amy pond

Doctor Who: Racebending (all major New Who characters!)

You may have seen this before, but this is where one picks out actors and actresses of colour to play already established white characters. Here’s my take on New Who. (You’ve seen my picks for Eleven, Amy, Rory and River already, but here they are again!) Also available on Tumblr, as most of my stuff is these days.




Ukweli Roach as Eleven: He has Eleven’s sense of bafflement and wonder down pat, and has already played an old man in a young man’s body (see: Eternal Law)
Sophie Okenodo as River: As we saw in The Beast Below, she is badass and knows her way around a gun.
Antonia Thomas as Amy: Tough, smart, and (let’s face it) beautiful.
Richard Ayoade as Rory: Stop picturing him as Moss for a second, and you’ll realise he can do adorkable very well
Lenny Henry as Nine: Contrary to popular belief, he can act. The Independent said of his Othello: “The frenzy within his imagination explodes into rage and, finally, wretchedness.” Oh, he’d have made a brilliant Nine.
Paterson Joseph as Ten: He can do both drama and comedy, and is mega-charismatic
Nina Toussaint-White as Rose: Remember her as Mels? Oh god, she’d be a perfect Rose.
Meera Syal as Donna: Another fine actress known mostly for comedy. Remember her as Nasreen? She’d be great.
Chiwetel Ejiofor as the Master: Ejiofor in Serenity was BRILLIANT, one of my favourite villains of all time, he was so good. Basically he should play every villain ever.
Michael Obiora as Jack: He was Billy Shipton in Blink- the lovely, flirty Billy. Look! He’s got no shirt on!
Art Malik as Wilf: Internationally famous, great actor.
Marianne Jean-Baptiste: Anyone ever seen her in Secrets And Lies, Mike Leigh’s family drama? I just get the feeling she’d make a really good Jackie.
Kehinde Fadipe as Sally: She was great in Misfits, vunerable and tough all at once.
Daniel Kaluuya as Craig: Have you ever seen Black Mirror? Oh god he is a FABULOUS actor. He could do everything required of Craig, comedy and drama and everything.
Angel Coulby as the TARDIS: She’d be brilliant, nuff said
Gina Torres as Canton: Because she ought to be in EVERYTHING.

Amy’s faith

The relationship between the Doctor and Amy: It’s complicated and painful (although very touching too). By the time we reach The God Complex, which is a whole episode focused around Amy’s faith in the Doctor, I was wondering why Amy had any faith left in the Doctor at all. He’s saved her and Rory a few times, true, and saved the universe…but Amy’s daughter is still lost to her. Which is why The God Complex could be ‘fixed’ in just five words…”I can’t save your daughter.” If Amy’s faith had been about faith in still finding her baby, and the Doctor had destroyed that…I think it would have made for a much better episode.

But I guess I have to take The God Complex as it is, not how I want it to be, so I put together a sort of theory. I think perhaps Amy developed a blind faith in the Doctor as a way of protecting herself, as a way of reverting to her seven-year-old self and blocking out all the terrible things that had happened to her. That’s why she sees her seven-year-old self in her room, because she fears being that person, that little girl, for the rest of her life. Always waiting for the Doctor to save her and never moving forward.

Just like Gibbis lost all his sense of personal autonomy…possibly Amy did too, in a way. Because if she puts her faith in the Doctor and lets him make all the decisions then she won’t have to deal with any pain or (misplaced) guilt she might feel. As odd as it sounds, I wonder if him calling her “Amy Williams” wasn’t what jerked her out of it…if that suddenly made her realise “Hey, I was keeping my own name, not taking Rory’s..why are you making that decision for me?”

Some incredibly clever person on GB pointed out that the Handbots anesthetising Amy is an exact mirror to the Doctor’s hand-on-face sign of affection to Amy-

Like Amy’s using the Doctor to put herself to sleep, just run around the universe and forget the terrible things that happened to her. I think it sort of works- people often shut down due to grief, and Amy lost her baby, one of the worst things that can happen to a person. Even if she does know her child as an adult, she won’t get to raise her, and that may well have caused terrible grief. So the Doctor had to jerk her out of it before it was too late.

This theory isn’t perfect- the Doctor is still making a lot of the decisions, after all. Although Amy accepts it, I still don’t like that it was the Doctor’s choice to drop Amy off on Earth, rather than hers. Hopefully, though, this will be retified in S7, and Amy will choose to leave the TARDIS because she’s found other things she wants to do, and because she no longer needs him. (Though she will obviously always care for him.) So…yeah, I guess I like to think he did save her. Any more anesthetic and she’d have ended up (metaphorically) dead.

I enjoy poking at things I dislike until they turn into things I like…

I started thinking, hey, Amy’s a famous person in the Whoniverse now! She’d totally be on magazine covers! And this is Amy, she loves art- she’d have her own craft magazine, she’d do all these fabulous things!

So I put together some magazine covers for Amy, telling a bit of her story between Series Six and Seven. See if you can catch all the references. Rather Big versions can be found hereherehere and here!

DW Series Seven wish list

Dear Moffat, I would like:

  • Some sort of ending that ensures the Ponds get to raise their baby while also ensuring that River grows up to be River
  • Amy’s killing of Madam Kovarian actually being addressed
  • Rory being a nurse a lot and being kind to villains-of-the-week
  • The show to remember that Amy is a model/perfume designer/businesswoman now
  • Canton to make an appearance
  • Captain Jack to make an appearance
  • Martha to make an appearance
  • (Oh please give us Martha and Mickey)
  • River being shown to have a career outside the Doctor, one she both likes and is good at
  • Rory and the Doctor asking Amy for permission to hug the other
  • You to explain that bloody photo in Melody’s room at the orphanage
  • You to kindly plug the plot hole where Melody is a little girl in 1970s New York one moment and a little girl in 1990s Leadworth the next
  • To meet all of Rory’s family and them be TOTALLY AWESOME
  • Amy’s parents to be in the show again
  • More of baby!Amelia and Rory and if possible baby!Mels
  • dinosaurs

thedoctordonnastardis:

thedoctordonnastardis:

anarchymydearhunter:

Amy is not exactly the nicest person to Rory, even after he protected her for 2000 years.

And then she has the audacity to give him shit when she had to wait 37 years for something that was a complete accident.

When Amy and Rory die in…

Erm, I think you misread my post. I wasn’t attacking Rory. I loved what he did and I’m sorry if it looked like I was. I’m just trying to show that Amy’s not a bad person for being bitter because their situations were totally different. Rory had a lot of advantages that Amy didn’t have, such as immortality, knowledge of the Doctor’s return, had the choice of staying. Amy had none of these abilities and none of these choices, and as a result, her attitude and demeanour is completely justified.

I wish to second this (the reply to this, if you can’t see it, which I can’t)-

Amy went through something terrible, Rory went through something terrible. Sometimes Amy is dismissive of Rory, sometimes Rory is insecure about her love- they’re both flawed but amazing people. I’m going to be SO sad when they leave. :(

Doctor Who AUApocalypse

A gang of survivors make their way across an devastated world. All of them- Rose Tyler, Martha Jones, Donna Noble, Mickey Smith, River Song, and newlyweds Amy and Rory Pond- are slowly running out of hope. Until they meet a stranger called The Doctor.

Gif 1- Donna and Rose observe events
Gif 2- The fire takes Manhattan
Gif 3- Amy and Rory take to the road
Gif 4- The Doctor walks on
Gif 5- The survivors; Martha and Mickey share a look
Gif 6- The Doctor notices Amy’s wedding ring; River runs to an injured (dead?) Doctor
Gif 7- Martha and Amy run
Gif 8- Rory walks through the water; River watches him sadly

I am incredibly delighted and humbled that my Companions as literary characters set got so many notes. Seriously. And I figured I might elaborate on it a bit!

Rose as Little Red Riding Hood: Obviously, the Bad Wolf connection. Plus, Rose wears a red hoodie sometimes. BUT! The original story has an awful lot of interpretations that you can kind of apply to Rose’s story as well. Like the idea that the whole thing is a parable about sexual maturity. Or the idea that Red is ‘reborn’ from a girl into a woman after her encounter. But I love the idea that, in Doctor Who, Rose starts off as Little Red Riding Hood, with the Doctor as the Wolf (there was even a brief ‘what big ears you have’ scene between the Doctor and Nancy in The Empty Chld) but then she becomes the Wolf- Bad Wolf. In other words, she becomes what would have devoured her. Which, by taking on the TARDIS energy, she literally does…

Martha as Dorothy:This one, I was surprised it worked so well. But The Wizard Of Oz is basically a story about needing something and then finding it, and that’s what Martha does. Like Dorothy, her home life isn’t completely happy- her family all sort of take advantage of her good nature, and maybe control her a little. So Martha ends up with the Doctor (the Wizard!) and travels into another world. There she makes new friends and brings an end to a tyrant’s rule- but she also realises that there’s no place like home, that she wants to be with her family instead. And then the Wizard turns out to be not what she expected, either- she sees the dark side of him, and the human side (which treats her badly). He’s not all-powerful, he’s just an old man who’s been trying to get home. He lets her down- so she says goodbye to her friends, and goes home. And she’s learned a lesson: she’s no longer willing to let her loved ones rule her life. She comes out of her quest a more mature person (not that she wasn’t one to start with, but yeah. She had a journey.)

Donna as Alice: This might be the weakest one, sorry. But Donna, like Alice, refused to be taken in by all the nonsense thrown at her- she was totally defiant to the Queen. And even though it was all a dream (well, probably) Alice started off bored and, after she woke, was inspired. And her sister, in the closing passage of the novel, thinks about how ‘this same little sister of hers would, in the after-time, be herself a grown woman; and how she would keep, through all her riper years, the simple and loving heart of her childhood; and how she would gather about her other little children, and make their eyes bright and eager with many a strange tale, perhaps even with the dream of Wonderland of long ago; and how she would feel with all their simple sorrows, and find a pleasure in all their simple joys, remembering her own child-life, and the happy summer days.’ So I like to think that was Donna’s ending: an old woman talking about Ood and Pyroviles to delighted children, inspiring loads of people with stories she didn’t know she was the hero of.

Amy as Wendy: Actually, a deleted scene makes this one pretty much explicit- from The Beast Below:  ‘My aunt says your wedding day’s the day you grow up’. Amy ran away with her imaginary friend the night before adulthood came- meeting terrible monsters and villains and lost children- and gradually came to realise she’d have to grow up. I think Amy as Wendy was done deliberately- actually, we probably should’ve guessed, she’d have a daughter. Who took her place as companion to the boy who never grew up.
The book Peter Pan describes Peter’s fate- to never grow up- as ‘a tragedy’. Which could be applied to the Doctor, too. And if Amy never grows up, that tragedy will be hers, too. Remember that exchange- ‘Have you ever run away from something because you were scared, or not ready, or just because you could?’ ‘Once, a long time ago’ ‘What happened?’ ‘Hello!’ If Amy sticks around, she’ll become the Doctor. I like to think her moment of entering adulthood was the wedding- she saved the Doctor by rejecting what her parents had told her and trusting in her own self. And she got Rory as a reward. And then she got a daughter she was always destined to only half have…

Amy as a) fan b) writer c) Moffat himself

Strange thought of the week: Amy Pond…is Steven Moffat.

Well, in a very strange, loose sense. But Moffat started out as a Doctor Who fan in childhood, before becoming a writer, and then a Doctor Who writer, before graduating to showrunner. And Amy was a fan of the Doctor in childhood, and remained a fan all through adulthood, becoming companion to the Doctor and then mother in law to the Doctor…

Amy as fan

Like Moffat, Amy encountered the Doctor as a child and her fascination never went away. She met her Doctor in 1996, the year Doctor Who was last on air till the revived series…she met him again in 2008, when David Tennant’s era was in full swing…and she finally got to go with the Eleventh Doctor in 2010, which is the year we all met him as well.

I think there’s a case to be made for Amy representing Fandom, in Series Five at least. Look at us- we’re a community of fanworks, and Amy too channels her obsession into art. She makes drawings and dolls and TARDISes- I’ve always thought that if Amy was One Of Us, she’d be a fanartist and up there with the best of ’em.

Anyway, Amy is surrounded with people who disapprove of her obsession. Even Rory does a little at first, before coming around. And to be fair, Amy is a little obsessed, maybe somewhat more than is healthy. But gradually she balances out her TARDIS life and her Leadworth life- or her fandom life and her real life, if you will.

And Amy is the kind of fan who is inspired by the Doctor to become a better person. She uses what she’s learned to become a quick-thinking, kind, intelligent heroine.

And- I can’t put it any other way – she saves the Doctor with the sheer POWER OF FANNISHNESS! The bow ties and the suspenders and the TARDIS blue all serve to remind her of the Doctor. Ah, Amy. You are One Of Us…

Amy as writer

“I found you in words.” Amy to the Doctor.

Actually it was that quote that kicked me off on this line of thought. Amy is literally the author of the Whoniverse in that she rewrites the universe to bring the Doctor back- she wrote her parents back in, too! It works on a very meta-ry level- Amy, in some way, is the creator of the Eleventh Doctor. Just as Moffat is…

In fact, from the very start, it was what was in her head that was important- in the case of Prisoner Zero, too. Amy’s memories of her fannish childhood are what allows her to save the day, over and over again.

Amy gets Rory, too, who is Moffat’s hero- “everything I could never be”. In a bizzare way, Amy is like the self-insert and Rory is the Gary Stu.

Amy as showrunner

Now we’ve reached the point where Amy has created River Song. And so has Steven Moffat. Anyway…just as Steven Moffat is the most important person to Doctor Who out-universe, Amy is the most important person to the Doctor in-universe. She won’t be for much longer- that’s how the programme works- but for now she’s the one running the Doctor’s show. She’s his mother-in-law! She’s his best friend! She ‘will bring the Silence’! (I’m assuming we’ll see this soon.) So…yeah. The most important person.

I’ve pondered Rory being Moffat’s self-insert, but the more I think about it the more I think it’s really Amy.