Rose (TV story): Difference between revisions

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{{quote|Nice to meet you, [[Rose Tyler|Rose]]. Run for your life!|[[Ninth Doctor|The Doctor]]}}
{{title dab away}}
{{Infobox NewTV|
{{real world}}
story name= Rose |
{{ImageLinkTV}}
image=[[Image:Doctorwhorose.jpg|250px]]|
{{Infobox Story SMW
series=[[Doctor Who]] -<br/>[[TV stories|TV Stories]] |
|image                 = RoseAtHenriks.jpg
number= [[Series 1 (Doctor Who)|Series 1]] |
|series               = [[Doctor Who television stories|''Doctor Who'' television stories]]
story number= 157|
|season number         = Series 1 (Doctor Who 2005)  
doctor=[[Ninth Doctor]] (Introduction) |
|series episode number = 1
companions= [[Rose Tyler]] (Introduction)|
|story number         = 157
enemy= [[Auton]]s <br> The [[Nestene Consciousness]] <br> [[Mickey Smith (Auton)|Auton facsimile]] |
|novelisation          = Rose (novelisation)
setting= [[London]], [[March]] [[2005]] |
|doctor               = Ninth Doctor  
writer= [[Russell T Davies]] |
|companions           = [[Rose Tyler|Rose]]  
director= [[Keith Boak]] |
|featuring            = Mickey Smith
producer= [[Phil Collinson]] |
|featuring2            = Jackie Tyler
broadcast date= [[26th March]] [[2005]] |
|featuring3            = Clive Finch
format= 1x45-minute episodes |
|featuring4            = Caroline Finch
production code= 161 |
|enemy                 = The [[Nestene Consciousness]]
previous story= [[Doctor Who (1996)|Doctor Who: The TV Movie]]|
|setting               = [[London]], [[4 March|4]] - [[5 March]] [[2005]]  
next story= [[The End of the World]]}}
|writer               = Russell T Davies
'''''Rose''''' is the first episode of the [[Series 1 (Doctor Who)|first series]] of the revived ''"[[Doctor Who]]"''. It was first shown on BBC One on 26th March 2005 and was the first new episode of Doctor Who since the 1996 television movie ''"[[Doctor Who (1996)|Doctor Who]]"''.
|director             = [[Keith Boak]]  
|producer             = [[Phil Collinson]]  
|confidential          = Doctor Who: A New Dimension (CON episode)
|confidential2        = Bringing Back the Doctor (CON episode)
|broadcast date       = 26 March 2005
|network              = BBC One
|format               = 1x45 minute episode
|production code       = 1.1
|prev                  = The Curse of Fatal Death (TV story)
|next                  = The End of the World (TV story)
|made prev            = Introduction to the Night (TV story)
|made next             = Aliens of London (TV story)
|script                = The Shooting Scripts
|clip                  = "I'm the Doctor, by the Way" (HD) Rose Doctor Who
|clip2                = Rose Tyler Boards the TARDIS! (HD) Rose Doctor Who
|bts                  = Chris and Billie's First Big Scene Together (HQ) - Doctor Who Confidential - BBC
|thwr                  = 50
}}{{dab page|Rose (disambiguation)}}
'''''Rose''''' was the first episode of [[Series 1 (Doctor Who 2005)|series 1]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''.


==Synopsis==
The first story to be produced by [[BBC Wales]], it was both the first new episode of ''Doctor Who'' since ''[[Scream of the Shalka (webcast)|Scream of the Shalka]]'', the first full televised adventure since ''[[The Curse of Fatal Death (TV story)|The Curse of Fatal Death]]'' and the first story to be part of a regularly airing programme since ''[[Survival (TV story)|Survival]]'' in [[1989 (production)|1989]]. It also introduced recurring supporting cast [[Camille Coduri]] as [[Jackie Tyler]] and [[Noel Clarke]] as [[Mickey Smith]].
When [[Rose Tyler]] meets a mysterious stranger called [[Ninth Doctor|the Doctor]], her life will never be the same again. Soon, she realises that her [[Jackie Tyler|mum]], her [[Mickey Smith|boyfriend]] and the whole of planet [[Earth]] are in danger. The only hope of salvation lies inside a [[The Doctor's TARDIS|strange blue box]].


==Plot==
An immediate success, the episode set a record 10.81 million [[BBC One]] rating that bested the previous record-holder, ''[[Robot (TV story)|Robot]]'', and remained the most watched first episode for any new incarnation of [[the Doctor]] (not outdone by ''[[The Christmas Invasion (TV story)|The Christmas Invasion]]'', ''[[The Eleventh Hour (TV story)|The Eleventh Hour]]'', or'' [[Deep Breath (TV story)|Deep Breath]]'') until it was finally toppled in 2018 by ''[[The Woman Who Fell to Earth (TV story)|The Woman Who Fell to Earth]]''.<ref name="ratings">[http://www.doctorwhonews.net/2018/10/the-woman-who-fell-to-earth-tops-charts.html Final ratings - Doctor Who news]</ref>
[[File:Rose cornered by Autons.jpg|thumb|left|200px|[[Rose Tyler]] is about to killed by an Auton.]]
At 7:30am in the [[Powell Estate]], [[London]], a 19 year-old blonde girl, [[Rose Tyler]] wakes up, gets dressed and ready, kisses goodbye to her mother, [[Jackie Tyler]] and walks to [[Henrik's]], the department store where she works. After spending her lunch break with her boyfriend, [[Mickey Smith]], who she sees break dancing, she returns to work until the end of her shift. As the store nears closing time, she is about to walk home, when she is stopped by a security guard, who is holding the [[lottery]] winnings for [[Wilson]], the chief electrician. She heads down to the basement. However, when she arrives outside Wilson's room, she discovers he is missing, even after calling for him. Once she enters a storage room, the doors close behind her, and she is not able to open them. She is then disturbed to see a group of moving [[Auton|shop-window mannequins]]. Believing it to be a practical joke, she tells them to stop, but they do not respond. Instead they keep coming towards her, and is soon surrounded. They look as if they are about to kill her, when someone holds her arm. She turns to see a [[Ninth Doctor|leather jacketed man]], who tells her to "run!".


She quickly obliges and the two run just before one of the mannequins karate chops her. The two run to a lift, quickly pursued by the mannequins. Before the doors can close, one of the mannequins reaches for one of them, but the man is able to pull its arm out, and the two are able to escape. On the way up, Rose believes that students may have been involved, since "all those people have got to be students." The man congratulates her on her theory, but quickly debunks her and says they aren't students, but living plastic, and they have killed Wilson. When they arrive at the correct floor, the man is revealed to carry a bomb and plans to destroy a relay device and stop the moving mannequins. Though he may die in the process, he tells Rose not to worry about him and tells her to go. He then gives a quick introduction; he is [[Ninth Doctor|the Doctor]] and reminds her to run for her life.
It is also the third-highest rated series-opener of all time, second only to ''[[Destiny of the Daleks (TV story)|Destiny of the Daleks]]'' and ''The Woman Who Fell to Earth''.


[[File:Henrik's is destroyed.jpg|thumb|200px|[[Ninth Doctor|The Doctor]] destroyes [[Henrik's]].]]
It was the first ''Doctor Who'' story to be produced in a 16:9 widescreen format, which would remain until ''The Woman Who Fell to Earth'' was produced in 2:1. It was also the first single-episode, 45-minute story and the first 45-minute episode since Part Two of ''[[Revelation of the Daleks (TV story)|Revelation of the Daleks]]'' in [[1985 (production)|1985]]. ''Rose'' was the Doctor Who debut for almost everyone who worked on it — except for [[model unit supervisor]] [[Mike Tucker]], who worked as a visual effects assistant on the original series from 1985 to [[1989 (production)|1989]]. Though it was not the ''Doctor Who'' debut for visual effects company, [[The Mill]] — that had actually come on ''[[The Curse of Fatal Death (TV story)|The Curse of Fatal Death]]'' — it did feature the premiere of their [[title sequence]].<ref>[[DWM 353]]{{which}}</ref> The sequence would survive with only minor alterations until ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]''.
Rose decides to follow his advice and runs away from the vicinity of Henrik's, carrying the arm of the plastic mannequin. After she is at a safe distance, she sees in shock her place of work exploding. She then turns around and runs back home. On the way, she passes a [[The Doctor's TARDIS|blue police box]].


When she returns home, her mother makes [[telephone|phone calls]] to every one of her friends, telling them that Rose has survived the explosion, before telling her that she should consider [[compensation]] for the "trauma" she experienced in the events. Mickey rushes in to see if she is okay. After assuring him she is, he decides to go back home, carrying the plastic arm with him. After he is out, he throws the arm away in a bin.
Narratively, it portrayed the [[Nestene Consciousness]] and [[Auton]]s for the first time on television since ''[[Terror of the Autons (TV story)|Terror of the Autons]]'' in [[1971 (releases)|1971]]. It also introduced a new recurring element in the form of the [[Shadow Proclamation]], contained the first reference to the [[Last Great Time War]], and introduced elements about Rose's character that would be directly referenced in later episodes.


The next morning, Rose's alarm goes off at 7:30am and wakes up. But since she no longer has a job, her mum tells her there is no point in getting up, but she does anyway. Later on, while having [[tea]], Jackie reiterates to her about getting compensation from what happened the last night. Afterwards, Rose hears a noise from the door, and after investigating for a minute, opens the [[cat flap]], and is shocked to see the Doctor again, using his [[Sonic Screwdriver|metal device]] he used the last night to close the lift. He wonders what she is doing in the house; Rose tells him she lives here, and is only hear because someone "blew up my job." He has come to trace the plastic arm. Jackie believes he is there to talk about giving Rose compensation. In the home, the Doctor acknowledges to Jackie that she is in her dressing gown, and there is a man in her bedroom, but when she tells him that "anything can happen," he says no, and walks off.
Unusually, the introduction of the [[Ninth Doctor]] in no way explained how this incarnation had come to be, and failed to explain much of anything about who the Doctor was. Indeed, ''Rose'' started a mild [[story arc]] surrounding the mystery — from Rose's perspective — about the Doctor's identity. New audiences would not have known until [[The Parting of the Ways (TV story)|the series' final episode]] that the Doctor could [[regenerate]], and wouldn't get their first glimpse of preceding Doctors until two years later, in ''[[Human Nature (TV story)|Human Nature]]''. As for the Ninth Doctor's origins, it was oft-alluded across the next eight years that the Ninth Doctor had simply [[Eighth Doctor's regeneration|regenerated from the Eighth Doctor]] during the Time War, however the [[2013 specials|2013 anniversary special]] ''[[The Day of the Doctor (TV story)|The Day of the Doctor]]'' [[Retroactive continuity|retroactively]] introduced a "gap" incarnation, the [[War Doctor]].


[[File:Doctor kills arm.jpg|thumb|left|200px|The Doctor uses his [[sonic screwdriver]] to kill the arm.]]
Various stories were written to coincide with this story. [[PROSE]]: ''[[UNIT's Position on The London Incident (short story)|UNIT's Position on The London Incident]]'' and ''[[Operation Mannequin (short story)|Operation Mannequin]]'' were two narratives published on the [[U.N.I.T. (tie-in website)|''U.N.I.T.'' tie-in website]] in 2005 to accompany the televsion story, and in [[2018 (releases)|2018]], [[Russell T Davies]] wrote [[Rose (novelisation)|a novelisation]] of the story. Later, as the global ''[[Doctor Who: Lockdown!]]'' watch-along event created by ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]''{{'}}s [[Emily Cook]] continued with a watch-along of this story on [[26 March (releases)|26 March]] [[2020 (releases)|2020]], Davies returned to the writing stool to create new content, both releasing a previously withheld [[2013 (production)|2013]] short story ''[[Doctor Who and the Time War (short story)|Doctor Who and the Time War]]'', which depicted an alternate account to the origin of this incarnation of the Doctor than what was later revealed, and a sequel entitled ''[[Revenge of the Nestene (short story)|Revenge of the Nestene]]'', which Davies placed as Chapter 21 of his 2018 novelisation.
While Rose make a cup of tea for him, the Doctor looks through [[Heat Magazine]], and comments that a celebrity couple's relationship won't last since "he's gay and she's an alien," a novel with a "sad ending", and playing with a deck of cards, as well as looking in a mirror, where he comments on his new face after a recent [[regeneration]]. He then sees the plastic arm, which starts strangling, all the time Rose is oblivious to it. Moments later, it lets go of the Doctor and starts suffocating Rose. Fortunately, the Doctor is able to reset his sonic screwdriver to disable the arm, and kill it. He then starts to leave.


Rose however, chases after him, telling him he can't leave, since they tried to kill her twice. The Doctor tells her that they aren't after her, but they're after him; Rose was merely in the wrong place at the wrong time. Jokingly, they wonder if they are living to start a price war, until the Doctor tells Rose that they want to overthrow and destroy the [[human]] race, and claim the [[Earth]] as their own. Rose asks the Doctor who he actually is. He starts off by explaining that when human children learn that the Earth is actually moving, they wouldn't believe it, since everything seems to stand still, but he can feel the planet rotating 1,000 miles per hour, moving around 67,000 miles per hour. He then tells her to forget about him, before leaving onto the same blue box, which then disappears.
This episode through to '' [[The End of Time (TV story)|The End Of Time]]'' of Russell's original time as showrunner all ran with the overarching theme ''Consequences of the Time War''; all of which his successor [[Steven Moffat]] wrapped up.


However, she cannot let go, and decides to go to her boyfriend's house to go on his [[computer]]. Form there, she researches the Doctor on the [[Internet]], and eventually finds a hit while typing "The Doctor blue box". She is lead to [[Who is Doctor Who?]], where the front page shows a face of the same man she met twice earlier, before reading the address. She decides to have Mickey drop her off to the address of the website's owner, [[Clive Finch]].
== Synopsis ==
[[Rose Tyler]] believes she is living another day of her "ordinary" life, but after being threatened by [[Auton]]s (living plastic) controlled by the [[Nestene Consciousness]], she meets the [[Ninth Doctor]].


Reluctantly, they arrive on his [[Volkswagen Beetle]]. Rose tells Mickey to keep a look out, while she goes to see Clive. She sees Clive at his house, and he invites her in. His wife, [[Caroline Finch]] is shocked to realise a girl is interested in his work. The two walk to his shed, where Clive shows Rose pictures of the same man with the same face and same look in [[Dallas]], [[1963]], the same date [[John F. Kennedy]] was [[Kennedy assassination|assassinated]]; followed by an older picture of a family with a friend, the Doctor. The family originally wanted to go to the ''[[Titanic]]'' in [[1912]], but ultimately decided not to. Finally, he shows her a sketch of the Doctor just before the eruption of [[Krakatoa]]. He believes that the Doctor is dangerous, and always has one continuing companion; death; if she has seen him, this will mean they are all in danger.
== Plot ==
[[File:Rose cornered by Autons.jpg|thumb|left|[[Rose Tyler]] being attacked by an [[Auton]].]]
[[Rose Tyler]] wakes up one morning at 7 AM, gets ready for work, and kisses her mother [[Jackie Tyler|Jackie]] goodbye. She gets the [[bus]] to [[Henrik's]], the department store in central London where she works. In the evening, as the store nears closing time, Rose is about to head home when she is stopped at the door by a security guard who is holding the [[lottery]] winnings for [[H.P. Wilson|Wilson]], the chief electrician. She takes the lift down to the [[basement]] in search of him, but Wilson is nowhere to be found. Entering a large storage room to investigate a noise, Rose soon finds herself trapped when the door closes and locks on its own, and is disturbed to see a group of [[Auton|moving shop-window mannequins]] that quickly surround her and raise their arms to kill her. All of a sudden, [[Ninth Doctor|a man]] takes hold of her hand and tells her to "run!"


[[File:Mickey is trapped.jpg|thumb|200px|A wheelie bin captures [[Mickey Smith|Mickey]].]]
She quickly obliges, and they both run to a [[lift]] whilst being pursued by the mannequins. Before the doors can close, one of the [[Auton]]s reaches for them, but the man quickly pulls its arm off before it can do them any harm. On the way up, he informs Rose that the mannequins are living plastic and that Wilson is dead. When they arrive at ground level, the man holds up a bomb and tells Rose that he plans to destroy a relay device on the roof to stop the creatures. He offers a quick introduction — he is [[Ninth Doctor|the Doctor]] — and tells her to run for her life.
Meanwhile, Mickey keeps an eye on the house, until he is distracted by a wheelie bin moving on its own. Thinking people are playing a practicle joke, he comes out to confront it, but when he opens it, it is empty. After he closes it, he discovers that letting go is difficult, since the lid is sticking into his hands, the plastic stretching with hands. Each attempt to break free ends up getting back to the bin. Eventually, the bin suddenly tosses him in the air and swallows him whole ... then burps loudly afterwards. Sometime later, Rose returns to the car, thinking that she has wasted her time, not knowing that Mickey is replaced with a [[Mickey Smith (Auton)|living plastic version]]. They both decide to have dinner at a [[pizza]] restaurant.


During the evening, the two arrive and are seated. Rose looks through the menu, but "Mickey" starts to grill Rose about the Doctor, asking what he told her, as well as talking funny to her. While she wonders what is up with him, a man gives them a bottle of [[alcohol|champagne]]. After coming back two more times, Plastic Mickey raises his head to tell him they didn't order any, but is surprised to see that it is the Doctor holding the bottle. He uses the gas of the bottle to fire the cork at "Mickey's" forehead, but it just merely makes its way down to his mouth, where he spits it out. After his hands morph into paddles, and a brief struggle, the Doctor is able to pull his head off, and he and Rose flee while the headless plastic Mickey causes havok at the restaurant. The two close the back door and locks it off with his metal device, called a [[sonic screwdriver]]. While headless Mickey attempts to break his way through, the Doctor then goes inside his blue box, to the bewilderment of Rose, which is now positioned in the back courtyard. With nowhere to go, she follows him, but the second she enters, she quickly turns back outside, looks at the size of the box and enters again. She discovers that the inside of the box is bigger than the outside. The Doctor then explains that the blue box is called the [[The Doctor's TARDIS|TARDIS]] and that it and he are both alien.
[[File:Henrik's_is_blown_up.jpg|thumb|The Doctor blows up Henrik's.]]
Rose heeds his advice, and runs from the vicinity, carrying the plastic arm with her. Once she's at a safe distance, she watches in shock as Henrik's explodes in a huge ball of flame. Rose then returns home, running past [[The Doctor's TARDIS|a strange blue box]], and her boyfriend [[Mickey Smith]] comes in to check on her. He eventually leaves to watch [[football]] at the pub, and is asked to take the arm with him. He throws the piece of plastic into one of the bins outside.


[[File:Rose in TARDIS.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Rose discovers the TARDIS is bigger on the inside.]]
Rose wakes up at the same time the next morning, before realising that she no longer has a job to go to. Mooching around the flat while bickering with her mother, she suddenly hears a scratching noise from the [[cat flap]], which Jackie still hasn't nailed down, and assumes it's a stray [[cat]]. She opens it up to find the Doctor, who tells her he's been tracing a signal from the plastic arm. Demanding answers, Rose invites him inside. While she makes them both [[coffee]] in the kitchen, the Doctor explores the flat and is stunned by the size of his ears when he looks in the mirror, implying he has recently [[Regeneration|regenerated]]. Investigating a noise from behind the sofa, he is suddenly attacked by the plastic arm. Rose believes the Doctor's strangulation to be in jest — that is, until the arm lets go of him and flies towards her instead. Thankfully, the Doctor manages to deactivate the Auton arm with [[the Doctor's sonic screwdriver|his sonic screwdriver]], though not after Jackie's coffee table has been smashed in the struggle. He takes the arm off her, and hastily rushes out.
Rose starts crying; the Doctor first believes it's culture shock, but learns that she wonders if the real Mickey is dead, something the Doctor didn't consider. Rose then notes, to the Doctor's frustration, that the head is melting; the same head he tries to track the location of the [[Nestene Consciousness]], the entity controlling the [[Auton]]s. He manages to follow it, but the head is completely melted before they can track the precise location of the Consiousness. They arrive on the edge of the [[River Thames]]. After they arrive, and exit, Rose wonders three things. She wonders why the TARDIS is a box; it is a disguse. She wonders how the travelled; the TARDIS disappears in one place and reappears in another. She also wnats to know that if the Doctor is an alien, how can he speak as if he's from the North; the Doctor explains that "lots of planets have a North."


While trying to deduce the location of the Nestene Consciousness, the Doctor wants to find a transmitter of some kind, that is very big and round, oblivious to the fact that he is standing on the opposite side of the [[London Eye]]; a perfect landmark for a transmitter. After some help from Rose, he realises this, and the two run across a bridge to the other side of the Thames. The two then find an entrance to an underground base beneath the eye. The Doctor has brought with him a vial of [[Anti-plastic]], which he wants to use as a last resort; he wishes to appeal to the Nestene Consciousness first. Once they enter, he asks the Consciousness to seek an audience to it, which it grants. On the way down, Rose sees Mickey. The Doctor explains that they need to keep Mickey alive to keep his plastic double alive.
Rose chases after him outside, demanding to know what's going on. The Doctor tells her that the living plastic is here to start a war that would overthrow and destroy the [[human]] race so that they can claim the [[Earth]] as their own. He then departs in a mysterious blue box in the estate car park, ordering her to forget about him. Rose turns away for a second; when she looks back, both the Doctor and the box have gone.


[[File:London-eye.jpg|thumb|200px|The invasion begins...]]
Rose cannot let go, and decides to use Mickey's [[computer]] to find out more about the Doctor. She tries several different keywords on [[search-wise.net]], (just the word "doctor" brings up medical results, and "doctor living plastic" produces art results) eventually settling on "doctor blue box". She follows a link to [[www.whoisdoctorwho.co.uk|whoisdoctorwho.co.uk]], a website owned by a conspiracy theorist named [[Clive Finch|Clive]]. Mickey [[Mickey Smith's Volkswagen Beetle|drives]] her to [[1 Juke Street|the man's house]] in the suburbs, where she is invited in by [[Clive's son|his son]]. Out in his shed, Clive shows her images from many points in Earth's past, including the [[assassination of John F. Kennedy]], the sinking of the ''[[Titanic]]'' and the eruption of [[Krakatoa]] - all the pictures he shows her feature the Doctor. Clive goes through the facts: "the Doctor is a legend woven throughout history; when disaster comes, he's there." He believes the Doctor is an [[Immortality|immortal]] [[alien]], tells Rose he is dangerous, and that he has only one constant companion: death.
As Rose comes to release Mickey, he explains that it can talk. The Doctor meanwhile, talks with it, and in accordance to the [[Shadow Proclamation]], asks it to leave the planet and find a new one to restart the Auton race, as all of the Nestene's planets were destroyed. However, instead the Conciousness has two of the Autons capture him, as it detects the TARDIS, as well as discovering that he is carrying Anti-plastic, something the Doctor says is just an insurance policy. The Consiousness also realises he is a [[Time Lord]], and that they were destroying the planets in the [[Last Great Time War]]. Angered by this, it decides to start the invasion ahead of plans, and uses a lightning polt from the vat to the London Eye, powering the transmission.


Knowing everybody's in danger, Rose calls her mother to tell her to go home. However, Jackie instead talks to her about getting compensation, since she picked up a form from a [[Police]] station, and chooses not to listen to Rose about staying home; she insists on doing some late night shopping in [[Queen's Arcade]]. While the transmitter is transmitting, Clive and his family walk past a shop window in the same mall, where they see a few mannequins starting to move. Everyone soon notices all the mannequins moving, and break through the glass. Clive is amazed that everything he has looked for has come true, and he was right all along. However, one of the Autons opens its hand, revealing a gun; the Auton shoots Clive dead. The public starts to panic, including Jackie, who runs away from the mall. However, she also realises that all the mannequins everywhere have come out to kill all humans.
[[File:Mickey_is_attacked_by_a_bin.jpg|thumb|left|Mickey being attacked by a bin.]]
Meanwhile, Mickey is waiting in his car outside when he suddenly gets distracted by a plastic wheelie bin moving forwards on its own. He gets out of the car and opens the bin, expecting to find someone playing a practical joke, only to find it completely empty. As he tries to close the lid, he finds that the plastic is stuck to his hands, and merely stretches as he tries to pull away. After a few attempts at breaking free, the bin suddenly tosses Mickey into the air and swallows him whole. Not long after, Rose returns to the car, convinced that she's wasted her time and that Clive really is just a conspiracy nut. She and Mickey decide to go out for a [[pizza]], but what Rose doesn't realise is that her boyfriend has been swapped; replaced by a shiny, plastic duplicate...


Meanwhile, below the London Eye, the Autons holding the Doctor are slowly pushing him towards the edge of the ledge that they are stood on. Rose realises that she must save him, takes an axe and uses it to break free one of the chains on the wall. While doing this she explains to herself that she has no A-levels, no job, and no future, but took bronze at age 7 gymnastics. She then swings down to the Autons holding the Doctor. She collides with them, and the one holding the anit-plastic falls down to the vat containing the Nestene Consciousness. The Doctor uses the only Auton left and throws him to the vat as well. The vial of anti-plastic opens and spills onto the Nestene Consciousness, killing it.
As the two of them dine at [[Restaurant (Rose)|the restaurant]], the plastic Mickey begins grilling Rose about the Doctor. She is disturbed by her boyfriend's odd speech patterns, speaking as if he is somehow malfunctioning. After being interrupted twice by the offer of [[champagne]], Mickey finally looks up from the table, only to find the Doctor standing there holding the bottle. He fires the cork at Mickey's forehead, but it is simply absorbed into his plastic [[skull]], and Mickey spits it out. His hands morph into paddles, and he begins attacking all those around him. The Doctor briefly struggles with the duplicate and manages to pull its head off, but this barely slow the plastic Mickey down at all. Rose hits the [[fire alarm]], and, while the other patrons evacuate, she and the Doctor are chased out of the building by a now-headless Mickey, who flips over tables in the process.


[[File:Base destroyed.jpg|thumb|left|200px|The [[Nestene Consciousness]] is destroyed.]]
They escape to the back courtyard, and the Doctor calmly enters his little blue box. With nowhere to go, Rose follows him inside at the last second, only to rush back out again at the sight of interior. As the headless Mickey breaks its way into the courtyard, Rose runs back into the box - which is bigger on the inside. The Doctor explains that his blue box is called [[the TARDIS]], that it's impregnable from outside forces like the plastic duplicate, and that both it and he are [[Time Lord|alien]]. As he wires Mickey's head into the central [[Control console|console]], Rose wonders if her real boyfriend is dead; something the Doctor didn't even consider. Their conversation is cut short, however, when Rose points out that the head is melting, much to the Doctor's dismay; he had hoped to use it to track down the [[Nestene Consciousness]] — the entity controlling the Autons. Activating the TARDIS controls, he still manages to follow a trace of the signal, but the head is completely melted before they can find the precise location of the Consciousness.
Jackie takes cover behind a car, but sees three bride Autons attempting to shoot her. Fortunately, the transmitter shuts down, and all the Autons turn into lifeless mannequins again. However, underneath the London Eye, the base starts to collapse and explode. Before it is destroyed, the Doctor, Mickey and Rose board the TARDIS and escape. After they arrive in an alleyway, Mickey quickly leaves after realising that the box is bigger inside and can move. Rose then receives a phonecall from her mum, who tells her to go home, as it is not safe. Rose quietly laughs before hanging up.


With the Earth saved, the Doctor decides to continue on his travels, but suggests Rose to come with him on his adventures. Though tempted, Rose decides to stay for the wellbeing of her mother and boyfriend. The Doctor bids farewell to her and leaves. After the TARDIS dematerialises, Rose decides to send Mickey home. However, before they even leave the alley, the TARDIS appears again in front of them. The Doctor comes out and tells Rose "by the way, did I also mention that this can also travel in time?" She changes her mind, kisses Mickey and thanks him. When Mickey wonders what for, she replies "exactly," before running to the TARDIS.
The box lands somewhere nearby, at the edge of the [[River Thames]], and Rose is shocked to learn that they have moved. The Doctor explains that the Nestene plans to use Earth's polluted atmosphere as a food source after losing its own planet in a war, and will need an activation signal for its invasion plans; a transmitter of some kind, very big and round. He figures it must be "completely invisible", but Rose identifies it instantly: the [[London Eye]] would be the perfect transmitter for the Nestene. Hand in hand, the two of them run across [[Westminster Bridge]] together, and Rose quickly spots an entrance to an underground base beneath the Eye.


==Cast==
[[File:Angry Nestene Consciousness Rose.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Nestene Consciousness]] negotiates with the Doctor.]]
*[[Ninth Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[Christopher Eccleston]]
Entering the Nestene lair, Rose immediately notices Mickey and runs down to him; her boyfriend has been kept alive after being duplicated to maintain the copy. The Doctor, meanwhile, tries to reason with the Nestene, but the Consciousness has two of its Auton guards capture him when it detects the presence of the TARDIS, which it identifies as terrifyingly superior technology. They discover a vial of [[anti-plastic]] in the Doctor's pocket — which he had intended to use only as a last resort. The Nestene confronts its Time Lord enemy about its lost planet, and he can only respond, "I couldn't save your world. [[Last Great Time War|I couldn't save any of them]]!" Terrified, it decides to start the invasion ahead of schedule, sending [[Activation signal|a signal to activate]] the Autons.
*[[Rose Tyler]] - [[Billie Piper]]
*[[Jackie Tyler]] - [[Camille Coduri]]
*[[Mickey Smith]] - [[Noel Clarke]]
*[[Clive Finch]] - [[Mark Benton]]
*[[Caroline Finch]] - [[Elli Garnett]]
*[[Clive's Son]] - [[Adam McCoy]]
*[[Auton|Lead Auton]] - [[Alan Ruscoe]]
*[[Auton]]s - [[Paul Kasey]], [[David Sant]], [[Elizabeth Frost]], [[Helen Otway]]
*[[Nestene Consciousness]] Voice - [[Nicholas Briggs]]


==Crew==
Rose calls her mother to get her to go home to safety, but Jackie can't hear her through the bad reception, and continues into the [[Queen's Arcade]] mall for some late-night shopping. Much to her surprise, the shop-window dummies come to life, breaking through the windows as the bemused shoppers stare at them. Clive, who is also shopping there with his family, remarks that everything he read about was true, before he is confronted by an Auton who detaches its hand and shoots him dead in front of his wife and son.
*[[Executive Producer]] - [[Russell T Davies]], [[Julie Gardner]], Mal Young
*[[Associate Producer]] - Helen Vallis
*[[Script Editor]] - Elwen Rowlands
*Casting Director - Andy Pryor
*Production Manager- Tracie Simpson
*Production Accountant - Endaf Emyr Williams
*Sound Recordist - Ian Richardson
*Costume Designer - Lucinda Wright
*Make-Up Designer - Davy Jones
*Music - [[Murray Gold]]
*Visual Effects - [[The Mill]]
*Visual FX Producer - [[Will Cohen]]
*Visual FX Supervisor - [[Dave Houghton]]
*[[Special Effects]] - Any Effects
*[[Prosthetics]] - Millennium Effects
*[[Production Designer]] - [[Edward Thomas]]
*[[Editor]] - [[Mike Jones]]
*[[Director of Photography]] - Ernie Vincze BSC
*[[Auton]]s Original Creator - [[Robert Holmes]]
*Original [[Theme Music]] - [[Ron Grainer]]
*[[First Assistant Director]] - [[George Gerwitz]]
*[[Second Assistant Director]] - [[Steffan Morris]]
*[[Third Assistant Director]] - [[Dafydd Rhys Parry]]
*[[Location Manager]] - [[Clive Evans]], [[Lowri Thomas]]
*[[Production Co-ordinator]] - [[Dathyl Evans]]
*A/[[Production Accountant]]s - [[Debi Griffiths]], [[Kath Blackman]]
*[[Continuity]] - [[Sian Prosser]]
*[[Choreographer]] - [[Ailsa Altena-Berk]]
*[[Camera Operator]] - [[Mike Costelloe]], [[Martin Stephens]]
*[[Focus Puller]] - [[Steve Lawes]], [[Mark Isaac]]
*[[Grip]] - [[John Robinson]]
*[[Boom Operator]] - [[Damian Richardson]]
*[[Gaffer]] - [[Mark Hutchings]]
*[[Best Boy]] - [[Peter Chester]]
*[[Stunt Co-ordinator]] - [[Rod Woodruff]]
*[[Stunt Performer]] - [[Holly Lumsden]], [[Paul Kulik]]
*[[Art Department Co-ordinator]] - [[Gwenllian Llwyd]]
*[[Concept Artist]] - [[Bryan Hitch]]
*[[Production Buyer]] - [[Catherine Samuel]]
*[[Set Decorator]] - [[Peter Walpole]]
*[[Supervising Art Director]] - [[Stephen Nicholas]]
*[[Standby Art Director]] - [[Julian Luxton]]
*[[Property Master]] - [[Patrick Begley]]
*[[Construction Manager]] - [[Andrew Smith]]
*[[Standby Props]] - [[Phill Shellard]], [[Adrian Anscombe]]
*[[Graphic Artist]] - [[Jenny Bowers]]
*[[Wardrobe Supervisor]] - [[Yolanda Pearl-Smith]]
*[[Make-Up Supervisor]] - [[Linda Davie]]
*[[Make-Up Artist]] - [[Sarah Wilson]]
*[[Casting Associate]] - [[Kirsty Robertson]]
*[[Assistant Editor]] - [[Ceres Doyle]]
*[[Post Production Supervisor]] - [[Marie Brown]]
*[[On Line Editor]] - [[Matthew Clarke]]
*[[Colourist]] - [[Kai van Beers]]
*[[2D VFX Artist]]s - [[Simon C. Holden]], [[David Bowman]], [[Sara Bennett]], [[Alberto Montanes]], [[Jennifer Herbert]]
*([[3D VFX Artist]]s - [[Andy Howell]], [[Chris Tucker]], [[Jean-Claude Deguara]], [[Mark Wallman]], [[Paul Burton]], [[Chris Petts]], [[Paul Perrott]]
*[[Digital Matte Painter]] - [[Alex Fort]]
*[[Model Unit Supervisor]] - [[Mike Tucker]]
*[[Dubbing Mixer]] - [[Tim Ricketts]]
*[[Dialogue Editor]] - [[Paul McFadden]]
*[[Sound FX Editor]] - [[Paul Jefferies]]
*[[Business Manager]] - [[Richard Pugsley]]


==References==
Panic ensues as the Autons start blasting, and shoppers scatter in all directions. Jackie runs outside to behold utter chaos: Autons are everywhere, bodies litter the ground, and a double-decker bus has crashed into a post-box at the end of the street and burst into flames. She takes cover behind a car, just as three bride mannequins smash their way out of the shop window behind her and raise their arms to shoot her dead.
* The [[sonic screwdriver]] makes an appearance and is once again a major all-purpose tool.
* [[Clive Finch]] suggests that the title "Doctor" is passed down from father to son, and points to his website saying to [[Rose Tyler]] "that's your Doctor there, isn't it". This would seem to suggest he has information on the Doctor's other incarnations.


==Story Notes==
Below the London Eye, Rose finally decides to take some initiative. She breaks free one of the chains on the wall with an [[axe]], and swings down to the Autons, freeing the Doctor and pushing the mannequins, along with the anti-plastic, into the vat containing the Nestene Consciousness. The vial leaks the solution onto the Nestene, and the alien dies in agony. Back outside, all the Autons return to lifeless mannequins again as the transmission from the London Eye is stopped, while underground, the Nestene base starts to collapse and explode. The Doctor, Mickey and Rose board the TARDIS and, just in time, escape the destruction. Jackie looks around at the chaos, as shell-shocked survivors struggle to come to terms with what has happened.
* First Story of the First Series of the new Doctor Who
 
* This is the first story featuring [[Christopher Eccleston]] as [[the Doctor]].
With the Earth saved, the Doctor thanks Rose for her help and suggests she join him on his adventures; the TARDIS can go anywhere in the whole [[universe]]. Mickey, however, is not invited. Rose, much to his disappointment, refuses, feeling responsible for her mum and her boyfriend. The Doctor bids her farewell and leaves, dematerialising the box before her eyes. But as Rose prepares to help a terrified Mickey back home, she hears the TARDIS reappear behind her. The Doctor emerges once more, and tells Rose that the TARDIS can also [[Time travel|travel in time]]. Without much thought, she kisses her boyfriend goodbye and runs straight into the TARDIS, to start her adventures in [[time]] and [[space]].
* This is the first story featuring new [[companion]] [[Rose Tyler]] ([[Billie Piper]]).
 
* This is the first story featuring the new TARDIS console room, which has a far more organic appearance than its predecessors. Initially questioned by fans, the later mini-episode ''[[Time Crash]]'' would confirm this as a new "desktop theme" for the TARDIS interior called "coral".
== Cast ==
* This was the first ''Doctor Who'' episode to be produced in a widescreen picture format. Discounting the [[Doctor Who (1996)|1996 telefilm]], it is also the first episode to have a shot-on-film appearance since 1985's ''[[Revelation of the Daleks]]'' and the first episode to be completely filmed since ''[[Spearhead from Space]]'' in 1970. However, the show is in fact videotaped, as it has been since 1986, with the footage subsequently processed to look like film. This production style continued into 2009 when the series began production in high definition.
* [[Ninth Doctor|Doctor Who]] - [[Christopher Eccleston]]
* The story itself a sequel to [[Spearhead from Space]], and has thematic similarities to the earlier story, as both feature a new Doctor, a new companion, and the Auton threat.
* [[Rose Tyler]] - [[Billie Piper]]
* A copy of this story was available to download on the [[Internet]] on various p2p networks several weeks before it was released. The preview version was essentially the broadcast version; however it did not contain the new credits and had the original series theme music as opposed to the new version.
* [[Jackie Tyler]] - [[Camille Coduri]]
* The word [[Auton]] is not used in the dialogue of the story but is used in the episode credits.
* [[Mickey Smith]] - [[Noel Clarke]]<ref>Clarke also plays [[Mickey Smith (Auton)|an Auton duplicate of Mickey]].</ref>
* In Rose's flat, the Doctor leafs through a copy of Alice Sebold's ''The Lovely Bones''. He is shown flicking through the book very quickly and commenting, "Sad ending." He also looks at a woman's magazine and comments on one of the articles, saying, "Well, that'll never work. He's gay and she's an alien."
* [[Clive Finch|Clive]] - [[Mark Benton]]
* The surname Finch was used for [[Clive Finch|Clive]] and his wife in the production notes but not in the on-screen version.
* [[Caroline Finch|Caroline]] - [[Elli Garnett]]
* The episode, like the [[1996]] [[Doctor Who: The TV Movie]], breaks with what had become the tradition of including the Doctor's image in the title sequence.
* [[Clive's son|Clive's Son]] - [[Adam McCoy]]
* For this, the first episode, the opening credits follow the UK standard of title sequence then program, the rest of the season (other than the first episode) would include a 'teaser' before the main title sequence.
* [[Auton]]s - [[Alan Ruscoe]], [[Paul Kasey]], [[David Sant]], [[Elizabeth Fost]], [[Helen Otway]]
* [[Nestene Consciousness|Nestene]] Voice - [[Nicholas Briggs]]
 
=== Uncredited cast ===
 
* Adult Dummies - [[Catherine Capelin]], [[Michael Humpries]], [[Jasom Jones]] (also credited elsewhere in same publication as Jason Jones), [[Saul Murphy]], [[Paul Newbolt]], [[Catrin O'Neil]], [[Sean Palmer]]<ref name=":0">[[DWMSE 11]]: ''Rose''</ref>
* Dummies - [[Elen Thomas]], [[J. P. Kingdom]], [[M Couchman]], [[Alan Wadlan]], [[Steph Grant]], [[Glyn Page]], [[Louise Vincent]], [[David Matthews]]<ref name=":0" />
* Hand double for Doctor Who - [[Phil Jay]]<ref name=":0" />
* Plastic Arm Strangler - [[Rod Woodruff]]<ref name=":0" />
* Stunt double for Doctor Who - [[Will Willoughby]]<ref name=":0" />
* Blonde Mother - [[Melanie Mort]]<ref name=":0" />
* Blonde Child - [[Daisy Sydenham]]<ref name=":0" />
* Neighbour - [[Alun Jenkins]]<ref name=":0" />
* Stunt Double for Mickey - [[Maurice Lee]], [[Will Willoughby]]<ref name=":0" />
* Diners - [[Linda Davies]], [[Ceri Jones]], [[Jacqueline Morris]], [[Andy Jackson]], [[Ian Jennings]], [[Angela Silcocks]], [[Helena Dunn]], [[Creighton Hanney]], [[Lyndon Ward]], [[Wendy Ward]], [[Russell Cook]], [[Leighton Haberfield]], [[Nicholas Wade]]<ref name=":0" />
* Headless Mickey - [[Kevin Hudson]], [[Chris Stone]]<ref name=":0" />
* Stunt Dummy - [[Holly Lumsden]], [[Paul Kulik]]<ref name=":0" />
* Stunt Public - [[Holly Lumsden]], [[Paul Kulik]]<ref name=":0" />
* Stunt Bride - [[Holly Lumsden]]<ref name=":0" />
* Stunt Driver - [[Paul Kulik]]<ref name=":0" />
* Stunt double for Rose Tyler - [[Juliette Cheveley]]<ref name=":0" />
* Stunt doubles for Lair Dummies - [[Maurice Lee]], [[Ricard Dwyer]]<ref name=":0" />
* ADR - [[Paul Sparrowman]], [[Paula Keogh]], [[Daryl Adcock]], [[Nicholas Lupton]], [[Wendi Sheard]], [[Jane Hunt]], [[Jenny Pink]], [[Stephen Bracken-Keogh]]<ref name=":0" />
 
== Crew ==
{{Wales crew
|Writer=Russell T Davies
|Producer=Phil Collinson
|Director=Keith Boak
|Character1=Autons
|CharCreatedBy1a=Robert Holmes
|1stAD=George Gerwitz
|2ndAD=Steffan Morris
|3rdAD=Dafydd Rhys Parry
|LocationManager=Clive Evans (location manager){{!}}Clive Evans
|LocationManager2=Lowri Thomas
|ProductionCoOrdinator=Dathyl Evans
|AssistantProductionAccountant=Debi Griffiths
|AssistantProductionAccountant2=Kath Blackman
|Continuity=Sian Prosser
|ScriptEditor=Elwen Rowlands
|CameraOperator=Mike Costelloe
|CameraOperator2=Martin Stephens
|FocusPuller=Steve Lawes
|FocusPuller2=Mark Isaac
|Grip=John Robinson
|BoomOperator=Damian Richardson
|Gaffer=Mark Hutchings
|BestBoy=Peter Chester
|StuntCoOrdinator=Rod Woodruff
|Stunt=Holly Lumsden
|Stunt2=Paul Kulik
|Choreographer=Ailsa Altena-Berk
|ArtDeptCoOrdinator=Gwenllian Llwyd
|ConceptArtist=Bryan Hitch
|ProductionBuyer=Catherine Samuel
|SetDecorator=Peter Walpole
|SupervisingArtDirector=Stephen Nicholas
|StandbyArtDirector=Julian Luxton
|PropertyMaster=Patrick Begley
|ConstructionManager=Andrew Smith (art department)
|StandbyProps=Phill Shellard
|StandbyProps2=Adrian Anscombe
|GraphicArtist=Jenny Bowers
|WardrobeSupervisor=Yolanda Peart-Smith
|Make-upSupervisor=Linda Davie
|Make-upArtist=Sarah Wilson
|CastingAssociate=Kirsty Robertson
|AsstEditor=Ceres Doyle
|PostProdSupervisor=Marie Brown
|OnlineEditor=Matthew Clarke
|Colourist=Kai van Beers
|2DArtist=Simon C. Holden
|2DArtist2=David Bowman
|2DArtist3=Sara Bennett
|2DArtist4=Alberto Montanes
|2DArtist5=Jennifer Herbert
|3DArtist=Andy Howell
|3DArtist2=Chris Tucker
|3DArtist3=Jean-Claude Deguara
|3DArtist4=Mark Wallman
|3DArtist5=Paul Burton
|3DArtist6=Chris Petts
|3DArtist7=Porl Perrott
|DigitalMattePainter=Alex Fort
|ModelUnitSupervisor=Mike Tucker
|DubbingMixer=Tim Ricketts
|DialogueEditor=Paul McFadden
|SoundFXEditor=Paul Jefferies
|FinanceManager=Richard Pugsley
|OriginalTheme=Ron Grainer
|CastingDirector=Andy Pryor CDG
|ProductionAccountant=Endaf Emyr Williams
|SoundRecordist=Ian Richardson (sound recordist)
|CostumeDesigner=Lucinda Wright
|Make-upDesigner=Davy Jones (make-up designer)
|Music=Murray Gold
|VisualEffects=The Mill
|VisualFXProducer=Will Cohen
|VisualFXSupervisor=Dave Houghton
|SpecialEffects=Any Effects
|Prosthetics=Millennium Effects
|Editor=Mike Jones (editor)
|ProductionDesigner=Edward Thomas
|DOP=Ernie Vincze BSC
|ProductionManager=Tracie Simpson
|AssociateProducer=Helen Vallis
|ExecutiveProd=Russell T Davies
|ExecutiveProd2=Julie Gardner
|ExecutiveProd3=Mal Young
}}''Note: [[Paul Perrot]] was mis-credited as '''Porl''' Perrot on the initially broadcast version of the episode.<ref name=":0" />''
 
== Worldbuilding ==
* A [[customer announcement]] is given in [[Henrik's]].
* [[Central London]] is closed off.
* The Doctor calls Rose a "[[bonehead]]".
* Rose mentions [[breast implant]]s.
* The Doctor tells Rose that the dummies are not waging a "[[price war]]".
* Rose suffers [[culture shock]].
* The Doctor tells Rose that the TARDIS is "not just a [[London hopper]]".
 
=== The Doctor ===
* The Doctor has been to several major events in his ninth incarnation, including the launching of the ''[[Titanic]]'' in [[1912]], the [[assassination]] of [[John F. Kennedy]] in [[1963]], and the eruption of the volcano at [[Krakatoa]] in [[1883]].
* The Doctor reads the novel ''[[The Lovely Bones]]'' in Jackie's flat by flipping through it.
* The Doctor often says, "[[Fantastic]]!"
* The Doctor apparently finds out what his current face looks like for the first time by looking in a [[mirror]].
=== Foods and beverages ===
* Mickey offers to make Rose a cup of [[tea]].
* Rose offers to make the Doctor a cup of [[coffee]] which she is preparing in the kitchen when he is attacked by the [[Auton]] arm.
* Rose and Mickey's Auton double go out for [[pizza]].
 
=== Individuals ===
* Rose's friend [[Suki (Rose)|Suki]] says there are jobs going at the local [[hospital]].
* Jackie's friend [[Arianna]] successfully sued the council.
* Rose thinks the dummies are a practical joke set up by [[Derek (Rose)|Derek]].
* Jackie's friend [[Bev (Father's Day)|Bev]] phones to make sure Rose is okay.
* Jackie's friend [[Debbie (Rose)|Debbie]] knows someone from ''[[The Mirror]]''.
 
=== Locations ===
* Henrik's is located on [[Regent Street]].
* Jackie suggests Rose get a job at [[Finch's]].
 
=== Technology ===
* The Nestene Consciousness used [[warp shunt]] technology to get to Earth.
 
== Story notes ==
* This is the first story featuring the new TARDIS console room, which has a far more organic appearance than its predecessors. Initially questioned by fans, the later mini-episode ''[[Time Crash (TV story)|Time Crash]]'' would confirm this as a new "desktop theme" for the TARDIS interior, which the [[Fifth Doctor]] called "coral".
* The sonic screwdriver makes a reappearance on screen in a new shape, but with the same sound effect. The screwdriver was first introduced in [[TV]]: ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'' and destroyed in [[TV]]: ''[[The Visitation (TV story)|The Visitation]]'', then reappeared in [[TV]]: ''[[Doctor Who (TV story)|Doctor Who]]''. From this episode onwards, it becomes an established tool within the series.
* A copy of this story was available to download on the Internet on various peer-to-peer (p2p) networks several weeks before it was released. The preview version was near-identical to the broadcast version, with the exception of the [[title sequence]] and ending credits using the version of the [[Doctor Who theme|title theme]] used between 1967 and 1980 (presumably as a placeholder) rather than the new arrangement by Murray Gold. In 2005, the illegal distribution of TV series episodes via p2p was nowhere near as widespread as it became with the later rise of torrents; ''Rose'' was one of the first major TV productions to be "leaked" in this fashion.<ref>https://www.cnet.com/tech/tech-industry/bbc-probes-net-leak-of-doctor-who-episode/</ref> The leak was ultimately traced to a third party company in Canada which had a legitimate preview copy. The employee responsible was fired by the company and the BBC considered further legal action.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/media/2005/mar/24/newmedia.broadcasting#:~:text=Just%20days%20before%20the%20new,%2Dparty%20company%20in%20Canada%22.</ref>
** The events of ''Rose'' being leaked were seemingly alluded to in the short story ''[[Computer Virus File Sharing Alert (short story)|Computer Virus File Sharing Alert]]'', where a [[computer virus]] conspicuously named "[[RUFFCUT]]" (as version of ''Rose'' that as leaked was not the final cut of the story) was spread after people began pirating media online. The dates even lined more-or-less up, as the virus became active on [[10 March]] [[2005]], a few days after the real world incident.
* The word "Auton" is not used in the dialogue of the story nor does it appear in the [[The Shooting Scripts|shooting script]] as published in 2005, but does appear in the episode credits.
* The surname Finch was used for Clive and his wife in the production notes, but not in the on-screen version.
* For this, the first episode, the opening credits follow the UK standard of "title sequence, then programme." The rest of this season and the next three would include a cold opening before the main title sequence of each episode, as had previously been done in [[TV]]: ''[[Castrovalva (TV story)|Castrovalva]]'', [[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'', and [[TV]]: ''[[Time and the Rani (TV story)|Time and the Rani]]''.
* There were problems during the first broadcast of this episode in the [[UK]] which meant that sound from a [[BBC Three]] program, ''Strictly Dance Fever'' hosted by [[Graham Norton]], was heard over the scene in which Rose first encounters the Autons.
* There were problems during the first broadcast of this episode in the [[UK]] which meant that sound from a [[BBC Three]] program, ''Strictly Dance Fever'' hosted by [[Graham Norton]], was heard over the scene in which Rose first encounters the Autons.
* As part of the launch of the new series the [[BBC]] screened the [[documentary]] [[Doctor Who: A New Dimension]] on [[BBC1]].
* As part of the launch of the new series, the [[BBC]] screened the documentary ''[[Doctor Who: A New Dimension (CON episode)|Doctor Who: A New Dimension]]'' on [[BBC One]] — coincidentally narrated by [[David Tennant]], the future [[Tenth Doctor]].
* Following this episode, [[Doctor Who Confidential]]: Episode 1 was broadcast on BBC 3.
* Following this episode, ''[[Doctor Who Confidential]]'' Episode 1 was broadcast on BBC 3.
* When searching for [[the Doctor]] on the [[Internet]] [[Rose Tyler|Rose]] uses [http://www.search-wise.net/ search-wise]. This is an actual web page with the same logo as on the show, but it is not actually a search engine: instead, it is a web page created by a company called Compuhire, designed for use in television and film when a search engine is required to be seen on-screen. (See their [http://www.search-wise.net/about.htm disclaimer].)
* The reference to the Doctor having a Northern accent relates to the media attention generated around [[Christopher Eccleston]] — who had always retained his native [[Lancashire]] accent — not conforming to people's perception of what the Doctor should be like. It also references the fact the different actors who had previously played the Doctor had, themselves, differing accents, most notably [[Sylvester McCoy]], whose Doctor spoke with a light Scottish accent, which would crop up again when [[Peter Capaldi]] took on the role.
* The reference to [[the Doctor]] having a Northern accent relates to the media attention that has been generated around [[Christopher Eccleston]] not conforming to people's perception of what [[the Doctor]] should be like.
* In the scene where the Doctor is in Rose's flat, the original script called for the Doctor to stick his entire head in the cat flap. When it arrived, however, it was far too small.
* In the scene where the Doctor is in Rose's flat, the original script called for the Doctor to stick his entire head in the cat flap. But when they got it, it was far too small.
* The episode in early drafts had "Auton bin men", which would explain why Mickey could appear in the Nestene Consciousness's lair after being eaten alive by the plastic trash-bin.
* Rose's comment about the Doctor sounding like he was from the north marks the second time Earth geography has been applied to the Doctor's demeanour (previously, he was referred to as being from England in the TV movie). The Doctor's retort, "lots of planets have a north" is a possibly unintended reference to [[DW]]: ''[[The Ribos Operation]]'', in which being "from the north" was a major character point.
* Rose's comment about the Doctor sounding like he was from the north marks the second time Earth geography has been applied to the Doctor's demeanour (previously, he was referred to as being from England in the [[Doctor Who (TV story)|TV movie]]).
* Similarly, Rose and the Doctor's exchange regarding his accent also echoes a similar discussion between the [[Fourth Doctor]] and fellow Time Lord [[Drax]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The Armageddon Factor]]'' regarding the latter's affected accent.
* Similarly, Rose and the Doctor's exchange regarding his accent also echoes a similar discussion between the [[Fourth Doctor]] and fellow Time Lord [[Second Drax]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Armageddon Factor (TV story)|The Armageddon Factor]]'' regarding the latter's affected Cockney accent.
* A special effects milestone occurs when the Doctor is shown standing in the door of the TARDIS and the interior is clearly visible behind him. In the original series, the interior of the TARDIS was usually shown as a dark void whenever a head-on view of the open doors (a rarity) occurred. For the first time, elements of the exterior of the TARDIS -- specifically the inside of the doors and the POLICE BOX lettering along the roofline -- are visible from the console room.
* A special effects milestone occurs when the Doctor is shown standing in the door of the TARDIS and the interior is clearly visible behind him. In the original series, the interior of the TARDIS was usually shown as a dark void whenever a head-on view of the open doors a rarity occurred (though this has previously been done in the [[The Pilot Episode|pilot]] version of the [[An Unearthly Child (episode)|first episode]] of the original series; however curiously enough not in its broadcast version). For the first time, elements of the exterior of the TARDIS specifically the inside of the doors and the POLICE PUBLIC CALL BOX lettering along the roofline are visible from the console room.
* Between the final scene and the closing credits, the episode incorporates a "Next Time..." trailer for the next episode. This is the first time this device has been used in ''Doctor Who''. This becomes a regular feature, omitted only on rare occasions, or occasionally moved to the end of the closing credits.
* Between the final scene and the closing credits, the episode incorporates a "Next Time..." trailer for the next episode. This is the first time this device has been used in ''Doctor Who''. This becomes a regular feature, omitted only on rare occasions, or occasionally moved to the end of the closing credits. It also introduces a trend which remained through the first RTD era of the show that the trailer would be proceeded by the 2005 ''Doctor Who ''logo swiping across the screen from right to left. It was also rare that this feature would happen before the credits rather than the trailer.
* Actor [[Nicholas Briggs]] makes his debut on the revived series, providing the voice of the Nestene Consciousness. He would go to be the show's designated voice actor, vocalizing the [[Dalek]]s and [[Cybermen]] over the next few seasons. ''Rose'' is far from Briggs' first ''Doctor Who''-related work, as he had been an active participant in independent, unofficial, and licensed spin-off productions dating back to the 1980s, most notably his work hosting the ''[[Myth Makers]]'' interview video series, writing and directing films for [[BBV Productions]] and [[Reeltime Pictures]], and as producer of the [[Big Finish]] ''Doctor Who'' audio dramas, a project that had its roots in [[Audio Visuals]], a series of fan-made ''Doctor Who'' audio adventures in which Briggs himself played the Doctor.
* Actor [[Nicholas Briggs]] makes his debut on the revived series, providing the voice of the Nestene Consciousness. He would go to be the show's designated voice actor, remaining the [[Dalek]]s' and [[Cyberman|Cybermen]]'s voice actor (as of 2022). ''Rose'' is far from Briggs' first ''Doctor Who''-related work, as he had been an active participant in independent, unofficial, and licensed spin-off productions dating back to the 1980s, most notably hosting the ''[[Myth Makers]]'' interview video series, writing and directing films for [[BBV Productions]] and [[Reeltime Pictures]], and as producer of the [[Big Finish Productions]] ''Doctor Who'' audio dramas, a project that had its roots in [[Audio Visuals (fan work)|Audio Visuals]], a series of fan-made ''Doctor Who'' audio adventures in which Briggs himself played the Doctor. In 2009, Briggs would have his first official on-screen appearance in a Who franchise production with a supporting role in ''[[Torchwood (TV series)|Torchwood]]'': ''[[Children of Earth]]''.
* Russell T Davies becomes the first author of original ''Doctor Who'' spin-off fiction to write for the official TV series. A decade earlier, he wrote the [[Seventh Doctor]] novel ''[[Damaged Goods]]'' for the [[Virgin New Adventures]] line of novels. Numerous other writers of licensed spin-off fiction and [[Big Finish]] audio dramas would go on to write for the revival, including [[Paul Cornell]], [[Mark Gatiss]], [[Steven Moffat]] (who would ultimately succeed Davies as lead writer in 2009), [[Robert Shearman]], and [[Gareth Roberts]].
* [[Russell T Davies]] becomes the first author of original ''Doctor Who'' spin-off fiction to write for the official TV series. A decade earlier, he wrote the Seventh Doctor novel ''[[Damaged Goods]]'' for the [[Virgin New Adventures]] line of novels. Numerous other writers of licensed spin-off fiction and [[Big Finish Productions]] audio dramas would go on to write for the revival, including [[Paul Cornell]], [[Mark Gatiss]] (who would also guest star in three episodes), [[Steven Moffat]] (who would ultimately succeed Davies as lead writer in 2009), [[Robert Shearman]], and [[Gareth Roberts]].
* This is the first and, to date, only episode of ''Doctor Who'' to use the name of a companion in its title (it would be followed by two episodes of ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'' featuring [[Sarah Jane Smith]]'s name). There was an episode of the 1960s serial ''[[The Daleks' Master Plan]]'' entitled "The Feast of Steven", after companion [[Steven Taylor]], but it wasn't a title applied to a complete storyline, unlike ''Rose''. Later, series 3 would begin with [[Smith and Jones]], named after soon-to-be companion [[Martha Jones]] and the Doctor's occasional alias.
* This is the first episode of ''Doctor Who'' to use the name of a companion in its title.
* The scene in which Rose wanders through the basement of the department store alone was the first scene Billie Piper shot as Rose Tyler (per ''[[Project Who]]'').
* Clive's website, [[Doctor Who?]], marks the first time a character has directly referred to the Doctor by the name "Doctor Who" on screen since [[WOTAN]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The War Machines (TV story)|The War Machines]]''. Clive's use is clearly meant in the form of a question, with "Doctor Who" being more or less a nickname.
* The [[The Trip of a Lifetime (trailer)|original preview trailers]] for Series 1 include a scene where the Ninth Doctor is narrowly outrunning a fireball behind him down a concrete tunnel. This is likely set moments after he set off the explosives he laid in Henrik's, and details his escape from the doomed building.
* [[Executive producer]] [[Russell T Davies]] stated that he chose to have Christopher Eccleston depict a new incarnation of the Doctor so he could have a fresh start for both the new viewers and the narratives he wanted to implant in the series, and because Eccleston was a good friend of his who wanted to help ''Doctor Who'' gain momentum to become successful again.
* [[Paul McGann]], who portrayed the [[Eighth Doctor]] in the telemovie, said that he would have returned to the series if given the chance, but Russell T Davies did not want to depict [[Eighth Doctor's regeneration|a regeneration]] with first-time viewers tuning in, who would be unable to identify why the Doctor changed appearances. Eventually, he was given a chance to reprise the Eighth Doctor in 2013 for the mini-episode [[TV]]: ''[[The Night of the Doctor (TV story)|The Night of the Doctor]]'', which dealt with the lingering mystery of his regeneration.
* This story seemingly implied that the Ninth Doctor had recently undergone regeneration from a past incarnation, when he commented about the features of his face while looking at a mirror in Rose's flat. The logical assumption at the time of his debut among viewers was that he had regenerated from the Eighth Doctor. However, this was disproven in 2013 when [[Steven Moffat]] conceived a new incarnation to retroactively insert between the Eighth and Ninth Doctors. The so-called [[War Doctor]], played by [[John Hurt]], did not call himself the Doctor until the end of his life and was an honorary, unnumbered inclusion among the other incarnations who carried the title fully throughout their lives. The War Doctor was cemented as the Ninth Doctor's predecessor when [[War Doctor's regeneration|he regenerated into him]] near the end of [[TV]]: ''[[The Day of the Doctor (TV story)|The Day of the Doctor]]''. Additionally, in a retrospective on the new series in [[DWM 485]], Russell T Davies stated the intention of the scene was merely him noticing the features, rather like being disappointed with "buck teeth" or similar un-aesthetically pleasing traits. He notes the Doctor in the episode is "in command" rather than post-regenerative, and he included the references to [[Krakatoa]] and [[Titanic]] to suggest this incarnation has a life before this episode.
** The original assumption about the Ninth Doctor emerging from the regeneration of the Eighth Doctor would later be maintained in Russell's short story ''[[Doctor Who and the Time War (short story)|Doctor Who and the Time War]]'', written before, but ultimately released after, Moffat introduced the War Doctor and ''The Night of the Doctor''.
* This is the only episode introducing a new Doctor in the revived series to not run longer than average.
* This was the first episode since Part Two of 1985's [[TV]]: ''[[Revelation of the Daleks (TV story)|Revelation of the Daleks]]'' to run for approximately 45 minutes.
* This is the first TV story since [[TV]]: ''[[Mission to the Unknown (TV story)|Mission to the Unknown]]'' to consist of a single standard-length episode. This would become the standard for the revived series.
* This is also the first story since [[TV]]: ''[[Logopolis (TV story)|Logopolis]], ''to credit its leading cast member as 'Doctor Who' and not 'The Doctor', but this credit would be reverted during [[David Tennant]]'s tenure, at his request.
* This is the first TV story to include a creator credit for a creature or character. In this case, [[Robert Holmes]] was credited as the creator of the [[Autons]].
* During writing, [[Russell T Davies]] had trouble coming up with how Mickey was supposed to be captured by the Nestene Consciousness while waiting for Rose in the car, and finally realised he could be lured by a plastic wheelie bin. He commented that such instances of the ordinary being made scary made the series unique.
* [[Russell T Davies]] had to take out "oblique" references to the Autons being like terrorists, as the Eye was once a target of a terrorist attack.
* The entrance of the Doctor was something much debated; [[Jane Tranter]] and other members of the production team wanted it to be more dramatic, but the scene was never reshot. [[Russell T Davies]] remarked that it reflects Rose's point of view, whereas a more dramatic entrance would reflect the audience's excitement at the Doctor coming back.
* The scene in which the Auton arm attacks in the Tylers' flat was originally much longer, but was revised.
* The episode originally underran by several minutes, and a scene with the Doctor and Rose walking was added a month or so later.
* [[Russell T Davies]] wanted the Doctor to realise that Rose has something to offer to his cause. Their holding hands while running was meant to signify that they were a team, despite him not asking her yet, and they were not to question their relationship.
* The episode was intended to be presented from Rose's point-of-view. For audience identification purposes, [[Russell T Davies]] wanted the alien menace to be easily mistaken as human, so that it was possible for Rose to mistake the aliens for humans. Davies felt that there was no need to create a new monster, as the Autons met these criteria.
* The Auton sequences were difficult to film because the costumes were uncomfortable for the actors; which meant that frequent breaks from filming were needed.
* Computer-generated imagery was used in post-production to cover up the zipper on the back of the necks of the Auton costumes.
* [[Russell T Davies]] wanted to recreate the scene of the Autons breaking out of shop windows from their first appearance in ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'', although he had the budget to actually smash the glass instead of just cutting around it like in ''Spearhead''.
* [[Russell T Davies]] offered [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgar_Wright Edgar Wright] the opportunity to direct the episode, but Wright was forced to decline, as he was still working on ''[[Shaun of the Dead]]''.
* [[Restaurant (Rose)|The restaurant]] was filmed at La Fosse, located at [[The Hayes]] in [[Cardiff]].<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20070305042655/http://www.shannonsullivan.com/drwho/serials/2005a.html ''Rose'' on shannonsullivan.com via the Wayback Machine]</ref><ref name=":0"> It took the production team a while to find a restaurant that would require minimal set dressing but would be willing to close for a day.{{fact}}
* The production team sought to film the Cardiff scenes in secrecy, but the day before they began the Cardiff Council issued a press release naming the streets where they would be filming.
* The area underneath the London Eye where the Doctor and Rose confront the Nestene Consciousness was filmed in an unused paper mill in Grangetown, Cardiff. It underwent steam cleaning because there were such high health and safety concerns. They were only permitted to film for three days, which required that some of the sequence be cut: originally, there was to be another Auton Mickey involved.
* In the original script, Rose's first experience of seeing the TARDIS interior was shared with the audience. [[Keith Boak]], however, wanted her to exit and run around the TARDIS before entering again, at which point the interior would be revealed to the audience. This change was eventually embraced by the executive producers. [[Russell T Davies]] remarked that he originally wanted to take Rose and the audience inside the TARDIS in all one shot, but this was not a feasible with the budget. This effect would later be accomplished in ''[[The Snowmen (TV story)|The Snowmen]]''.
* The episode name was gradually shortened; in Davies' pitch it had been called ''Rose meets the Doctor, and the journey begins'', on his contract ''Rose Meets the Doctor'' and finally ''Rose.''
* [[Noel Clarke]] isn't too fond of this episode. He felt that he didn't understand the tone that [[Russell T Davies]] was going for, and that he was overemphasising Mickey's cartoonishness as result. This was largely due to the fact that he was also filming the final episode of {{wi|Auf Wiedersehen, Pet}}, a situation excaberated by the death of co-star {{w|Pat Roach}}. He later said: "It wasn't played straight - some of it was played for laughs. I have no excuses, but I do have reasons: I had no rehearsal time, so I didn't really know the tone of what we were doing. I'd never met [[Christopher Eccleston|Chris]] before, or [[Billie Piper|Billie]] or [[Camille Coduri|Camille]]. I didn't realise at the time, but my head wasn't where it should have been".
* [[Steven Moffat]] stated in 2013 that he believed that the Ninth Doctor is newly-regenerated here, as evidenced by his reaction to looking in the mirror. [[Russell T Davies]] disagrees: "No, I don't think he'd just regenerated. If you have certain physical features like big ears or buck teeth, you look at them and sigh every time you look in the mirror. And I think if you'd had eight different faces, even if you'd been in the current form for a hundred years, you'd still mutter at them. So it was meant as a nod to the fact he'd once had other faces. But I wrote the ''Titanic'' stuff and Krakatoa assuming that the Ninth Doctor had been around for a while. He doesn't act very post-regeneration, does he? He appears in command, waving a bomb. This is a man who knows himself, and has known himself for a while".
* On March 26 2020, the fifteenth anniversary of the episode, a collective fan "Watch-along" was held on [[Twitter]]. [[Russell T Davies]] participated and released a prequel and sequel to the episode. The prequel was entitled "''[[Doctor Who and the Time War (short story)|Doctor Who and the Time War]]''", an unused story intended for ''[[The Doctor: His Lives and Times]]'' but declined for contradicting ''[[The Day of the Doctor (TV story)|The Day of the Doctor]]''. The story concerns the Eighth Doctor's regeneration into the Ninth Doctor after the events of the Time War. The sequel was entitled "''[[Revenge of the Nestene (short story)|Revenge of the Nestene]]''" it was released in audio form akin to the [[Big Finish]] range and serves as a continuation of the novelisation and concerns the survival of one Auton after the events of the episode. The infamous Graham Norton interruption was also recreated.
* This is the first television story to be recorded on the digital [[betacam]] format.
* [[Russell T Davies]] revealed in ''[[The Writer's Tale]]'' that {{w|Mackenzie Crook}} was almost cast as Clive Finch.
* [[Jane Tranter]] had expected the [[Dalek]]s to be the villains, but [[Russell T Davies]] felt that they would be better used to provide a mid-season bump in publicity.
* The main villains were originally conceived to be the twin bosses of Rose's company who always appeared to be holding hands, because they were really two Autons who were fused together.
* Rose was originally an office cleaner. Russell T Davies suggested that she might find [[dinosaur]]s in the basement of the high rise where she worked (inspired by ''[[Walking with Dinosaurs]]''). She would be saved by the Doctor, with one sequence involving an escape using a window cleaner's cradle.
* Rose's decision to join the Doctor in the TARDIS was originally foreshadowed when Jackie mentioned receiving a phone call from her daughter that morning, promising that she would be safe, a call which Rose insisted she hadn't placed.
* Outside Clive's, Mickey was originally kidnapped by Autons disguised as workmen.
* The use of the plastic garbage bin was inspired by the way ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'' and ''[[Terror of the Autons (TV story)|Terror of the Autons]]'' had made everyday objects sinister.
* The Mickey duplicate was originally unmasked when his plastic eyeball fell into his soup.
* In the Nestene's lair, Rose was initially deceived by another Auton Mickey. It was from their conversation that the Nestene learned about the Doctor's anti-plastic serum.
* Rose was originally supposed to run into Mickey after Henrik's department store blew up. This was abandoned due to [[Noel Clarke]]'s commitment to {{wi|Auf Wiedersehen, Pet}}.
* Filming the scene in the basement was slow and the artistes dressed as Autons needed more breaks than anticipated, especially given the heat of the subterranean spaces.
* Script editor [[Elwen Rowlands]] suggested the name of Tizzano's in reference to the sixteenth-century artist {{w|Titian}}, whose real name was Tiziano Vecelli. The removal of the Auton Mickey's head had reminded Rowlands of the decapitation of [[John the Baptist]], the aftermath of which was debatably the subject matter of the Titian painting popularly known as ''Salome''.
* [[Russell T Davies]] had scripted the Doctor to use the word “Dimensions” when explaining the meaning of the acronym TARDIS, [[Christopher Eccleston]] chose to revert back to the original “Dimension”.
* The chaotic shooting schedule soured the relationship between [[Russell T Davies]] and [[Christopher Eccleston]]. Frustrated that the production team had not done enough to foster a positive working environment, Eccleston was already contemplating his departure from the series.
* [[Christopher Eccleston]] and [[Mark Benton]] had previously appeared in [[Russell T Davies]]'s {{wi|The_Second_Coming_(TV_serial)|The Second Coming}}.


===Ratings===
=== Ratings ===
* 9.94 million (43.2% audience share)
* 10.81 million, with a 43.2% audience share.<ref name="ratings"/>
*Repeat - 0.48 million (3.5% audience share)


===Myths and rumours===
=== Myths and rumours ===
*It is often speculated that the Nestene Consciousness can be heard to utter the words "[[Bad Wolf meme|Bad Wolf]]".
* It is often speculated that the Nestene Consciousness can be heard to utter the words "[[Bad Wolf meme|Bad Wolf]]". ''(The subtitles and DVD commentary for the episode state that it says "Time Lord". This can be heard more clearly on the Blu-ray release of series 1.)''
*Due to the widescreen format introduced with this episode, it was often erroneously stated that this episode and those that followed were filmed in high-definition. In fact, the first high-definition ''Doctor Who'' episode wasn't produced until ''[[Planet of the Dead (TV story)|Planet of the Dead]]'' in 2009.
* Due to the widescreen format introduced with this episode, it was often erroneously stated that this episode and those that followed were filmed in high-definition. In fact, the first high-definition ''Doctor Who'' episode wasn't produced until ''[[Planet of the Dead (TV story)|Planet of the Dead]]'' in [[2009 (production)|2009]]. The spinoff series ''[[Torchwood (TV series)|Torchwood]]'', however, had always been produced in high definition. In 2010, the first standard-definition ''Doctor Who'' episode to be professionally upscaled to HD, ''[[The Next Doctor (TV story)|The Next Doctor]]'', was released on Blu-ray; this opened the door for ''Rose'' and other episodes of the first four series to undergo similar conversion in 2013.
* Was produced as a pilot before leading into production of a full series. ''The episode was always part of a 13-episode production block - with exceptions, the BBC seldom produces "pilot episodes" in the American sense of the word.''


===Filming Locations===
=== Filming locations ===
Mostly filmed in [[Cardiff]], but with some location filming in [[London]]:
* [[Howells]], [[Cardiff]] ([[Henrik's]])
* Queens Arcade, Cardiff (shopping centre)
* Working Street, Cardiff (shopping centre)
* St Mary's Market, Cardiff (alleyway where Rose agrees to travel with the Doctor)
* [[Cardiff Royal Infirmary]] (restaurant yard)
* Disused paper mill, Grangetown, Cardiff (Nestene lair)
* [[Trafalgar Square]], [[London]]
* Victoria Embankment, London
* [[London Eye]], London
* [[Westminster Bridge]], London
* [[Brandon Estate]], Kennington, London ([[Powell Estate]])
* Lydstep Flats, Gabalfa, Cardiff (Powell Estate)
* University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff (Henrik's basement)
* Unit Q2, [[Newport]] (studio filming)
* Skinner Street, Newport (scene with the Doctor and the bomb)
* Culverhouse Cross Studio 1, Cardiff (insert shot) (all [[TCH 48]])


* The scenes in which [[Rose Tyler |Rose]] is at work were filmed in [[Howells]] in the centre of [[Cardiff]].
=== Production errors ===
* The scene in which the [[Auton]]s attack people in a shopping centre was filmed in [[The Queens Arcade]].
{{discontinuity}}
* The scene in which Rose agrees to go travelling with [[the Doctor]] was filmed at Cardiff's outdoor market.
* In the opening titles, when the TARDIS moves screen-left out of the time vortex for the first time (while the vortex is blue, a second or two before the bullet-time freeze transition from blue to red), it doesn't pass through anything but simply vanishes. This error remains part of the title sequence throughout the first Russell T Davies era, and becomes more obvious once production of the show moved to HD in ''[[Planet of the Dead (TV story)|Planet of the Dead]]''.
*The Yard where the TARDIS is parked was filmed at the back of the Cardiff Royal Infirmary.
* As Rose opens the door to the room in the basement where she first encounters the Autons and the Doctor, before switching the lights on, the cameraman's shadow can be seen falling on some boxes.
*The [[Nestene Consciousness]]' lair was filmed in a disused paper mill in Cardiff.
* The BBC news report incorrectly spells Henrik's as Henrick's.
* In the news report, it shows the time as 20:45, two minutes pass by and it still says 20:45.
* If one looks carefully, the eyeholes in the faces of the Auton costumes are visible.
* When the Doctor pulls off the Auton's arm, the sleeve vanishes. There's no sound of it ripping and it wasn't on the arm when it got pulled off.
* When the Auton's arm gets pulled off, it's obviously its right arm. But when Rose carries it home, it is now a left arm, which turns back into a right arm when she gets home.
* While Rose is making coffee, the milk is in her right hand. It cuts to the Doctor shuffling cards, then cuts back and we see that now she has a teaspoon in her right hand. Again, it cuts back to him ''trying'' to shuffle them, and the milk is back in her right hand.
* While Mickey is trying to escape from the bin, he turns around 180 degrees, twisting the strands of plastic attached to his hands. It cuts to another angle and the strands are un-twisted.
* When Rose sets off the fire alarm in the restaurant, the glass cover doesn't break.
* When Rose first enters the TARDIS, there is only one handrail near the door. Then as she exits the TARDIS there is a handrail on both sides of the entrance.
* As the Doctor and Rose run across Westminster Bridge, two buses pass by on their right. Another shot shows them from the other side of the road, and the buses have disappeared.
* After the Nestene identifies the TARDIS, one can see a microphone above the Doctor's head.
* When the three Auton brides close in on Jackie, their hands fall off one-by-one, but as the second one falls off, the third one has already fallen off, and in the next shot it falls again.
* The TARDIS interior background painted in behind the Doctor in the first shot of the final scene where he's offering to take Rose with him is jittery and rough, with a noticeable black spot appearing above his left shoulder. It is also noticeable above his right shoulder as he steps back into the TARDIS to close the door and disappear. This is most noticeable on the Bluray release, and is also visible in the recap of the episode seen at the beginning of ''[[Aliens of London (TV story)|Aliens of London]]''.


===Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors===
== Continuity ==
* When Rose is attacked by the plastic arm, the Doctor uses his sonic screwdriver to cancel the signal. While he is doing this, Jackie is drying her hair in the other room. Firstly, wouldn't she hear Rose crashing through the table? Secondly, in ''[[Forest of the Dead]]'' the Doctor says that hairdryers interfere with his sonic screwdriver. So, shouldn't he be unable to use it against the arm? ''Firstly the Doctor said ''some'' hairdryers and secondly, he had to buzz it a few times for it to work. Besides, the hairdryer might not be close enough. Also if you look back Jackie puts on the hairdryer on before Rose falls through the table, she may not have heard it or did not assume it was anything major.''
* One of the buses that passed Rose on her way to work matches the appearance of the [[Celestial Omnibus]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Iris Wildthyme and the Polythene Terror (novel)|Iris Wildthyme and the Polythene Terror]]'')
*When Rose is making coffee for the Doctor, she picks up the milk bottle with her right hand, then it cuts to the Doctor shuffling the cards, then it cuts back and very briefly you can see that she's got a teaspoon in her right hand instead. Then it's back to the Doctor trying again to shuffle the cards, finally back to Rose with the milk in her right hand once again. ''It's possible that she could be picking things up and putting things down between shots.''
* The Doctor introduces himself to Rose in almost the same way he did to [[Charley Pollard]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Storm Warning (audio story)|Storm Warning]]'')
*When Mickey opens the wheelie bin, it is almost empty. Why would someone put out an empty rubbish bin? ''Maybe the bin ate the rubbish or has been emptied and hasn't been put back yet. Perhaps it was the bin day and he just put it out for the sake of getting rib of the little rubbish he had.''  
* People similar to Clive who are obsessed with the Doctor were depicted in [[PROSE]]: ''[[Return of the Living Dad (novel)|Return of the Living Dad]]''.
*If the Doctor is newly-regenerated, then how are there photos of him on the day before the Titanic set sail, at the assassination of John F. Kennedy and when Krakatoa erupted without Rose?''The Doctor may have gone to those time periods when he left Rose and Mickey after defeating the Nestene Consciousness, Rose was somewhere else at the time of those photos, or he went there before he met Rose. Alternatively, he could have had his memory somehow wiped. Also there is nothing on screen to indicate that the Doctor is newly regenerated, other than a vague self-reference to his appearance; he could have just as easily been referring to the outcome of a recent haircut as a regeneration or he may not have looked in a mirror.''
* The Doctor once again speed reads a book in a matter of seconds. ([[TV]]: ''[[City of Death (TV story)|City of Death]]'', ''[[The Time of Angels (TV story)|The Time of Angels]]'', [[AUDIO]]: ''[[Invaders from Mars (audio story)|Invaders from Mars]]'')
* When Mickey closes the wheelie bin lid, he then finds the plastic stuck to his hands, he lifts his hands up and the plastic stretches like tar. If you look closely when he lifts his hands up for the first time, you'll see that a shadow of one of his hands is cast clearly on his shirt, yet there is no shadow of the strands of plastic stuck to his fingers. Weird.
* The Doctor once again tries his hand at card tricks. ([[TV]]: ''[[Robot (TV story)|Robot]]'')
* When the three bride Autons attack Jackie, and they open their hands one at a time, it is clear that when the second Auton opens its hand, all three are already open. After it cuts to Rose, and back to Jackie again, the third one opens (even though we just saw it already open!)
* Rose returns to London in [[TV]]: ''[[Aliens of London (TV story)|Aliens of London]]''.
* How does the rubbish bin burp? It doesn't seem to have any reason to. It does not seem to be releasing gas, nor does it have any such parts that could make the noise. ''It was most likely just for comedic effect.; The burp seals in the freshness. Besides it could be the plastic's movements or releasing gas as it takes in Mickey.''
* The Auton invasion is referenced in [[TV]]: ''[[Love & Monsters (TV story)|Love & Monsters]]''.
* Obviously this was intended, but it seems a little strange and pointless to show the Doctor in the photos of the Titanic etc, to be in exactly the same position each time.
* Rose tells the Doctor she had a cat. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Cat Came Back (short story)|The Cat Came Back]]'')
* It is often speculated that the Nestene Consciousness can be heard to utter the words "[[Bad Wolf meme|Bad Wolf]]", while the subtitles for the episode show that is says 'Timelord'
* The Nestene Consciousness survived ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Revenge of the Nestene (short story)|Revenge of the Nestene]]'') and attempts another invasion of Earth fighting the Doctor's [[Tenth Doctor|next incarnation]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Autonomy (novel)|Autonomy]]'')
* When Mickey opens the lid to the trash bin and his hands are stuck to it, when he starts to strech out the plastic and turn around, the strands switch hands instead of crossing. How does this happen.
* Unbeknownst to Rose, this is not the first time that she met the Doctor. She previously encountered the [[Tenth Doctor]] on [[1 January]] [[2005]], immediately before [[Tenth Doctor's regeneration|his regeneration]] into his [[Eleventh Doctor|eleventh incarnation]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]'')
* The Doctor has a vial of anti plastic. Should it not be anti Nestene. The Nestene Conscious is not made of plastic, the Nestene is an organic creature.
* The Doctor once again claims that the TARDIS withstood an attack from the assembled hordes of [[Genghis Khan]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[City of Spires (audio story)|City of Spires]]'') This assertion is heard by the Eleventh Doctor when a time rift of the past leaks into the TARDIS. ([[TV]]: ''[[Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS (TV story)|Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS]]'')
* The Doctor's ability to sense the movement of the Earth is similar to his previous ability to sense the movement of a space station in [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Murder Game (novel)|The Murder Game]],'' and feel the effects of a drill twenty-one kilometres beneath the ground in [[TV]]: ''[[The Hungry Earth (TV story)|The Hungry Earth]]'' . Similarly, in his [[Eleventh Doctor|eleventh incarnation]], he was keenly aware of the suspicious lack of engine vibrations onboard the ''[[Starship UK]]''. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Beast Below (TV story)|The Beast Below]]'') The [[Twelfth Doctor]] was also able to deduce that the gravity of what appeared to be a spaceship was too realistic, and that it was actually a building on an invisible planet, which turned out to be [[Skaro]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)|The Magician's Apprentice]]'')
* The Ninth Doctor had at least one adventure without Rose before returning and telling her the TARDIS can travel in time. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Beast of Babylon (short story)|The Beast of Babylon]]'')
* The Doctor, upon looking at his reflection in a mirror, remarks that his ears are quite large. This betrays the wishes of his [[War Doctor|predecessor]], who wanted ears which were less conspicuous upon regenerating. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Day of the Doctor (TV story)|The Day of the Doctor]]'') This also reflects the reaction the [[Fourth Doctor]] had to his reflection, who was quite uncertain about his ears. ([[TV]]: ''[[Robot (TV story)|Robot]]'')
** This is quite possibly the first time he's seen himself in the mirror, as he destroyed every mirror in the TARDIS immediately after his regeneration. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Day of the Doctor (TV story)|The Day of the Doctor]]'')
* Clive tells Rose about how the Ninth Doctor convinced the [[Daniels family (Rose)|Daniels family]] not to go on the Titanic. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Battle Scars (audio story)|Battle Scars]]'', [[PROSE]]: ''[[Have You Seen This Man? (short story)|Have You Seen This Man?]]'') He also shows her a [[charcoal]] drawing of the Ninth Doctor at [[Krakatoa]] in [[1883]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Her Own Bootstraps (audio story)|Her Own Bootstraps]]'', [[PROSE]]: ''[[Have You Seen This Man? (short story)|Have You Seen This Man?]]'')
* The [[Lord Mayor of Cardiff]] [[Roy Llewellyn]] was believed to have been among the people killed during the Auton attack, which had spread to at least [[Cardiff]]. In reality, he was [[murder]]ed by [[Barry Jackson]] as part of his scheme to become Lord Mayor, who covered his death up amongst the casualties of the invasion ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[One Rule (audio story)|One Rule]]'') which was subsequently explained away as a [[terrorist]] attack just as the first Nestene invasion in the [[1970s]] was given the cover story of [[Black Thursday]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Who Killed Kennedy (novel)|Who Killed Kennedy]]'', [[TV]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space (TV story)|Spearhead from Space]]'') Having become the new Lord Mayor after eliminating the rest of the candidates, Barry Jackson would eventually be succeeded by [[Blon Fel-Fotch Passameer-Day Slitheen]], posing as [[Margaret Blaine]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Boom Town (TV story)|Boom Town]]'')
* Rose questions whether the Autons were actually students playing a practical joke. When the TARDIS landed at [[Gatwick Airport]] in [[1966]], the report about it doing so was also believed to have been something done by students. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'')


==Continuity==
== Home video releases ==
*The sonic screwdriver makes a reappearance (first introduced in [[DW]]: ''[[Fury from the Deep]]'' and destroyed in [[DW]]: ''[[The Visitation]]'', it made a reappearance in [[DW]]: ''[[Doctor Who: The TV Movie]]'' before its reappearance (in a new shape but the same noise).
=== DVD releases ===
* People similar to Clive who are obsessed with the Doctor were depicted in [[NA]]: ''[[Return of the Living Dad]]''. Clive is clearly corresponding by e-mail with others like himself and refers to the Doctor appearing in numerous conspiracy theories (possibly an early reference to [[LINDA]] [[DW]]: ''[[Love & Monsters|Love &amp; Monsters]]''.
* This story was released on a DVD along with ''[[The End of the World (TV story)|The End of the World]]'' and ''[[The Unquiet Dead (TV story)|The Unquiet Dead]]'' as ''Doctor Who - Series 1: Volume 1''. However, in Portugal and Russia ''Series 1: Volume 1'' also included the contents of ''Series 1: Volume 2''.
* It is implied but never stated that [[the Doctor]] has just [[regeneration|regenerated]]. When he is in [[Rose Tyler|Rose's]] flat he checks his appearance in the mirror as if he is unused to it. He also notes the way in which his ears stick out. This is similar to a scene in the first episode of [[Tom Baker]]'s debut story, [[DW]]: ''[[Robot (TV story)|Robot]]''.
* The version of the episode included on the [[UK]] release of ''Doctor Who - Series 1: Volume 1'' was an early edit which includes extra music cues ultimately cut from the transmitted episode, notably in the scene of the Doctor and Rose walking from her flat to the TARDIS.  
* The [[Auton]]s and the [[Nestene]] have previously featured [[DW]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space]]'' and [[DW]]: ''[[Terror of the Autons]]'', both of which were [[Third Doctor]] stories. The Nestenes also feature in the [[PDA]]: ''[[Business Unusual]]'' and ''[[Synthespians™]]'' which are both [[Sixth Doctor]] stories. The Autons also reappear in [[NSA]] ''[[Autonomy]]''.
* The version of the episode included on the [[Poland|Polish]] release of Doctor Who - Seria 1 appears to be a pre-televised copy, likely used by accident. It includes a few more unused cues, most notably during the scene where Plastic Mickey's head begins to melt. This and several other cues heard throughout the series cannot be found on any other releases of Series 1.
* The Doctor has at some time in his past been involved in a war which led to the destruction of the [[Polymos|Nestene Homeworld]]. This war is also referenced in [[PDA]]: ''[[Synthespians™]]''.
* This story was also released as part of the series 1 DVD box set, ''Doctor Who - The Complete First Series''.
*The Doctor speed reads a book as he did in [[DW]]: ''[[City of Death]]''.
* This story was also released with Issue 1 of the [[Doctor Who DVD Files]].
*Rose returns to London in [[DW]]: ''[[Aliens of London]]''.
* The Auton invasion is referenced in [[DW]]: ''[[Love & Monsters|Love &amp; Monsters]]''.
* The Doctor indicates that an unnamed but presumably well-known celebrity is actually an alien in disguise. He doesn't seem too concerned, suggesting a ''Men in Black'' scenario exists in the Doctor Who universe where human-disguised or human-like aliens live peacefully on Earth in the present day. (This is later supported by the decision by [[Bayldon Copper]], who is not from Earth, to stay on the planet after the events of [[DW]]: ''[[Voyage of the Damned]]''.)
* Clive's website, [[Defending the Earth!|Who is Doctor Who?]] marks the first time a character has directly referred to the Doctor by the name "Doctor Who" on screen since [[WOTAN]] in [[DW]]: ''[[The War Machines]]''. Unlike WOTAN's use, which is considered a continuity error, Clive's use is clearly meant in the form of a question, with "Doctor Who" being more or less a nickname.
*Rose tells the Doctor she had a cat. This is confirmed in [[The Cat Came Back]].


==DVD and Other Releases==
=== Blu-ray releases ===
[[Image:Bbcdvd-s1-v1.gif|thumb|173px|Series 1 Volume 1: Rose - The End of the World - The Unquiet Dead DVD Cover]]
* This story was released in The Complete Series One Blu-ray set in [[November (releases)|November]] [[2013 (releases)|2013]] along with the rest of the series. This release was initially bundled with the first seven series of the revived ''Doctor Who''.
*This was released on a DVD along with ''The End of the World'' and ''The Unquiet Dead''. Doctor Who - Series 1 Volume One.
* In 2017, a Complete Series One Blu-ray steelbook was released as a limited edition.
*This was also released as part of the series 1 DVD boxset. Doctor Who - The Complete First Series.
*This was also released with Issue 1 of the [[Doctor Who DVD Files]].


==See also==
=== Other releases ===
*[[DW]]: ''[[Spearhead from Space]]''
* ''Series 1: Volume 1'' was also the first to be released in the UMD format for PlayStation Portable.
*[[DW]]: ''[[Survival]]''
* This story is available for streaming via [[Netflix]], [[Hulu Plus]] and [[Amazon Prime]]. It can also be purchased on [[iTunes]].
* In 2015, it was released by BBC Worldwide on BitTorrent and iTunes in the ''A Decade of the Doctor'' bundle, to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the new series. It included introductions by Peter Capaldi, ''Earth Conquest: The World Tour'' and an episode guide.


==External Links==
=== DVD releases ===
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/episodes/2005/rose.shtml Official BBC Website - Episode Guide for '''Rose''']
==== Series 1: Volume 1 ====
* [http://www.gallifreyone.com/episode.php?id=2005-01 Outpost Gallifrey Episode Guide: '''Rose''']
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true" widths="120">
* [http://www.drwhoguide.com/who_tv01.htm The Doctor Who Reference Guide detailed synopsis of ''Rose'']
File:Series 1 volume 1 us dvd.jpg|Region 1 US cover
*[http://www.shannonsullivan.com/drwho/serials/2005a.html A Brief History of Time (Travel): '''Rose''']
File:Series-1-volume-1.jpg|Region 2 UK cover
* [http://www.whoniverse.org/discontinuity/9A.php The Whoniverse Discontinuity Guide to '''Rose''']
File:Series 1 Volume 1 Netherlands DVD.jpg|Region 2 Netherlands cover
* [http://www.whoisdoctorwho.co.uk/ Clive's Website]
File:Series 1 volume 1 japan dvd.jpg|Region 2 Japanese cover
File:Series 1 volume 1 portugal dvd.jpg|Region 2 Portuguese cover
File:Doctor Who Series 1 Volume 1 region4.jpg|Region 4 Australian cover
File:Series 1 volume 1 russia dvd.jpg|Region 5 Russian cover
</gallery>
=== UMD releases ===
==== Series 1: Volume 1 ====
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true" widths="120">
File:Series 1 Volume 1 UMD.jpg|Region 2 UK cover
</gallery>


== External links ==
* {{bbcdw|episodes/2005/rose.shtml|Rose}}
{{dwrefguide|who_tv01.htm|Rose}}
* {{briefhistory|serials/2005a.html|Rose}}
* {{whoniverse|s01_01|Rose}}
* {{locguide|rose|Rose}}


{{Series 1}}
== Footnotes ==
[[Category:Ninth Doctor episodes]]
{{reflist|2}}
[[Category:2005 television stories]]
{{TitleSort}}
{{DWTV}}
{{Nestene stories}}
{{Auton stories}}
[[cs:Rose (TV příběh)]]
[[cy:Rose (stori deledu)]]
[[de:161 - Rose]]
[[es:Rose (episodio)]]
[[fi:Rose Kohtaa Tohtorin (TV-jakso)]]
[[fr:Rose (TV)]]
[[he:רוז (סיפור טלוויזיה)]]
[[it:Rose (TV)]]
[[pt:Rose (Episódio)]]
[[ro:Rose (TV)]]
[[ru:Роза (ТВ история)]]
 
[[Category:Doctor Who (2005) television stories]]
[[Category:Stories set in 2005]]
[[Category:Series 1 (Doctor Who) stories]]
[[Category:Stories set in the City of Westminster]]
[[Category:Nestene/Auton television stories]]
[[Category:Stories set in London]]
[[Category:Stories set in London]]
[[Category:Stories set in 2005]]
[[Category:Stories set in the London Borough of Southwark]]
[[Category:Bad Wolf arc]]
[[Category:Stories set in the London Borough of Lambeth]]
[[Category:Stories with unique variations of the Doctor Who opening titles]]
[[Category:An Introduction To The Ninth Doctor television stories]]

Latest revision as of 20:22, 21 November 2024

RealWorld.png

You may wish to consult Rose (disambiguation) for other, similarly-named pages.

Rose was the first episode of series 1 of Doctor Who.

The first story to be produced by BBC Wales, it was both the first new episode of Doctor Who since Scream of the Shalka, the first full televised adventure since The Curse of Fatal Death and the first story to be part of a regularly airing programme since Survival in 1989. It also introduced recurring supporting cast Camille Coduri as Jackie Tyler and Noel Clarke as Mickey Smith.

An immediate success, the episode set a record 10.81 million BBC One rating that bested the previous record-holder, Robot, and remained the most watched first episode for any new incarnation of the Doctor (not outdone by The Christmas Invasion, The Eleventh Hour, or Deep Breath) until it was finally toppled in 2018 by The Woman Who Fell to Earth.[1]

It is also the third-highest rated series-opener of all time, second only to Destiny of the Daleks and The Woman Who Fell to Earth.

It was the first Doctor Who story to be produced in a 16:9 widescreen format, which would remain until The Woman Who Fell to Earth was produced in 2:1. It was also the first single-episode, 45-minute story and the first 45-minute episode since Part Two of Revelation of the Daleks in 1985. Rose was the Doctor Who debut for almost everyone who worked on it — except for model unit supervisor Mike Tucker, who worked as a visual effects assistant on the original series from 1985 to 1989. Though it was not the Doctor Who debut for visual effects company, The Mill — that had actually come on The Curse of Fatal Death — it did feature the premiere of their title sequence.[2] The sequence would survive with only minor alterations until The End of Time.

Narratively, it portrayed the Nestene Consciousness and Autons for the first time on television since Terror of the Autons in 1971. It also introduced a new recurring element in the form of the Shadow Proclamation, contained the first reference to the Last Great Time War, and introduced elements about Rose's character that would be directly referenced in later episodes.

Unusually, the introduction of the Ninth Doctor in no way explained how this incarnation had come to be, and failed to explain much of anything about who the Doctor was. Indeed, Rose started a mild story arc surrounding the mystery — from Rose's perspective — about the Doctor's identity. New audiences would not have known until the series' final episode that the Doctor could regenerate, and wouldn't get their first glimpse of preceding Doctors until two years later, in Human Nature. As for the Ninth Doctor's origins, it was oft-alluded across the next eight years that the Ninth Doctor had simply regenerated from the Eighth Doctor during the Time War, however the 2013 anniversary special The Day of the Doctor retroactively introduced a "gap" incarnation, the War Doctor.

Various stories were written to coincide with this story. PROSE: UNIT's Position on The London Incident and Operation Mannequin were two narratives published on the U.N.I.T. tie-in website in 2005 to accompany the televsion story, and in 2018, Russell T Davies wrote a novelisation of the story. Later, as the global Doctor Who: Lockdown! watch-along event created by Doctor Who Magazine's Emily Cook continued with a watch-along of this story on 26 March 2020, Davies returned to the writing stool to create new content, both releasing a previously withheld 2013 short story Doctor Who and the Time War, which depicted an alternate account to the origin of this incarnation of the Doctor than what was later revealed, and a sequel entitled Revenge of the Nestene, which Davies placed as Chapter 21 of his 2018 novelisation.

This episode through to The End Of Time of Russell's original time as showrunner all ran with the overarching theme Consequences of the Time War; all of which his successor Steven Moffat wrapped up.

Synopsis[[edit] | [edit source]]

Rose Tyler believes she is living another day of her "ordinary" life, but after being threatened by Autons (living plastic) controlled by the Nestene Consciousness, she meets the Ninth Doctor.

Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]

Rose Tyler being attacked by an Auton.

Rose Tyler wakes up one morning at 7 AM, gets ready for work, and kisses her mother Jackie goodbye. She gets the bus to Henrik's, the department store in central London where she works. In the evening, as the store nears closing time, Rose is about to head home when she is stopped at the door by a security guard who is holding the lottery winnings for Wilson, the chief electrician. She takes the lift down to the basement in search of him, but Wilson is nowhere to be found. Entering a large storage room to investigate a noise, Rose soon finds herself trapped when the door closes and locks on its own, and is disturbed to see a group of moving shop-window mannequins that quickly surround her and raise their arms to kill her. All of a sudden, a man takes hold of her hand and tells her to "run!"

She quickly obliges, and they both run to a lift whilst being pursued by the mannequins. Before the doors can close, one of the Autons reaches for them, but the man quickly pulls its arm off before it can do them any harm. On the way up, he informs Rose that the mannequins are living plastic and that Wilson is dead. When they arrive at ground level, the man holds up a bomb and tells Rose that he plans to destroy a relay device on the roof to stop the creatures. He offers a quick introduction — he is the Doctor — and tells her to run for her life.

The Doctor blows up Henrik's.

Rose heeds his advice, and runs from the vicinity, carrying the plastic arm with her. Once she's at a safe distance, she watches in shock as Henrik's explodes in a huge ball of flame. Rose then returns home, running past a strange blue box, and her boyfriend Mickey Smith comes in to check on her. He eventually leaves to watch football at the pub, and is asked to take the arm with him. He throws the piece of plastic into one of the bins outside.

Rose wakes up at the same time the next morning, before realising that she no longer has a job to go to. Mooching around the flat while bickering with her mother, she suddenly hears a scratching noise from the cat flap, which Jackie still hasn't nailed down, and assumes it's a stray cat. She opens it up to find the Doctor, who tells her he's been tracing a signal from the plastic arm. Demanding answers, Rose invites him inside. While she makes them both coffee in the kitchen, the Doctor explores the flat and is stunned by the size of his ears when he looks in the mirror, implying he has recently regenerated. Investigating a noise from behind the sofa, he is suddenly attacked by the plastic arm. Rose believes the Doctor's strangulation to be in jest — that is, until the arm lets go of him and flies towards her instead. Thankfully, the Doctor manages to deactivate the Auton arm with his sonic screwdriver, though not after Jackie's coffee table has been smashed in the struggle. He takes the arm off her, and hastily rushes out.

Rose chases after him outside, demanding to know what's going on. The Doctor tells her that the living plastic is here to start a war that would overthrow and destroy the human race so that they can claim the Earth as their own. He then departs in a mysterious blue box in the estate car park, ordering her to forget about him. Rose turns away for a second; when she looks back, both the Doctor and the box have gone.

Rose cannot let go, and decides to use Mickey's computer to find out more about the Doctor. She tries several different keywords on search-wise.net, (just the word "doctor" brings up medical results, and "doctor living plastic" produces art results) eventually settling on "doctor blue box". She follows a link to whoisdoctorwho.co.uk, a website owned by a conspiracy theorist named Clive. Mickey drives her to the man's house in the suburbs, where she is invited in by his son. Out in his shed, Clive shows her images from many points in Earth's past, including the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the sinking of the Titanic and the eruption of Krakatoa - all the pictures he shows her feature the Doctor. Clive goes through the facts: "the Doctor is a legend woven throughout history; when disaster comes, he's there." He believes the Doctor is an immortal alien, tells Rose he is dangerous, and that he has only one constant companion: death.

Mickey being attacked by a bin.

Meanwhile, Mickey is waiting in his car outside when he suddenly gets distracted by a plastic wheelie bin moving forwards on its own. He gets out of the car and opens the bin, expecting to find someone playing a practical joke, only to find it completely empty. As he tries to close the lid, he finds that the plastic is stuck to his hands, and merely stretches as he tries to pull away. After a few attempts at breaking free, the bin suddenly tosses Mickey into the air and swallows him whole. Not long after, Rose returns to the car, convinced that she's wasted her time and that Clive really is just a conspiracy nut. She and Mickey decide to go out for a pizza, but what Rose doesn't realise is that her boyfriend has been swapped; replaced by a shiny, plastic duplicate...

As the two of them dine at the restaurant, the plastic Mickey begins grilling Rose about the Doctor. She is disturbed by her boyfriend's odd speech patterns, speaking as if he is somehow malfunctioning. After being interrupted twice by the offer of champagne, Mickey finally looks up from the table, only to find the Doctor standing there holding the bottle. He fires the cork at Mickey's forehead, but it is simply absorbed into his plastic skull, and Mickey spits it out. His hands morph into paddles, and he begins attacking all those around him. The Doctor briefly struggles with the duplicate and manages to pull its head off, but this barely slow the plastic Mickey down at all. Rose hits the fire alarm, and, while the other patrons evacuate, she and the Doctor are chased out of the building by a now-headless Mickey, who flips over tables in the process.

They escape to the back courtyard, and the Doctor calmly enters his little blue box. With nowhere to go, Rose follows him inside at the last second, only to rush back out again at the sight of interior. As the headless Mickey breaks its way into the courtyard, Rose runs back into the box - which is bigger on the inside. The Doctor explains that his blue box is called the TARDIS, that it's impregnable from outside forces like the plastic duplicate, and that both it and he are alien. As he wires Mickey's head into the central console, Rose wonders if her real boyfriend is dead; something the Doctor didn't even consider. Their conversation is cut short, however, when Rose points out that the head is melting, much to the Doctor's dismay; he had hoped to use it to track down the Nestene Consciousness — the entity controlling the Autons. Activating the TARDIS controls, he still manages to follow a trace of the signal, but the head is completely melted before they can find the precise location of the Consciousness.

The box lands somewhere nearby, at the edge of the River Thames, and Rose is shocked to learn that they have moved. The Doctor explains that the Nestene plans to use Earth's polluted atmosphere as a food source after losing its own planet in a war, and will need an activation signal for its invasion plans; a transmitter of some kind, very big and round. He figures it must be "completely invisible", but Rose identifies it instantly: the London Eye would be the perfect transmitter for the Nestene. Hand in hand, the two of them run across Westminster Bridge together, and Rose quickly spots an entrance to an underground base beneath the Eye.

The Nestene Consciousness negotiates with the Doctor.

Entering the Nestene lair, Rose immediately notices Mickey and runs down to him; her boyfriend has been kept alive after being duplicated to maintain the copy. The Doctor, meanwhile, tries to reason with the Nestene, but the Consciousness has two of its Auton guards capture him when it detects the presence of the TARDIS, which it identifies as terrifyingly superior technology. They discover a vial of anti-plastic in the Doctor's pocket — which he had intended to use only as a last resort. The Nestene confronts its Time Lord enemy about its lost planet, and he can only respond, "I couldn't save your world. I couldn't save any of them!" Terrified, it decides to start the invasion ahead of schedule, sending a signal to activate the Autons.

Rose calls her mother to get her to go home to safety, but Jackie can't hear her through the bad reception, and continues into the Queen's Arcade mall for some late-night shopping. Much to her surprise, the shop-window dummies come to life, breaking through the windows as the bemused shoppers stare at them. Clive, who is also shopping there with his family, remarks that everything he read about was true, before he is confronted by an Auton who detaches its hand and shoots him dead in front of his wife and son.

Panic ensues as the Autons start blasting, and shoppers scatter in all directions. Jackie runs outside to behold utter chaos: Autons are everywhere, bodies litter the ground, and a double-decker bus has crashed into a post-box at the end of the street and burst into flames. She takes cover behind a car, just as three bride mannequins smash their way out of the shop window behind her and raise their arms to shoot her dead.

Below the London Eye, Rose finally decides to take some initiative. She breaks free one of the chains on the wall with an axe, and swings down to the Autons, freeing the Doctor and pushing the mannequins, along with the anti-plastic, into the vat containing the Nestene Consciousness. The vial leaks the solution onto the Nestene, and the alien dies in agony. Back outside, all the Autons return to lifeless mannequins again as the transmission from the London Eye is stopped, while underground, the Nestene base starts to collapse and explode. The Doctor, Mickey and Rose board the TARDIS and, just in time, escape the destruction. Jackie looks around at the chaos, as shell-shocked survivors struggle to come to terms with what has happened.

With the Earth saved, the Doctor thanks Rose for her help and suggests she join him on his adventures; the TARDIS can go anywhere in the whole universe. Mickey, however, is not invited. Rose, much to his disappointment, refuses, feeling responsible for her mum and her boyfriend. The Doctor bids her farewell and leaves, dematerialising the box before her eyes. But as Rose prepares to help a terrified Mickey back home, she hears the TARDIS reappear behind her. The Doctor emerges once more, and tells Rose that the TARDIS can also travel in time. Without much thought, she kisses her boyfriend goodbye and runs straight into the TARDIS, to start her adventures in time and space.

Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Uncredited cast[[edit] | [edit source]]

Crew[[edit] | [edit source]]

General production staff

Script department

Camera and lighting department

Art department

Costume department

Make-up and prosthetics

Movement

Casting

General post-production staff

Special and visual effects

Sound



Not every person who worked on this adventure was credited. The absence of a credit for a position doesn't necessarily mean the job wasn't required. The information above is based solely on observations of the actual end credits of the episodes as broadcast, and does not relay information from IMDB or other sources.

Note: Paul Perrot was mis-credited as Porl Perrot on the initially broadcast version of the episode.[4]

Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The Doctor has been to several major events in his ninth incarnation, including the launching of the Titanic in 1912, the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963, and the eruption of the volcano at Krakatoa in 1883.
  • The Doctor reads the novel The Lovely Bones in Jackie's flat by flipping through it.
  • The Doctor often says, "Fantastic!"
  • The Doctor apparently finds out what his current face looks like for the first time by looking in a mirror.

Foods and beverages[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Mickey offers to make Rose a cup of tea.
  • Rose offers to make the Doctor a cup of coffee which she is preparing in the kitchen when he is attacked by the Auton arm.
  • Rose and Mickey's Auton double go out for pizza.

Individuals[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Rose's friend Suki says there are jobs going at the local hospital.
  • Jackie's friend Arianna successfully sued the council.
  • Rose thinks the dummies are a practical joke set up by Derek.
  • Jackie's friend Bev phones to make sure Rose is okay.
  • Jackie's friend Debbie knows someone from The Mirror.

Locations[[edit] | [edit source]]

Technology[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The Nestene Consciousness used warp shunt technology to get to Earth.

Story notes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • This is the first story featuring the new TARDIS console room, which has a far more organic appearance than its predecessors. Initially questioned by fans, the later mini-episode Time Crash would confirm this as a new "desktop theme" for the TARDIS interior, which the Fifth Doctor called "coral".
  • The sonic screwdriver makes a reappearance on screen in a new shape, but with the same sound effect. The screwdriver was first introduced in TV: Fury from the Deep and destroyed in TV: The Visitation, then reappeared in TV: Doctor Who. From this episode onwards, it becomes an established tool within the series.
  • A copy of this story was available to download on the Internet on various peer-to-peer (p2p) networks several weeks before it was released. The preview version was near-identical to the broadcast version, with the exception of the title sequence and ending credits using the version of the title theme used between 1967 and 1980 (presumably as a placeholder) rather than the new arrangement by Murray Gold. In 2005, the illegal distribution of TV series episodes via p2p was nowhere near as widespread as it became with the later rise of torrents; Rose was one of the first major TV productions to be "leaked" in this fashion.[5] The leak was ultimately traced to a third party company in Canada which had a legitimate preview copy. The employee responsible was fired by the company and the BBC considered further legal action.[6]
    • The events of Rose being leaked were seemingly alluded to in the short story Computer Virus File Sharing Alert, where a computer virus conspicuously named "RUFFCUT" (as version of Rose that as leaked was not the final cut of the story) was spread after people began pirating media online. The dates even lined more-or-less up, as the virus became active on 10 March 2005, a few days after the real world incident.
  • The word "Auton" is not used in the dialogue of the story nor does it appear in the shooting script as published in 2005, but does appear in the episode credits.
  • The surname Finch was used for Clive and his wife in the production notes, but not in the on-screen version.
  • For this, the first episode, the opening credits follow the UK standard of "title sequence, then programme." The rest of this season and the next three would include a cold opening before the main title sequence of each episode, as had previously been done in TV: Castrovalva, TV: The Five Doctors, and TV: Time and the Rani.
  • There were problems during the first broadcast of this episode in the UK which meant that sound from a BBC Three program, Strictly Dance Fever hosted by Graham Norton, was heard over the scene in which Rose first encounters the Autons.
  • As part of the launch of the new series, the BBC screened the documentary Doctor Who: A New Dimension on BBC One — coincidentally narrated by David Tennant, the future Tenth Doctor.
  • Following this episode, Doctor Who Confidential Episode 1 was broadcast on BBC 3.
  • The reference to the Doctor having a Northern accent relates to the media attention generated around Christopher Eccleston — who had always retained his native Lancashire accent — not conforming to people's perception of what the Doctor should be like. It also references the fact the different actors who had previously played the Doctor had, themselves, differing accents, most notably Sylvester McCoy, whose Doctor spoke with a light Scottish accent, which would crop up again when Peter Capaldi took on the role.
  • In the scene where the Doctor is in Rose's flat, the original script called for the Doctor to stick his entire head in the cat flap. When it arrived, however, it was far too small.
  • The episode in early drafts had "Auton bin men", which would explain why Mickey could appear in the Nestene Consciousness's lair after being eaten alive by the plastic trash-bin.
  • Rose's comment about the Doctor sounding like he was from the north marks the second time Earth geography has been applied to the Doctor's demeanour (previously, he was referred to as being from England in the TV movie).
  • Similarly, Rose and the Doctor's exchange regarding his accent also echoes a similar discussion between the Fourth Doctor and fellow Time Lord Second Drax in TV: The Armageddon Factor regarding the latter's affected Cockney accent.
  • A special effects milestone occurs when the Doctor is shown standing in the door of the TARDIS and the interior is clearly visible behind him. In the original series, the interior of the TARDIS was usually shown as a dark void whenever a head-on view of the open doors — a rarity — occurred (though this has previously been done in the pilot version of the first episode of the original series; however curiously enough not in its broadcast version). For the first time, elements of the exterior of the TARDIS — specifically the inside of the doors and the POLICE PUBLIC CALL BOX lettering along the roofline — are visible from the console room.
  • Between the final scene and the closing credits, the episode incorporates a "Next Time..." trailer for the next episode. This is the first time this device has been used in Doctor Who. This becomes a regular feature, omitted only on rare occasions, or occasionally moved to the end of the closing credits. It also introduces a trend which remained through the first RTD era of the show that the trailer would be proceeded by the 2005 Doctor Who logo swiping across the screen from right to left. It was also rare that this feature would happen before the credits rather than the trailer.
  • Actor Nicholas Briggs makes his debut on the revived series, providing the voice of the Nestene Consciousness. He would go to be the show's designated voice actor, remaining the Daleks' and Cybermen's voice actor (as of 2022). Rose is far from Briggs' first Doctor Who-related work, as he had been an active participant in independent, unofficial, and licensed spin-off productions dating back to the 1980s, most notably hosting the Myth Makers interview video series, writing and directing films for BBV Productions and Reeltime Pictures, and as producer of the Big Finish Productions Doctor Who audio dramas, a project that had its roots in Audio Visuals, a series of fan-made Doctor Who audio adventures in which Briggs himself played the Doctor. In 2009, Briggs would have his first official on-screen appearance in a Who franchise production with a supporting role in Torchwood: Children of Earth.
  • Russell T Davies becomes the first author of original Doctor Who spin-off fiction to write for the official TV series. A decade earlier, he wrote the Seventh Doctor novel Damaged Goods for the Virgin New Adventures line of novels. Numerous other writers of licensed spin-off fiction and Big Finish Productions audio dramas would go on to write for the revival, including Paul Cornell, Mark Gatiss (who would also guest star in three episodes), Steven Moffat (who would ultimately succeed Davies as lead writer in 2009), Robert Shearman, and Gareth Roberts.
  • This is the first episode of Doctor Who to use the name of a companion in its title.
  • The scene in which Rose wanders through the basement of the department store alone was the first scene Billie Piper shot as Rose Tyler (per Project Who).
  • Clive's website, Doctor Who?, marks the first time a character has directly referred to the Doctor by the name "Doctor Who" on screen since WOTAN in TV: The War Machines. Clive's use is clearly meant in the form of a question, with "Doctor Who" being more or less a nickname.
  • The original preview trailers for Series 1 include a scene where the Ninth Doctor is narrowly outrunning a fireball behind him down a concrete tunnel. This is likely set moments after he set off the explosives he laid in Henrik's, and details his escape from the doomed building.
  • Executive producer Russell T Davies stated that he chose to have Christopher Eccleston depict a new incarnation of the Doctor so he could have a fresh start for both the new viewers and the narratives he wanted to implant in the series, and because Eccleston was a good friend of his who wanted to help Doctor Who gain momentum to become successful again.
  • Paul McGann, who portrayed the Eighth Doctor in the telemovie, said that he would have returned to the series if given the chance, but Russell T Davies did not want to depict a regeneration with first-time viewers tuning in, who would be unable to identify why the Doctor changed appearances. Eventually, he was given a chance to reprise the Eighth Doctor in 2013 for the mini-episode TV: The Night of the Doctor, which dealt with the lingering mystery of his regeneration.
  • This story seemingly implied that the Ninth Doctor had recently undergone regeneration from a past incarnation, when he commented about the features of his face while looking at a mirror in Rose's flat. The logical assumption at the time of his debut among viewers was that he had regenerated from the Eighth Doctor. However, this was disproven in 2013 when Steven Moffat conceived a new incarnation to retroactively insert between the Eighth and Ninth Doctors. The so-called War Doctor, played by John Hurt, did not call himself the Doctor until the end of his life and was an honorary, unnumbered inclusion among the other incarnations who carried the title fully throughout their lives. The War Doctor was cemented as the Ninth Doctor's predecessor when he regenerated into him near the end of TV: The Day of the Doctor. Additionally, in a retrospective on the new series in DWM 485, Russell T Davies stated the intention of the scene was merely him noticing the features, rather like being disappointed with "buck teeth" or similar un-aesthetically pleasing traits. He notes the Doctor in the episode is "in command" rather than post-regenerative, and he included the references to Krakatoa and Titanic to suggest this incarnation has a life before this episode.
    • The original assumption about the Ninth Doctor emerging from the regeneration of the Eighth Doctor would later be maintained in Russell's short story Doctor Who and the Time War, written before, but ultimately released after, Moffat introduced the War Doctor and The Night of the Doctor.
  • This is the only episode introducing a new Doctor in the revived series to not run longer than average.
  • This was the first episode since Part Two of 1985's TV: Revelation of the Daleks to run for approximately 45 minutes.
  • This is the first TV story since TV: Mission to the Unknown to consist of a single standard-length episode. This would become the standard for the revived series.
  • This is also the first story since TV: Logopolis, to credit its leading cast member as 'Doctor Who' and not 'The Doctor', but this credit would be reverted during David Tennant's tenure, at his request.
  • This is the first TV story to include a creator credit for a creature or character. In this case, Robert Holmes was credited as the creator of the Autons.
  • During writing, Russell T Davies had trouble coming up with how Mickey was supposed to be captured by the Nestene Consciousness while waiting for Rose in the car, and finally realised he could be lured by a plastic wheelie bin. He commented that such instances of the ordinary being made scary made the series unique.
  • Russell T Davies had to take out "oblique" references to the Autons being like terrorists, as the Eye was once a target of a terrorist attack.
  • The entrance of the Doctor was something much debated; Jane Tranter and other members of the production team wanted it to be more dramatic, but the scene was never reshot. Russell T Davies remarked that it reflects Rose's point of view, whereas a more dramatic entrance would reflect the audience's excitement at the Doctor coming back.
  • The scene in which the Auton arm attacks in the Tylers' flat was originally much longer, but was revised.
  • The episode originally underran by several minutes, and a scene with the Doctor and Rose walking was added a month or so later.
  • Russell T Davies wanted the Doctor to realise that Rose has something to offer to his cause. Their holding hands while running was meant to signify that they were a team, despite him not asking her yet, and they were not to question their relationship.
  • The episode was intended to be presented from Rose's point-of-view. For audience identification purposes, Russell T Davies wanted the alien menace to be easily mistaken as human, so that it was possible for Rose to mistake the aliens for humans. Davies felt that there was no need to create a new monster, as the Autons met these criteria.
  • The Auton sequences were difficult to film because the costumes were uncomfortable for the actors; which meant that frequent breaks from filming were needed.
  • Computer-generated imagery was used in post-production to cover up the zipper on the back of the necks of the Auton costumes.
  • Russell T Davies wanted to recreate the scene of the Autons breaking out of shop windows from their first appearance in Spearhead from Space, although he had the budget to actually smash the glass instead of just cutting around it like in Spearhead.
  • Russell T Davies offered Edgar Wright the opportunity to direct the episode, but Wright was forced to decline, as he was still working on Shaun of the Dead.
  • The restaurant was filmed at La Fosse, located at The Hayes in Cardiff.[7]<ref name=":0"> It took the production team a while to find a restaurant that would require minimal set dressing but would be willing to close for a day.[source needed]
  • The production team sought to film the Cardiff scenes in secrecy, but the day before they began the Cardiff Council issued a press release naming the streets where they would be filming.
  • The area underneath the London Eye where the Doctor and Rose confront the Nestene Consciousness was filmed in an unused paper mill in Grangetown, Cardiff. It underwent steam cleaning because there were such high health and safety concerns. They were only permitted to film for three days, which required that some of the sequence be cut: originally, there was to be another Auton Mickey involved.
  • In the original script, Rose's first experience of seeing the TARDIS interior was shared with the audience. Keith Boak, however, wanted her to exit and run around the TARDIS before entering again, at which point the interior would be revealed to the audience. This change was eventually embraced by the executive producers. Russell T Davies remarked that he originally wanted to take Rose and the audience inside the TARDIS in all one shot, but this was not a feasible with the budget. This effect would later be accomplished in The Snowmen.
  • The episode name was gradually shortened; in Davies' pitch it had been called Rose meets the Doctor, and the journey begins, on his contract Rose Meets the Doctor and finally Rose.
  • Noel Clarke isn't too fond of this episode. He felt that he didn't understand the tone that Russell T Davies was going for, and that he was overemphasising Mickey's cartoonishness as result. This was largely due to the fact that he was also filming the final episode of Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, a situation excaberated by the death of co-star Pat Roach. He later said: "It wasn't played straight - some of it was played for laughs. I have no excuses, but I do have reasons: I had no rehearsal time, so I didn't really know the tone of what we were doing. I'd never met Chris before, or Billie or Camille. I didn't realise at the time, but my head wasn't where it should have been".
  • Steven Moffat stated in 2013 that he believed that the Ninth Doctor is newly-regenerated here, as evidenced by his reaction to looking in the mirror. Russell T Davies disagrees: "No, I don't think he'd just regenerated. If you have certain physical features like big ears or buck teeth, you look at them and sigh every time you look in the mirror. And I think if you'd had eight different faces, even if you'd been in the current form for a hundred years, you'd still mutter at them. So it was meant as a nod to the fact he'd once had other faces. But I wrote the Titanic stuff and Krakatoa assuming that the Ninth Doctor had been around for a while. He doesn't act very post-regeneration, does he? He appears in command, waving a bomb. This is a man who knows himself, and has known himself for a while".
  • On March 26 2020, the fifteenth anniversary of the episode, a collective fan "Watch-along" was held on Twitter. Russell T Davies participated and released a prequel and sequel to the episode. The prequel was entitled "Doctor Who and the Time War", an unused story intended for The Doctor: His Lives and Times but declined for contradicting The Day of the Doctor. The story concerns the Eighth Doctor's regeneration into the Ninth Doctor after the events of the Time War. The sequel was entitled "Revenge of the Nestene" it was released in audio form akin to the Big Finish range and serves as a continuation of the novelisation and concerns the survival of one Auton after the events of the episode. The infamous Graham Norton interruption was also recreated.
  • This is the first television story to be recorded on the digital betacam format.
  • Russell T Davies revealed in The Writer's Tale that Mackenzie Crook was almost cast as Clive Finch.
  • Jane Tranter had expected the Daleks to be the villains, but Russell T Davies felt that they would be better used to provide a mid-season bump in publicity.
  • The main villains were originally conceived to be the twin bosses of Rose's company who always appeared to be holding hands, because they were really two Autons who were fused together.
  • Rose was originally an office cleaner. Russell T Davies suggested that she might find dinosaurs in the basement of the high rise where she worked (inspired by Walking with Dinosaurs). She would be saved by the Doctor, with one sequence involving an escape using a window cleaner's cradle.
  • Rose's decision to join the Doctor in the TARDIS was originally foreshadowed when Jackie mentioned receiving a phone call from her daughter that morning, promising that she would be safe, a call which Rose insisted she hadn't placed.
  • Outside Clive's, Mickey was originally kidnapped by Autons disguised as workmen.
  • The use of the plastic garbage bin was inspired by the way Spearhead from Space and Terror of the Autons had made everyday objects sinister.
  • The Mickey duplicate was originally unmasked when his plastic eyeball fell into his soup.
  • In the Nestene's lair, Rose was initially deceived by another Auton Mickey. It was from their conversation that the Nestene learned about the Doctor's anti-plastic serum.
  • Rose was originally supposed to run into Mickey after Henrik's department store blew up. This was abandoned due to Noel Clarke's commitment to Auf Wiedersehen, Pet.
  • Filming the scene in the basement was slow and the artistes dressed as Autons needed more breaks than anticipated, especially given the heat of the subterranean spaces.
  • Script editor Elwen Rowlands suggested the name of Tizzano's in reference to the sixteenth-century artist Titian, whose real name was Tiziano Vecelli. The removal of the Auton Mickey's head had reminded Rowlands of the decapitation of John the Baptist, the aftermath of which was debatably the subject matter of the Titian painting popularly known as Salome.
  • Russell T Davies had scripted the Doctor to use the word “Dimensions” when explaining the meaning of the acronym TARDIS, Christopher Eccleston chose to revert back to the original “Dimension”.
  • The chaotic shooting schedule soured the relationship between Russell T Davies and Christopher Eccleston. Frustrated that the production team had not done enough to foster a positive working environment, Eccleston was already contemplating his departure from the series.
  • Christopher Eccleston and Mark Benton had previously appeared in Russell T Davies's The Second Coming.

Ratings[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • 10.81 million, with a 43.2% audience share.[1]

Myths and rumours[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • It is often speculated that the Nestene Consciousness can be heard to utter the words "Bad Wolf". (The subtitles and DVD commentary for the episode state that it says "Time Lord". This can be heard more clearly on the Blu-ray release of series 1.)
  • Due to the widescreen format introduced with this episode, it was often erroneously stated that this episode and those that followed were filmed in high-definition. In fact, the first high-definition Doctor Who episode wasn't produced until Planet of the Dead in 2009. The spinoff series Torchwood, however, had always been produced in high definition. In 2010, the first standard-definition Doctor Who episode to be professionally upscaled to HD, The Next Doctor, was released on Blu-ray; this opened the door for Rose and other episodes of the first four series to undergo similar conversion in 2013.
  • Was produced as a pilot before leading into production of a full series. The episode was always part of a 13-episode production block - with exceptions, the BBC seldom produces "pilot episodes" in the American sense of the word.

Filming locations[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Howells, Cardiff (Henrik's)
  • Queens Arcade, Cardiff (shopping centre)
  • Working Street, Cardiff (shopping centre)
  • St Mary's Market, Cardiff (alleyway where Rose agrees to travel with the Doctor)
  • Cardiff Royal Infirmary (restaurant yard)
  • Disused paper mill, Grangetown, Cardiff (Nestene lair)
  • Trafalgar Square, London
  • Victoria Embankment, London
  • London Eye, London
  • Westminster Bridge, London
  • Brandon Estate, Kennington, London (Powell Estate)
  • Lydstep Flats, Gabalfa, Cardiff (Powell Estate)
  • University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff (Henrik's basement)
  • Unit Q2, Newport (studio filming)
  • Skinner Street, Newport (scene with the Doctor and the bomb)
  • Culverhouse Cross Studio 1, Cardiff (insert shot) (all TCH 48)

Production errors[[edit] | [edit source]]

If you'd like to talk about narrative problems with this story — like plot holes and things that seem to contradict other stories — please go to this episode's discontinuity discussion.
  • In the opening titles, when the TARDIS moves screen-left out of the time vortex for the first time (while the vortex is blue, a second or two before the bullet-time freeze transition from blue to red), it doesn't pass through anything but simply vanishes. This error remains part of the title sequence throughout the first Russell T Davies era, and becomes more obvious once production of the show moved to HD in Planet of the Dead.
  • As Rose opens the door to the room in the basement where she first encounters the Autons and the Doctor, before switching the lights on, the cameraman's shadow can be seen falling on some boxes.
  • The BBC news report incorrectly spells Henrik's as Henrick's.
  • In the news report, it shows the time as 20:45, two minutes pass by and it still says 20:45.
  • If one looks carefully, the eyeholes in the faces of the Auton costumes are visible.
  • When the Doctor pulls off the Auton's arm, the sleeve vanishes. There's no sound of it ripping and it wasn't on the arm when it got pulled off.
  • When the Auton's arm gets pulled off, it's obviously its right arm. But when Rose carries it home, it is now a left arm, which turns back into a right arm when she gets home.
  • While Rose is making coffee, the milk is in her right hand. It cuts to the Doctor shuffling cards, then cuts back and we see that now she has a teaspoon in her right hand. Again, it cuts back to him trying to shuffle them, and the milk is back in her right hand.
  • While Mickey is trying to escape from the bin, he turns around 180 degrees, twisting the strands of plastic attached to his hands. It cuts to another angle and the strands are un-twisted.
  • When Rose sets off the fire alarm in the restaurant, the glass cover doesn't break.
  • When Rose first enters the TARDIS, there is only one handrail near the door. Then as she exits the TARDIS there is a handrail on both sides of the entrance.
  • As the Doctor and Rose run across Westminster Bridge, two buses pass by on their right. Another shot shows them from the other side of the road, and the buses have disappeared.
  • After the Nestene identifies the TARDIS, one can see a microphone above the Doctor's head.
  • When the three Auton brides close in on Jackie, their hands fall off one-by-one, but as the second one falls off, the third one has already fallen off, and in the next shot it falls again.
  • The TARDIS interior background painted in behind the Doctor in the first shot of the final scene where he's offering to take Rose with him is jittery and rough, with a noticeable black spot appearing above his left shoulder. It is also noticeable above his right shoulder as he steps back into the TARDIS to close the door and disappear. This is most noticeable on the Bluray release, and is also visible in the recap of the episode seen at the beginning of Aliens of London.

Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]

Home video releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

DVD releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • This story was released on a DVD along with The End of the World and The Unquiet Dead as Doctor Who - Series 1: Volume 1. However, in Portugal and Russia Series 1: Volume 1 also included the contents of Series 1: Volume 2.
  • The version of the episode included on the UK release of Doctor Who - Series 1: Volume 1 was an early edit which includes extra music cues ultimately cut from the transmitted episode, notably in the scene of the Doctor and Rose walking from her flat to the TARDIS.
  • The version of the episode included on the Polish release of Doctor Who - Seria 1 appears to be a pre-televised copy, likely used by accident. It includes a few more unused cues, most notably during the scene where Plastic Mickey's head begins to melt. This and several other cues heard throughout the series cannot be found on any other releases of Series 1.
  • This story was also released as part of the series 1 DVD box set, Doctor Who - The Complete First Series.
  • This story was also released with Issue 1 of the Doctor Who DVD Files.

Blu-ray releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • This story was released in The Complete Series One Blu-ray set in November 2013 along with the rest of the series. This release was initially bundled with the first seven series of the revived Doctor Who.
  • In 2017, a Complete Series One Blu-ray steelbook was released as a limited edition.

Other releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Series 1: Volume 1 was also the first to be released in the UMD format for PlayStation Portable.
  • This story is available for streaming via Netflix, Hulu Plus and Amazon Prime. It can also be purchased on iTunes.
  • In 2015, it was released by BBC Worldwide on BitTorrent and iTunes in the A Decade of the Doctor bundle, to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the new series. It included introductions by Peter Capaldi, Earth Conquest: The World Tour and an episode guide.

DVD releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

Series 1: Volume 1[[edit] | [edit source]]

UMD releases[[edit] | [edit source]]

Series 1: Volume 1[[edit] | [edit source]]

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]