It helps, of course, that he's been given such a good script to work with. This episode might strike Steven Moffat's best balance yet between flashy, quick-fire moments and longer scenes of slowly mounting dread, as both are on equal display here. And so we get the bravado opening, with River trusting that the Doctor will rescue her from the Byzantium215 (albeit after getting the message 12,000 years in the future) as she ejects herself into space -- but we also get the quiet moments in the Maze of the Dead, as the small exploration party nervously checks the shadows and all the statues for the Weeping Angel. This leads to the frankly marvellous realization that all the statues are Weeping Angels that are slowly waking up, thanks to the radiation leaking from the crashed spaceship.
"The image of an Angel becomes itself an Angel." ("The Time of Angels") ©BBC |
And we can't talk about this episode without mentioning River Song. Alex Kingston turns in another fabulous job here, and the moments in the TARDIS are particularly fun, as they show a cheekier side to her before she has to join up with the Church's army and become the River we already know from her debut story. There are some lovely gags about her knowing how to fly the TARDIS better than the Doctor and how museums are his way of keeping score, but what's particularly great is the chemistry between Alex Kingston and Matt Smith. Smith chooses to play the Doctor as grumpy and bad-tempered, while Kingston goes for flirtatious. It shouldn't really work, but it does because these are two actors who clearly already respect each other and are willing to give the scenes space. It's also great how well they work together when things become serious (such as when Amy is trapped with the image of the Angel), putting aside any differences they might have to work as a well-oiled team.
There's frankly tons to adore about this episode (and it's only the first part!) -- it's put together so well that it remains compelling viewing even when you know the twists that are coming. This is full of fabulous performances and wonderful imagery, with just the right amount of tension to keep you worried. The final opinion will partially hinge on how well they can wrap this up next time, but as of right now it would be hard to find a better or more effective episode than what "The Time of Angels" accomplishes in its 45 minutes.
215 This therefore being the crash of the Byzantium River mentions in "Silence in the Library".