Doctor Who: 10 Ways An American Reboot Could Work

4. Too Long A Season

DOCTOR WHO - The End of Time, Part One You don€™t often hear people praising 22-episode seasons, but they could allow some of Doctor Who€™s more complicated story arcs some room to breathe. Take the Master€™s return in 2007 or the €˜bees disappearing leading to universal collapse€™ in 2008. Both are no sooner set up and explained than they€™re resolved via that deus ex machina from Richard Donner€™s Superman movie. Ultimate foes and high stakes need more than two weeks to sink in, and American showrunners are less timid than either Davies or Moffat have been in stretching longer stories through the spines of their shows.
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Hamish Crawford writes fiction more easily than fact. His first volume of short fiction, “A Madhouse, Only With More Elegant Jackets”, was published in 2011 from First Edition Publishing. He has an English degree from the University of Calgary and a Screenwriting M.A. from the University of Westminster, which leaves little space on the wall for his several PhD. rejection letters. His stories and articles have appeared in such publications as NoD and the Cult Britannia website (www.cultbritannia.co.uk). In September he will be speaking at a Doctor Who 50th anniversary conference in Hertfordsire. The owner of far more hats than heads, Hamish currently lives in Canada, and is disappointed that the preceding biography contains so few factual errors. Visit his website: http://hamish-crawford.weebly.com