If you'd managed to avoid Steven Moffat's comments about this "dark" series opener, then you might initially expect 'The Impossible Astronaut' to be something of a romp. The Doctor's amusing antics through time, and another of River's humourous departures from the Stormcage facility, lead our heroes to Utah, where a fateful reunion is on the cards. The Doctor Who team's US location shooting has certainly paid off, lending these early scenes a grand scale that the series could scarcely have expected to achieve in 2005, let alone in 1963.
The episode's early sense of fun is of course merely intended to lull us gullible viewers into a false sense of security. Seven minutes in, a nation's collective jaw dropped as The Doctor - this show's lead - is mercilessly gunned down. This plot twist is simply stunning, and it's difficult to imagine even casual viewers not sitting up to pay attention at this point.
On a purely parental note though, while scares for the kiddies are all well and good, it's perhaps questionable how traumatic it could be for a young child to see their hero shot to death and subsequently burnt up.


After a brilliantly comic and exciting incursion into the White House, a deeply creepy scene in a bathroom affords us our first full glimpse of the Silents. The creatures are undoubtedly a triumph - genuinely creepy and memorable, with an interesting gimmick. But to put on my Mary Whitehouse hat once more, it's again debatable whether the unsettling scene in which a Silent confronts Amy and kills the White House staffer Joy should really be broadcast at 6pm.

The episode then concludes with a magnificent double-blow of a cliffhanger, as Amy reveals her pregnancy to The Doctor and the impossible astronaut returns. Though the extended use of slow-motion is perhaps over-egging things just a little here, this cliffhanger is still one of the best that Doctor Who has ever done. Period.
All in all, this is a fantastic launch for the sixth series of Doctor Who. The only obvious criticism is that this instalment and the one that follows could prove too confusing and too frightening for kids, but perhaps we're just underestimating the show's young fans? Time will tell, as it always does, but ultimately the fact that a show that's been running on-and-off for almost 50 years can still subvert expectations, and produce something as simultaneously shocking and thrilling as 'The Impossible Astronaut', is something for the Who team to be proud of.
All in all, this is a fantastic launch for the sixth series of Doctor Who. The only obvious criticism is that this instalment and the one that follows could prove too confusing and too frightening for kids, but perhaps we're just underestimating the show's young fans? Time will tell, as it always does, but ultimately the fact that a show that's been running on-and-off for almost 50 years can still subvert expectations, and produce something as simultaneously shocking and thrilling as 'The Impossible Astronaut', is something for the Who team to be proud of.
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