![]() ![]() The mix of characters seemed to be the most interesting thing about the episode, but even then we are given so little of them and they died off so quickly it wasn’t enough to sustain the entire episode. The first-person cam was very Don’t-Blink-esque and the skipping of the opening sequence was good to keep you immersed in the story, unfortunately the story didn’t really pack enough of a punch to hold your immersion and suspension of disbelief for very long. Other than that, the whole episode the audience is in as much dark as anyone with the constant question of what’s really going on, what the dust things are, what Rasmussen is up to, and everything really. So maybe we should have gotten a little human anatomy & physiology lecture from the Doctor and we could be calling them Gound monsters. The scientific term for those little boogers is gound. But seriously, monsters made of your eye goop. What do you normally call it? Eye gunk? Sleep in your eye? Eye boogers? Eye sand? Eye shnooters? Yeah I don’t even know about that last one. Nor am I a sleep dust doctor, so maybe their way was right.Īnd can we just talk about sleep dust for a moment. The sandmen in Doctor Who were obviously far scarier looking than the Sandman in Rise of the Guardians, but how exactly were they able to hold Rasmussen’s form but no one else’s? Maybe it’s just me, but I would think as a power hungry, crazed pile of sleep dust that it would be easier to infiltrate a planet disguised as a member of the population rather than as giant scary dust monster but what do I know? I haven’t actually done that yet so I’m not exactly an expert. And get some sleep? Is that not plastered in every Kindergarten through twelfth grade school across the world? Every other news article is about the importance of getting sleep and just how terrible you are when you don’t get any sleep and sleep is the key to immortality and winning the lottery and a bunch of other really cool stuff you’re missing out on because you’re not sleeping enough (as I write, suffering from insomnia myself). ![]() The sleep dust was interesting-ish but quite honestly felt more on a children’s show level – for whatever reason I was reminded of the Sandman in Rise of the Guardians. ![]() The head cameras was fairly obvious from the get go and I was waiting to see how the Doctor would go about explaining how camerasĬan see through people’s eyes. However this go around, the Doctor lets us know something that we should be doing.ĭespite the clever twist on typical Doctor Who story and the funny quibble between Clara and Twelve about putting “space” in front of things, this episode felt rather weak on the whole and… unremarkable. There wasn’t even one specific part or thing that I can solidly say I hated, it was just terribly lackluster throughout the episode. Normally things we can’t do are impressed up on us: don’t blink (Weeping Angels), don’t breathe (clockwork droids), don’t look (dream crabs), and don’t think (dream crabs again). This time around, Doctor Who brings us a scary episode with an unusual twist for the Whoverse. ![]()
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