The Doctor and Ruby try to rescue spoiled Lindy Pepper-Bean (Callie Cooke). |
1 episode. Running Time: Approx. 43 minutes. Written by: Russell T. Davies. Directed by: Dylan Holmes Williams. Produced by: Vicki Delow.
THE PLOT:
"We come here from the Homeworld. No stinky old folk, just people ages 17 to 27. I mean, no, not just anyone. If you can afford it, obviously."
Lindy Pepper-Bean (Callie Cooke) is a resident of Finetime, a carefree luxury city for the children of the elite. These teens spend two hours per day working and the rest of their time partying. Lindy and her friends are constantly online inside their "bubbles," holographic social media spheres that encircles the users' heads.
Lindy lives completely inside her bubble, so much so that the Doctor and Ruby have to push her to look beyond it before she even notices one of her co-workers being literally eaten right next to her. Finetime has become infested with monsters: sluglike creatures that are consuming the population - and yet, for whatever reason, they are ignoring Lindy... at least, so far.
Finetime's security is too tight for even the Doctor to get in. If Lindy wants to survive, she'll need to follow his and Ruby's instructions in order to reach a place of safety. All the while, the Doctor tries to piece together what's happening based on the snippets of information available to him.
CHARACTERS:
The Doctor: He tries to contact Lindy right at the start of the episode. When he appears on her screen, talking about monsters, she instantly blocks him. It's only after Ruby manages to gain a small degree of trust that the young woman is willing to listen to him. He shrugs off Lindy's wails that she hates him, doing his utmost to keep this frankly idiotic young woman to focus on her own survival. Gatwa delivers what I think is his best-acted scene of the series thus far at the very end: The Doctor, letting out a cry of pure frustration before he lapses into a deep, still silence.
Ruby: Gets the time-honored companion's role of acting as the Doctor's intermediary when he alienates Lindy. She alternately ignores or agrees with Lindy's complaints about how "stupid" she is for not knowing about Finetime and the bubble, showing impressive patience and compassion for the girl. She's still working class at heart, though; when she learns that the residents are "the rich kids," she can't help but snark about it.
Lindy Pepper-Bean: Lindy's bubble is her world far more than any actual physical space. It's where she has fun, where she interacts with her friends, and where she distracts herself from having to ever actually think. There's a wonderful little moment after she witnesses the monster eating her co-worker. She shuts down, unable to process it, retreating into her bubble and playing music to avoid engaging with reality. The importance of Callie Cooke's performance to this episode can't be understated. We experience the entire story through Lindy's eyes, making it critical that this fundamentally selfish and unlikable person still comes across as human enough to make us care about her fate.
Ricky September: The social media star idolized by Lindy, Ricky (Tom Rhys Harries) has a "star account." In defiance of the stereotype, he is probably the least narcissistic person in Finetime. When he sees Lindy struggling, he helps her immediately, and he is protective of her both physically and emotionally from that moment on. He's more capable than her, and we discover why: Despite owing his success to social media, he likes to turn the bubble off while walking around and reading. Some of his behavior is almost Doctorish, with him putting himself in harm's way to save Lindy.
THOUGHTS:
Dot and Bubble is the best episode so far this season - and following on the heels of two other excellent episodes, that's an impressive achievement.
The story is well constructed. We open on Lindy and stay with her for the entire running time. A lot of world building is achieved in the opening minutes, with her turning on her bubble as soon as she wakes, her head engulfed in social media "noise" even as she walks to the bathroom (following directional arrows) to brush her teeth. A couple of her friends are bizarrely "offline," and the Doctor appears to give a warning that she ignores. That warning aside, this opening mostly establishes her daily life, which is so consumed by her bubble that reality has become all but irrelevant.
Lindy's bubble isn't a metaphor or analogy for social media, because it explicitly is social media. It's not the only bubble that exists in the story, though. Lindy happily declares that Finetime is reserved for the young and rich. Poor people and "stinky old people" have no place, keeping her and her friends isolated from anyone belonging to a different social class or even generation. Finetime is itself a domed city, so thoroughly locked off from the outside world that even the Doctor can't get in. When you break it all down, Lindy and her peers: live inside their personal social media bubbles... inside a bubble of youth and privilege... all of which exists inside the bubble of Finetime itself.
The epilogue takes the already existing ideas of social media isolation and separation according to class and adds a new wrinkle. This doesn't come out of nowhere, with hints dropped in character reactions throughout. However, unlike the "bubble" themes, this last is kept reasonably subtle and in the background, so that its full revelation comes as a shock to the Doctor and probably much of the audience, as well. The epilogue deals with this change-up well, with the final minutes particularly effective in not only the scripting, but also in Gatwa's performance and some outright beautiful closing shots.
OVERALL:
Dot and Bubble is my favorite episode so far this season. A good script provides an effective monster story while at the same time delivering plenty of social commentary. The performances are universally excellent. It's also extremely well-directed, with a wonderful contrast between Lindy's noisily cheerful bubble and the monsters chowing down on people outside of it.
This also marks the third standout in a row. At this point, not only has "Season One" (Series Fourteen, I mumble stubbornly) firmly recovered from its stumbling start - It seems on track to be one of the revived series' stronger seasons.
Overall Rating: 10/10.
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Next Story: Rogue (not yet reviewed)
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