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{{Infobox | {{title dab away}} | ||
|image = | {{real world}} | ||
| | {{ImageLinkTV}} | ||
{{Infobox Story SMW | |||
|image = File:Piece of the TARDIS from the Time Crack..jpg | |||
|series = [[Doctor Who television stories|''Doctor Who'' television stories]] | |||
|season number = Series 5 (Doctor Who 2005) | |||
|series episode number = 9 | |||
|story number = 209b | |story number = 209b | ||
|doctor = | |scripturl = https://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/documents/doctor-who-5-episode-9-cold-blood-green-revisions-10112009.pdf | ||
|companions = | |doctor = Eleventh Doctor | ||
| | |companions = [[Amy Pond|Amy]], [[Rory Williams|Rory]] | ||
|setting = | |featuring = [[Malohkeh]] | ||
|writer = | |enemy = [[Commander]] [[Restac]] | ||
|setting = [[Cwmtaff]] and the [[Silurian city]], [[2020]] | |||
|writer = Chris Chibnall | |||
|director = [[Ashley Way]] | |director = [[Ashley Way]] | ||
|producer = [[Peter Bennett]] | |producer = [[Peter Bennett]] | ||
|broadcast date = | |confidential = What Goes on Tour... (CON episode) | ||
|format = | |broadcast date = 29 May 2010 | ||
|network = BBC One | |||
|format = 1×50 minute episode | |||
|production code = 1.9 | |production code = 1.9 | ||
| | |prev = The Hungry Earth (TV story) | ||
|next | |next = Vincent and the Doctor (TV story) | ||
}} | |made prev = The Hungry Earth (TV story) | ||
{{ | |made next = The Vampires of Venice (TV story) | ||
|clip = {{uc:Doctor Who clip}} 4 2 | |||
|clip2 = {{uc:Doctor Who clip}} 5 | |||
|thwr=161}} | |||
'''''Cold Blood''''' was the ninth episode of [[Series 5 (Doctor Who 2005)|series 5]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. | |||
It was the second part of a two-part story that featured the return of the [[Silurian]]s and the first death of recurring [[companion]] [[Rory Williams]], which soon escalated further to total [[temporal erasure|erasure from existence]] after a [[Time field|crack]] consumed his body. Thus only the Doctor remembers him. | |||
Once more, [[the Doctor]] is seen trying to bring about a peaceful solution to a conflict between Silurians and [[human]]s. In this case, a rogue Silurian is responsible for the breakdown of trust, as is just one human. It's worth noting that unlike the previous branches of the Silurians, which had a more peaceful nature, Alaya and Restac are shown to be racist and genocidal. | |||
Unlike the previous branches of the Silurian species, which never survived their initial encounters with the Doctor, this one found in [[Cwmtaff]] survives for another chance at cohabitation with humanity in the future. | |||
[[Neve McIntosh]], who plays Alaya and Restac, would later return to the show the following year in ''[[A Good Man Goes to War (TV story)|A Good Man Goes to War]]'', playing another Silurian named [[Madame Vastra]]. However, unlike the characters in this story, Vastra would serve as one of the Doctor's recurring allies, primarily in the Victorian Era. | |||
== Synopsis == | == Synopsis == | ||
Once more the [[Eleventh Doctor]] meets members of the [[Silurian]] race. However, this time, can he prevent them from being destroyed by [[human]]ity out of an act of self-preservation, or can he broker peace between them and bring about a better future for both races of planet [[Earth]]? | |||
In the meantime, there are other questions that are left unanswered: Can [[Ambrose Northover|Ambrose]] be trusted to keep [[Alaya]] alive? What is happening to [[Tony Mack]]'s wound? Are the Silurians responsible for the empty graves? And what awaits Mo and [[Amy Pond|Amy]] when a Silurian [[Malokeh|doctor]] is eager to see what makes them tick? | |||
== Plot == | == Plot == | ||
A view of the Earth is shown from space as the sun rises from behind it, illuminating the features of the planet. | |||
A Silurian narrates that his people are now awakening and that he remembers the day 1000 years ago when he met the Doctor and the losses that the Time Lord suffered because of the failed attempt to negotiate peace. | |||
[[File:Silurian_City.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor and Nasreen explore the city.]] | |||
Back to the present day in 2020, the [[Eleventh Doctor]] and [[Nasreen Chaudhry|Nasreen]] enter [[Silurian city|the Silurian city]], which is quite elaborate and grand. A curious Nasreen wonders how any of the vegetation and the city itself could be there, being so far beneath the [[Earth]]. The Doctor explains that the city and the vegetation are fueled by thermal energy and most of the Silurians are hibernating in [[suspended animation]]. To get back who was taken, they need to find the Silurians that were awakened by the threat the drill posed to the city. | |||
Nasreen wonders if waltzing straight into the city is a good idea as the Doctor assures her that the "front door approach" is always the best idea. An alarm goes off, announcing hostile life forms entering the city. Shocked at being called hostile, the Doctor admits that the "front door approach" may not have been the best idea. They turn to leave, but Silurian soldiers arrive and hold them at gunpoint. The Doctor tells them they are not hostile, but the Silurians knock them out with gas. | |||
[[Amy Pond|Amy]] and [[Mo Northover|Mo]] are strapped to surgical operating tables in a Silurian surgery. The Silurian surgeon, [[Malohkeh]], is getting ready to vivisect Amy. He removes his mask and tightens Amy's straps. Malohkeh notes that Amy is reacting differently to the cold than Mo; Amy yells she was dressed for Rio. He then takes the scalpel and begins to put it in Amy's chest, but is called away to examine the Doctor and Nasreen. Amy, who has sneaked the remote controlling the surgical tables from the surgeon, releases Mo and herself and they escape into the city. While searching for a means of returning to the surface, they find [[Elliot Northover|Elliot]], trapped in suspended animation, but alive. | |||
The Doctor and Nasreen are strapped to tables in a separate laboratory and forcibly scanned; while Nasreen is complacent, the Doctor cries out in pain. Malohkeh converses with [[Restac|Commander Restac]], wondering if there has been any word from [[Alaya]]. When Restac briskly responds in the negative, Malohkeh assures her that it is all right to show some emotion as they are from the same genetic line. Malohkeh begins to decontaminate the Doctor and Nasreen; again, the Doctor cries out, begging Malohkeh to stop. Because the Doctor is not human, the decontamination process affects him differently — not only does it cause him severe pain, but it "remove[s] half of the things keeping [him] alive". Against Restac's wishes, Malohkeh stops the process after seeing an internal scan confirms his non-human status. | |||
Thanking Malohkeh, the Doctor asks if they have any [[celery]]. Malohkeh explains the drill threatened the oxygen pockets above the city; the Doctor is pleased to hear about such technology, but then realises that the impending drill wasn't a very nice greeting. The Doctor asks for Restac's identity, learning to his annoyance that there is a military. Restac demands to know where the rest of their "invasion force" is. The Doctor tells Restac that the two of them are not an invasion force, revealing that they've come down to negotiate a trade of prisoners: Alaya for the three humans the Silurians took. Restac, however, is less inclined to negotiate and orders the execution of Nasreen and the Doctor out of spite. | |||
[[File:Ambrose_Northover.jpg|thumb|Ambrose cannot make peace with the Silurians.]] | |||
On the surface, [[Tony Mack|Tony]] approaches Alaya for help in curing the venomous sting on his shoulder, promising to release her if she can do something for him. Alaya refuses and amuses herself by having Tony describe what the venom's effect feels like. [[Ambrose Northover|Ambrose]] eventually learns of Tony's injury and Alaya's refusal to help. She angrily confronts the Silurian, threatening her with a taser. Alaya encourages her to use it, which she does; on the second shot, Alaya collapses as Tony and Rory arrive, and she dies in Rory's arms. They both become angry with Ambrose because she killed their only bargaining chip to get their loved ones back. Ambrose expresses remorse for what she's done. | |||
Restac and Malohkeh lead the two prisoners to the city's execution chamber, flanked by Silurian warriors. The Doctor explains the nature of the Silurians' hibernation to Nasreen: centuries before, their astronomers predicted a planet was on a crash course for Earth, so they hibernated below the surface to avoid the catastrophe. The planet was, in fact, the moon coming into alignment. Malohkeh is impressed with the Doctor's knowledge of their race, prompting the Doctor to reveal that he'd [[Doctor Who and the Silurians (TV story)|previously met another branch]]. Restac is happy to hear more of her race has survived; however, the Doctor sadly informs her that humans killed them, reigniting Restac's rage. | |||
Once inside the execution chamber, Mo and Amy appear, brandishing guns they have taken from sleeping Silurian warriors, with the intention of rescuing the Doctor. Restac swiftly disarms Amy, forcing their surrender. The two are added to the procession. When Malohkeh protests, Restac dismisses him. | |||
On the surface, Rory and Tony berate Ambrose for what she has done to Alaya. Suddenly, Restac's face appears on the screen of a deactivated computer monitor in the church [[cellar]]. She has somehow manipulated the monitor to address the humans and negotiate Alaya's return. Though the Doctor orders Ambrose to let Rory handle the situation, she steps in and declares she has had enough of the Silurians' orders. She refuses to return Alaya unless Restac releases her family. Angered, Restac orders the first execution: Amy. The computer monitor goes dark. | |||
[[File:ColdBloodTriad.jpg|left|thumb|Restac is stopped by Malohkeh and Eldane.]] | |||
However, before the Silurian warriors can fire, their leader, [[Eldane]], arrives with Malohkeh and countermands the order. Malohken knew Restac was only acting on [[Racist|bigotry]] and needed their wiser leader to make the decisions. Eldane tells Restac to "go play soldiers" somewhere else, dismissing her. Now free, the Doctor, realising his chances of negotiating have been reignited, resumes communications with his companions on the surface, ordering them to bring Alaya down via the Silurian transport pods in the mine storeroom. Reaching the mine, Ambrose encourages Tony to reactivate the drill on a timer in case things go wrong. | |||
The Doctor appoints Nasreen and Amy as the ambassadors for humanity and allows them to talk to Eldane. Amy wonders if the Earth is shared in the future, prompting Nasreen to ask what she means. The Doctor reveals that he and Amy travel in time, surprising both Nasreen and Eldane. He then explains time is in flux at this moment, which means they can create a future where humanity and the Silurians live in harmony on the surface, rather than have more genocide. Calling the meeting together, the Doctor leaves with Mo to collect Elliot. | |||
The Silurian | Malohken brings Mo and the Doctor to the stasis chamber Elliot is in; he begins shutting it down. The Silurian explains that he didn't mean any harm, he just slowed Elliot's growth so that he can study how he matures. Malohkeh explains that his family has been studying human evolution through the centuries, but he is the only one awake for the last 300 years. The Doctor expresses his fondness towards a fellow scientist. The boy is released and the Doctor apologises for putting him in harm's way. Elliot happily forgives him. | ||
[[File:Malokeh.jpg|thumb|Malohkeh sees Restac's insanity worsen.]] | |||
The Doctor, Mo and Elliot return to the negotiations, but Malohkeh opts to stay behind to check something. Hearing that cryo-storage has been opened, he rushes to see what is happening. He discovers Restac has awoken more of her warriors. She states that she is protecting them from the apes, clearly showing that she has been consumed by xenophobia towards humanity. Restac tells Malohkeh that he has done good work, but has no place during a war; she kills him, leaving the others unaware of her growing insanity. | |||
Amy, Nasreen and Eldane talk about how the Silurians might be able to live alongside humans. Amy proposes using areas of the Earth uninhabitable to humans, such as deserts as new habitats for the Silurians. However, Nasreen wonders about the resources and population problem that would ensue; there're already 6 billion humans, what happens when the Silurians start reaching that number? With the promise of a place to live, Eldane insists his race can bring new technology and resources. Amy and Nasreen are pleased to hear there are benefits to sharing the Earth. As the meeting concludes, the Doctor comments on how well things have gone. | |||
However, Rory, Tony and Ambrose enter, placing Alaya's body on the floor. Appalled, the Doctor demands to know what Rory has left happened while he was away. Ambrose tells the Doctor that she did it. Sighing, the Doctor tells Eldane that he had no idea about this; Eldane is understanding, knowing both sisters have a bigoted view of humanity and would do anything to ignite a war. Ambrose pleads that she was only trying to protect her family, but it becomes clear that even Elliot and Mo are disgusted with her. | |||
[[File:Restac-close-up.jpg|thumb|left|Restac orders her troops to attack.]] | |||
Restac returns and cries at the sight of her sister. She wonders why the Doctor insists they trust humans; Ambrose then reveals that drill is on a timer and that it will be disabled if the Silurians never come to the surface. When Restac learns Ambrose is responsible, she orders the woman's immediate execution. The warriors fire at her, but the Doctor steps in to protect her, using the sonic to blow up their guns. The group is forced to flee the room. | |||
Eldane leads the Doctor and his friends to the laboratory. They barricade themselves inside and try to think of a way to proceed. Time is running out before the drill reactivates and destroys the Silurian city, but with Restac's warriors surrounding them, they cannot return to the surface and turn it off. Restac's too blinded by rage to realise she'll die. Eldane decides to use an emergency failsafe called [[toxic fumigation]]. He will use the controls to release a cloud of toxic gas across the city. The Silurians in suspended animation in their cryo-chambers will be safe, but those under Restac's orders will be killed. The Doctor, with Nasreen's reluctant permission, agrees to program an energy surge to destroy the drill and prevent any further threat to the city while using the controls and his sonic screwdriver to deactivate the Silurian [[force field]] on the surface. | |||
Though the Doctor regrets the failure of compromise, Eldane insists the Earth is not ready for the return of the Silurians yet. With this, the Doctor informs his companions that [[31st century|in a thousand years]], the Silurians will return to the surface no matter what and they must spread the word, either religion or rumour; the Earth must be ready to accept the Silurians. Tony decides to stay behind when he learns the Silurians can cure his wound, which is causing mutation. Nasreen also opts to remain with Tony, thanking the Doctor for helping her fulfil her dream of seeing the Earth. The Doctor ushers his companions to the TARDIS, ordering the Northovers inside and telling them where the [[TARDIS medical bay|medical bay]] is. | |||
[[File:Cold Blood.jpg|thumb|The Doctor forcing Amy into the TARDIS as Rory is consumed by the time field.]] | |||
However, he is distracted by the sight of a [[Time field|crack]] opposite the TARDIS; Amy recognises it instantly. The Doctor is distressed that he doesn't understand it, especially when he remembers that [[Prisoner Zero]] and the [[Weeping Angel]]s seemed to know what it was. Knowing that the cracks were caused by a temporal explosion, he muses that with an explosion, there is shrapnel, and reaches into the crack; wincing in pain, producing a shard of smoking debris. Before he can take a good look at it, Restac crawls into the room, having let herself be poisoned. She aims her weapon at the Doctor in revenge. Right as the Doctor is about to disable her weapon with the sonic, Rory needlessly pushes him away and takes the blast. | |||
Before Restac can fire again, she dies. After a brief conversation with Amy, Rory dies in her arms. The Doctor, seeing Rory has already been surrounded by the [[Time Field|time field]], forces Amy into the TARDIS, where they watch as Rory is slowly being wrapped in tendrils sent out of the crack. | |||
A devastated Amy reminds the Doctor what he told her after the ''[[Byzantium (spacecraft)|Byzantium]]'': she remembered the Clerics [[history-proofing|because she is a time traveller]]. This, however, is her ''own'' history changing, so it's different. He tries to help Amy remember Rory, which he admits is possible if there is no distraction. As Amy remembers Rory, her memories of him begin to fade. Amy tries her best, but the TARDIS has a bumpy landing that breaks her concentration. She forgets all about him. All that remains of Rory is the engagement ring he gave Amy lying on the floor of the TARDIS console room, and the Doctor's memories of him; the ring exists because the inside of the TARDIS exists outside of the normal time-space. | |||
The Doctor, Amy, Elliot, Mo and Ambrose rush out of the TARDIS to see the drill explode. Sometime later, Ambrose wonders why the Doctor didn't leave her to be killed by Restac; he tells her that an eye-for-an-eye leaves the world blind, and that it's never the way. Firmly, the Doctor tells Ambrose to make up for her murdering of Alaya by making sure that Elliot grows up to be the best of humanity, which she had failed to be. | |||
The Doctor | [[File:Doctor cracks origin.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor makes a disturbing discovery.]] | ||
The Doctor and Amy return to the TARDIS. Amy stops to wave at her future self on the opposite hill; for a moment, she believes she saw someone else next to her as well, but quickly forgets about it, reminding the Doctor of Rio. Once she is inside the TARDIS, he remembers the debris he pulled from the crack. It is a scorched blue and white fragment of wood with black lettering. The Doctor holds it against the sign on the TARDIS door, confirming it is a broken piece of the TARDIS exterior. The Doctor worriedly enters the TARDIS. | |||
==Cast== | == Cast == | ||
*[[Eleventh Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[Matt Smith]] | * [[Eleventh Doctor|The Doctor]] - [[Matt Smith]] | ||
*[[Amy Pond]] - [[Karen Gillan]] | * [[Amy Pond]] - [[Karen Gillan]] | ||
*[[Rory Williams]] - [[Arthur Darvill]] | * [[Rory Williams|Rory]] - [[Arthur Darvill]] | ||
* | * [[Alaya]]/[[Restac]] - [[Neve McIntosh]] | ||
* [[Nasreen Chaudhry]] - [[Meera Syal]] | |||
*[[Tony Mack]] - [[Robert Pugh]] | * [[Tony Mack]] - [[Robert Pugh]] | ||
*[[ | * [[Ambrose Northover|Ambrose]] - [[Nia Roberts]] | ||
*[[ | * [[Malohkeh]] - [[Richard Hope]] | ||
*[[ | * [[Eldane]] - [[Stephen Moore]] | ||
*[[ | * [[Mo Northover|Mo]] - [[Alun Raglan]] | ||
*[[ | * [[Elliot Northover|Elliot]] - [[Samuel Davies]] | ||
== | === Uncredited Cast === | ||
* [[Silurian]]s - [[Samantha Bennett]], [[Nathalie Cuzner|Natalie Cuzner]], [[Barbara Fadden]], [[Alexandra Winton]]{{fact}} | |||
== | == Crew == | ||
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|SpecialEffects=Real SFX | |||
|Prosthetics=Millennium FX | |||
|Music=Murray Gold | |||
|Editor=David Barrett | |||
|ProductionDesigner=Edward Thomas | |||
|DOP=Mark Waters | |||
|LineProducer=Patrick Schweitzer | |||
|AssociateProducer= | |||
|CoProducer= | |||
|Writer=Chris Chibnall | |||
|Writer2= | |||
|Producer=Peter Bennett | |||
|Producer2= | |||
|Director=Ashley Way | |||
|ExecutiveProd=Steven Moffat | |||
|ExecutiveProd2=Piers Wenger | |||
|ExecutiveProd3=Beth Willis | |||
|DedicatedTo=<!--This exact credit never actually used as of April 2010; left for future use--> | |||
|InMemoryOf= | |||
|Note=Despite the centrality of prosthetics to creating the [[Silurian]]s — and indeed the inclusion of an interview with [[Rob Mayor]] on [[CON]]: ''[[After Effects (CON episode)|After Effects]]'' — no member of [[Millennium FX]]'s staff received an individual credit on this episode. | |||
|Note3=[[Malcolm Hulke]] did not receive a credit for creating the [[Silurian]]s, though he does later on in [[TV]]: ''[[A Good Man Goes to War (TV story)|A Good Man Goes to War]]''. | |||
|Note2=Similarly, [[Davy Jones (make-up designer)|Davy Jones]] was fairly extensively interviewed in [[CON]]: ''[[After Effects (CON episode)|After Effects]]'', where he was clearly shown to be doing the job of the [[prosthetics make-up artist]]. However he was not credited for his work. This was the first time he was visually confirmed to be working on ''Doctor Who'' since ''[[The Parting of the Ways (TV story)|The Parting of the Ways]]''. | |||
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== | == Worldbuilding == | ||
*[[ | === The Doctor === | ||
* | * [[Eleventh Doctor|The Doctor]] asks for a stick of [[celery]] after the almost lethal "decontamination". | ||
* This is the first episode since | |||
=== Technology === | |||
* The [[Homo Reptilia]]'s transport pads use [[gravity bubble]]s. | |||
* The Doctor looks for [[heat signature]]s to find [[Amy Pond|Amy]]. | |||
=== Species === | |||
* The [[Klempari defence]] is when a single member of a species claims to be the last of its kind. | |||
=== Earth === | |||
* The Doctor mentions the Silurians going into [[hibernation]] when they predicted a [[planet]] was going to crash into the [[Earth]], which in fact was when [[the Moon]] first entered its orbit around the Earth. | |||
== Notes == | |||
* Though it apparently was not used in the episode, in ''[[Doctor Who Confidential]]'' a cut segment appeared from the scene in which the [[Silurian]]s are marching [[Eleventh Doctor|the Doctor]] and [[Nasreen Chaudhry|Nasreen]] to the court hall. In the dialogue, Nasreen expresses that she does not want to be executed "down here". The Doctor commiserates, saying that the "last time I was executed it really put a blight on the day." There are several possible events to which this could be a reference to. | |||
* The Doctor uses the phrase, "squeaky bum time", originally coined by Sir [[wikipedia: Alex Ferguson|Alex Ferguson]], the manager of [[football]] club [[Manchester United]], in 2003.<ref> http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/squeaky-bum-time.html</ref> Before [[Matt Smith]] became an actor, he planned to become a professional footballer, but was forced out by a back injury. He continued to be a fan of the sport. | |||
* This is the first episode since {{cs|The End of Time (TV story)|part=one}} to have narration. Other stories with narration include [[TV]]: {{cs|The Deadly Assassin (TV story)}}, [[TV]]: {{cs|Doctor Who (TV story)}}, [[TV]]: {{cs|Army of Ghosts (TV story)}}, and [[TV]]: {{cs|Human Nature (TV story)}}. The opening narration, however, was not actually in the script. According to [[Ashley Way]] in the DVD commentary, it was added by [[Steven Moffat]]. | |||
* Clips from {{cs|The Eleventh Hour (TV story)}}, {{cs|The Time of Angels (TV story)}}, {{cs|Flesh and Stone (TV story)}}, and {{cs|The Vampires of Venice (TV story)}} are shown to illustrate the Doctor thinking back on other times that he witnessed the [[Crack in time|cracks in time]]. | |||
* The Doctor holds [[the Doctor's sonic screwdriver|his sonic screwdriver]] vertically upright to disarm the [[Silurian]]s, reminiscent of his older sonic screwdriver models. He was last seen to hold it like this in [[TV]]: {{cs|Utopia (TV story)}}. In ''Confidential'', Matt Smith stated that the sonic isn't a weapon, so he didn't point it at the weapons to disarm them. | |||
* The actors portraying Silurians in previous stories didn't wear masks. The masks here helped save time and money since the actors wearing masks didn't require as much time in make-up.{{source}} | |||
* In earlier stories featuring Silurians they had a third eye which had several abilities. They could use it to generate heat to dig through cave walls, operate their technology, and defend themselves. Steven Moffat omitted the Silurians' third eye because he feared they looked too similar to [[Davros]].{{source}} | |||
* [[Amy Pond|Amy]] and [[Mo Northover|Mo]]'s discovery that the Silurians have kidnapped a menagerie of modern animals, including a dog owned years earlier by [[Tony Mack]], was cut for time.{{source}} | |||
* [[Karen Gillan]] called [[Rory Williams|Rory]]'s death scene "incredibly challenging" for her to perform and tried to make it "truthful and believable".{{source}} | |||
* This is the first appearance of the Silurians having a long tongue that could inject venom. | |||
* Dropped in editing was an extensive conversation about faith between Rory and [[Alaya]], which would have foreshadowed Rory's fate at the end of the story.{{source}} | |||
* [[Chris Chibnall]] wanted to give the episode a distinctive feel by changing the principal setting:{{source}} after focussing on the human community of Cwmtaff in {{cs|The Hungry Earth (TV story)}}, the underground [[Silurian city]] would predominate this episode. | |||
* Tony Mack originally had a brother, and it was this character who murdered Alaya. However, as Chris Chibnall wrote the script, he came to feel that the strong feminine dynamic between Alaya and [[Ambrose Northover]] was more compelling; Ambrose became the Silurian's killer, and the brother was dropped.{{source}} | |||
* This two-parter formed Block Four of season five.{{source}} | |||
* [[Arthur Darvill]] was uncertain whether or not Rory's erasure from time meant the end of his tenure. He was booked on the show for several more months, but only because the scripts were being filmed out of broadcast order (he was yet to record his appearances in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Vampires of Venice (TV story)}} and [[TV]]: {{cs|Amy's Choice (TV story)}}). Nonetheless, Darvill had heard rumours amongst the crew that Steven Moffat was not finished with Rory Williams.{{source}} | |||
* Chris Chibnall wanted this to be a "story about people making mistakes under massive pressure" and the accidental conflict that came out of protecting a family; as such, he always intended for Alaya to die.{{source}} | |||
* The episode utilised many different locations and unusual sets to portray the Silurian city, as the production team did not want simply a "cave feel". They believed that the Silurians were also sophisticated and were able to use materials found underground, such as granite and marble. Many of the sets were given an orange glow from beneath to portray the "ambient glow" from the centre of the Earth.{{source}} | |||
* Plantasia Botanic Gardens was chosen to portray the Silurian city, because it gave a sense of things growing, as these were necessary for the Silurians to survive. Set designers were able to rearrange the plants, though they had to be careful not to show the window leading to the car park or other modern amenities.{{source}} | |||
=== Ratings === | === Ratings === | ||
* Overnight ratings were 5.7 million (5.4 million on BBC1, 0.3 million on HD) for a 27.2% share.<ref>http://gallifreynewsbase.blogspot.com/2010/05/cold-blood-overnight-ratings.html</ref> | |||
* Official viewing figures was 7.04 million. | |||
* Final UK ratings were 7.49 million.<ref>[http://guide.doctorwhonews.net/info.php?detail=ratings&type=date Doctor Who Ratings - UK final]</ref> | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
=== Filming locations === | === Filming locations === | ||
'' | * The Silurian Council Chamber is a redress of the Temple of Peace, which had previously been used as the [[Platform One]] meeting room set from {{cs|The End of the World (TV story)}}, the Senate building seen in {{cs|Gridlock (TV story)}}, the temple of the [[Sibylline Sisterhood]] in {{cs|The Fires of Pompeii (TV story)}} and the Mona Lisa chamber at the art gallery from {{cs|Mona Lisa's Revenge (TV story)}}. <ref>http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/arts/sites/doctor-who-wales/alllocations/cardiff-temple-of-peace</ref> It was later used as the location for the German restaurant [[River Song]] attacks in [[TV]]: {{cs|Let's Kill Hitler (TV story)}}. | ||
* Plantasia Botanic Gardens, Parc Tawe, Swansea. The same location had previously been used in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Daughter (TV story)}}. | |||
=== Production errors === | === Production errors === | ||
*When running from the Silurians in the tunnels, the Doctor holds his sonic screwdriver. In the shots of the Doctor, the screwdriver is vertical, but in the shots of the Silurians, the screwdriver is more horizontal. | {{Discontinuity}} | ||
*When Amy is trying to | * In particular close-ups, one of [[Restac]]'s 'scales' is absent, leaving an obvious hole where it should be in [[Neve McIntosh]]'s prosthetics. | ||
* When running from the Silurians in the tunnels, the Doctor holds his sonic screwdriver. In the shots of the Doctor, the screwdriver is vertical, but in the shots of the Silurians, the screwdriver is more horizontal. | |||
* At one point, the Silurian city's computer states that the [[toxic fumigation]] is about to begin and everyone needs to evacuate as the Doctor's group runs. However, the fumigation has already begun as evidenced by the toxic gas shown being released moments before the announcement. | |||
* When Amy is trying to not forget Rory, the memory of him getting shot does not show the laser blast striking him. | |||
* When Restac shows up, the Doctor has just pulled the shard of [[The Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]] out of the crack. He starts to push himself off the ground. The camera cuts to Restac dragging herself towards them and then back to the Doctor, who finishes jumping to his feet. The shard of the TARDIS is nowhere in sight. It has not been left on the ground and there wasn't time for the Doctor to put it in his pocket. | |||
* In the scene where Rory is dead after the Doctor remembers about the cracks erasing people, he goes near the TARDIS, but when it cuts to Amy crying, the Doctor is behind her. There wouldn't be enough time for him to go from the TARDIS to behind Amy. | |||
* When saving Ambrose from a Silurian ray gun, the humans run from the Silurians. Tony is seen directly in front of the Doctor and [[Elliot Northover|Elliot]]. However, in the next shot, he is at the front of the group, directly in front of Nasreen. | |||
== Continuity == | == Continuity == | ||
* | * It is revealed that [[the Doctor's TARDIS]] is at least at the centre of [[Total event collapse|the explosion]] that started [[Crack in time|the cracks]], as [[Eleventh Doctor|the Doctor]] fishes a piece of TARDIS out of the crack, which is burnt and destroyed. The fact that it is, in fact, the cause of the explosion was revealed in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Pandorica Opens (TV story)}} / {{cs|The Big Bang (TV story)}}. | ||
*The Doctor directly references | * The Doctor directly references his first encounter with [[Silurian]]s in [[TV]]: {{cs|Doctor Who and the Silurians (TV story)}}, when [[Brigadier]] [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Lethbridge-Stewart]] betrayed him and murdered many Silurians, as [[Ambrose Northover|Ambrose]] did to [[Alaya]]. | ||
* | * [[Rory Williams|Rory]] pushes the Doctor out of the line of fire only to be mortally wounded himself, just as [[Jenny (The Doctor's Daughter)|Jenny]] did in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Doctor's Daughter (TV story)}}. | ||
*The Doctor | * The Doctor mentions [[Fixed point in time|fixed points in time]], having previously mentioned them in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Fires of Pompeii (TV story)}} and [[TV]]: {{cs|The Waters of Mars (TV story)}}. | ||
*The Doctor | * The warrior class of Silurians use heat ray weapons similar to those utilised by the biologically-related [[Sea Devil]]s in [[TV]]: {{cs|Warriors of the Deep (TV story)}}. | ||
* A [[gravity bubble]] is used by the Silurians. They were also used by [[Edwin Bracewell]] to keep the [[Spitfire]]s in space in [[TV]]: {{cs|Victory of the Daleks (TV story)}}. | |||
* Several Silurian characters in this story can be compared to those in [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Bloodtide (audio story)}}. [[Eldane]] respects the [[human]] race just as [[Sh'vak]] did, whereas [[Restac]] has the same attitude as [[Tulok]]; though Tulok apparently engineered humanity, he just wanted to hunt them for sport. | |||
* In [[TV]]: {{cs|Doctor Who and the Silurians (TV story)}}, the [[Third Doctor]] managed to convince a [[Okdel L'da|Silurian leader]] to share the planet, but that leader was killed by his [[Morka|lieutenant]]. A similar situation happens in this story with the Eleventh Doctor, [[Malokeh]] and Restac. | |||
* [[Amy Pond|Amy]] pickpockets Malokeh so she can escape. [[Darius Pike]] picked [[Thorne]]'s pocket in [[TV]]: {{cs|Liberation (TV story)}}. The Doctor also did so in several stories, such as [[TV]]: {{cs|The Ribos Operation (TV story)}}. | |||
* The Doctor asks for some [[celery]] after the aborted decontamination sequence. The [[Fifth Doctor]] wore a stick of celery on his lapel throughout his tenure, claiming in [[TV]]: {{cs|The Caves of Androzani (TV story)}} that it was an "excellent restorative." | |||
* This story continues the history of the Doctor's failure to achieve peace between the Silurians and humans. He had previous failed attempts in [[TV]]: {{cs|Doctor Who and the Silurians (TV story)}}, [[TV]]: {{cs|The Sea Devils (TV story)}}, and [[TV]]: {{cs|Warriors of the Deep (TV story)}}. | |||
== Home video releases == | |||
[[File:Series-5-volume-3-dvd-cover1.jpg|thumb|Series 5, volume 3 DVD cover]] | |||
=== DVD & Blu-ray releases === | |||
* Series 5, Volume Three was released on DVD and Blu-Ray in region 2/B on [[2 August (releases)|2 August]] [[2010 (releases)|2010]] and region 4/B on [[2 September (releases)|2 September]] 2010. The volume features ''Amy's Choice'', ''The Hungry Earth'' and ''Cold Blood'', and the featurette ''The Monster Diaries''. | |||
* The episode was later released in the Complete Fifth Series boxset on both DVD and Blu-ray, in region 1/A on [[9 November (releases)|9 November]] 2010, in region 2/B on [[8 November (releases)|8 November]] 2010 and in region 4/B on [[2 December (releases)|2 December]] 2010. | |||
* A DVD-only release of Series 5, Part Two, containing the latter seven episodes of the series, was released in region 1 on [[26 July (releases)|26 July]] [[2016 (releases)|2016]]. | |||
=== Digital releases === | |||
* In the United Kingdom, this story is available on [[BBC iPlayer]]. | |||
== | == External links == | ||
{{dwrefguide|who_tv53.htm|Cold Blood}} | |||
== | == Footnotes == | ||
{{Reflist}} | |||
{{DWTV}} | |||
{{Homo Reptilian stories}} | |||
{{TitleSort}} | |||
[[cy:Cold Blood (stori deledu)]] | |||
[[de:228 - Cold Blood]] | |||
[[es:Cold Blood]] | |||
[[fr:Cold Blood (TV)]] | |||
[[it:Cold Blood (TV)]] | |||
[[Category:Doctor Who (2005) television stories]] | |||
[[Category: | |||
[[Category:Stories set in 2020]] | [[Category:Stories set in 2020]] | ||
[[Category:Silurian and Sea Devil | [[Category:Silurian and Sea Devil television stories]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Stories set in Wales]] | ||
[[Category:Series 5 (Doctor Who) stories]] | |||
[[Category:Stories set in alternate timelines]] | |||
[[Category:The Monster Collection: The Silurians stories]] |
Latest revision as of 23:48, 28 November 2024
Cold Blood was the ninth episode of series 5 of Doctor Who.
It was the second part of a two-part story that featured the return of the Silurians and the first death of recurring companion Rory Williams, which soon escalated further to total erasure from existence after a crack consumed his body. Thus only the Doctor remembers him.
Once more, the Doctor is seen trying to bring about a peaceful solution to a conflict between Silurians and humans. In this case, a rogue Silurian is responsible for the breakdown of trust, as is just one human. It's worth noting that unlike the previous branches of the Silurians, which had a more peaceful nature, Alaya and Restac are shown to be racist and genocidal.
Unlike the previous branches of the Silurian species, which never survived their initial encounters with the Doctor, this one found in Cwmtaff survives for another chance at cohabitation with humanity in the future.
Neve McIntosh, who plays Alaya and Restac, would later return to the show the following year in A Good Man Goes to War, playing another Silurian named Madame Vastra. However, unlike the characters in this story, Vastra would serve as one of the Doctor's recurring allies, primarily in the Victorian Era.
Synopsis[[edit] | [edit source]]
Once more the Eleventh Doctor meets members of the Silurian race. However, this time, can he prevent them from being destroyed by humanity out of an act of self-preservation, or can he broker peace between them and bring about a better future for both races of planet Earth?
In the meantime, there are other questions that are left unanswered: Can Ambrose be trusted to keep Alaya alive? What is happening to Tony Mack's wound? Are the Silurians responsible for the empty graves? And what awaits Mo and Amy when a Silurian doctor is eager to see what makes them tick?
Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]
A view of the Earth is shown from space as the sun rises from behind it, illuminating the features of the planet.
A Silurian narrates that his people are now awakening and that he remembers the day 1000 years ago when he met the Doctor and the losses that the Time Lord suffered because of the failed attempt to negotiate peace.
Back to the present day in 2020, the Eleventh Doctor and Nasreen enter the Silurian city, which is quite elaborate and grand. A curious Nasreen wonders how any of the vegetation and the city itself could be there, being so far beneath the Earth. The Doctor explains that the city and the vegetation are fueled by thermal energy and most of the Silurians are hibernating in suspended animation. To get back who was taken, they need to find the Silurians that were awakened by the threat the drill posed to the city.
Nasreen wonders if waltzing straight into the city is a good idea as the Doctor assures her that the "front door approach" is always the best idea. An alarm goes off, announcing hostile life forms entering the city. Shocked at being called hostile, the Doctor admits that the "front door approach" may not have been the best idea. They turn to leave, but Silurian soldiers arrive and hold them at gunpoint. The Doctor tells them they are not hostile, but the Silurians knock them out with gas.
Amy and Mo are strapped to surgical operating tables in a Silurian surgery. The Silurian surgeon, Malohkeh, is getting ready to vivisect Amy. He removes his mask and tightens Amy's straps. Malohkeh notes that Amy is reacting differently to the cold than Mo; Amy yells she was dressed for Rio. He then takes the scalpel and begins to put it in Amy's chest, but is called away to examine the Doctor and Nasreen. Amy, who has sneaked the remote controlling the surgical tables from the surgeon, releases Mo and herself and they escape into the city. While searching for a means of returning to the surface, they find Elliot, trapped in suspended animation, but alive.
The Doctor and Nasreen are strapped to tables in a separate laboratory and forcibly scanned; while Nasreen is complacent, the Doctor cries out in pain. Malohkeh converses with Commander Restac, wondering if there has been any word from Alaya. When Restac briskly responds in the negative, Malohkeh assures her that it is all right to show some emotion as they are from the same genetic line. Malohkeh begins to decontaminate the Doctor and Nasreen; again, the Doctor cries out, begging Malohkeh to stop. Because the Doctor is not human, the decontamination process affects him differently — not only does it cause him severe pain, but it "remove[s] half of the things keeping [him] alive". Against Restac's wishes, Malohkeh stops the process after seeing an internal scan confirms his non-human status.
Thanking Malohkeh, the Doctor asks if they have any celery. Malohkeh explains the drill threatened the oxygen pockets above the city; the Doctor is pleased to hear about such technology, but then realises that the impending drill wasn't a very nice greeting. The Doctor asks for Restac's identity, learning to his annoyance that there is a military. Restac demands to know where the rest of their "invasion force" is. The Doctor tells Restac that the two of them are not an invasion force, revealing that they've come down to negotiate a trade of prisoners: Alaya for the three humans the Silurians took. Restac, however, is less inclined to negotiate and orders the execution of Nasreen and the Doctor out of spite.
On the surface, Tony approaches Alaya for help in curing the venomous sting on his shoulder, promising to release her if she can do something for him. Alaya refuses and amuses herself by having Tony describe what the venom's effect feels like. Ambrose eventually learns of Tony's injury and Alaya's refusal to help. She angrily confronts the Silurian, threatening her with a taser. Alaya encourages her to use it, which she does; on the second shot, Alaya collapses as Tony and Rory arrive, and she dies in Rory's arms. They both become angry with Ambrose because she killed their only bargaining chip to get their loved ones back. Ambrose expresses remorse for what she's done.
Restac and Malohkeh lead the two prisoners to the city's execution chamber, flanked by Silurian warriors. The Doctor explains the nature of the Silurians' hibernation to Nasreen: centuries before, their astronomers predicted a planet was on a crash course for Earth, so they hibernated below the surface to avoid the catastrophe. The planet was, in fact, the moon coming into alignment. Malohkeh is impressed with the Doctor's knowledge of their race, prompting the Doctor to reveal that he'd previously met another branch. Restac is happy to hear more of her race has survived; however, the Doctor sadly informs her that humans killed them, reigniting Restac's rage.
Once inside the execution chamber, Mo and Amy appear, brandishing guns they have taken from sleeping Silurian warriors, with the intention of rescuing the Doctor. Restac swiftly disarms Amy, forcing their surrender. The two are added to the procession. When Malohkeh protests, Restac dismisses him. On the surface, Rory and Tony berate Ambrose for what she has done to Alaya. Suddenly, Restac's face appears on the screen of a deactivated computer monitor in the church cellar. She has somehow manipulated the monitor to address the humans and negotiate Alaya's return. Though the Doctor orders Ambrose to let Rory handle the situation, she steps in and declares she has had enough of the Silurians' orders. She refuses to return Alaya unless Restac releases her family. Angered, Restac orders the first execution: Amy. The computer monitor goes dark.
However, before the Silurian warriors can fire, their leader, Eldane, arrives with Malohkeh and countermands the order. Malohken knew Restac was only acting on bigotry and needed their wiser leader to make the decisions. Eldane tells Restac to "go play soldiers" somewhere else, dismissing her. Now free, the Doctor, realising his chances of negotiating have been reignited, resumes communications with his companions on the surface, ordering them to bring Alaya down via the Silurian transport pods in the mine storeroom. Reaching the mine, Ambrose encourages Tony to reactivate the drill on a timer in case things go wrong.
The Doctor appoints Nasreen and Amy as the ambassadors for humanity and allows them to talk to Eldane. Amy wonders if the Earth is shared in the future, prompting Nasreen to ask what she means. The Doctor reveals that he and Amy travel in time, surprising both Nasreen and Eldane. He then explains time is in flux at this moment, which means they can create a future where humanity and the Silurians live in harmony on the surface, rather than have more genocide. Calling the meeting together, the Doctor leaves with Mo to collect Elliot.
Malohken brings Mo and the Doctor to the stasis chamber Elliot is in; he begins shutting it down. The Silurian explains that he didn't mean any harm, he just slowed Elliot's growth so that he can study how he matures. Malohkeh explains that his family has been studying human evolution through the centuries, but he is the only one awake for the last 300 years. The Doctor expresses his fondness towards a fellow scientist. The boy is released and the Doctor apologises for putting him in harm's way. Elliot happily forgives him.
The Doctor, Mo and Elliot return to the negotiations, but Malohkeh opts to stay behind to check something. Hearing that cryo-storage has been opened, he rushes to see what is happening. He discovers Restac has awoken more of her warriors. She states that she is protecting them from the apes, clearly showing that she has been consumed by xenophobia towards humanity. Restac tells Malohkeh that he has done good work, but has no place during a war; she kills him, leaving the others unaware of her growing insanity.
Amy, Nasreen and Eldane talk about how the Silurians might be able to live alongside humans. Amy proposes using areas of the Earth uninhabitable to humans, such as deserts as new habitats for the Silurians. However, Nasreen wonders about the resources and population problem that would ensue; there're already 6 billion humans, what happens when the Silurians start reaching that number? With the promise of a place to live, Eldane insists his race can bring new technology and resources. Amy and Nasreen are pleased to hear there are benefits to sharing the Earth. As the meeting concludes, the Doctor comments on how well things have gone.
However, Rory, Tony and Ambrose enter, placing Alaya's body on the floor. Appalled, the Doctor demands to know what Rory has left happened while he was away. Ambrose tells the Doctor that she did it. Sighing, the Doctor tells Eldane that he had no idea about this; Eldane is understanding, knowing both sisters have a bigoted view of humanity and would do anything to ignite a war. Ambrose pleads that she was only trying to protect her family, but it becomes clear that even Elliot and Mo are disgusted with her.
Restac returns and cries at the sight of her sister. She wonders why the Doctor insists they trust humans; Ambrose then reveals that drill is on a timer and that it will be disabled if the Silurians never come to the surface. When Restac learns Ambrose is responsible, she orders the woman's immediate execution. The warriors fire at her, but the Doctor steps in to protect her, using the sonic to blow up their guns. The group is forced to flee the room. Eldane leads the Doctor and his friends to the laboratory. They barricade themselves inside and try to think of a way to proceed. Time is running out before the drill reactivates and destroys the Silurian city, but with Restac's warriors surrounding them, they cannot return to the surface and turn it off. Restac's too blinded by rage to realise she'll die. Eldane decides to use an emergency failsafe called toxic fumigation. He will use the controls to release a cloud of toxic gas across the city. The Silurians in suspended animation in their cryo-chambers will be safe, but those under Restac's orders will be killed. The Doctor, with Nasreen's reluctant permission, agrees to program an energy surge to destroy the drill and prevent any further threat to the city while using the controls and his sonic screwdriver to deactivate the Silurian force field on the surface.
Though the Doctor regrets the failure of compromise, Eldane insists the Earth is not ready for the return of the Silurians yet. With this, the Doctor informs his companions that in a thousand years, the Silurians will return to the surface no matter what and they must spread the word, either religion or rumour; the Earth must be ready to accept the Silurians. Tony decides to stay behind when he learns the Silurians can cure his wound, which is causing mutation. Nasreen also opts to remain with Tony, thanking the Doctor for helping her fulfil her dream of seeing the Earth. The Doctor ushers his companions to the TARDIS, ordering the Northovers inside and telling them where the medical bay is.
However, he is distracted by the sight of a crack opposite the TARDIS; Amy recognises it instantly. The Doctor is distressed that he doesn't understand it, especially when he remembers that Prisoner Zero and the Weeping Angels seemed to know what it was. Knowing that the cracks were caused by a temporal explosion, he muses that with an explosion, there is shrapnel, and reaches into the crack; wincing in pain, producing a shard of smoking debris. Before he can take a good look at it, Restac crawls into the room, having let herself be poisoned. She aims her weapon at the Doctor in revenge. Right as the Doctor is about to disable her weapon with the sonic, Rory needlessly pushes him away and takes the blast.
Before Restac can fire again, she dies. After a brief conversation with Amy, Rory dies in her arms. The Doctor, seeing Rory has already been surrounded by the time field, forces Amy into the TARDIS, where they watch as Rory is slowly being wrapped in tendrils sent out of the crack.
A devastated Amy reminds the Doctor what he told her after the Byzantium: she remembered the Clerics because she is a time traveller. This, however, is her own history changing, so it's different. He tries to help Amy remember Rory, which he admits is possible if there is no distraction. As Amy remembers Rory, her memories of him begin to fade. Amy tries her best, but the TARDIS has a bumpy landing that breaks her concentration. She forgets all about him. All that remains of Rory is the engagement ring he gave Amy lying on the floor of the TARDIS console room, and the Doctor's memories of him; the ring exists because the inside of the TARDIS exists outside of the normal time-space.
The Doctor, Amy, Elliot, Mo and Ambrose rush out of the TARDIS to see the drill explode. Sometime later, Ambrose wonders why the Doctor didn't leave her to be killed by Restac; he tells her that an eye-for-an-eye leaves the world blind, and that it's never the way. Firmly, the Doctor tells Ambrose to make up for her murdering of Alaya by making sure that Elliot grows up to be the best of humanity, which she had failed to be.
The Doctor and Amy return to the TARDIS. Amy stops to wave at her future self on the opposite hill; for a moment, she believes she saw someone else next to her as well, but quickly forgets about it, reminding the Doctor of Rio. Once she is inside the TARDIS, he remembers the debris he pulled from the crack. It is a scorched blue and white fragment of wood with black lettering. The Doctor holds it against the sign on the TARDIS door, confirming it is a broken piece of the TARDIS exterior. The Doctor worriedly enters the TARDIS.
Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor - Matt Smith
- Amy Pond - Karen Gillan
- Rory - Arthur Darvill
- Alaya/Restac - Neve McIntosh
- Nasreen Chaudhry - Meera Syal
- Tony Mack - Robert Pugh
- Ambrose - Nia Roberts
- Malohkeh - Richard Hope
- Eldane - Stephen Moore
- Mo - Alun Raglan
- Elliot - Samuel Davies
Uncredited Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]
Crew[[edit] | [edit source]]
Executive Producers Steven Moffat, Piers Wenger and Beth Willis |
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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. |
Despite the centrality of prosthetics to creating the Silurians — and indeed the inclusion of an interview with Rob Mayor on CON: After Effects — no member of Millennium FX's staff received an individual credit on this episode. Similarly, Davy Jones was fairly extensively interviewed in CON: After Effects, where he was clearly shown to be doing the job of the prosthetics make-up artist. However he was not credited for his work. This was the first time he was visually confirmed to be working on Doctor Who since The Parting of the Ways. Malcolm Hulke did not receive a credit for creating the Silurians, though he does later on in TV: A Good Man Goes to War. |
Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor asks for a stick of celery after the almost lethal "decontamination".
Technology[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Homo Reptilia's transport pads use gravity bubbles.
- The Doctor looks for heat signatures to find Amy.
Species[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Klempari defence is when a single member of a species claims to be the last of its kind.
Earth[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor mentions the Silurians going into hibernation when they predicted a planet was going to crash into the Earth, which in fact was when the Moon first entered its orbit around the Earth.
Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Though it apparently was not used in the episode, in Doctor Who Confidential a cut segment appeared from the scene in which the Silurians are marching the Doctor and Nasreen to the court hall. In the dialogue, Nasreen expresses that she does not want to be executed "down here". The Doctor commiserates, saying that the "last time I was executed it really put a blight on the day." There are several possible events to which this could be a reference to.
- The Doctor uses the phrase, "squeaky bum time", originally coined by Sir Alex Ferguson, the manager of football club Manchester United, in 2003.[1] Before Matt Smith became an actor, he planned to become a professional footballer, but was forced out by a back injury. He continued to be a fan of the sport.
- This is the first episode since The End of Time (part one) [+]Loading...{"part":"one","1":"The End of Time (TV story)"} to have narration. Other stories with narration include TV: The Deadly Assassin [+]Loading...["The Deadly Assassin (TV story)"], TV: Doctor Who [+]Loading...["Doctor Who (TV story)"], TV: Army of Ghosts [+]Loading...["Army of Ghosts (TV story)"], and TV: Human Nature [+]Loading...["Human Nature (TV story)"]. The opening narration, however, was not actually in the script. According to Ashley Way in the DVD commentary, it was added by Steven Moffat.
- Clips from The Eleventh Hour [+]Loading...["The Eleventh Hour (TV story)"], The Time of Angels [+]Loading...["The Time of Angels (TV story)"], Flesh and Stone [+]Loading...["Flesh and Stone (TV story)"], and The Vampires of Venice [+]Loading...["The Vampires of Venice (TV story)"] are shown to illustrate the Doctor thinking back on other times that he witnessed the cracks in time.
- The Doctor holds his sonic screwdriver vertically upright to disarm the Silurians, reminiscent of his older sonic screwdriver models. He was last seen to hold it like this in TV: Utopia [+]Loading...["Utopia (TV story)"]. In Confidential, Matt Smith stated that the sonic isn't a weapon, so he didn't point it at the weapons to disarm them.
- The actors portraying Silurians in previous stories didn't wear masks. The masks here helped save time and money since the actors wearing masks didn't require as much time in make-up.[source needed]
- In earlier stories featuring Silurians they had a third eye which had several abilities. They could use it to generate heat to dig through cave walls, operate their technology, and defend themselves. Steven Moffat omitted the Silurians' third eye because he feared they looked too similar to Davros.[source needed]
- Amy and Mo's discovery that the Silurians have kidnapped a menagerie of modern animals, including a dog owned years earlier by Tony Mack, was cut for time.[source needed]
- Karen Gillan called Rory's death scene "incredibly challenging" for her to perform and tried to make it "truthful and believable".[source needed]
- This is the first appearance of the Silurians having a long tongue that could inject venom.
- Dropped in editing was an extensive conversation about faith between Rory and Alaya, which would have foreshadowed Rory's fate at the end of the story.[source needed]
- Chris Chibnall wanted to give the episode a distinctive feel by changing the principal setting:[source needed] after focussing on the human community of Cwmtaff in The Hungry Earth [+]Loading...["The Hungry Earth (TV story)"], the underground Silurian city would predominate this episode.
- Tony Mack originally had a brother, and it was this character who murdered Alaya. However, as Chris Chibnall wrote the script, he came to feel that the strong feminine dynamic between Alaya and Ambrose Northover was more compelling; Ambrose became the Silurian's killer, and the brother was dropped.[source needed]
- This two-parter formed Block Four of season five.[source needed]
- Arthur Darvill was uncertain whether or not Rory's erasure from time meant the end of his tenure. He was booked on the show for several more months, but only because the scripts were being filmed out of broadcast order (he was yet to record his appearances in TV: The Vampires of Venice [+]Loading...["The Vampires of Venice (TV story)"] and TV: Amy's Choice [+]Loading...["Amy's Choice (TV story)"]). Nonetheless, Darvill had heard rumours amongst the crew that Steven Moffat was not finished with Rory Williams.[source needed]
- Chris Chibnall wanted this to be a "story about people making mistakes under massive pressure" and the accidental conflict that came out of protecting a family; as such, he always intended for Alaya to die.[source needed]
- The episode utilised many different locations and unusual sets to portray the Silurian city, as the production team did not want simply a "cave feel". They believed that the Silurians were also sophisticated and were able to use materials found underground, such as granite and marble. Many of the sets were given an orange glow from beneath to portray the "ambient glow" from the centre of the Earth.[source needed]
- Plantasia Botanic Gardens was chosen to portray the Silurian city, because it gave a sense of things growing, as these were necessary for the Silurians to survive. Set designers were able to rearrange the plants, though they had to be careful not to show the window leading to the car park or other modern amenities.[source needed]
Ratings[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Overnight ratings were 5.7 million (5.4 million on BBC1, 0.3 million on HD) for a 27.2% share.[2]
- Official viewing figures was 7.04 million.
- Final UK ratings were 7.49 million.[3]
Filming locations[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Silurian Council Chamber is a redress of the Temple of Peace, which had previously been used as the Platform One meeting room set from The End of the World [+]Loading...["The End of the World (TV story)"], the Senate building seen in Gridlock [+]Loading...["Gridlock (TV story)"], the temple of the Sibylline Sisterhood in The Fires of Pompeii [+]Loading...["The Fires of Pompeii (TV story)"] and the Mona Lisa chamber at the art gallery from Mona Lisa's Revenge [+]Loading...["Mona Lisa's Revenge (TV story)"]. [4] It was later used as the location for the German restaurant River Song attacks in TV: Let's Kill Hitler [+]Loading...["Let's Kill Hitler (TV story)"].
- Plantasia Botanic Gardens, Parc Tawe, Swansea. The same location had previously been used in TV: The Doctor's Daughter [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Daughter (TV story)"].
Production errors[[edit] | [edit source]]
- In particular close-ups, one of Restac's 'scales' is absent, leaving an obvious hole where it should be in Neve McIntosh's prosthetics.
- When running from the Silurians in the tunnels, the Doctor holds his sonic screwdriver. In the shots of the Doctor, the screwdriver is vertical, but in the shots of the Silurians, the screwdriver is more horizontal.
- At one point, the Silurian city's computer states that the toxic fumigation is about to begin and everyone needs to evacuate as the Doctor's group runs. However, the fumigation has already begun as evidenced by the toxic gas shown being released moments before the announcement.
- When Amy is trying to not forget Rory, the memory of him getting shot does not show the laser blast striking him.
- When Restac shows up, the Doctor has just pulled the shard of the TARDIS out of the crack. He starts to push himself off the ground. The camera cuts to Restac dragging herself towards them and then back to the Doctor, who finishes jumping to his feet. The shard of the TARDIS is nowhere in sight. It has not been left on the ground and there wasn't time for the Doctor to put it in his pocket.
- In the scene where Rory is dead after the Doctor remembers about the cracks erasing people, he goes near the TARDIS, but when it cuts to Amy crying, the Doctor is behind her. There wouldn't be enough time for him to go from the TARDIS to behind Amy.
- When saving Ambrose from a Silurian ray gun, the humans run from the Silurians. Tony is seen directly in front of the Doctor and Elliot. However, in the next shot, he is at the front of the group, directly in front of Nasreen.
Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]
- It is revealed that the Doctor's TARDIS is at least at the centre of the explosion that started the cracks, as the Doctor fishes a piece of TARDIS out of the crack, which is burnt and destroyed. The fact that it is, in fact, the cause of the explosion was revealed in TV: The Pandorica Opens [+]Loading...["The Pandorica Opens (TV story)"] / The Big Bang [+]Loading...["The Big Bang (TV story)"].
- The Doctor directly references his first encounter with Silurians in TV: Doctor Who and the Silurians [+]Loading...["Doctor Who and the Silurians (TV story)"], when Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart betrayed him and murdered many Silurians, as Ambrose did to Alaya.
- Rory pushes the Doctor out of the line of fire only to be mortally wounded himself, just as Jenny did in TV: The Doctor's Daughter [+]Loading...["The Doctor's Daughter (TV story)"].
- The Doctor mentions fixed points in time, having previously mentioned them in TV: The Fires of Pompeii [+]Loading...["The Fires of Pompeii (TV story)"] and TV: The Waters of Mars [+]Loading...["The Waters of Mars (TV story)"].
- The warrior class of Silurians use heat ray weapons similar to those utilised by the biologically-related Sea Devils in TV: Warriors of the Deep [+]Loading...["Warriors of the Deep (TV story)"].
- A gravity bubble is used by the Silurians. They were also used by Edwin Bracewell to keep the Spitfires in space in TV: Victory of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Victory of the Daleks (TV story)"].
- Several Silurian characters in this story can be compared to those in AUDIO: Bloodtide [+]Loading...["Bloodtide (audio story)"]. Eldane respects the human race just as Sh'vak did, whereas Restac has the same attitude as Tulok; though Tulok apparently engineered humanity, he just wanted to hunt them for sport.
- In TV: Doctor Who and the Silurians [+]Loading...["Doctor Who and the Silurians (TV story)"], the Third Doctor managed to convince a Silurian leader to share the planet, but that leader was killed by his lieutenant. A similar situation happens in this story with the Eleventh Doctor, Malokeh and Restac.
- Amy pickpockets Malokeh so she can escape. Darius Pike picked Thorne's pocket in TV: Liberation [+]Loading...["Liberation (TV story)"]. The Doctor also did so in several stories, such as TV: The Ribos Operation [+]Loading...["The Ribos Operation (TV story)"].
- The Doctor asks for some celery after the aborted decontamination sequence. The Fifth Doctor wore a stick of celery on his lapel throughout his tenure, claiming in TV: The Caves of Androzani [+]Loading...["The Caves of Androzani (TV story)"] that it was an "excellent restorative."
- This story continues the history of the Doctor's failure to achieve peace between the Silurians and humans. He had previous failed attempts in TV: Doctor Who and the Silurians [+]Loading...["Doctor Who and the Silurians (TV story)"], TV: The Sea Devils [+]Loading...["The Sea Devils (TV story)"], and TV: Warriors of the Deep [+]Loading...["Warriors of the Deep (TV story)"].
Home video releases[[edit] | [edit source]]
DVD & Blu-ray releases[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Series 5, Volume Three was released on DVD and Blu-Ray in region 2/B on 2 August 2010 and region 4/B on 2 September 2010. The volume features Amy's Choice, The Hungry Earth and Cold Blood, and the featurette The Monster Diaries.
- The episode was later released in the Complete Fifth Series boxset on both DVD and Blu-ray, in region 1/A on 9 November 2010, in region 2/B on 8 November 2010 and in region 4/B on 2 December 2010.
- A DVD-only release of Series 5, Part Two, containing the latter seven episodes of the series, was released in region 1 on 26 July 2016.
Digital releases[[edit] | [edit source]]
- In the United Kingdom, this story is available on BBC iPlayer.
External links[[edit] | [edit source]]
Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]
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