On Sun, 08 Apr 2012 16:31:27 +0100, FishFood <
do...@home.com> wrote:
>What happens when our monsters are loved as much as our heroes?
>
>Im i the only one who thinks its odd how the Daleks have over
>time become this lovable set piece? A menace in name only.
they're now a parrody, or do i mean pantomime, of themselves.
>There's something about their familiarity which now makes them
>toothless as monsters, so that they have lost all meaning.
you can only see something so often until it become familiar and no longer novel.
>Any future story featuring these cybernetic villains would have
>to address the issue of their menace, in a way which repositions
>them as objects of loathing.
like actualy doing something evil and not looking like cyberquazi modo's with their new revised design. boy do the new daleks
look shit. as for the new cybermen, evertime i see one i just think megaman from the nintendo games.
>Otherwise what's the point? Whats the point of the story or the
>character, if the audience can't draw obvious line between good
>and evil?
i think this taking it as read they're evil isn't doing them any good, children watching will not know there back story and
orogin and need to see the daleks in thier true evil colours.
>I suppose the next generation of DW fans will have a darker
>re-imagining of DW to look forward to, the same way comic book
>The Batman, is now the Gothic novel Dark knight.
the problem with the daleks is they've been over used and humped to death and when used used badly. they have no menace about
them anymore. in the old days when the daleks turned up it was something special. now its just 'oh, look, its the daleks
again this week'.
the beeb is about to fuck up once again with the weeping angels (i seem to recal the beeb won a hugo for them), they're going
to be in the next series.