Right. Finally- finally!- figured out what I actually think about The Time of the Doctor. Been a long time since it's been so difficult to nail down my opinions on an episode, but it's a fascinating and flawed bit of work in many ways. Text dump incoming...
Concept
It's... quite difficult for Christmas Day, no? I mean, calls across Time and Space, monster jamborees, religious orders, complicated backstory from the past 4 years being tied up... Nothing to really grab you by the throat through the drunken Christmas stupor?
I love the concept of the Doctor slowly sacrificing himself for this one village. It's a really nice counterpoint to the Tenth Doctor's begrudging sacrifice in The End of Time, and it's the sort of thing I absolutely want the Doctor to be doing. It's damaged by the fact that we don't care about any of the villagers as individuals, though. There's something of a feint towards Barnable being a symbolic figure for the Doctor, but fundamentally, by the time the Doctor makes his final stand on the roof, he's fighting for a bunch of nameless extras. It's baked in to the passing of the centuries, but it does kind of damage the hero's struggle. Then again, maybe this is precisely why the Doctor's so heroic here- I've long wished that the original concept of the Doctor having to go into the control booth to save a nameless technician instead of Wilf was kept in The End of Time, and this is that on a grander scale.
The Oswald Family
Moffat... No. I really, really wouldn't have bothered with this strand of the episode (calling it part of the plot would be a total lie). Added nothing except water-treading. We don't know these people, either at the beginning of the episode or at the end, so the trials and tribulations of their Christmas are a total lead weight around this already narratively overstuffed episode. Not one of the family has been given any interesting characteristics, either. Hassled dad, bitchy stepmum, nostalgic grandma. Yawn. It's better than the background figures that Amy had for a family, in fairness, but not by much. I can understand Moffat wanting a family Christmas in his Christmas special, but it'd certainly have helped if it was a family we'd given the remotest shit about.
With all that said, I actually liked Clara herself quite a bit more in this episode than I have in others. Dunno why, really, although I suspect the fact that she's allowed to be a person rather than a mystery now helps Coleman's natural likability and charisma fill in more of the gaps in the characterisation.
Christmas?
One thing I'm absolutely sure on; The Time of the Doctor has absolutely no earthly business being a Christmas special. None at all. As I've already said, the most overtly Christmassy elements of the episode were inelegantly crowbarred in, and the rest of the episode jarred heavily with our expectations of a Christmas special. This happened with The End of Time, too. Honestly, I think the ominous nature of regeneration specials makes them fundamentally suited to be Christmas specials.
As a side note, doing a regeneration episode as an Easter special is the most blindingly obvious idea. If Moffat had found the time to make The Time of the Doctor into something to be shown at Easter, and given us a more appropriate Christmas special, the big revelations from this episode could have been more organically spread out, and the regeneration episode could have been less messy. Ah well.
The Moffatisms
Ooh, let's count them. Femme fatale from the Doctor's past that we've never met before? A cute child with talismanic importance to the Doctor (two, if we count the little Amelia hallucination)? A collection of monsters conspiring against the Doctor? The rewriting of established history? Check, check, check and check.
Now, none of this is a problem. Moffat is a writer with a good deal of tropes in his back pocket, and I really don't have any issues with him exploring them. However, they really don't work to their full potential here. Tasha Lem is a bizarre character- all credit to Orla Brady for finding the notes in the performance that made it work, but nothing about the character as written makes any sense as someone we've just met. Part of me suspects that the role was originally intended for River, with Alex Kingston having to drop out- certainly, that's the only sense I can make out of the psychopath line.
A Comparison...
One really interesting comparison to be drawn is that between TTOTD and The Parting of the Ways. Even beyond the regeneration, you have the Doctor sending the companion home, only to contrive a way to find her way back to him. It is here that Moffat's deficiencies in comparison to RTD become properly apparent, and why Parting works much, much better. Parting stings like a gut punch- we know Rose, Mickey and Jackie, and know exactly why Rose would push so hard to get back. In Time, on the other hand, Clara's situation doesn't carry even remotely the same amount of heft- the Doctor had only picked her up that morning, we don't give the remotest shit about any of the characters she's been left with, and as soon as she gets back to the Doctor he sends her back home again! The Moffat style and the RTD style have different positives and negatives, but Moffat comes out poorly here.
The Regeneration
Perfect. Perfect, perfect, perfect. The last ten minutes as a whole, actually. The first 50 minutes of the episode were often muddled and unclear, but the last ten were superb, both on the clock tower and in the TARDIS. Loved the Doctor's triumphant riposte to the Daleks, love the huge destructive scale of the regeneration, loved the Amy hallucination, love the shock of the snap regeneration where we've been trained to expect a long drawn-out SFX sequence, loved Capaldi's boggling and intense stares. The one element I loved above all others, however...
Matt Smith
The man's a revelation. This episode absolutely relied on him in a way very few episodes throughout the show's history have relied on their Doctor, and he totally bossed it. Whether he was buried under piles of latex to simulate age, or mourning the loss of Handles, or doing the broad comedy of the wig gag, or the patronising of the wooden Cyberman, or the initial resigned yet stoic conversation with the Daleks on the rooftop, or the sheer joy of the new regeneration cycle... He absolutely nailed every single beat. Astonishing performance- handily the best of his Doctor Who career, and only Tennant in Midnight, Eccleston in The Parting of the Ways or Davison in The Caves of Androzani can even remotely compete.
The cherry atop the cake was the final regeneration scene. That elegiac performance, the halting, emotional delivery, the moment with Amy... Christ. Best pre-regeneration performance ever, and it's not even close.
Conclusion
I will never criticise Moffat for ambition. I often feel his surface-level tropes (timey-wimey, femme fatales, etc.) often serve to disguise what an innovative and groundbreaking writer of Doctor Who he really is. I don't think even this episode's most fervent detractors could deny it was, on some level, ambitious- without knocking RTD's regeneration stories, they were very much big, typical adventures that contained a regeneration at the end. This was different- it was a story that could only be told now (or, to be more accurate, at the final regeneration- Moffat's creative accounting doesn't quite convince me, but I'll let it slide).
Yet, for all this, the episode's absolutely at its best when it's playing with extremely simple, universally understandable stakes. The Doctor, having confronted and prepared for death, facing his oldest enemies for the last time, and his triumphant turning of the tables, followed by his fond farewell to everything that he loved as he faces his change. That's what I'll remember from this episode- not superfluous explanations (we figured out that the Silence blew up the TARDIS nearly three years ago, thanks all the same), not underpowered monster confrontations, not Papal Mainframes or Tasha Lem or truth fields. Just the Doctor facing death. Moffat would do well to learn lessons from that.