The Parting of the Ways (TV story): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 21:43, 28 December 2013
The Parting of the Ways was the thirteenth and final episode of the first series of the revived series of Doctor Who. It concluded the Bad Wolf story arc. It also was the final regular outing for the Ninth Doctor, and saw the departures of actors Christopher Eccleston and John Barrowman (until Utopia) and executive producer Mal Young. It established a visual metaphor for regeneration that would remain standard into the present day (every regeneration from then on with the exception of the Master's in Utopia would appear like that), following which viewers got their first glimpse of David Tennant's Tenth Doctor.
From a visual effects point of view, viewers were treated to a massive army of Daleks and Dalek spaceships. At the time of broadcast, it was the most expansive view of a Dalek army that had yet been portrayed on screen, taking the record from Planet of the Daleks. To this day, its only rival stories for the greatest amount of Daleks would be The Stolen Earth/Journey's End and Asylum of the Daleks.
Synopsis
As the Daleks attack the Game Station led by their Emperor, the Ninth Doctor finds himself helpless. He knows he must make big sacrifices if he is going to survive. But does this mean losing his beloved Rose Tyler forever?
With Jack Harkness assembling an army together and the Doctor powerless against the Dalek Emperor, a deadly net closes around the whole universe. One thing is for certain, not everyone will make it out of this deadly battle alive. But who or what is Bad Wolf? It's time for the Doctor and Rose to find out.
Plot
The Daleks turn on Rose Tyler and demand that she predict the Ninth Doctor's actions, but she refuses. The Daleks detect the Doctor's TARDIS flying in real space towards the saucer, and launch missiles against it. The missiles detonate, but thanks to the tribophysical waveform macro-kinetic extrapolator taken from Blon Fel-Fotch Passameer-Day Slitheen, Jack has rigged up a force field around the TARDIS that protects it. The TARDIS materialises on board the Dalek saucer, around Rose and the single Dalek guarding her, which Jack destroys with the gun he improvised on the Game Station. As the Doctor examines the wreckage of the Dalek, he muses that since it is now apparent that the Daleks survived the Time War, the Time Lords died for nothing.
The travellers exit the TARDIS, and are immediately fired on by the surrounding Daleks, but the extrapolator's force field continues to protect them. The Doctor taunts the Daleks, reminding them that Dalek legends call him "the Oncoming Storm", and even though they claim to have eliminated all emotion, he is sure that, deep inside, the Daleks still feel fear when faced with him. He asks how they survived the Time War, and is answered by a low, grating voice, "They survived... through me." The voice is that of the Dalek Emperor, a Dalek mutant suspended in a transparent tank of fluid, flanked by panels of armour and topped by an equally gargantuan Dalek domed head. Around it floats an entourage of black-domed Daleks.
The Emperor explains that though the Doctor destroyed all the Daleks in the War, its ship survived: "falling through time — crippled but alive". The surviving Daleks spent centuries hiding in "the dark space", silently rebuilding, infiltrating Earth's systems, harvesting humans and converting the genetic material into an army of Daleks. When Rose suggests that makes the Daleks half-human, the Daleks cry out that the remark is blasphemy. The Doctor is surprised that the Daleks even have such a concept. The Emperor declares: "I reached into the dirt and made new life. I am the god of all Daleks!" Even though it used human genetic material, only one cell in a billion was fit to be nurtured, and the Emperor insists that its manipulation resulted in the cultivation of "pure and blessed Dalek".
Horrified, the Doctor realises that the Daleks have been driven insane by the human values they have absorbed, becoming self-loathing fanatics who hate their own genetic makeup, which makes them deadlier than ever. The travellers re-enter the TARDIS, and the Doctor returns them to Floor 500 of the Game Station.
The Doctor orders the two remaining programmers to turn up the transmitters so the Daleks cannot transmat aboard the station. Earth is ignoring the station's warnings since it stopped transmitting and is simply sitting there defenceless. Despite the Doctor's earlier orders, Lynda Moss is still on board, unwilling to leave him. In any case, there were not enough shuttles, and there are still about a hundred people on board, on Floor 000, including Rodrick, Rose's main opponent in The Weakest Link, who is still looking for his prize money. The Dalek fleet begins to move towards Earth, the Emperor giving orders to purify the planet with fire and turn it into its temple.
The Doctor begins dismantling the panels in the control room. The Daleks have left him an enormous transmitter, and to Jack's disbelief, the Doctor is proposing to build and transmit a Delta wave, an energy wave that will fry every brain within radius of the blast. Unfortunately, a wave of this magnitude would require three days to build up, and the Dalek fleet will be upon them in twenty-two minutes. The Doctor must work fast.
Jack attaches the extrapolator to the station's systems so the Daleks cannot simply blast the station out of the sky, but it will not prevent them from physically invading to stop the wave. Jack concentrates the force field on the top six levels of the station, so the Daleks will have to enter at Floor 494 and work their way up to Floor 500. Rose stays behind to help the Doctor build the wave while the others, armed with bastic bullets which can breach Dalek casings, go down to Floor 000 to try to scare up volunteers to help hold back the Daleks. Jack kisses both Rose and the Doctor good-bye.
On Floor 000, only a few join the defenders. Others, like Rodrick, do not believe that the Daleks still exist. Jack warns them all to stay on Floor 000 and keep quiet, even if they start to hear the sounds of battle above; if they do, hopefully the Daleks will not notice them. On Floor 500, the Delta Wave starts its build-up, but when the Doctor checks to see how long it will need to build, he hangs his head in dismay. When Rose asks how bad it is, the Doctor brightens up and says it can work if he can use the TARDIS to cross his own timeline. He ushers her into the TARDIS and tells her to stay there while he powers up the station. Once he exits the TARDIS, however, his expression turns sombre, and he points the sonic screwdriver at the ship, making it dematerialise with Rose on board.
Rose finds the TARDIS doors locked, and a hologram of the Doctor appears, explaining to Rose that if she is receiving this message, then the Doctor is either dead, or about to die with no chance of escape. Emergency Program One will take her home, and the TARDIS will not return for him for fear that its technology will fall into the Dalek hands. He asks her to just let the TARDIS moulder away and die, and, in remembrance of him, to have a fantastic life. The TARDIS lands Rose at her estate in the 21st century, and despite her near-hysterical jiggling of the controls, she cannot get it to work again. Outside, Mickey comes running down the street, having heard the distinctive sound of the TARDIS' engines, and Rose hugs him, weeping.
When Jack contacts Floor 500, he finds that the Doctor has sent Rose away. When Jack asks if the Delta Wave will be ready, the Dalek Emperor breaks in on the transmission, noting that even if the wave is completed in time, it will not be able to discriminate between human and Dalek; it will wipe all Daleks and humans within its long range. The Doctor replies that there are colonies in space and the human race will survive, but the whole universe is in danger if he lets the Daleks live. Jack tells the Doctor to keep working, and defiantly tells the Emperor that he has never, and will never, doubt the Doctor. The Doctor questions the Emperor on how it managed to scatter the words "Bad Wolf" through history, but the Emperor replies that these words were not part of its design.
Jack places Lynda in an observation deck which has a heavy door that will hopefully hold the Daleks out for a time. From the deck, Lynda will monitor the station's sensors and update the rest of the humans on the Daleks' progress. Through the window, they see the fleet decelerate into Earth orbit, and thousands of Daleks begin to stream out from the saucers towards the station. The Daleks force the airlock on Floor 494, and begin to work their way up, taking the internal lasers off-line and ruthlessly exterminating the first batch of defenders, whose bastic bullets have no effect as they melt against the Dalek force fields (Jack's information about the effectiveness of the bullets is out of date).
In the 21st century, Jackie and Mickey try to persuade Rose to just get on with her life. Rose tells them that she cannot, because the Doctor showed her a better way to live, just as he showed Mickey: you do not just give up; you make a stand and fight for what is right. As Mickey tries to reason with her, Rose notices the words "Bad Wolf" scrawled in six-foot high letters on a paved public area of the estate, and also in the form of graffiti on the surrounding walls. Rose realises that the words are not a warning, but a message, telling her that she can still get back to the Doctor. She runs for the TARDIS, hoping at least to help the Doctor escape. She tells Mickey that the TARDIS is telepathic, and to make contact, they need to get inside it, open the console to get at the heart of the TARDIS. However, their first attempt to pry the console open by hooking a chain to Mickey's car is unsuccessful.
On Floor 495, the Daleks encounter the Anne Droid from The Weakest Link, and it effectively manages to dispose of three Daleks before another one shoots its head off. To Lynda's horror, instead of flying up to 496, the Daleks travel down to Floor 000, exterminating everyone left there. In the TARDIS, Jackie tries her hand at persuading Rose to give up, but Rose tells her that Pete, her father, would not have given up; she knows this because she met him. Jackie does not believe this, until Rose reminds her that a blonde girl was there holding Pete's hand when he died and Jackie saw her from a distance; that girl was Rose. Shaken, Jackie rushes out of the TARDIS.
On 2002nd century Earth, the fleet descends, bombarding the planet, the outlines of the continents distorting on Lynda's screen (notably Australasia) as they are devastated by the Dalek bombing. The Emperor proudly proclaims that he has created heaven on Earth. Meanwhile on Floor 499, Jack organises the last stand against the Daleks, telling the defenders to concentrate fire on the Dalek eye-stalks. This works against one Dalek, but the others overwhelm the barricades. As a Dalek squad begins to cut through the doors to Lynda's position, another squad floats in space outside the window of the observation deck. One Dalek fires at the window, shattering the glass and exposing Lynda to the vacuum of space. Jack, the only human on the game station still alive retreats towards Floor 500, still firing vainly at the oncoming Dalek squads
Back in the 21st century, Jackie returns to the TARDIS with a heavy-duty recovery vehicle. She tells Rose that she was right; this would have been the sort of mad thing Pete would have done. The heavier chain of the recovery vehicle holds, and the console tears open. Rose stares into the heart of the TARDIS, and energy from within the console flows into her eyes. The TARDIS doors close of their own accord, shutting Jackie and Mickey out, and the TARDIS dematerialises, intense light visibly streaming out of the TARDIS windows.
Jack runs out of ammunition and is exterminated at the doorway to Floor 500 just as the Doctor finishes readying the Delta Wave. The Daleks glide into the control room, and when the Doctor threatens to activate the wave, the Emperor dares him to do so, to become like it — "the Great Exterminator", to make the choice between coward and killer. The Doctor hesitates, and then says he would be a coward any day. As the Doctor prepares for extermination, the TARDIS materialises behind him. The doors open, the light from the TARDIS' heart spilling out into the control room, and in the middle of it all is Rose as Bad Wolf, glowing brightly. In answer to the Doctor, Rose tells him she looked into the TARDIS and it into her. The Doctor tells her that she looked into the time vortex, something no one is supposed to see.
Suffused with power, Rose easily stops and diverts a Dalek blast. As the Emperor calls her "the abomination", Rose explains that she is the Bad Wolf and proceeds to scatter the name of the Game Station's owners through time and space, to lead herself to this point. She can now see all of time and space: the past, present and all possible futures; all she wants is the Doctor to be safe and protected from the Daleks. The Emperor declares that she cannot hurt it as it is immortal, but Rose proves the Emperor wrong by waving her hand and killing him. All the Daleks — emperor, fleet and on those on Earth — are destroyed. Rose declares the Time War has ended. However, the power continues to stream through Rose, and she is unwilling to let go of the power of life and death, a power demonstrated when outside the room and unseen by the Doctor Captain Jack suddenly returns to life. The Doctor tries desperately to get her to relinquish what she has been given, but Rose weeps that she cannot cope with the power coursing through her body.
The Doctor knows that the power will kill her, so he pulls her close and kisses her, drawing the energy into himself. As Rose falls unconscious, the Doctor releases the vortex energies back into the TARDIS. Jack makes it to the control room only to see the TARDIS dematerialise without him.
On-board, Rose awakens, remembering little of what has transpired. As she tries to figure out what happened, the Doctor notices a small ripple of energy sweeping across the back of his hand and his expression clouds momentarily. Turning back to Rose, he tells her that he was going to take her to so many places, like Barcelona — the planet, not the city, and that perhaps he will, just not as he is now. Rose does not understand what the Doctor is talking about, until he buckles backwards in pain. The Doctor tells her that the vortex energy is destroying every cell in his body. He will regenerate, but this incarnation will not see her again. The Ninth Doctor's last words to Rose are, "Before I go, I just want to tell you, you were fantastic. Absolutely fantastic. And you know what? So was I."
With that, blazing energy courses through his body, and before Rose's astonished eyes, the Doctor's features change and he regenerates into his next incarnation. The new Doctor briefly says, "New teeth. That's weird." He wonders where he was going to go, before saying, "Oh, that's right. Barcelona." The Doctor smiles.
Cast
- Doctor Who - Christopher Eccleston
- Rose Tyler - Billie Piper
- Captain Jack - John Barrowman
- Male Programmer - Jo Stone-Fewings
- Lynda - Jo Joyner
- Rodrick - Paterson Joseph
- Female Programmer - Nisha Nayar
- Mickey - Noel Clarke
- Jackie - Camille Coduri
- Voice of Anne Droid - Anne Robinson
- Dalek Voice - Nicholas Briggs
- Dalek Operators - Barnaby Edwards, Nicholas Pegg, David Hankinson
- Android - Alan Ruscoe
- and introducing David Tennant as Doctor Who
Crew
Executive Producers Russell T Davies, Julie Gardner and Mal Young |
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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. |
References
Individuals
- The Doctor states that, in the ancient legends of the Dalek home-world, he was known as the Oncoming Storm.
- Jackie borrows the truck from her friend Rodrigo.
- Captain Jack Harkness is killed by three Daleks and then resurrected by the Bad Wolf. This is later revealed to alter Jack's blood chemistry into that of an immortal and he becomes a fixed point in time.
- The Battle of the Game Station results in the death of all individuals participating in the battle, save Rose Tyler. However, two deaths are not absolute: Jack's death is ultimately reversed, and the Ninth Doctor, when seen as an individual incarnation, endures the equivalent of death, but the Doctor as a whole lives on in a new body, regenerating into the Tenth Doctor.
Technology
- The guns of the Game Station have bastic bullets.
- A delta wave fries all living brains.
- The Doctor and Jack use the tribophysical waveform macro-kinetic extrapolator to create a force field for the TARDIS.
- The Heart of the TARDIS can be absorbed by living beings, but prolonged exposure will burn up the cells in their body as the energies of time vortex deteriorate them.
Planets
- The future Earth is bombarded by apocalyptic Dalek attacks that are strong enough to badly warp and disfigure the shapes of its continents.
- The Doctor wishes to take Rose to the planet Barcelona.
Species
- When Jack is looking for volunteers to fight off the Daleks, Rodrick says that the Daleks disappeared thousands of years ago.
- Barcelonian dogs have no noses.
Story notes
- The Doctor regenerates into the Tenth Doctor, as played by David Tennant. His first words: "Hello, I'm {unintelligible}... new teeth, that's weird."
- According to his book The Writer's Tale, Russell T Davies planned to keep the departure of Christopher Eccleston a secret until the surprise regeneration. However, soon after the broadcast of The Unquiet Dead, the third episode of the season, the BBC's press office prematurely announced Eccleston's departure, which was followed several weeks later by confirmation that Tennant had been signed as the new Doctor, thereby removing both elements of surprise from the episode.
- The guns used by Jack and the Game Station people are Heckler and Koch G36Ks.
- Although he is soon brought back to life, Jack's death in this episode makes him the first companion to die since Kamelion in Planet of Fire.
- The Doctor's farewell recording to Rose — "Have a good life ..." — is quoted in the lyrics of "Song for Ten", featured in the next full episode, The Christmas Invasion.
- Jack kisses the Doctor affectionately on the mouth (after kissing Rose) before going off to fight the Daleks. This is the first same-sex kiss featured in the Doctor Who franchise.
- This episode marks the last time the lead character is identified as "Doctor Who" in the closing credits until TV: The Next Doctor. Beginning with The Christmas Invasion, the credit reverts to "The Doctor" as it had been during the last nine years of the original series. This episode is the only occasion in which David Tennant is credited as "Doctor Who" until TV: The Next Doctor.
- This is the first time the Doctor, or any Time Lord for that matter, is seen regenerating standing up, as previous Doctors collapsed before regenerating. This would later be seen again in the Master's regeneration in TV: Utopia, the Tenth Doctor's aborted regeneration in TV: The Stolen Earth, and his actual regeneration into the Eleventh Doctor in TV: The End of Time. Coincidentally, all of these episodes feature Jack Harkness.
- Submerging the Dalek mutant puppet in the Emperor's water tank destroyed its inner mechanics. As a result, the puppet would not be used again until TV: The Stolen Earth/Journey's End. A CGI version of the mutant was later used in TV: Daleks in Manhattan.
- This is the third regeneration episode to credit both actors playing the Doctor, the first two being TV: Logopolis and TV: The Caves of Androzani. The fourth occasion would be TV: The End of Time. Unlike the first two, and like the fourth, the incoming actor is the last actor to be credited. TV: Doctor Who (1996) also credited both actors who played the Doctor, but did so in the opening credits and without listing their roles specifically.
- Back in 1993, the BBC produced a documentary entitled Thirty Years in the TARDIS, which ended with several scenes showing how modern-day special effects could be applied to "new" Doctor Who production. One of these scenes shows many Daleks hovering together. Whether by accident or intent, this episode includes several scenes that strongly resemble this "what if" scenario.
- As the last episode of the series, there is no "Next Time" trailer at the end of the episode, merely a message that "Doctor Who will return in The Christmas Invasion".
- The story was chosen by BBC America to represent the Christopher Eccleston era during their 50th anniversary programming. Edited into an omnibus format with Bad Wolf, it was aired by BBCA on 29 September 2013, after the debut of their homegrown special called The Doctors Revisited - The Ninth Doctor. It also aired in the United Kingdom later in the year on 9 November, along with the Revisited special, on the Watch channel.
Ratings
- 6.9 million viewers.
Myths
- An alternate version of the ending features the death of Rose Tyler. Russell T Davies states that an alternate version of the final scene showed the Ninth Doctor looking at a screen displaying the text "DANGER: LIFE FORM DYING". This version was shown to the press in an attempt to preserve the surprise of the regeneration. This scene has never been released to the public, Davies electing not to include the scene on the Complete First Series DVD set, however he stated it may make an interesting curio for a DVD release at some point in the future.
- After it was announced prematurely by the BBC that Eccleston was leaving the series, some media reports indicated that he would leave (and regenerate) in the announced Christmas special, rather than this episode. This may have been intentional in order to preserve the surprise ending of this episode (which might also explain the fake Rose death reports, too).
- Lynda Moss was going to join and/or replace Rose Tyler as a companion in this story, but the script was re-written to depict her extermination. Billie Piper was not going to leave the show yet, having signed on for an additional series, and no plans were made to incorporate Lynda Moss as a recurring character.
Filming locations
to be added
Production errors
- The guns, when shown close-up, are revealed to be on "safe".
- All of the Daleks' ID codes except for the Emperor are the same three over and over again.
Continuity
- This is the first on-screen occurrence of a Dalek in the TARDIS. However, AUDIO: The Mutant Phase, PROSE: War of the Daleks and the stage play Doctor Who: The Ultimate Adventure featured a Dalek within the TARDIS.
- Rose would later tell both Sarah Jane Smith (TV: School Reunion) and the Cult of Skaro (TV: Doomsday) that she met the Dalek Emperor.
- A giant Dalek Emperor and some black-domed Dalek Guards appeared before in TV: Evil of the Daleks.
- Rose brings Jack back to life, an act that has far-reaching consequences for him as it makes him immortal. This becomes an underlying concept of Torchwood, is later addressed in TV: Utopia, and may ultimately be connected to the Face of Boe, whom Rose encountered in TV: The End of the World and again in TV: New Earth.
- The Ninth Doctor abandoned Jack as he ran to the TARDIS. The Tenth Doctor would later reveal that he had done this purposely, as Jack's immortality, and his being a fixed point in time, was "wrong" to him as a Time Lord. (TV: Utopia)
- Humans have previously been converted to Daleks on Necros by the Daleks' creator Davros (TV: Revelation of the Daleks) and on Red Rocket Rising by Doctor Marktez. (AUDIO: Blood of the Daleks) Oswin Oswald would later be converted as well. (TV: Asylum of the Daleks)
- Other attempts at reviving the Dalek race would occur in TV: Doomsday and TV: The Stolen Earth / Journey's End.
- An attempt at creating a different sort of Dalek/human hybrid would occur in TV: Daleks in Manhattan /Evolution of the Daleks.
- One of the Daleks has a cutting tool instead of a plunger; this has previously been seen in TV: The Daleks and TV: Planet of the Daleks.
- This is the first televised story since TV: Horror of Fang Rock in 1977 in which every character, other than the regular cast, is killed.
- Shortly after his sixth regeneration, the Seventh Doctor previously recorded a non-interactive hologram for another temporally stranded companion, namely Melanie Bush. (AUDIO: Unregenerate!) A holographic version of the Tenth Doctor would later appear in the TARDIS to Sally Sparrow and Larry Nightingale (TV: Blink) and a holographic version of his immediate successor appeared in the TARDIS to the Doctor himself, as he was dying after being poisoned by River Song (TV: Let's Kill Hitler).
- Rose learnt about the heart of the TARDIS in TV: Boom Town.
- Rose mentions the events of TV: Father's Day to Jackie.
- Mickey mentions in TV: The Age of Steel that he saved the world with a yellow truck.
- The Daleks have previously invaded Earth in TV: The Dalek Invasion of Earth and TV: Day of the Daleks.
- This is the first time that the Doctor's kisses have had an effect on humans beyond the act itself. In this case, the Doctor removes the time vortex energy from Rose by kissing her. In the next, he imparts traces of his alien DNA to Martha Jones. (TV: Smith and Jones) The Doctor and Donna Noble later kiss, but in that instance the Doctor is the one affected, as the kiss was a catalyst for an antidote to poison — Donna kissed him to give his system a shock. (TV: The Unicorn and the Wasp)
- The Eighth Doctor looked into the vortex in COMIC: The Flood.
- The Ninth Doctor looks at his right hand before he regenerates. His next incarnation does the exact same thing in TV: The Stolen Earth, which would ultimately be circumvented, and TV: The End of Time, when the Doctor truly regenerated into a new incarnation.
- The Ninth Doctor's pre-regeneration line, "I mean it's a bit dodgy this process, you never know what you're gonna end up with", echoes the Fifth Doctor's post-regeneration line, "That's the trouble with regeneration, you never quite know what you're going to get", from TV: Castrovalava.
- Just before the Daleks begin their invasion of the Game Station, Captain Jack Harkness says, "This is it gentlemen, we are at war". This line is repeated by Sanchez in TV: The Stolen Earth. Coincidentally both of these episodes feature the Daleks as the main enemy, and both feature the Doctor regenerating.
Home video releases
- The Parting of the Ways was released on a single DVD together with Boom Town and Bad Wolf.
- The Parting of the Ways was released on a single UMD (for Sony's Playstation Portable) together with Boom Town and Bad Wolf.
- The Parting of the Ways was also released as part of the Series 1 DVD box set.
- This story was also released with Issue 7 of the Doctor Who DVD Files.
External links
- Official BBC Website - Episode Guide for The Parting of the Ways
- The Parting of the Ways at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- The Discontinuity Guide to: The Parting of the Ways at The Whoniverse
- The Parting of the Ways at Shannon Sullivan's A Brief History of Time (Travel)
- The Parting of the Ways at The Locations Guide
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