Boom Town (TV story): Difference between revisions
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enemy= [[Blon Fel-Fotch Passameer-Day Slitheen]] | | enemy= [[Blon Fel-Fotch Passameer-Day Slitheen]] | | ||
setting= [[Cardiff]], [[September]] [[2006]] | | setting= [[Cardiff]], [[September]] [[2006]] | | ||
writer= [[Russell T | writer= [[Russell T Davies]] | | ||
director= [[Joe Ahearne]] | | director= [[Joe Ahearne]] | | ||
producer= [[Phil Collinson]] | | producer= [[Phil Collinson]] | |
Revision as of 00:40, 16 July 2008
This time you have consequences
Synopsis
The Ninth Doctor, Rose and Jack travel to modern-day Cardiff and meet up with Rose's boyfriend, Mickey. There, they discover that a recent enemy is very much alive, and is willing to rip apart the planet to ensure her freedom.
Plot
The Doctor has landed the TARDIS over the Cardiff Rift, located in the Roald Dahl Plass leading to the Wales Millennium Centre, left open after the Gelth were defeated in 1869, and using the slow radiation leakage to recharge the TARDIS. As the process will take a whole day, he, Rose, and Jack are joined by Mickey in Cardiff and take the opportunity to explore the area. While they enjoy a meal at a restaurant, the Doctor notices, to his dismay, the front page of The Western Mail, with the headline "New Mayor, New Cardiff" and a picture of Margaret Blaine, a Slitheen in its human form whom they previously encountered. Since their meeting, Blaine has become the Lord Mayor of Cardiff, and initiated the construction of a nuclear power plant. However, several people had found significant flaws with the design that could lead to a nuclear meltdown, and had approached her about these issues, but they have since disappeared, Blaine having killed them herself. During a recent press conference, a young reporter approached Blaine about these deaths and the information they had left behind. Blaine invited the reporter to follow her into the restroom where Blaine plans to kill her, but had a change of heart as the reporter talks about her family, realizing that she herself no longer has one.
Realizing that they must stop Blaine, the Doctor's group converges on City Hall and eventually capture Blaine after chasing her through repeated uses of a teleporter. She tells the group that the teleporter is how she escaped the destruction of the rest of her family, and that she hopes that, as planned, the meltdown of the plant would open the Rift and destroy the planet, herself using a hidden tribophysical waveform macro-kinetic extrapolator — a pan-dimensional surfboard — to escape the explosion. Rose notices that the name of the plant, Blaidd Drwg, is Welsh for "Bad Wolf", a phrase that she has observed before in her adventures with the Doctor. The Doctor tells Blaine he will take her back to her home planet of Raxacoricofallapatorius, but Blaine notes that the Slitheen family are convicted criminals there and she will be executed, which the Doctor insists is not his problem.
Jack recognizes that the extrapolator can be used to halve the time to refuel the TARDIS, and stays there to install it. Rose and Mickey go out for a drink to discuss their relationship; Mickey admits to seeing someone else since Rose is not there for him, which angers Rose. At the request of Blaine, the Doctor joins her for one last meal at her favourite restaurant, equipped with bracelets that will electrocute Blaine if she gets more than ten feet away from the Doctor. Blaine attempts to kill the Doctor through various means, but the Doctor is able to casually block the attempts. Blaine then attempts to gain the Doctor's sympathy, explaining how she will be executed and if he could take her to a different planet instead. However, before the Doctor can agree, a large earthquake shakes the area.
The group reassembles in the TARDIS, where a bright column of light is shooting up overhead. Jack tells the Doctor that it is the power from the Rift, brought upon by the extrapolator. The Doctor realizes that this was Blaine's plan all along - the extrapolator would have been found by someone of advanced technology to recognize the Slitheen, and would have activated it, causing it to lock onto the nearest alien power source (the TARDIS in this case), as to tear open the Rift and eventually the Earth, while she would have still ridden the device to escape the destruction. Blaine takes Rose hostage and demands the extrapolator, but before she can use it, the heart of TARDIS opens and shines in her face; the light overtakes her, and shortly her skin suit falls empty to the console floor. The Doctor and Jack manage to close the TARDIS console and reseal the Rift once more. When they investigate the suit, they find a Slitheen egg; the Doctor surmises as the TARDIS is telepathic, it may have sensed that Blaine wanted a second chance and gave that to her. As the Doctor, Rose, and Jack prepare to travel to Raxacoricofallapatorius to deliver the egg, Rose realizes that Mickey has left; the Doctor offers to wait for him, but Rose lets him go, allowing him to also have a second chance.
Cast
- The Doctor - Christopher Eccleston
- Rose Tyler - Billie Piper
- Captain Jack Harkness - John Barrowman
- Mickey Smith - Noel Clarke
- Mr Cleaver - William Thomas
- Margaret Blaine - Annette Badland
- Cathy Salt - Mali Harries
- Idris Hopper - Aled Pedrick
Crew
References
- Tribophysics was first mentioned off-handedly by Sarah Jane Smith to describe Osirian technology.
- When explaining the TARDIS's police box shape and the chameleon circuit to Mickey, Rose uses the term "cloaking device," a Star Trek reference.
- This is the first indication we have that Rose and the Doctor have noticed the Bad Wolf references which have been appearing on their travels. Margaret's admission that the power station's name, Blaidd Drwg, Welsh for "Bad Wolf," "just came to her".
- Rose mentions her visit to Justicia, which occurs in the BBC Books novel The Monsters Inside; this marked the first time the events of an original novel had been referenced in televised canon.
- Margaret plans to use the tribophysical waveform macrokinetic extrapolator as a pan-dimensional surfboard to escape Earth.
Story Notes
- Boom Town had a working title of Dining With Monsters.
Ratings
- 7.7 million viewers.
Myths
- When the Doctor and his associates march into Cardiff City Hall to capture Margaret, the Doctor is the only one not wearing a scarf. This could be a subtle in-joke reference to the Fourth Doctor, who is considered the definitive Doctor by many fans.
Influences
- The scene in which the Doctor and his companions march into Cardiff Town Hall to capture Margaret has been likened to similar scenes in Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Russell T. Davies has acknowledged Buffy as a major influence on his vision of the current series.
- The means by which Margaret plans to use the tribophysical waveform macrokinetic extrapolator as a pan-dimensional surfboard to escape Earth is highly reminiscent of the board used by the Silver Surfer, a character appearing in publications by Marvel Comics, whose UK division publishes Doctor Who Monthly.
Location Filming
to be added
Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors
- After the Doctor reads the Welsh banner Blaidd Drwg, Rose asks what it means even though the TARDIS should have translated it in her head. The TARDIS might think that due to the fact that most welsh people speak English, that it should only translate the english
- How did Margarets skin survive the events of World War Three? She states that she telaported away but could not take the rest of her family as the telaporter only has a capacity for one. She could have taken her skin with her.Do slitheen have ears for earings?.
- Wouldn't a future version of Captain Jack, along with Owen, Tosh and possibly Suzie, be in the Hub for the duration of this adventure?
Continuity
- This story is set six months after the events of "Aliens of London" and "World War Three."
- The temporal rift first appeared in "The Unquiet Dead," a brief synopsis of which is related by Rose to Mickey.
- The Edge of Destruction was the first story to suggest that there was some sort of 'power' beneath the console.
- "Tribophysics" was first mentioned offhandedly by Sarah Jane Smith in Pyramids of Mars. What Sarah meant, or what she actually said, is a matter of minor debate in fandom (some have suggested "tribiophysics" or "tribal physics"). Tribophysics may or may not have anything to do with the real science of tribology (also sometimes known as tribophysics), which deals with friction.
- During his dinner with Margaret Blaine, the Doctor eats steak — evidently, he has given up his vegetarianism, which the Sixth Doctor began to practice at the end of The Two Doctors.
- The temporal rift becomes a major plot and story focus for much of Torchwood.
- The Monsters Inside featured the trip to Justicia.
- It would later be established (TW: Fragments) that Torchwood 3 had been in existence since at least 1999 in Cardiff, with Jack in charge from about 2000. This means that the Doctor's arrival near the rift, his party's reunion with Mickey, and the subsequent Slitheen adventure -- all involving Captain Jack -- takes place very close to the older Captain Jack and his Torchwood team. A possible reference to this occurs in Utopia when Jack mentions having to wait until a version of the Doctor that coincided with him arrived; encountering the Doctor and his younger self at this point would have been unacceptable.
DVD and Other Releases
- This was released with Bad Wolf and The Parting of the Ways on a "vanilla" DVD with no extras.
- It was also part of the series 1 box set.
See also
- This is not the first time a story is resolved by de-aging the Doctor's antagonist, as happens to Margaret Blaine when the TARDIS regresses her back into an egg. A similar occurrence happens to Pangol of the Argolin in The Leisure Hive.