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16 February 2025
This review contains spoilers!
I think this really effectively builds on the themes and setting built up in the first story, I think I prefer this to that one. There's a lot to like, so going to go through it point by point
The first thing I want to draw attention to is the character of the Highness and his daughter. I love how they're characterised, initially their nervous laughter came across as grating and generally just frustrating, but then when the daleks leave and se see them drop it, we realise that's the point. They're doing this charade to fight the daleks in their own way, in honestly the only way they really can. It's not much, but it's a symbol of defiance for them, and when we see them both drop it later as they're broadcast to their people, them having that moment when things are getting too serious for them to keep it up, it works really well for me.
I think the small glimpse we get into Alby and Susan's relationship is really nice to see, and I love how Alby's part in it is somewhat flipping gender norms. We often see characters in fiction hung up on 'the one they let go', still loving them and not having told them, now split apart by circumstance and their driving goal being to tell them how they feel. We very rarely see the character who acts like that being male, or at least if we do, they're not portrayed in the same way Alby is here, it's just a fun dynamic to see, and it's a great way to keep the human element (or rather, the human factor) that's key to making this story work.
Susan's continued arc here is probably my favourite thread here. The face of hope, resistance, and the daleks. It's a really interesting dynamic. She needs to give people across the universe hope, saving countless lives in doing so, but she's not doing so as a freedom fighter, she's doing so as a prop, a monkey the daleks are putting on stage and forcing to dance, and then underneath it all there's her true acts of resistance. Those true acts of resistance also taking her to some dark places, condemning people to death to keep her secret hidden. It's a tough decision, but she's able to make those, and that's what's keeping her alive. It reminds me a bit of Katniss' story from the final book of The Hunger Games trilogy, which is another character arc I absolutely love, so is of course something I love seeing here, especially with that added level of darkness.
Also a smaller point, but I think this story really nails the 'powerscaling' of the daleks. The daleks can sometimes come across as completely unstoppable, yet sometimes as cannon fodder. Here I think it's just done really well. The daleks only leave a single dalek on one of the planets they control, not because a single dalek is completely unstoppable, I mean, it's stopped in the story, but because a single dalek is enough. It on its own kills most of a large group that're trying to kill it, and while it is defeated, it's not a dalek that's the villian, it's the Dalek empire, and when one goes down, they're going to send in their reinforcements. With a large enough group you might get lucky and be able to take down one dalek, but what happens next?
In the course of doing the review I've managed to convince myself to up the score from a 7 to an 8. I think the more I think about it, the more I like it
JayPea
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