supposed to be that his view of Martha is dulled by those heartbreak-colored glasses he’s wearing, anyone in the audience who’s also heartbroken over Rose’s departure is practically invited to swallow his point of view uncritically.  And so we’re invited to see her as he sees her: maybe not completely rubbish but oh god she’s not Rose, and anyway, what right does she think she has to flirt?  Doesn’t she know that he’s completely off-limits to companions, and that crossing that boundary with Rose makes him even more off-limits once that truly extraordinary exception ended in tears?

Well, no, she doesn’t.  She knows he’s a daft and oddly hot alien boy with a time machine and she can’t quite tell whether or not he’s flirting in between bouts of moping over his ex.  And in reality she’s brilliant and competent and puts in more blood, sweat, and tears for him in one season than the other nuWho companions combined, which is why it’s a shame that the audience is encouraged to only see her from the perspective of a character who’s being an ungrateful ass.

As for her not needing the Doctor, or for preferring stories where undervalued people with no opportunities in the mundane world suddenly get sucked into adventures and get a chance to shine… absolutely, everyone’s got story preferences, and that one is a classic arc in fantasy and hero-quest literature for a reason.  But.  In its choice of whose stories to value and whose to dismiss, in devoting so much loving attention to raising Rose and Donna up out of nothing and underhandedly encouraging a reading that takes Martha completely for granted, RTD’s Doctor Who implies that a girl only really deserves to be the Doctor’s companion if she needs him because otherwise she is nothing.  And that’s just gross, and exactly the sort of thing ‘The God Complex’ is taking aim at.  It’s not about devaluing Rose’s story, or Donna’s, it’s about objecting to a standard where that’s the only worthwhile story.  Martha is not less interesting because she brings something to the table besides raw unappreciated potential for the Doctor to tap.  If her arc shines less, it’s because RTD didn’t bother to polish it.

Reblogged from annakie

mashiere:

My Boy Builds Coffins

The Doctor will ALWAYS eventually leave his companions.

There are spoilers.

So I was just ranting to srrrevans in the car last week about how I should not make a Doctor Who vid to this song, no, really, it would be mean, and I don’t have time, and—but how perfect would it be—

So thank you, person on the internet, for making this vid.

Reblogged from annakie

krittartledartle:

I saw someone post something like this and I had create my own because I didn’t quite like the descriptions of the companions. 

Yes, it is so bothersome when the companions get taglines like “The girl who walked the earth” or “The girl who remembered” based on things they’ve done.  Clearly we must put a stop to that nonsense and define them according to their relationship to the Doctor instead.

A Complicated Event in Time and Space: Also Saves Planets, or, So About That Martha Jones...

Reblogged from annakie

overlymetaromantic:

It seems when it comes to Doctor Who, I have a strange affinity for characters that are generally disliked by the fandom. Last time it was Mickey Smith, and this time, it’s Martha Jones.

Now unlike Mickey, before I got into watching Doctor Who, I knew that Martha had a…

I don’t know whether this is a popular or unpopular opinion but…

Reblogged from thosewholivewithoutlove

thosewholivewithoutlove:

I really dislike Martha Jones. 

I think the main reason I don’t like her though, is because the other companions were so much better. 

Rose: Greatest Doctor/Companion relationship ever
Donna: BAMF who became Doctor/Donna 

Don’t get my wrong I don’t hate her, and some of the episodes she was in were really good but she just lacks something. I don’t know what. But she could have been so much better. Perhaps if she didn’t fall in love with the Doctor…

What’s missing for Martha, I think, is any sort of satisfying relationship dynamic with the Doctor.  Nine and Rose needed each other, Ten and Rose were head over heels for each other, Ten and Donna were best mates and she wasn’t afraid to smack him upside the head when he really needed it… in all those cases there was plenty of engagement and affection between them, and it was a two-way street.  Martha?  Martha spent all season being ignored and taken for granted.  Any kind of relationship she might’ve wanted with the Doctor, romantic or otherwise, was going to be one-sided, because no matter what she did or how many times she proved herself, Ten pretty much treated her as “person I keep around grudgingly because I need someone to keep me from wandering off of rooftops.”  So we never got to see how they would’ve worked as partners, or how they would’ve played off each other.

And the thing is, Martha is awesome.  If she never settled into a proper dynamic with the Doctor, it’s not because she brought nothing to the table, it’s because he turned up his nose at anything she brought to the table because he was too busy pining over Rose.  If at any point he’d managed to extract his head from his ass (or if the writers had had a clearer idea of where to go with Martha and how to handle Rose being gone—which amounts to the same thing, really) they could’ve been a fantastic double act, because Martha is very Doctorish, really.  She’s clever, she’s competent, she asks the right questions, she thinks on her feet, she has a finely attuned bullshit-o-meter, and she stands there marvelling that they’re on the moon while everyone else is panicking.  But instead we get infinite repeats of their dynamic in Shakespeare Code—she asks smart questions, he blows her off, she tries to help out, he moans that Rose would’ve known what to do when the cleverest companion he’s had in ages is sitting right next to him.  No wonder she ends up a bit desperate for validation.

Basically, I agree that there’s something fundamentally unsatisfying about Martha’s arc, but that something sure ain’t Martha.  Don’t fall into the trap of thinking that just because Ten treated her like she never did anything special, she really didn’t do anything special—Martha Jones was routinely three steps ahead of everyone else except the Doctor, and she might not have gone all sparkly and superpowered in the season finale, but that’s because she was busy becoming a BAMF freedom fighter, trolling the hell out of the Master, and doing all the hard work of saving the universe.  On the slow path, with no superpowers, just blood, sweat, tears, and a story.