
For the second episode in a row, we also have a strong focus on children, which is very much in keeping with this fairy tale about an imaginary friend who turns out to be real. (Anyone seeing anything unseemly about this should move right along to another website.) The cries of children attract the star-beast and in kindness to them, if no one else, it continues to ferry Starship UK to its new home after it is freed. Children can find friends in this world, not only in the whale and (as usual) the Doctor, but in Liz Ten, the kindly Queen who commends Mandy's bravery. And for us adults, we are turned into big kids by the overflowing nostalgia of what might be our own childhoods peppered throughout Starship UK, from the test card girl's nursery rhymes, to the carnival monsters, to the old BBC fonts.
In many ways, I am reminded of the 7th Doctor's era, and as an example I offer Ghost Light. This is a much more opaque story where tone and metaphor are more important than plot. The Beast Below is perhaps not as deep, but nonetheless follows similar rules.

We have a country bordering on the police state, ruling public opinion by a mix of fear and hopeful propaganda (the Smilers' faces) that, to its shame, is using an immigrant labourer to carry the load. This "starwhale" is mistreated, and yet actually volunteered to carry this load. It is treated with fear and as a necessary evil despite its productive place in society. And of course, there's also the matter of having elections every 5 years, in which the population magically "forgets" the sins of the past. It's why we keep electing the same corrupt or incompetent leaders term after term (to be extreme about it). The election booth is presented as a non-choice. Even the Queen here is deluding herself about being a protector of the people. She wears a mask, but doesn't realize she wears one underneath - her false youth and false idea of who she is and what she's done.

The Doctor
Speaking of the Doctor (and leaving this metaphor business behind, there are a couple of interesting things to note about Matt Smith's interpretation. First, he discussed the Time War and doesn't make a meal of it. He's over it. It was a bad day, let's move on. I am totally ok with that. It was RTD's big story arc, it's been acknowledged as the accepted backstory for the character, but there's really no need to dwell on it anymore. Doc11 has his own "humans are rubbish" moment, something all Doctors should indulge in at least one, and Smith avails himself well of it. The best bit, however, and noteworthy for those who don't think the Doctor should have actively pursued such a sanguinary solution, is where he says he'll have to find another name because he won't be the Doctor anymore. In other words, he doesn't think it's what he should pursue either. I also love the hug between the two leads and the vulnerability he shows there.

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