Posts Tagged ‘russell t daviesjulie gardner’

Partners in Crime (Doctor Who)

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

The Adipose, CGI aliens depicted using Massive, march through Central London towards Adipose Industries.

Partners in Crime” is the first episode of the fourth series of British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was broadcast on BBC One on 5 April 2008. The episode reintroduced comedienne Catherine Tate as Donna Noble, who previously appeared in “The Runaway Bride”. Donna and the Doctor (David Tennant) meet while separately investigating Adipose Industries, a company that has created a revolutionary diet pill. Together, they attempt to stop the death of thousands of people in London after the head of the company, the alien Miss Foster (Sarah Lancashire), creates the Adipose, short white aliens made from human body fat.

The episode’s alien creatures, the Adipose, were created using the software Massive, commonly used for crowd sequences in fantasy and science fiction films. The episode is stylistically different from other Doctor Who episodes; “Partners in Crime” has no clear antagonist, and the creatures are in a different style to Doctor Whos regular “big [and] scary” monsters.

“Partners in Crime” features the return of three other characters. Jacqueline King reprises her role as Sylvia Noble from “The Runaway Bride”. Bernard Cribbins reprises his role as Wilfred Mott from “Voyage of the Damned”. Cribbins was recalled to replace the character of Geoff Noble after actor Howard Attfield died. Billie Piper briefly reprises her role as Rose Tyler for the first time since the second series’ finale “Doomsday”, in a scene that was not included in preview showings.

The episode received many positive reviews. Most critics liked the special effects used to create the Adipose. Critics also praised Tate’s subdued acting in comparison to “The Runaway Bride”; Donna was changed from a “shouting fishwife” to a more emotional person when she became a full-time companion. Critics’ opinions were split over the episode’s plot: opinion on executive producer Russell T Davies’ writing ranged from “pure pleasure” to “the back of a fag packet”.

Synopsis

The episode primarily focuses on Donna Noble (Catherine Tate), a previous companion who appeared in “The Runaway Bride”. After her encounter with the Doctor (David Tennant), she became disenchanted with normal life and regretted declining his invitation to travel in the TARDIS. She started investigating conspiracy theories in the hope she would find him. She confides her regrets to her grandfather Wilfred Mott (Bernard Cribbins), an amateur astronomer who met the Doctor before in “Voyage of the Damned”.

The episode concerns Adipose Industries, which is marketing a diet pill to London’s population with the slogan “the fat just walks away”. Believing the treatment to be otherworldly, the Doctor and Donna investigate the company separately, and find that the slogan is literal—the pills use latent body fat to parthenogenetically create the Adipose, small white aliens which spawn every night, removing a little of the host’s body fat each time. In an emergency, multiple Adipose can spawn by using all of the body’s organic tissue, killing the host. When the Doctor and Donna meet, they are confronted by Miss Foster (Sarah Lancashire), an alien who is exploiting Britain’s overweight population to create the Adipose for the Adiposian First Family. Miss Foster mentions that the Adipose species “lost” their breeding planet and hired Foster to find a replacement; she chose Earth, knowing that it was illegal.

Foster accelerates her plans, feeling threatened by the Doctor’s invocation of galactic law and fearing he may inform the “Shadow Proclamation”, an interplanetary police force. Throughout London, the Adipose begin to spawn, soon numbering several thousand. The Doctor and Donna prevent total emergency parthenogenesis occurring, while the remainder make their way to Adipose Industries. The Adiposian First Family use their spaceship to collect the Adipose, but kill Foster to hide any evidence they used Earth illegally. The Doctor refrains from killing the Adipose because they are children; Donna notes that his previous companion Martha Jones made him more human, citing his infanticide of the Racnoss in their previous encounter.

At the end of the episode, Donna accepts an offer to travel in the TARDIS. She makes a detour to leave her car keys in a safe location for her mother Sylvia (Jacqueline King), and asks a blonde woman to help Sylvia find the keys. The woman turns towards the camera, revealing her to be Rose Tyler (Billie Piper). She fades from view as she walks away from the area. In the final scene, Donna asks the Doctor to fly by her grandfather, Wilfred, who sees her and celebrates on his allotment.

Production

Casting

“Partners in Crime” features several actors returning to the series. Catherine Tate was offered the opportunity to return as Donna Noble during lunch with executive producer Julie Gardner. Tate, who expected Gardner would ask about appearing in a biopic, later admitted it was “the furthest thing from [her] mind”. Tate’s return was controversial amongst Doctor Who fans; the criticism she received was compared to Daniel Craig after he was cast as James Bond. Howard Attfield, who appeared as Donna’s father Geoff in “The Runaway Bride”, filmed several scenes for this episode, but died before his scenes for the remainder of the season were completed. The producers retired his character out of respect, and dedicated him in the closing credits for the episode. Producer Phil Collinson suggested transferring his traits to the unrelated character Stan Mott from “Voyage of the Damned”, and rewriting his role as Donna’s grandfather. Executive producers Russell T Davies and Gardner liked the idea and recalled Bernard Cribbins to the role to re-film Attfield’s scenes, with the character renamed as Wilfred—a name Davies favoured for Donna’s grandfather—in time for the credits of “Voyage of the Damned” to be changed.

Writing

I see her as a slightly warped Mary Poppins. She’s quite austere. She’s a strong woman. When I first read the script, I thought, oh, well, of course she’s a baddie… but the more I read it, I thought, ‘No, she’s doing what she’s doing for legitimate reasons.’
—Sarah Lancashire

Davies took a different approach while writing the episode. David Tennant and Sarah Lancashire noted the character of Miss Foster had good intentions but was morally ambiguous. The premise of the Adipose pill was equally ambiguous with rare side-effects, but was a “win-win situation” for anyone involved. Davies based the character of Miss Foster on the “Supernanny” Jo Frost and Argentine philanthropist and politician Eva Perón, and Lancashire compared her character to Mary Poppins. The Adipose are a different style to regular Doctor Who villains; antagonists such as Lazarus in “The Lazarus Experiment” or the werewolf in “Tooth and Claw” were singular monsters designed to scare the audience; the Adipose were written as “cute” to provide a “bizarre [and] surreal” experience.

Davies made some changes to Donna’s character. The character was “rounded … out from being a shouting fishwife to someone who’s quite vulnerable and emotional”. Donna was written to provide a “caustic” and “grown-up” attitude towards the Doctor, in opposition to Rose and Martha, who fell in love with him. Tate considered Donna to be more equal to the Doctor because her character did not romanticise him, allowing her to question his morality more easily.

Donna’s mime

In this production, the script requires Catherine Tate, as Donna Noble, to reintroduce herself to The Doctor in mime. The stage directions by writer Russell T Davies are as follows.

Donna does a little mime. I came here, trouble, read about it, internet, I thought, trouble = you! And this place is weird! Pills! So I hid. Back there. Crept along. Looked. You. Cos they…

Tate says Davies had suggested that she might come up with something on the day. She improvised her mime during filming.

Filming

The episode was in the fourth production block in the season, and was filmed in October 2007. The out-of-sequence filming allowed producers to use props to “seed” later episodes; ATMOS, a plot device in the episodes “The Sontaran Stratagem” and “The Poison Sky”, is referred to by a sticker on a taxi’s windscreen. As the episode mostly takes place at night, many scenes were filmed in the early morning.

The scene where Donna and the Doctor investigate Adipose was difficult to film. The scene took thirty shots to complete, and Tennant and Tate experienced problems avoiding each other on-screen. The scene was filmed in a loan company’s call centre in Cardiff’s outskirts on an early Sunday morning, with the company’s telephonists serving as extras.

Exterior shots of Adipose Industries were filmed at the Welsh Gas Board building in Cardiff’s city centre. For health and safety reasons, Tennant was prohibited from performing his own stunts in the window cleaning platform. His only shot that required stunts was when he catches Miss Foster’s sonic pen, a shot that took several takes to perfect.

Adipose

The Adipose were inspired by a stuffed toy Davies owned. The name comes from the scientific name for body fat, adipose tissue. Davies’ brief outlined a “cute” child-friendly creature shaped like a block of lard, similar to the Pillsbury Doughboy. Further consultation with post-production team The Mill resulted in the ears and the singular fang each Adipose has.Stephen Regelous, who won an Academy Award for his software Massive, flew to London to supervise the creation of the crowd special effects. Regelous, a Doctor Who fan, was enthusiastic about helping The Mill with special effects, stating that “When I first found out that the Mill was working on Doctor Who, I was quietly hoping that Massive might be used to create hordes of Daleks or Cybermen and with series 4, I jumped at the opportunity to be involved.” The Mill created two types of Adipose: extras with artificial intelligence and independent movement, and “hero” Adipose, which were hand-animated.

Broadcast and reception

Broadcast and ratings

The episode was broadcast on 5 April 2008 at 18:20, the earliest timeslot since the show’s revival in 2005. Davies criticised the BBC’s scheduling department and claimed the show could lose 1.5 million viewers. The show retained a similar time of broadcast for a further four episodes, before returning to around 19:00. from “The Doctor’s Daughter” onwards.

The preview version of the episode supplied to the press and aired at the press launch omitted the scene that features Rose; before broadcast, only the production team, Tate, and Tennant had seen the scene. The scene contains Rose’s departure theme, “Doomsday”. Tennant commented “on the night of transmission … the Radio Times won’t have told you it’s coming, it’ll come as a genuine [...] prickle up the spine”.

Overnight figures estimated the show was watched by 8.4 million viewers, with a peak of 8.7 million, 39.4% of the television audience. The consolidated rating was 9.1 million viewers. Doctor Who was therefore the most watched show on 5 April, although the Grand National had a higher peak with 10.1 million viewers. The episode’s Appreciation Index was 88 (considered “Excellent”), the highest for any television show aired on 5 April.

Critical reception

The episode received many positive reviews. John Preston, writing for The Daily Telegraph, called the episode an “undiluted triumph”. Opening his review, he said “last night’s episode struck me as being as close to 50 minutes of pure pleasure as you’re likely to get on television”. He noted the episode’s clever tackling of the topical theme of obesity, and its mixture of emotion and special effects. In closing, he said “the dejected critic, denied even the smallest nit to pick, walks glumly away”. Scott Matthewman of The Stage lamented that the Adipose were not threatening enough. He liked the Adipose’s execution of Miss Foster, a “momentary pause in mid-air, gravity only kicking in when the character looks down”, comparing it to Wile E. Coyote and Chuck Jones, which “[was] a nice little touch in an episode … full of them”. He also appreciated Tate, saying that “David Tennant finally has a partner who is approaching an equal”. Sam Wollaston of The Guardian wrote that Tate was “not right for this role” and “too hysterical, too comedy, not cool enough”, and felt her inclusion was an attempt to trade on the popularity of her own series and “broaden the appeal of [Dr Who] still further”. He also found the music “a bit oppressive” but concluded that, despite these criticisms, the show was “still awfully nice television”. Keith Watson of Metro gave the episode 4 stars out of 5. He admitted that despite his dislike of Tate, “she isn’t that bad”. His review of the Adipose was positive, citing them as a reason of the quality of the show. Closing, he said “it split [his] sides”.

Jon Wise of The People said “Doctor Who is a super-galactic way of spending a Saturday night indoors”, and appreciated that Donna was not romantically interested in the Doctor, unlike Martha or Rose. Ben Rawson-Jones gave the episode a wholly positive review, summarising it as containing “pure fantastic family fun, delivering a winning blend of action, comedy, poignancy and one unexpected shock cameo”.

The episode received several negative reviews. Andrew Billen, writing for The Times, lamented that Davies had “forgotten that Doctor Who’s main task is to send children scuttling behind sofas while entertaining their fathers with the odd philosophical idea, the occasional classical reference, a joke or two they would probably not wish to explain and a wee bit of space totty”. Billen also criticised the writing and acting, but commended Tate for a “toned down performance”. Alan Stanley Blair of SyFy Portal summarised it as “a runaway Saturday morning cartoon in desperate need to a solid story”. Blair found flaws with the comedy and the music in the episode, but was impressed with Tate’s acting and Piper’s cameo. Kevin O’Sullivan of the Sunday Mirror criticised Tate and Tennant for overacting, and had concerns about the writing: “It didn’t exactly ooze tension. All we got in the way of terrifying space enemies was Sarah Lancashire hamming it up as an intergalactic super nanny, a couple of security guards with guns and lots of cute little fat babies.”Ian Hyland of News of the World criticised the child-friendly storyline, comparing it to “the back of a fag packet”. He also criticised Tennant for appearing “jaded” and Tate for “still shouting”.

Journey’s End (Doctor Who)

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Inside the TARDIS, Donna collapses near the Doctor's severed hand and commences a mutual transfer of energy.

Journey’s End” is the thirteenth episode of the fourth series of British science fiction television series Doctor Who first broadcast on BBC One on 5 July 2008. It is the second episode of a two-part crossover story, preceded by “The Stolen Earth”. At 65 minutes in length, it is the longest regular episode of Doctor Who, approximately 20 minutes longer than a standard revived series episode. This episode also marks the final appearance of Catherine Tate as continuing companion Donna Noble.

Plot

Synopsis

The episode continues from the end of “The Stolen Earth”; the Doctor (David Tennant) is regenerating inside the TARDIS. Once his body has healed, he halts the transformation by transferring the remaining energy into his severed hand. The TARDIS is captured by the Daleks and transported to the Crucible, the Dalek flagship at the heart of the 27 planets. The Doctor and his previous companions Jack Harkness (John Barrowman) and Rose Tyler (Billie Piper) leave the TARDIS, but Donna Noble (Catherine Tate) is locked in. The Supreme Dalek orders the TARDIS to be destroyed; in the process, Donna collapses by the Doctor’s severed hand, and activates the energy stored in the hand to form a second Doctor who saves the TARDIS from destruction.

Concurrently, Torchwood employees Gwen Cooper (Eve Myles) and Ianto Jones (Gareth David-Lloyd) find safety from an advancing Dalek in an impenetrable time bubble; Sarah Jane Smith (Elisabeth Sladen) is saved from a Dalek extermination by Rose’s ex-boyfriend Mickey Smith (Noel Clarke) and mother Jackie Tyler (Camille Coduri), who surrender with her to get aboard the Crucible; and Martha Jones (Freema Agyeman) teleports to a castle near Nuremberg where the Daleks are heard speaking German.

The Doctor and Rose are taken to Davros (Julian Bleach), creator of the Daleks. The Doctor taunts Davros on account of the fact he is not in charge (Davros having been overthrown, imprisoned and kept alive for his knowledge), but Davros in turn retorts that the Doctor is as much a monster as he. Davros explains that the twenty-seven stolen planets form a compression field which can cancel the electrical energy of atoms. The resulting “reality bomb” has the potential to destroy all matter in every universe; reality itself would be destroyed.

After the device is tested, the Daleks receive two transmissions: Sarah Jane, Mickey, Jack, and Jackie threaten to destroy the Crucible using a “Warpstar” that Sarah Jane had, and Martha threatens to use the Osterhagen Key – a last resort device which would destroy Earth by setting off a chain of nuclear warheads. Their actions cause Davros to challenge the Doctor’s reliance on his companions. The companions, however, are transported to the Vault before they can execute their plans, whereupon Davros gloats over his seeming victory and challenges the Doctor over the deaths he has caused and the sheer number of people who have died for him. Davros calls this my final victory; I have shown you yourself, Doctor.

Davros prepares to detonate the reality bomb, before the TARDIS materialises in front of him. The second Doctor and Donna run out but are stunned by Davros’ energy blasts. The blast activates Time Lord knowledge imbued within Donna when she helped create the second Doctor, and she disables the reality bomb, Davros and the Daleks. The two Doctors help her relocate the missing planets, but the control panel is destroyed by the Supreme Dalek before Earth can be relocated. Davros asks Dalek Caan why he didn’t foresee this, but the Doctor realises that he had. Caan confirms this, citing that having witnessed the atrocities committed by the Daleks throughout time and space, Caan sought to bring an end to it.

Motivated by Dalek Caan’s prophecy of the Daleks’ extinction, and knowing the Daleks could still take the Universe by force, with or without the Reality Bomb, the new Doctor destroys the Daleks and the Crucible. The original Doctor offers to save Davros who refuses, accusing the Doctor of being responsible for the destruction and naming him as “the Destroyer of Worlds”. The companions flee into the TARDIS as the Crucible self-destructs, and “tow” the Earth back into its original orbit with the aid of Sarah Jane’s supercomputer Mr Smith, her robotic dog K-9, and the spatio-temporal rift in Cardiff.

In the dénouement of the episode, the Doctor parts ways with his companions: Sarah Jane returns home to her son Luke; Martha and Mickey leave with Jack; and the Doctor returns Rose and Jackie to the parallel universe they were trapped in, in “Doomsday”. The Doctor leaves the other Doctor to stay in the parallel universe as punishment for committing genocide and to requite Rose’s love. After departing, Donna becomes overwhelmed by the Time Lord knowledge. To save her life, the Doctor is forced to wipe her mind, and explains to her mother Sylvia (Jacqueline King) and grandfather Wilfred Mott (Bernard Cribbins) that Donna must never remember him, even for a second, because she will die if she does so. As the Doctor leaves, Wilfred promises that he will never forget the Doctor on his granddaughter’s behalf.

Continuity

The episode is the culmination of all four series of Doctor Who produced by Russell T Davies; dialogue in the episode refers to the events of “The Christmas Invasion”, in which the Doctor had his hand amputated and regrown during a sword fight and to the Ood naming the time travellers “Doctor-Donna” in “Planet of the Ood. The episode refers to Genesis of the Daleks; Davros mentions Sarah Jane’s presence on Skaro at the creation of the race.

The fictional Dårlig Ulv Stranden (Norwegian: Bad Wolf Bay) seen at the end of “Doomsday”, is revisited. The Doctor’s reply to Rose’s statement of love is specified to Rose but left unheard; Davies deliberately left the reply ambiguous when he wrote “Doomsday”. Executive producer Julie Gardner stated on the “Doomsday” commentary and the Doctor Who Confidential special for “Journey’s End” that the Doctor requited her love.

Davros refers to the Doctor as “The Destroyer of Worlds”. The first reference to this phrase is from the novelisation of Remembrance of the Daleks, which states that the Daleks, in their own language, refer to the Doctor as Ka Faraq Gatri, which translates either as “Bringer of Darkness” or “Destroyer of Worlds”.

Production

Writing

Russell T Davies started writing “Journey’s End” on 11 January 2008. Davies originally planned to show Davros prior to his crippling accident and to reveal how this happened. Davies wrote in the original script that Doctor-Donna would use a standard QWERTY keyboard when she takes control of the Daleks but Production Designer Edward Thomas pointed out that Daleks have suckers and so would be unable to use a QWERTY keyboard. Instead Thomas designed the controls seen in the episode. Also according to the original script, the Doctor was to give Rose’s Doctor a small piece of “coral” from the TARDIS so that he could grow his own TARDIS. This was filmed and survived until the last edit of the episode, but was ultimately cut because the production team felt it made the Bad Wolf Bay scene “too long and complicated”. In addition, Davies decided it should not be seen to be so easy to produce another TARDIS. The clip was included on the Series 4 DVD boxset.

In the BBC commentary for this episode, Phil Collinson and Julie Gardner describe a brief additional scene with Donna which was cut from the final episode:

“There was an additional Donna bit after this goodbye from the Doctor, which is when he goes outside into the TARDIS, we cut back into the kitchen, and there’s a moment where Donna hears the TARDIS… there’s a moment of realisation, and then she turns back round and carries on talking into the phone.”

Gardner considered this scene untruthful and too confusing, since Donna remembering would lead to her death, and since she didn’t recognise the Doctor it wouldn’t make sense to assume she would recognise the noise of the TARDIS.

Locations

Castell Coch, situated minutes away from the Doctor Who studios in Upper Boat, is used as the German castle. The beach at Southerndown, a few miles west of Cardiff, is used once more as Norway’s fictional Dårlig Ulv Stranden (Bad Wolf Bay).

Casting

Mickey Smith (Noel Clarke) and Jackie Tyler (Camille Coduri) make their first appearances in Doctor Who since “Doomsday”. K-9 Mark IV (voiced by John Leeson) makes his first appearance since The Sarah Jane Adventures story The Lost Boy, and his first in Doctor Who since “School Reunion”.

Former Blue Peter presenter Gethin Jones controlled one of the Daleks that escorts the human prisoners aboard the Crucible. He previously played a Cyberman in “Rise of the Cybermen” and has made a cameo appearance as himself in Doctor Who spin-off The Sarah Jane Adventures in the episode “Invasion of the Bane”.

Another Doctor

One significant feature of this episode is the creation of a second Doctor. Unlike the multiple Doctors of stories such as The Two Doctors, where his previous incarnations were played by actors or depicted in old footage, this Doctor is identical in appearance to the Tenth Doctor. In the accompanying Doctor Who Confidential for this episode, Davies explains “This is so busy and so mental and so epic and universal in scale that of course you need two Doctors to solve it.” Phil Collinson, Graeme Harper, and David Tennant discuss the use of the double, a musician called Colum Regan who is a very good physical match for Tennant. Collinson explains that while with an unlimited budget they would use Tennant in every shot, “we only have a certain number of effects shots where you can see the two Doctors together, so we have to pick those carefully.”

Harper is then shown directing a scene in which both Regan and Tennant are shown around the TARDIS console. Harper explains that in “two or three wide shots” they were able to use Regan and Tennant together. For the most part the double is used for scenes where one or the other Doctor is only seen from behind, or only an arm or back of the head is seen in a shot. The double has appeared in other episodes throughout the series. Over documentary footage showing the shooting of the scene where the new Doctor emerges from the TARDIS, Tennant describes the procedure for making an effects shot involving Tennant as both Doctors. The camera is locked in place while Tennant goes off and changes clothing, with Regan holding his place. A shot is made for reference with Regan, then another shot is made without Regan. This enables the shots to be merged during editing to create the effect of having David Tennant in two places in the same shot.

Broadcast and reception

Broadcast

The episode was screened free in Trafalgar Square in London as part of Pride London 2008; the third series finale was planned to be shown during the 2007 event, but was cancelled as a security measure. A teaser trailer was appended to promote the 2008 Christmas Special featuring the Cybermen in their first appearance since “Doomsday”.

“Journey’s End” was watched by 10.57 million viewers when broadcast on BBC1, giving it a 45.9% share of the total television audience. The episode was the most-viewed programme of the week; “Journey’s End” is the first Doctor Who episode to receive this rank. It also received an Appreciation Index score of 91, equalling the record for the programme set by its predecessor “The Stolen Earth”. A story on the BBC News website described fan reaction of the serials on the Digital Spy and Ain’t It Cool News forums as “mixed”.

Canadian Broadcast

The episode was premiered in Canada on 12 December 2008. Although the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation is credited as a co-producer, the CBC cut 21 minutes from the episode to fit it in a 60-minute timeslot with advertising. This edit removed numerous subplots as well as the final farewells by the various companions, as well as the final scene of the Doctor alone in his TARDIS. The CBC subsequently streamed the unedited version of the episode on its website.

Critical reception

The Telegraph’s John Preston states that this episode of Doctor Who “[a]s usual…served up a lot more than mere excitement.” He credits Doctor Who’s success partly to its “richly defined characters behaving in readily identifiable ways.” Also of The Telegraph, Sarah Crompton wrote that the episode was “exciting, incomprehensible, satisfying and slightly irritating all at the same time”. Although Crompton said “It was inevitable that the start would be an anti-climax”, she praised the special effects and also noted that she would miss “the warmth and humour” that Tate brought to the series.Lucy Mangan in a humorous review for The Guardian that rewrites the dialogue between Tennant’s and Cribbins’ characters at the end as a discussion of the plot, described it as providing “something for everyone”. In The Times, Andrew Billen called “Journey’s End” “a spectacular finale that…gave the lie to the truism that more always, dramatically speaking, adds up to less.”

Mark Wright of The Stage likens “Journey’s End” to “one big house of cards…[that] will come crashing down” if thought about too much. However, he had no problem with the resolution of “The Stolen Earth”’s cliffhanger and is critical of those who complain about feeling cheated by the lack of a regeneration. Though he expresses that he saw little need for Mickey and Jackie in this episode, he asserts that Donna had “the saddest end for a companion ever” and praises Davies for just managing to keep the plot together. He argues that as Davies “writes the emotions and big themes so well…blow logic and rational plot moments if they get in the way!” He compares Davies’s writing style to “PT Barnum showmanship” and praises both the dark and light elements of the episode. He concludes that, if not overthought, the episode remains “an audacious, big, silly, often poignant season finale”.

Writing for The Mirror, Jim Shelley is highly critical of this episode in his review describing it as “[d]emented rather than dazzling”. He was confused by the two Doctors played by David Tennant, saw little development in Donna across the series and was puzzled by the Doctor’s attempt to save his arch-enemy, Davros. He claims that “amidst all the shrieking, shouting, and mock operatic bluster, [he was] sure [he] saw a kitchen sink thrown in for good measure. Riddled with scientific mumbo-jumbo, it was too chaotic and long-winded to be the classic farewell Russell T Davies promised.” He argues that the plot “went haywire” and that “Rose and the two Tennants acted out a sort of twisted menage a trois.” In conclusion he states “Tennant’s cheeky chappie mannerisms made the show into an extraterrestrial EastEnders.”

In Scotland’s Daily Record, Paul English called the episode “yet another fizzing Doctor Who adventure” and said that “Writer and producer Russell T Davies makes TV with the epic feel of the movies. He gets more tension, humour and emotion into an hour of telly than many films manage in twice the time with double the budget.” He lamented that “Journey’s End” “lacked the goofiness” of the series’ 2005 return, but concluded that the finale was “TV gold”.

Dave Golder of SFX says “If, while your brain is telling you, ‘This is crap!’ your heart is still doing backflips then it’s your kind of episode. ‘Journey’s End’ is almost a two fingers up at technobabble; there’s certainly tons of it in the episode, but it’s largely irrelevant.” He praises the action sequences and the portrayal of Donna, Davros, Rose and the Doctor, but remarks that the overcrowding of minor characters made parts of the script seem “underdeveloped” and describes the Daleks as mostly “[c]annon fodder”. “[The] plot does hang together, but only just”. Overall, he describes the episode as “exceptional” but “not perfect”.

Ben Rawson-Jones of Digital Spy describes the episode as “a satisfying and epic crowdpleasing conclusion” to the series and particularly praises Tate and Donna’s exit. He states the episode mixes poignant and haunting scenes with “‘punch the air’ moments and fan-pleasing twists.” Noting the episode is “not entirely flawless”, he is critical of the Daleks’ seemingly “too convenient” demise arguing that it undermines their menace. Writing for the Doctor Who blog on the Radio Times website, William Gallagher called “Journey’s End” “event drama” and “party television”. He stated that the resolution to the regeneration cliff-hanger left him feeling “a bit cheated”, but praised the episode’s characterisation, concluding that David Tennant “has been the best Doctor of them all” and that “Doctor Who is the best drama on TV: it’s the one with most verve and spark and exuberant excitement.” John Beresford of TV Scoop called the finale “just about the most exciting Doctor Who episode [he could] ever remember”, and “a fantastically imaginative, exciting and action-packed finale to the fourth series.”

Meat (Torchwood)

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

The ever growing alien provides a seemingly unlimited supply of meat.

Meat” is the fourth episode of the second series of British science fiction television series Torchwood, which was broadcast by BBC Two on 6 February 2008.

Plot

Synopsis

Rhys Williams is out driving when he is telephoned by a work mate to inform him that one of their firm’s lorries has crashed. He drives to the site of the crash and see that one of his employees and friends has died. Torchwood appears on the scene and Rhys spots Gwen amongst them.

The Torchwood team confiscates the meat that the lorry was transporting when they suspect it of being alien. Gwen recognises the lorry as one from Rhys’ firm. Back at the Hub, Toshiko rings Rhys’ office for information, pretending to be the police. Rhys texts Gwen asking for her to come home. He attempts to get her to confess to being at the crash site but she is evasive.

Rhys sees Gwen meeting up with Jack near the invisible lift in Roald Dahl Plass and follows her to a factory. While there he is captured by a group of men and taken into the factory. Jack and Gwen see this and mistake his actions for collaboration. The men show Rhys that they have captured a live “space whale” (nicknamed the “cash cow” by its captors) which is the source of the meat and which continues to grow despite them cutting chunks of its flesh away while it is still alive. In an act of self-preservation, Rhys agrees to replace his dead employee for the men.

Back at their flat, Rhys and Gwen argue over her being at the crash and Gwen admits to the nature of her work for Torchwood. Rhys is disbelieving until she shows him around the Hub. With Rhys’ help the team manages to inflitrate the factory so they can free the alien creature. The team hides in one of Rhys’ vans and Rhys drives them to the factory where the team sneaks in.

They locate the creature and plan to stun the men and sedate it so they can move it back to the Hub until the Cardiff spacetime Rift reopens. They confirm that the creature is sentient, but the men discover them and in the fight Rhys is shot. The creature becomes distressed and Owen can see no other option but to euthanise it when it poses a threat to them by struggling; he injects it with a chemical solution, tearfully apologizing to the dying creature as it slowly expires, and as Toshiko lays a comforting hand on his shoulder. They are able to stun the men and feed them amnesia pills. Back at the Hub, Owen patches up Rhys’ wound and Jack orders Gwen to give Rhys a pill too. She finds that she cannot bring herself to do so and Jack relents, disappointed about this but unwilling to fire Gwen and face losing her from the team.

Continuity

The Pterodactyl makes a brief appearance in this episode, its first of this series.

Outside references

There are passing references to Scooby-Doo, Captain Ahab, and Band Aid.

Reception

On overnight returns, The Guardian reported that the episode gained a healthy 11% share, 2.9 million viewers on BBC2 in is first broadcast at 9pm on February 6 while BBC One showed a live Match of the Day featuring the debut of new England football manager Fabio Capello in a match with the Switzerland team and ITV fielded the drama series Honest starring Amanda Redman.

Silence in the Library

Saturday, June 27th, 2009

Professor River Song questions the Doctor about where he is on their personal timelines.

“Silence in the Library” is the eighth episode of the fourth series of the revived British science fiction television series Doctor Who, first broadcast on 31 May 2008. It is the first of a two-part story, followed by “Forest of the Dead”, and is the second two-parter Steven Moffat has contributed to the series after “The Empty Child”/”The Doctor Dances” in 2005. A few days before the episode aired, the BBC announced that Moffat will become Head Writer of the programme for the show’s fifth series in 2010, replacing current Head Writer Russell T Davies, who has held the role since Doctor Who returned to television in 2005.

Plot

Synopsis

The Doctor and Donna arrive in the 51st century at a planet-sized book repository simply called “The Library”, summoned by an anonymous request for help on the Doctor’s psychic paper. However, they find it completely devoid of humanoid life, and the Library’s computers even claim as such, though when the Doctor widens the search for non-humanoid life, the Library’s computers claim over “a million million lifeforms” exist. A Node, an information drone which presents a donated human face to the user to facilitate communication, warns them to count the shadows, which appear despite the lack of objects to cast them. As they try to search for answers, they meet a team of explorers, led by archaeologist River Song, who have come to ascertain the meaning of the Library’s final communication, which states “4022 saved, no survivors”. River Song seems to know the Doctor, has a diary with a cover matching the Doctor’s TARDIS, and even possesses a sonic screwdriver. She also later displays knowledge of the TARDIS’s “emergency programme one”. She only admits that she will know the Doctor in his relative future, refusing to disclose more for fear of spoilers. Professor Song also recognises Donna’s name, but avoids explaining why Donna was not present when she knew the Doctor.

The Doctor organises the team to make sure the area is well lit as he explains that they are surrounded by Vashta Nerada, microscopic carnivorous creatures that disguise themselves as shadows to hunt and latch onto their prey. He notes that they are usually nowhere near as aggressive or numerous as the ones here seem to be. Before he can fully explain, however, Miss Evangelista wanders off and is stripped to the bone in moments. The Doctor and Donna learn that the exploration team wears communication devices which link to their nervous systems for thought-based communication. As a side-effect, these devices tend to retain an imprint of the user at the moment of death, creating a short-lived “Data Ghost” of that person’s consciousness, which is capable of communicating with the living (being ‘unaware’ that it is dead) but eventually dissipates to the point where it simply repeats the last thing it said or nonsense.

Curiously, the Library’s operations seem to be tied to the imagination of a young girl; she sees the Doctor and Donna through the eyes of a security camera when they first break into the central room, the exploration team appears on her television when the Doctor attempts to hack the Library computers, and books fly from the shelves when she fiddles with the television’s remote control. The girl is under the observation of Dr. Moon, a child psychologist, at the request of her dad, but Dr. Moon insists to the girl that what she imagines in her nightmares is in fact real, while the real world is a lie. He also states that there are people in her library who need to be saved.

The team’s investigation is interrupted when a shadow of Vashta Nerada latches onto the pilot, Dave. Although the Doctor attempts to save him by sealing him inside his suit, the creatures manage to get inside, eat him alive, and then animate his suit in order to chase the other explorers. The Doctor attempts to teleport Donna back to the TARDIS while he leads the rest of the team to safety, but something goes wrong with the teleport and Donna fails to materialise properly. As the team races away from the possessed suit, the Doctor is horrified to find a Node with Donna’s face on it, which claims that Donna has left the Library and has been saved. The show ends in a cliffhanger as the Doctor is forced to leave the Node behind, but is trapped by the approaching suit on one side and the Vashta Nerada shadows on the other.

Continuity

As shown on the BBC Doctor Who website, there are a number of books in the library either written by former Doctor Who writers or featured in previous episodes. Among those seen are the operating manual for the TARDIS, Origins of the Universe (Destiny of the Daleks), The French Revolution (An Unearthly Child), the Journal of Impossible Things (”Human Nature”/”The Family of Blood”), The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy (written by Douglas Adams, former Doctor Who writer and script editor), Everest in Easy Stages (The Creature from the Pit) and Black Orchid (a book first seen in the Fifth Doctor serial of the same name).

The Doctor mentions that “emergency program one” will send Donna home should she be left alone in the TARDIS for five hours. In “The Parting of the Ways”, this program was activated by the Ninth Doctor to send Rose Tyler home.

According to Steven Moffat, the squareness gun used by Professor River Song to help the party escape from the impending Vashta Nerada is intended to be the same sonic blaster that was used by Jack Harkness in the episode “The Doctor Dances”. Moffat suggests that it was left in the TARDIS after “The Parting of the Ways”, and taken by River Song in the Doctor’s future. The name “squareness gun” was coined by Rose in the earlier episode.

The psychic paper has previously summoned the Doctor to a location in “New Earth”, where the Face of Boe called the Doctor to his supposed deathbed.

The Doctor also mentions that he loves “a little shop”, a sentiment previously expressed in the episodes “New Earth” and “Smith and Jones”.

The Doctor says, “I’m sorry. I’m so sorry,” to Dave once he realises the Vashta Nerada have latched onto him. This has been a recurring phrase throughout the new series.

Broadcast and reception

“Silence in the Library” was scheduled against the final of ITV’s talent contest Britain’s Got Talent and suffered in the ratings as a result. BARB’s final figures recorded an audience 6.27 million when adjusted for time shifting. Britain’s Got Talent was viewed by 11.52 million in comparison. This was the first time since the series’ revival in 2005 that Doctor Who did not have the largest audience share in its timeslot.

However, the episode did receive an Appreciation Index score of 89 (considered “Excellent”), the joint highest figure the new series had received to date, alongside “The Parting of the Ways”, “Doomsday” and the following episode “Forest of the Dead”. BBC Three’s repeat of the episode was watched by 1.35 million viewers, almost double the figures for the equivalent repeat of the previous episode, “The Unicorn and the Wasp”.

This episode, along with “Forest of the Dead”, has been nominated for a Hugo Award in the Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form category.

Production

Casting

For the role of River Song, whom producer Russell T Davies describes as “sort of the Doctor’s wife”, the production sought to cast Kate Winslet. One of Winslet’s first acting roles was in the BBC teen drama Dark Season, written by Davies. The role of River Song eventually went to Alex Kingston, about whom Davies said, “I bloody love her!”

The role of Strackman Lux went to Steve Pemberton, who is best known for his work as a member of The League of Gentlemen. Pemberton’s fellow League member Mark Gatiss wrote the Doctor Who episodes “The Unquiet Dead” and “The Idiot’s Lantern”, and appeared in the episode “The Lazarus Experiment”.

Locations

Certain scenes were filmed at the Old Swansea Central Library and the Brangwyn Hall in Swansea, Wales.

A Day in the Death

Saturday, June 27th, 2009

Owen holds on to "the Pulse", expecting it to explode.

A Day in the Death” is the eighth episode of the second series of British science fiction television series Torchwood, which was broadcast by BBC Three on 27 February 2008. This episode is the last of three to feature Doctor Who companion, Martha Jones, and also features guest star Richard Briers.

Plot

Owen Harper narrates the opening of the episode, detailing his life and his death, which he is living through. On top of a building Owen sits with a woman, asking her if she is ready to jump.

After revealing his undead state, Owen tells the woman about the days since his death, shown as a series of flashbacks. Jack relieves Owen of his duties so he can be monitored and protected. Owen is angry when Martha Jones assumes his position, and further disheartened when he is given Ianto’s job of making coffee. He feels useless, conscious that he’s always been alone while each one of the Torchwood team has or has had someone in their life (Ianto and Jack, Gwen and Rhys, Martha and her boyfriend, Tosh and Tommy).

Martha concludes that Owen is 100% human yet will not age. The team discusses a series of energy spikes coming from the estate of a reclusive collector of alien artifacts, Henry Parker. Parker has not been seen since 1986, leading the team to wonder what he has inside his house. They devise a plan to find out the origin of the energy spikes, excluding Owen from the task.

As Owen toys with a scalpel in the autopsy room, Martha tries to reassure him that she doesn’t want his job. While talking, she realises that Owen has sliced his hand – a wound he can’t feel, which won’t heal. Owen heads home, where he begins to clear out his apartment. Tosh arrives to keep him company, and Owen zones out.

On the roof, the woman says Owen and Tosh sound like a married couple. She tells him that her husband died in a car accident on their wedding day. She asks Owen if things get better when you die, and Owen flashes back to his apartment. He asks Tosh why she is there, and becomes angry when she offers to help. After insulting Toshiko, Owen intentionally breaks his finger to show her how ‘broken’ he is, before attempting suicide. He fails to drown since he has no need for breath.

At the Hub, the team realise that heat-sensors on the Parker estate make it impossible for them to get inside. When Owen points out that he has no body heat, Jack agrees to take him on the mission.

After successfully entering the house, Owen reaches Parker, an old man linked up to many ventilators and medical machines. The man says he suffered a failed bypass and three heart attacks, but is being kept alive by a glowing object he calls “the Pulse”. Owen explains that it isn’t keeping him alive; hope is doing the job. Owen promises to help Parker face his fear of death, but Parker suffers another heart attack. Unable to draw breath himself, Owen cannot perform CPR, and Parker dies.

Tosh tells Owen that “the Pulse” will explode with nothing to prevent it. Owen holds the object, telling the team he’ll try to absorb its energy. Owen begins to say his goodbyes, praising Martha as his replacement, and apologising to Tosh. Tosh says she loves him and Owen hugs the object as it begins to glow. On the roof, the woman looks at Owen incredulously, asking what happened next. Owen mentions that life is sometimes not as bad as we think, and retrieves “the Pulse” from his backpack. They had falsely identified it, as it was actually a reply to one of humanity’s satellites, launched to make contact with alien life. The object produces a beautiful light and Owen answers the woman’s earlier question: it does get better.

In flashback, after the team says farewell to Martha, Owen promises to tell Tosh whenever he’s feeling bad, admitting he’s scared of the darkness and becoming trapped. Walking along a footpath, Owen picks up a photo of the woman on the roof, which had fallen from a building above. This is what brought him there: not to jump himself, but to save her. Owen tells her that if she cannot see anything left for her, then she should jump; but if she can see a glimmer of hope then it’s worth taking a chance. She introduces herself as Maggie; and as Owen holds her hand, they watch the light show from “the Pulse”.

Continuity

  • One of Henry Parker’s purchases was a Dogon Eye, an item last seen in “Random Shoes”. The official website states that he has recently purchased a Cyberman arm and chest unit.
  • In the opening scene, archive footage of Louise Delamere as Diane Holmes, Owen’s first series love interest, is shown. Also in the opening montage, clips from episodes such as “Everything Changes”, “Ghost Machine”, “Out of Time” and “Meat” can be glimpsed.
  • This is the second episode in which Owen is relieved of his duties. He was previously dismissed by Jack after he opened the rift in “End of Days”.

Outside references

  • Owen says that Torchwood filed Henry Parker as “Mostly Harmless,” a reference to the book by the same name by Douglas Adams, who used to write for Doctor Who. “Mostly Harmless” was the revised entry for planet Earth in the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, also written by Adams. The original entry for Earth was “harmless”.
  • Owen criticises Ianto for liking Tintin. Owen thinks Tintin is weird, and reckons “he was shagging the dog” (his pet Snowy). Later in the episode, Owen is given a Tintin T-shirt. Doctor Who writer Steven Moffat is currently writing a screenplay for a forthcoming Tintin movie.
  • In reference to his reclusiveness, Parker is stated to be “a bit Howard Hughes”.
  • The symptoms of Owen’s death (numbness, inability to heal) have similarities to leprosy, as suffered by the protagonist of Stephen R Donaldson’s The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant. The alien words spoken by Owen in the “Dead Man Walking” (melenkurion, abatha, duroc, minas, mill and khabaal) were also taken from Donaldson’s novels.

Production

Cast notes

Richard Briers previously played the Chief Caretaker in the Seventh Doctor serial Paradise Towers.

Music

The song playing in Owen’s apartment is “Atlas” by Battles.

The Last Sontaran

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

As Kaagh, the last Sontaran of the Tenth Sontaran Battle Fleet, attempts to take Luke, Clyde, Maria and Sarah Jane captive, Maria creates a distraction by pointing to UNIT troops supposedly coming up behind Kaagh.

The Last Sontaran is the first story of Series 2 of The Sarah Jane Adventures and is a continuation of events from Doctor Who two-part story “The Sontaran Strategem” and “The Poison Sky”. The two-part story, The Last Sontaran, was broadcast on 29 September 2008; “Part One” as part of the CBBC slot on BBC One at 4.35 p.m.; “Part Two” on the CBBC Channel at 5.15 p.m..

Plot

Synopsis

Part One

Alan Jackson (Joseph Millson) is offered a job in Washington, D.C. in the United States of America, but seeks daughter Maria’s (Yasmin Paige) and ex-wife Chrissie’s (Juliet Cowan) approval before he relocates himself and Maria there.

After strange lights are sighted around the Tycho Radio Tower, Sarah Jane Smith (Elisabeth Sladen), Luke Smith (Tommy Knight), Clyde Langer (Daniel Anthony) and Maria investigate. As shown in the picture, they discover Sontaran Commander Kaagh (Anthony O’Donnell), the only survivor of the Tenth Sontaran Battle Fleet which was otherwise seen to be destroyed in Doctor Who episode “The Poison Sky”. Kaagh plans to avenge his fleet by bringing Earth’s satellites down on nuclear power plants across the world thereby wiping out all of humanity with the resultant explosions.

Part Two

Failing to overpower Kaagh as he implements his plan, Sarah Jane, Luke, Clyde and Maria are saved by the arrival of Alan and Chrissie, the latter discovering the truth about Sarah Jane’s alien investigations. Chrissie knocks Kaagh unconscious by jamming the high-heel of her shoe into the probic vent on the back of his neck, but an electrical charge also knocks her out and Alan and Maria think they can pass the day’s events off to her as a dream. Luke is able to deactivate the computer Kaagh has rigged to ground the satellites and with his ship’s weapons deactivated, Kaagh is sent back to his home planet, Sontar.

Six weeks later, Alan and Maria leave for America. Chrissie reveals to Sarah Jane that she remembers everything about the Sontaran incident.

Continuity

Reference is made to the Bane seen in “Invasion of the Bane”; the Slitheen seen in Revenge of the Slitheen and The Lost Boy; the Gorgon and Alan’s being turned to stone seen in Eye of the Gorgon; the Trickster and the alternate reality seen in Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?; and the Xylok, the Moon coming towards Earth and the rebooting of Mr Smith (Alexander Armstrong) as seen in The Lost Boy. Kaagh refers to the Doctor’s victory over the Sontarans in Doctor Who two-part story “The Sontaran Strategem”/”The Poison Sky” and footage of the Sontaran mothership exploding is re-used from “The Poison Sky”, marking the first time footage from Doctor Who has been used in The Sarah Jane Adventures. Kaagh is shown to bleed green blood as other Sontarans have been shown to in Doctor Who. Sarah Jane refers to her past encounters with Sontarans, alongside the Third Doctor in Earth’s relative past in Doctor Who serial The Time Warrior and alongside the Fourth Doctor and Harry Sullivan in Earth’s relative future in Doctor Who serial The Sontaran Experiment. Clyde observes that Sontarans resemble baked potatoes, an observation also made by Sarah Jane and Bea Nelson-Stanley in Eye of the Gorgon, and by Private Ross Jenkins in The Sontaran Stratagem. Sarah Jane plans to call in military organisation UNIT to defeat Kaagh, but ultimately does not. UNIT battled the Tenth Sontaran Battle Fleet in “The Sontaran Strategem” and “The Poison Sky”. Sarah Jane refers to the Sontarans’ ongoing war with the Rutans. Stating “Some people never learn”, Chrissie breaks into Sarah Jane’s house through the same window she did in Eye of the Gorgon. As Maria enters the attic to take one last look around and to say goodbye to Mr Smith, she looks to her left and sees numerous alien objects Sarah Jane has collected, including; a bottle of Bubble Shock! seen in “Invasion of the Bane”; Mr Smith’s Portable Scanner; a Sontaran gas canister and Kaagh’s gun taken from Kaagh in this story; the MITRE headset seen in The Lost Boy; a puzzle box seen in Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?; and entanglement shells seen in Warriors of Kudlak.

Outside references

Clyde and Luke refer to the Battle of Waterloo and the Battle of Hoth, the latter seen in Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back (1980 and 1997). Sarah Jane likens the empty observatory to deserted ship the Mary Celeste. Clyde likens Kaagh to Conan the Barbarian, calls him “Bilbo” and accuses him of having a “little man complex”. When Sarah Jane asks Mr Smith if he has acquired a sense of humor since his reboot, he replies, “I will run a diagnostics check immediately” whilst playing the sound effect associated with the Book from the television adaptation of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Chrissie refers to Sarah Jane as “Mary Jane” and “Calamity Jane”. When Alan tries to convince Chrissie that Maria is playing an alternate reality game, Chrissie compares it to the time they spent “looking for a golden rabbit” when they were dating, referring to Kit Williams’ Masquerade.

Production

Writing

Speaking to Doctor Who Magazine, writer Phil Ford claims “we haven’t seen a Sontaran like this before” and states the character “was just fantastic to write for”. Ford thinks Kaagh is “the best Sontaran that we’ve ever seen in the Doctor Who world” and describes Anthony O’Donnell’s performance as “fantastic…[making] an amazing Sontaran”. The Jacksons were written out as regulars in The Sarah Jane Adventures because Yasmin Paige left the series in order to focus on her GCSEs.

Broadcast and reception

Broadcast

“Part One” was first broadcast on BBC One at 4.35 p.m. on Monday 29 September 2008 and was repeated on the CBBC Channel at 5.00 p.m. on Saturday 4 October 2008. “Part Two” was first broadcast on the CBBC Channel at 5.15 p.m. on Monday 29 September 2008 and was repeated on BBC One at 4.35 p.m. on Monday 6 October 2008. Both episodes were made available for 21 days after first broadcast on the BBC iPlayer.

Ratings

Overnight ratings for “Part One” of The Last Sontaran indicate that 0.7 million people (0.3 million above the average 0.4 million viewers for that time slot) watched the episode on BBC One on Monday 29 September 2008, earning it a 6.3 per cent share of the television audience. The Appreciation Index for the episode was 84 – the joint highest figure on BBC One on Monday 29 September 2008.

Critical reception

Ben Rawson-Jones, Cult Editor for Digital Spy, praises The Last Sontaran for its “emotional content”, but notes that “Part Two” “disappoints in the action stakes” following “Part One”. He argues that the title The Last Sontaran nullifies any potential suspense prior to the revelation of the Sontaran as the force behind the mysterious lights, but praises O’Donnell’s performance as Kaagh as being largely responsible for making the Sontaran plot a success. He views Sarah Jane’s reaction to Maria’s news that she is leaving as “a fascinating departure from her usual maternal role to the children” and suggests this is a result of Sarah Jane having been abandoned by the Fourth Doctor at the end of Doctor Who serial The Hand of Fear. He claims Part Two has “[p]lenty of tension-free chase sequences function[ing] as meaningless padding and lessen[ing] the threat posed by Commander Kaagh”, attributing the lack of tension to “inadequate direction.” He brands Clyde and Luke as “dependable as ever” and the Jacksons as “endearing”, the latter compensating “for [Part Two's] action failings” with Maria and Alan’s departure being “well handled” and “touching” and Chrissie being “a revelation…[as] her seemingly vacuous nature has been replaced by an air of mystery.” Although Rawson-Jones notes “the subplot featuring the Sontaran-controlled Professor stalking his own daughter Lucy is rather disturbing for a CBBC show that airs at 4.35pm”, he describes the adventure as “[f]ittingly…death-free and surprisingly heartwarming.” However, he laments “that this wonderful show is not being shown in a timeslot when the whole family could sit down to enjoy it together.”

Writing for Dreamwatch, Patrick Holm describes “Part One” as “[o]verall, a good start” but argues that “[s]ome odd gaps in logic and excess runarounds make…["Part Two"] not as effective as it could have been.” Holm expresses surprise at the lack of references to the “literally world-shaking events” of Doctor Who episode “Journey’s End” which precedes this story chronologically and which saw a Dalek invasion of Earth and Sarah Jane, Luke and Mr Smith helping to defeat them and return Earth to its rightful place in space. However, he states Ford’s script for “Part One” is “enjoyable” and praises its mixing of “old and new Who mythologies” with its many “other references back to the parent series [Doctor Who]“. He also praises Ford for “giving the Sontarans a few new tricks” and notes that the effects in “Part One” indicate that the budget for The Sarah Jane Adventures has been increased. Whilst praising Knight and Langer for being “much more fluid in their movements”, Holm does not share Rawson-Jones’s appreciation for the emotional scenes in “Part One” regarding Maria’s departure and claims they lack “the resonance you might expect.” Holm does state, however, that “[t]he scenes regarding Maria’s departure are handled better…[in "Part Two"], even if some of the closing scene platitudes are a little vomit-inducing.” He cites as examples of weaknesses in “Part Two”; the ease with which Kaagh is fooled by the children; and the incredible luck Clyde has when Sarah Jane and Luke happen to be on the other side of a locked door in order to let him in thus saving him from Kaagh. He is also critical of the reuse of the threat of “something being brought crashing down to Earth…an overused plot last season” and observes that an “end of season rematch with Kaarg is unsubtly telegraphed”. However, he does states that “[t]here are some good moments [in "Part Two"], particularly as Chrissie Jackson gets more character development in one 30-second scene than she had in most of [Series One]“.

Holm likens Sarah Jane’s gang to Mystery, Inc. from Scooby-Doo and sees Kaagh as “a character somewhere between the sadistic Styre from The Sontaran Experiment and General Staal in “The Sonataran Stratagem”.” Both Rawson-Jones and Holm view Kaagh’s cloaking abilities as a “homage” to “’80s action classic” Predator (1987).

Forest of the Dead

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Donna discovers that Miss Evangelista was corrupted when she was uploaded to the data core.

Forest of the Dead” is the ninth episode of the fourth series of British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was first broadcast by BBC One on 7 June 2008. It is the second of a two-part story, following “Silence in the Library”.

Plot

Synopsis

The Doctor, Strackman Lux, Dr. River Song and the rest of her group successfully flee from the Vashta Nerada that were pursuing them at the end of “Silence in the Library”. As the group light up the room to dispel the shadows the Vashta Nerada may hide in, the Doctor finds that the Library’s moon is sending out electromagnetic signals that interfere with his sonic screwdriver. Lux explains that the moon acts as a virus checker on the Library’s computer core, causing the Doctor to recognize that Donna and the other 4022 people that were “saved” according to the Library were actually stored in the data core. The group make for the access point to the computer core, still pursued by the spacesuits of Song’s former teammates possessed by the Vashta Nerada. The Doctor pauses a moment to try to reason with the Vashta Nerada, and learns that the books in the Library were made from the trees that their species has laid its eggs in. The Vashta Nerada awoke in the Library and now take it as their their own forest to defend.

Meanwhile, Donna wakes up in the care of Dr. Moon inside the Earth-like computer simulation, though Dr. Moon as well as the little girl that watches Donna from her television attempt to prevent Donna from recognizing it as such. Dr. Moon introduces Donna to a man Lee, and the two become lovers, married, and have two children, though to Donna she seems to skip between these events. One day, Donna is met by Miss Evangelista, who explains that the Library had stored her persona when she was attacked by the Vashta Nerada, but due to corruption, her face has become severely deformed, although she has become more intelligent. As such, Evangelista is “brilliant but unloved” and is able to see the computer simulation for what it is, and tries to pass her knowledge of the simulation to Donna. The little girl causes a distraction to prevent Donna from learning the full truth, but Donna’s confidence is shaken, and when her children doubt her existence, they disappear. Donna desperately seeks out Lee. The little girl, fearing that the truth may be known, “deletes” her father and Dr. Moon, and descends into further despair.

The Doctor and his group reach the core as Lux explains that “CAL”, the name they have been seeing associated with the core, is the girl that is watching them through her television. She is really his aunt Charlotte Abigail Lux. As a child, she suffered from an incurable disease and Lux’s grandfather paid for the construction of the Library, hooking Charlotte to its computer to allow her to spend eternity surrounded by humanity’s literature. However, now that over four thousand other persons are in the core with her, even the “doctor” moon cannot help to keep the computer systems going. The Doctor plans to connect himself into the core to provide the stability to allow the rescued patrons to be reconstituted, and has Lux prepare for their arrival. When the Vashta Nerada threaten to attack them, the Doctor negotiates a deal—that once he frees the people from the core, he will have humanity leave the Library to them forever. River Song recognizes that the Doctor will die if he attempts to put himself in the data core, and knocks him out, taking his place instead. Much to the Doctor’s anguish, Song reminds him that he will see her in his relative future and that there would be only one reason why she would know the Doctor’s real name. As Song connects herself to the system, Donna attempts to race to Lee in the simulation before it whites out.

The Doctor’s plan works as expected as all the stored humans, including Donna, are returned to corporeal form, and Lux begins to transport the humans off the planet. Donna attempts to find Lee but just misses him before he is transported away. The Doctor mournfully leaves Song’s diary and sonic screwdriver to the Library, but suddenly questions why he would have given her the screwdriver in his future. He discovers that the screwdriver has a Data Ghost device in it, and races to the computer core to transfer its data into the computer. River Song awakens in the computer simulation, greeted by Charlotte, Dr. Moon, Evangelista (her appearance restored to normal) and the rest of her team, and thanks the Doctor.

Continuity

According to Steven Moffat, the squareness gun used by Professor River Song to help the party escape from the impending Vashta Nerada at the beginning of the episode is intended to be the same sonic blaster that was used by Jack Harkness in the episode “The Doctor Dances”. Moffat suggests that it was left in the TARDIS after “The Parting of the Ways”, and taken by River Song in the Doctor’s future. The name “squareness gun” was coined by Rose Tyler in the earlier episode. The Bad Wolf motif (seen prominently during series one as well as in other places) is alluded to once more: a picture of blonde girl and a wolf is visible in Charlotte’s house.

Professor River Song uses the Doctor’s name (not heard by the viewer) in order to gain his trust. The secret behind the Doctor’s true name was also explored in “The Girl in the Fireplace” (also by Steven Moffat), “The Shakespeare Code” and “The Fires of Pompeii”, and later referred to in “Midnight”. According to the Doctor, he could only tell his name to someone at one (unspecified) point in his life.

Production

Writing

“Forest of the Dead” was initially announced under the title “River’s Run”, before its name was changed relatively late in production. Josh and Ella, Donna’s two children in the computer-generated world, were named after Steven Moffat’s son and his son’s friend.

Casting

For the role of River Song, whom producer Russell T Davies describes as “sort of the Doctor’s wife”, the production sought to cast Kate Winslet. One of Winslet’s first acting roles was in the BBC teen drama Dark Season, written by Davies. The role of River Song eventually went to Alex Kingston, about whom Davies said, “I bloody love her!”

The role of Strackman Lux went to Steve Pemberton, who is best known for his work as a member of The League of Gentlemen. Pemberton’s fellow League member Mark Gatiss wrote the Doctor Who episodes “The Unquiet Dead” and “The Idiot’s Lantern”, and appeared in the episode “The Lazarus Experiment”.

Filming

Several scenes from this episode and “Silence in the Library” were filmed at Swansea’s Brangwyn Hall. These include the library reception area where the TARDIS arrives, and the staircase where the Doctor and Donna look out over the empty library. The climactic scenes of the episode (in the library core) were filmed in an electrical substation of a disused Alcoa factory in Waunarlwydd, Swansea.

The wedding dress Catherine Tate wears in this episode is the same dress she wore in “The Runaway Bride”.

Reception

Forest of the Dead was watched by 7.84 million viewers, giving it a 40% audience share; the highest in Series Four and the highest in its timeslot. The episode received an Appreciation Index score of 89 (considered “Excellent”), one of the highest figures the new series had received to date, alongside “The Parting of the Ways”, “Doomsday” and the preceding episode “Silence in the Library”.

This episode, along with “Silence in the Library”, has been nominated for a Hugo Award in the Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form category.

From Out of the Rain

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

One of the Night Travellers steps out of the film, into reality.

From Out of the Rain” is the tenth episode of the second series of British science fiction television series Torchwood. It was broadcast by BBC Three on 12 March 2008, and repeated on BBC Two one week later.

Plot

Synopsis

After the old ‘Electro’ cinema reopens as a museum of local history that was captured on celluloid, the old scenes of a black-and-white film of street scenes are interrupted by mysterious sequences which show a travelling company in the early 20th Century, just before the age of cinema. The film resists all attempts to stop it running, reloading itself, and the projector continues to operate even without power. The Ghostmaker (the leader of the company) and Pearl (’The Mermaid Woman’), once captured on film, manage to escape it and out into Cardiff. Ianto, attending this nostalgic evening with others of the team, is convinced he has seen Jack in the footage. He then witnesses the escape, noticing that two characters have suddenly disappeared from the film.

The escaped characters start roaming the streets of the city, taking an obscene delight in gathering an ‘audience’ to ‘join their company – forever’. They steal the last breaths of innocent people, keeping their breath in a silver flask and leaving the victims severely dehydrated and only half alive – with a heartbeat, but no breath. Torchwood starts investigating the mounting casualties and begins research on these old travelling companies. Jack used to be a member of one of the companies, under cover performing the act of ‘the man who couldn’t die’. He tells of the mysterious ‘Night Travellers’, who perform only during ‘the dead of the night’, coming ‘out of the rain’ and disappearing, taking people with them. The mythology surrounding them suggests that ‘young children were told to hold their breath while the travelling show passed by’ – an old lady, hospitalised since her family all disappeared in her childhood, warns them of the danger.

The ghosts aim to bring all their other travelling carnival fellows back into reality at the old cinema but, finally after various victims have been hospitalised and others kept frozen at a deserted former lido by Pearl, the solution occurs to Jack. Being filmed again, the loosened entities may thus be recaptured onto celluloid. Effectively, he manages to achieve this with a home movie camera, filming all the phantasmagoric creatures as they emerge from the screen and catching up with their fleeing leader. He exposes his reel to the sun, vanishing the carnival ghosts for ever. However, for its last act before disappearing, the Ghostmaker throws the open silver flask and, despite Ianto’s quick catch, most of the human souls are lost in the air. The frozen victims hidden at the lido simply disappear – Torchwood never even knowing of them – and the cataleptic victims in the Cardiff hospital all die, except for one child from an entire family affected. At his bedside, Ianto and Jack return his breath and bring him back to life. The silver flask ends up being stored by Jack in his safe at Torchwood.

Though the threat of the Night Travellers has been stopped now, Jack speculates that there could be more films with their ghosts trapped inside, confirmed by a scene at a car-boot sale where a man and his son purchase an old film reel. The metal case of the film is briefly opened and, back at the Hub, Jack hears a sliver of the Night Traveller’s carnival music…

Production

Cast and credits notes

  • The episodic title credits were missing in the BBC HD broadcast of this episode.
  • Julian Bleach, who plays the Ghostmaker, was later cast as Davros, the creator of the Daleks, in the 2008 Doctor Who episodes “The Stolen Earth” and “Journey’s End”.
  • Gerard Carey received a closing credit as Greg, a character from the earlier episode, “Meat”. Neither the actor nor his character appeared in this episode.

Midnight (Doctor Who)

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

The Doctor, Driver Joe and Technician Claude stare in awe at Planet Midnight's enchanting landscape.

Midnight” is the tenth episode of the fourth series of British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was first broadcast on BBC One on 14 June 2008. The episode placed much more emphasis on the role of David Tennant as the Tenth Doctor than in the rest of the fourth series of the programme, with the Doctor’s companion Donna Noble, played by actress Catherine Tate, playing only a minimal role. For this reason the writer Stephen James Walker has described this episode in his book Monsters Within as being “companion-lite”, in his analysis of this episode’s successor, the “Doctor-lite” episode “Turn Left”.

Plot

Synopsis

Via a telephone, The Doctor tries to persuade Donna to take a four hour shuttle bus ride to the Sapphire Waterfall. They are both holidaymakers on the crystalline planet Midnight, which orbits close enough to its sun that the extonic radiation exposure would vaporise any living thing walking unprotected on its surface. Donna opts to sunbathe at a spa. Passengers, along with the Doctor, include Val Cane, Biff Kane, and their teenage son Jethro, Professor Hobbes and his assistant Dee Dee Blasco, and businesswoman Sky Silvestry (who is a divorcee, on holiday and recuperating from the end of her marriage). The staff are the driver, Joe, trainee mechanic Claude, and a steward who is only referred to as ‘the Hostess’.

The trip initially goes smoothly despite the shuttle being rerouted to a new course, but suddenly the shuttle stops. The Doctor checks with the shuttle’s driver and mechanic, confirming that there’s nothing wrong with the vehicle apart from the micropetrol engines needing to be stabilised. He convinces them to open the shutter to look outside, and the mechanic believes he sees a shadow moving towards the bus. The crew calls for a rescue vehicle while the Doctor returns to the main cabin.

A few moments later, something begins knocking on the shuttle’s hull, copying the passengers when they knock back. The knocking moves around the shuttle, making its way towards Sky Silvestry, apparently the most frightened of the lot, and dents the door she is standing by. The lights then temporarily fail and the shuttle is violently rocked. When the lights are restored, the seats near Sky have been ripped off the floor and she is cowering in the corner. An attempt to speak to the cabin crew reveals that their cabin has also been ripped away, exposing Joe and Claude to the deadly sunlight.

Sky initially remains motionless, but is coaxed into turning around by the Doctor. Attempts to get her to speak only cause her to repeat what she is told, making it clear that Sky is no longer in control. The delay between Sky’s repetitions becomes shorter, until eventually she begins speaking in exact unison with the passengers. Cabin fever sets in, and the passengers contemplate throwing her outside. Their fear of the unknown presence among them is analysed by Dee Dee through a quotation from Goblin Market, a poem by Christina Rossetti. The Doctor’s attempts to calm the situation fail when the passengers become suspicious of him, especially when he is unwilling to reveal his name. This is only amplified when Sky focuses solely on repeating the Doctor’s words.

As the Doctor tries to reason with Sky, she begins speaking his words first, and the Doctor quickly becomes the one doing the repeating. Sky is now able to move, while the Doctor is paralysed. Most of the passengers reason that whatever was in Sky has now passed into the Doctor, while the hostess and Dee Dee reason that this is just the next step: stealing the voice of another. The other passengers refuse to listen and begin to drag the Doctor towards the nearest door after being goaded by Sky. However, the hostess realises that Sky is not talking in her own voice when she uses phrases the Doctor had used earlier. Before the other passengers can throw the Doctor out, she sacrifices herself by dragging Sky out of another door. The Doctor slowly recovers, and as the passengers wait for the rescue shuttle, he realises that no one knew the hostess’ name. At the spa, a mournful Doctor reunites with Donna. When she tries to imitate one of the Doctor’s phrases, he quickly tells her not to.

Continuity

Rose Tyler appears on one of the shuttle’s television screens shortly after the lifeform attacks the transport, echoing a similar appearance in “The Poison Sky”. In both instances, she silently shouts for the Doctor, who is not there to see the image in the first instance and is looking the opposite way in this episode. She also appears briefly in “Partners in Crime”. Rose is also mentioned by the Doctor by name along with Martha and Donna. In an early conversation with Sky about becoming recently single, the Doctor indirectly referred to Rose as one who “went to a different universe.”

This is the first story since 1975’s Genesis of the Daleks where the TARDIS does not appear. It is also the only full Doctor Who story where the adversary is neither seen nor given a name.

Two of the Tenth Doctor’s common phrases are used to identify his voice: “allons-y” and “molto bene”, first used in “Army of Ghosts” and “The Christmas Invasion” respectively.

Production

This episode is the fiftieth episode filmed for the revived series, and was filmed at the same time as “Turn Left”. Donna has a minor role in the episode (appearing in only the pre-credits sequence and the final scene), while the Doctor has a minor role in “Turn Left”.

Cast notes

David Troughton, cast here as Professor Hobbes, was a late replacement for Sam Kelly, who broke his leg and had to withdraw from the production. Troughton joined the rest of the cast in Cardiff with just two days notice. Now known for his stage work with the RSC as well as television, David Troughton is the son of Patrick Troughton, who portrayed the Second Doctor. He had a long association with the early series in the 1960s and early 1970s, appearing as an uncredited extra in the first, fifth, and sixth episodes of the Second Doctor serial The Enemy of the World, as Private Moor in the sixth episode of the Second Doctor serial The War Games, and as King Peladon in all four episodes of the Third Doctor serial The Curse of Peladon. More recently he has appeared as the Tinghus in the Doctor Who audio adventure Cuddlesome, as well as appearing as a new version of the Doctor’s old foe the Black Guardian during the events of The Judgement of Isskar (Only appearing at the conclusion of the audio), The Destroyer of Delights, and The Chaos Pool.

Daniel Ryan (Biff Kane) had announced in a 2006 interview that he was going to ask Russell T Davies for a role in Doctor Who, as he wanted his children to see him acting on television in a programme that was not inaccessible. Davies had previously written an episode of Linda Green, which Ryan starred in, and Ryan’s former castmates Sean Gallagher and Claire Rushbrook had already appeared in Doctor Who.

Reception

“Midnight” was watched by 8.05 million viewers, a 38% share of the total television audience, making it the fifth most-watched programme of the week. The episode received an Appreciation Index score of 86 (considered Excellent).

The Guardians TV reviewer Sam Wollaston described the episode as “great… it’s tense and claustrophobic, and gnaws away at you.” He praised the fact that all the action happened in one confined space with an unseen enemy, saying “this is psychological drama rather than full-blown horror; creepy-unknown scary, not special-effect-monster scary.”The Timess reviewer Andrew Billen was more critical, writing that Tennant’s Doctor was becoming “increasingly irritating”. He called the episode “sheet upon sheet of dialogue” that “felt too much of a writing exercise to be really scary” and a case-in-point of how the 2008 series “fails as often as it succeeds”. Billen did, however, praise the episode for its claustrophobic atmosphere and for showing the series was “not afraid of variety [and]… dead scared of repetition”.

To the Last Man (Torchwood)

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Toshiko implores Tommy to use the key in order to repair the time shift.

To the Last Man” is the third episode of the second series of British science fiction television series Torchwood, which was broadcast by BBC Two on 30 January 2008.

Plot

Synopsis

Tommy Brockless, a young World War I soldier, shell-shocked from his experiences in the trenches, is the key to saving the world. He is taken into custody by Torchwood in 1918 – Torchwood having been told to do so by his future self – and held in cryonic storage until the time comes for him to save the world. He is awoken one day each year for a medical check-up and a “day out” as a precautionary measure in case he is needed.

A time shift is set to cause 1918 and the present to bleed together at an unspecified time, and when this happens it is Tommy who will be “stitching” the fragments of 1918 back to their rightful place in time.

It is ninety years before this eventually happens and fragments of 1918 are appearing in an old abandoned hospital. Before the team realise that this is the year, Toshiko becomes infatuated with Tommy. Owen, noticing the closeness between them and having experienced something similar (cf. “Out of Time”), warns Tosh about the eventuality of saying goodbye.

When Tommy is told what he must do – actions that will result in him not seeing Toshiko again – Tommy initially refuses to take part. However, with encouragement from Toshiko, he begins to see the bigger picture and agrees. Toshiko is reluctant to do this, as Jack explains that Tommy is destined to be court martialled and shot for cowardice upon being sent back to the trenches. Jack eventually persuades her that it is for the greater good and she relents. During a brief time shift, Tommy tells Torchwood employees from that era that they must take him into custody. Then, with the next time shift, after a tearful goodbye, Tommy goes back to his own time. However, in his own time he reverts back to being shell-shocked and forgets all about Torchwood and why he has the Rift Key therefore the time shift still continues. As the time shifts are forcing the rift open Toshiko is able to be psychically transmitted into Tommy’s mind in the past and encourages him to the use the key. Tommy turns the key in his Rift manipulator device, dragging all of 1918 back with him.

Continuity

  • For the dating of this episode, see the Chronology.
  • Tosh and Tommy share a brief moment on Penarth Pier – built in 1894, the same year that Tommy was born.
  • Tommy remarks on how ridiculous it is that he has to save the world in his pyjamas. The Doctor did just that in the Doctor Who episode “The Christmas Invasion”, and refers to it as being very “Arthur Dent.”

Outside references

The title of – and dialogue within – the episode is a reference to Field Marshal Douglas Haig’s Order of the Day on 11 April 1918, in response to the German Spring Offensive: “There is no other course open to us but to fight it out. Every position must be held to the last man: there must be no retirement. With our backs to the wall and believing in the justice of our cause each one of us must fight on to the end.” Reporters at the time recognised that his order echoed that of Général Joffre to the commanders of the French Armies in September, 1914, at the outbreak of the First Battle of the Marne: “The hour has come to advance at all costs, and to die where you stand rather than give way.”

“Tommy” was a common slang term for a British soldier, particularly associated with the First World War.

Jack suggests that the British army executed “more than 300″ shell-shocked soldiers for cowardice during the First World War. Executions for all offences numbered 346, of which 40 were for murder or mutiny. The remaining 306 were for desertion (266), cowardice (18), and other offences (22). While some of these can now be attributed to shell shock, most cannot, although all 306 were posthumously pardoned in 2006.

Production

The song “One Of These Mornings” by Moby plays towards the start and at the end of this episode. The song “She’s Got You High” by Mumm-Ra plays in the pub as Toshiko and Tommy play pool.

News 24 stock footage is used to depict the Iraq War, again with the BBC logo omitted as it has been in Torchwood, The Sarah Jane Adventures episodes and in more recent Doctor Who episodes when news reports have been included as part of the story.

Reception

On overnight returns, The Guardian reported that the episode achieved a 13% share, 3.2 million viewers, in its first broadcast on January 30, 2008, at 9pm.BARB later listed the episode as BBC2’s top audience draw for the week ending February 3, with a certified estimate of 3.51 million viewers including timeshift.