Series 8
Deep Breath - 6/10
Into the Dalek - 7/10
Robot of Sherwood - 7/10
Listen - 8/10
Time Heist - 8/10
The Caretaker - 6/10
Kill the Moon - 7/10
Mummy on the Orient Express - 9/10
Flatline - 7/10
In The Forest of the Night - 8/10
Dark Water - 8/10
Death in Heaven - 6/10
Last Christmas - 8/10
The first big question that lingers about Last Christmas is whether it belongs to Series 8 or Series 9. I imagine most people don't care, and they can just skip reading this bit. In years gone by the festive special has typically been part of the series that followed it (with The End of Time and The Time of the Doctor being exceptions to the rule). But Last Christmas follows a series that was an episode shorter than usual, and also only finished little over a month ago. The title, and epilogue feel to the story makes it feel very much part of the Series 8 mould - its tone, and characters and the big build-up at the end were all products of what Series 8 had laid out. As such, despite its absence on the series boxset for me Last Christmas and presumably all festive specials from now on act as epilogues to each series, rather than prologues. In the case of Last Christmas, it was a welcome move that gave the episode its strongest elements.
The Inception-inspired dream plot was handled well enough. The rather mind boggling concepts in Inception were simplified a bit here - maybe still a bit too much to completely catch for anyone who had already been making merry, but sensible enough, and logical enough within the confines of the show. The Dream Crabs were an interesting menace, nowhere near as iconic as they could have been but very decent enough for the story at hand. In fact part of what made the threat stand out as one that was quite decent was that they felt like the kind of threat you'd find in the middle of a series proper. The episode itself was quite typical of the show, not trying to make a real show of itself but simply doing what it does best - monsters and soft sci-fi.
When it came to the interjected dream elements the episode was perhaps at its weakest, though by no means poor. The inclusion of Danny was a surprise, and it would have been a nice surprise if he'd been a remotely interesting character in Series 8 as a whole. It was nice to give him a more dignifying, respectable final scene within the show. But as a character Danny Pink just didn't work, and the only truly positive thing I have to say about his inclusion was that he wasn't brought back from the dead - a notion so scary in thought alone that it highlights how many missteps this episode could have taken that it avoided. For any failing it has, it's made better by the fact there were many others it could have had that it didn't.
Perhaps the weakest element, which was one that should have worked a whole lot better and was probably what brought the episode down, was Father Christmas. His role felt somehow forcefully interjected despite the fact that the explanation for his involvement was really rather decent. But the portrayal was probably the biggest problem, as as suspected for a long while before now Nick Frost was a peculiar choice for the role. Aside from a couple of quips and witty remarks, and the odd funny line that was simply funny rather than being funny because of the actor or the character, Father Christmas wasn't a particularly inspiring character. As the source of last hope, he was a bit of a non credible Santa. His inclusion ultimately consisted of scenes made to look cool - astride a reindeer, the admittedly well-rendered sleigh sequence towards the end. The character makes sense, but the portrayal was bizarre considering what the episode was going for. At the same time though, Nick Frost's limited capability as an actor (although I'm happy to be proven wrong, but he does seem to play the same type in everything he's in) wasn't remotely offensive, and it probably helped to keep the schmaltz out a little bit.
The other characters in the story were well-acted, particularly the two younger women. The older characters felt somewhat sidelined which was a great shame. They had decent stories to them, though again the delivery was a bit peculiar. Dropped in with them fairly quickly, the episode seems to assume we'll just like them automatically. And whilst they're likeable enough to carry the episode through, we don't get enough about them to make them as interesting or endearing as they could be. On a sort of 'monster fodder' scale, they were easy to remember on a first-name basis, but they won't go down as character greats.
Once again though, Last Christmas shows up Series 8 as a strong series for character where its leads are concerned. The icy and rocky relationship between Twelve and Clara is cleverly handled in the story - never becoming too heavy-handed, but staying as poignant and meaningful as it was before. He may have many misgivings, but Moffat has delivered with these two time and time again. And the decision to keep the Clara reveal a secret until transmission paid off brilliantly - it almost felt like a Christmas present from the show itself when it ended on an undisputedly happy note. It teased a poignant and frustratingly depressing ending. Sometimes I enjoy a depressing ending, but somehow Moffat has actually managed to tap into positive emotions in an incredibly strong way with this one, and despite a shaky final episode to the main series has made the prospects for Series 9 that little bit brighter.
I'll admit that Last Christmas was the first festive episode I missed upon initial broadcast in the past ten years. I had extremely low expectations for it, and minimal interest - the only other time I had that combination was ahead of The Doctor, The Widow and the Wardrobe which went on to fall short of my expectations still. This was thankfully a different story, and a story I'd happily watch again - even for those final few minutes. (And on that subject, Murray Gold deserves a lot of praise despite disappointing me in the past couple of years).
It doesn't have the class or style of A Christmas Carol, and it is very clunky in places too but Last Christmas is a commendable special which is more than you can ask for. It serves as a wonderful epilogue to Series 8 and closes that chapter - leaving us somewhere hopefully a little brighter for Series 9.
LAST CHRISTMAS COMPARED TO OTHER CHRISTMAS SPECIALS...
The Christmas Invasion - 7/10 (6th)
The Runaway Bride - 8/10 (2nd)
Voyage of the Damned - 6/10 (7th)
The Next Doctor - 5/10 (8th)
The End of Time: Parts One and Two - 5/10 (9th)
A Christmas Carol - 9/10 (1st)
The Doctor, The Widow and the Wardrobe - 3/10 (10th)
The Snowmen - 8/10 (5th)
The Time of the Doctor - 8/10 (3rd)
Last Christmas - 8/10 (4th)
RTD at Christmas - 31/50
Moffat at Christmas - 36/50