Forest of the Dead (TV story): Difference between revisions

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(→‎The Doctor: Removed line concerning Rivver Song being the song referenced by the Ood as events of Planet of the Dead disprove this.)
(→‎Continuity: Add comment about giving of screwdriver to Sarah Jane.& note re what happened to the 4022)
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*The teleport system is similar to that used in [[DW]]: ''[[The Ark in Space]]'' in that it is limited to three at one time.
*The teleport system is similar to that used in [[DW]]: ''[[The Ark in Space]]'' in that it is limited to three at one time.
*The [[sonic blaster|squareness gun]] used by River Song to blast a hole in the wall of the Library is the same gun used by [[Jack Harkness]] when he first met the Doctor. It was left behind in the TARDIS when Jack Harkness was teleported out with the Doctor & Rose into the game shows on Station Five. ([[DW]]: ''[[The Empty Child]]''/''[[The Doctor Dances]]''/''[[Bad Wolf]]'') (''Per Steven Moffat, ''Doctor Who Confidential'': "River Runs Deep"'')
*The [[sonic blaster|squareness gun]] used by River Song to blast a hole in the wall of the Library is the same gun used by [[Jack Harkness]] when he first met the Doctor. It was left behind in the TARDIS when Jack Harkness was teleported out with the Doctor & Rose into the game shows on Station Five. ([[DW]]: ''[[The Empty Child]]''/''[[The Doctor Dances]]''/''[[Bad Wolf]]'') (''Per Steven Moffat, ''Doctor Who Confidential'': "River Runs Deep"'')
*Despite his explicit statement to the contrary, the Doctor has given away a sonic screwdriver or two.  [[Liz Shaw]] has one in ''[[Inferno]]'', and [[Sarah Jane Smith]] has her sonic lipstick. Although he could be referring to never giving away his screwdriver.  ''Liz Shaw's device was only ever shown to open the door to the Doctor's workshop.  It was referred to as a "door handle."''
*Despite his explicit statement to the contrary, the Doctor has given away a sonic screwdriver or two.  [[Liz Shaw]] has one in ''[[Inferno]]'', and [[Sarah Jane Smith]] has her sonic lipstick. Although he could be referring to never giving away his screwdriver.  ''Liz Shaw's device was only ever shown to open the door to the Doctor's workshop.  It was referred to as a "door handle." He never gives them as a gift. In Sarah Jane's case he may have given it with the intention that she use it along with the other artefacts he gave her to protect the Earth.''
*Just as in [[DW]]: ''[[The Girl in the Fireplace]]'' and ''[[Last of the Time Lords]]'' the Doctor maintains that he is "always all right" in the wake of a great loss.
*Just as in [[DW]]: ''[[The Girl in the Fireplace]]'' and ''[[Last of the Time Lords]]'' the Doctor maintains that he is "always all right" in the wake of a great loss.
*The Doctor says that having 4,022 minds talking inside one's mind (referring to CAL) is like being him. In the [[Eighth Doctor Adventures|Eighth Doctor Adventure]] ''[[The Gallifrey Chronicles]]'', it is revealed that the Doctor had downloaded the entire [[The Matrix|Matrix]] into his head, effectively meaning that he had every single Time Lord's mind inside his own. Whether or not this line is an indication that the Matrix is still present in the Doctor's mind is unclear. It could also be referring to the Doctor's ability (referenced in ''[[The Parting of the Ways]]'') to see "all that is, all that was, all that ever could be". It is generally assumed that some point after ''[[The Gallifrey Chronicles]]'', the Doctor restored the Time Lords and Gallifrey, presumably removing the Matrix from his mind, only for them to be destroyed in the [[Last Great Time War]]. In ''[[Panacea|Gallifrey: Panacea]]'', [[Irving Braxiatel]] is implied to have heard rumours of the impending Time War and engineered the removal of the Time Lord biodata archive from Gallifrey.  This may also be a reference to the Time Lord Intelligentsia referenced in [[The Invisible Enemy]], described as the intellectual power of a thousand Time Lords.  The Doctor remarked, however, that he hadn't had access to that since he left the Time Lords.
*The Doctor says that having 4,022 minds talking inside one's mind (referring to CAL) is like being him. In the [[Eighth Doctor Adventures|Eighth Doctor Adventure]] ''[[The Gallifrey Chronicles]]'', it is revealed that the Doctor had downloaded the entire [[The Matrix|Matrix]] into his head, effectively meaning that he had every single Time Lord's mind inside his own. Whether or not this line is an indication that the Matrix is still present in the Doctor's mind is unclear. It could also be referring to the Doctor's ability (referenced in ''[[The Parting of the Ways]]'') to see "all that is, all that was, all that ever could be". It is generally assumed that some point after ''[[The Gallifrey Chronicles]]'', the Doctor restored the Time Lords and Gallifrey, presumably removing the Matrix from his mind, only for them to be destroyed in the [[Last Great Time War]]. In ''[[Panacea|Gallifrey: Panacea]]'', [[Irving Braxiatel]] is implied to have heard rumours of the impending Time War and engineered the removal of the Time Lord biodata archive from Gallifrey.  This may also be a reference to the Time Lord Intelligentsia referenced in [[The Invisible Enemy]], described as the intellectual power of a thousand Time Lords.  The Doctor remarked, however, that he hadn't had access to that since he left the Time Lords.
*No mention is made of the fact that the 4,022 people brought back to physical existence at the end of the story are now alive 100 years later than they were "saved," which would likely mean they now have no jobs, homes or living direct family — so what's to become of them?
*No mention is made of the fact that the 4,022 people brought back to physical existence at the end of the story are now alive 100 years later than they were "saved," which would likely mean they now have no jobs, homes or living direct family — so what's to become of them? ''They probably sued the Felman Lux Corporation for billions.''


== DVD and other releases==
== DVD and other releases==

Revision as of 12:32, 18 May 2009


Hush now. Spoilers!River Song

Synopsis

As the shadows rise, the Doctor forges an alliance with the mysterious River Song. But can anyone stop the Vashta Nerada?

Plot

Continuing on from Silence in the Library, River Song uses her blaster to create a hole in the wall - enabling her, the Doctor and the others to escape the shadow-possessed Proper Dave down a corridor.

All this is being watched on TV by the girl. She switches channels and eventually finds a channel showing Donna being taken out of the ambulance on a stretcher. She wakes up in an ambulance with no memories of her past life. She is treated in a facility by Doctor Moon. She soon spots something; she seems to jump from one place to another in an instant, which is how time progresses in her virtual world. Before she knows it, she is married to her ideal man Lee, who has a stammer, and has two kids of her own. She is then approached by a hooded figure in a playground, who turns out to be Miss Evangelista. She warns Donna that the world is not real. Donna soon observes that all the children in the playground are copies of one another.

Meanwhile, the Doctor squabbles with River Song, but is soon stunned when she whispers something in his ear to prove that he comes to trust her completely. However, Anita now has two shadows. They are then forced to flee as the Vashta Nerada suit creature has caught them up again. The Time Lord tries to reason with the Vashta Nerada as it takes over more of the team, and finds out they came as microspores in millions and millions of books and then hatched. Other Dave stays behind, but is then killed by the Vashta Nerada, leaving the Doctor inbetween the two Daves. He escapes and sets off after the other three.

Further ahead, River Song is telling Anita about the Doctor she knows and tells her that in the future the Doctor can open the TARDIS by snapping is fingers. The Doctor overhears this, but then switches his attention back to the present. He then figures out that the library's computer hard drive - CAL - is the key to bringing Donna back, for it has literally 'saved' her and all of the 4022 people in the Library 100 years ago to its hard drive. The team travels to the core of the planet to locate the computer. It transpires that the little girl is in fact the hard drive, and was Strackman Lux's grandfather's youngest daughter. She was dying so he made an imaginary world and a Doctor Moon to watch over her and any book ever written.

River Song knocks the Doctor out to prevent him stopping her sacrificing herself to bring back Donna and the others. The Doctor tries to persuade River to let him do this, and reveals that she had whispered his real name into his ear, which apparently he could only tell someone this one time. In order to restore those who have been saved, she has to provide memory to CAL, which burns out her mind. She dies, as the Doctor looks on, handcuffed to a wall.

Donna and the other saved people return, but she cannot find Lee and thinks that perhaps he didn't exist after all. Lee sees her but his stammer prevents him from calling out to her before he is teleported away.

The Doctor realizes in the nick of time that, knowing River's fate and having years to think of a way to save her, his future self must have given her the sonic screwdriver for a reason. He finds that, like the Data Ghosts, her consciousness has been saved in the screwdriver. The Doctor manages to upload River's data ghost into the Library's computer-- where she is reunited with the rest of her team, in the alternate reality with Dr. Moon and the girl.

Cast

References

  • The Vashta Nerada give the Doctor a day to sort everything.
  • The teleports can only teleport three people at a time.
  • The Doctor uses his future sonic screwdriver to save River Song's neural pattern within CAL.
  • When the Doctor says that history can be rewritten, River's response is "Not one line!" These are the same words the Doctor says to Barbara Wright, when she attempted to change history. (DW: The Aztecs)
  • The frantic music from Midnight (TV story) is heard during a scene where Donna Noble freaks out, having seen her "children", whom she had tucked in bed, disappear without a trace, while she was in the Data Core.
  • River also associates running with her time with the Doctor, echoing sentiments expressed by Donna Noble and Jenny.
  • River refers to the Doctor as an "impossible man", echoing similar sentiments by Agatha Christie.
  • River's ultimate fate a simulated reality in a vast computer, echoes that of the Doctor's own people, who store the memories and personalities of dead Time Lords in the Matrix. (DW: The Deadly Assassin)
  • River's final monologue that once in a very long while "everybody lives", echoes the line spoken by the Doctor in The Doctor Dances. Here too, the Doctor manages to miraculously save everyone, even those who'd already been lost, and ends with the Doctor having a cathartic moment of triumph.

The Doctor

  • The Doctor says "Who are you?" to River Song, ironic because he is always the one being asked that.
  • The Doctor learns the fate of River Song, and retains this memory through to their "first" meeting in the future. The future Doctor will adjust his sonic screwdriver in order to preserve Song's consciousness so his younger self will be able to preserve her within Cal.
  • Song appears to have knowledge of Time Lord anatomy, including knowledge of regeneration. She also indicates that destruction of both of the Doctor's hearts is a circumstance after which regeneration is not possible.

Story Notes

  • The working title for this story was: River's Run. When BBC Video announced the North American release of the Series 4 DVD box set, this title was used in the episode list and not Forest of the Dead.
  • In River Song's voice over, she mentions the "skies of all the world might just turn dark", a possible reference to The Darkness, a story arc element that plays out in the series 4 finale.
  • CAL was also the name of the computer graphics company that created the title sequence used between 1987 and 1989 for the Seventh Doctor's TV adventures. A result of this work was the creation of the first photo-realistic CGI TARDIS, featured in DW: Bad Wolf (TV story).
  • In the girl's house, on a drawing on the wall, there is a picture of a blonde haired girl and a wolf. This may be a reference to Rose and Bad Wolf as they are one and the same
  • This is the second episode in this series to have a character share the name of a character from the Joss Whedon show Firefly, with River. the first was Cobb in The Doctor's Daughter.
  • Moffat's recurring theme "everybody lives" returns again in this episode. In the BBC podcast associated with this episode, Moffat and Davies point out that so far in the four major storylines that he has contributed to the series, the only "final" deaths that have occurred have been due to old age (such as Billy Shipton and Kathy Nightingale) or illness (Madame de Pompadour). Moffat consequently promises (in the podcast) that he will kill people off in more dramatic fashion in future stories.
  • Although Moffat's story is science fiction, the idea of downloading human consciousness as data - even after physical death - and the philosophical issues surrounding this is an issue being addressed by futurists in real-life, with scientists such as Ray Kurzweil speculating that technology will allow the uploading of consciousness to computers within a generation in his book, The Age of Spiritual Machines.
  • A recurring theme in this and the preceding episode is "spoilers"; this is a term that was coined in the 1990s by science fiction fandom to address the circulation of information revealing the plots and endings of TV shows and movies. Interestingly, the fourth series of Doctor Who contains several examples of plot twists and cameos that were successfully protected from "spoilers". Other examples of successful spoiler protection include the appearance of Catherine Tate at the end of Doomsday. Examples of plot twists that were not successfully protected from "spoilers" included the return of Rose in Series 4 - spoiled in part by people witnessing the filming - and the regeneration of Christopher Eccleston at the end of Series 1 - spoiled by the BBC publicity office itself.

Ratings

to be added

Myths

  • Following the broadcast of Silence in the Library there was much discussion in the Doctor Who fan community over the identity of River Song, with speculation that she might be a future incarnation of Romana or an alias of Bernice Summerfield being two of the ideas put forth. The episode, ultimately, leaves her origin ambiguous although it does establish several times that this was the first time the Doctor met River, meaning she cannot be a past character.
  • In Planet of the Ood, the Doctor is told his "song may end soon", leading to speculation the "death" of River Song is what is being referred to.
  • Given Song's knowledge of the Doctor's true name, coupled with various references in dialogue in this and the preceding episode, additional speculation has included the possibility that she is the Doctor's future wife, or that the Doctor revealed his name to her just prior to his own death ("the only time I could," he says). It's unlikely the Doctor told her his name before his own death since Song clearly expected to meet the Doctor from a time after their relationship; she wouldn't have had this expectation if he was dead in her timeframe. However, given Davies' own comments that they have prepared to ensure this series continues long after the upcoming final regeneration, it is possible that his final death brings on a resurrection of some form.
    • Given the ease with which she tries to determine where she is in his personal timeline, it's likely that she wasn't expecting to meet the Doctor from any time period more specific than 'one where he knows me.' If she's witnessed the Doctor die, since he's a time traveler she could reasonably expect to encounter him from before his death much like times in the past when companions have encountered earlier versions of 'their' Doctor (mostly the multi-Doctor stories, although Sally Sparrow's one face-to-face meeting with the Doctor is a similar scene). In those scenarios, the Doctor seems to just take it in stride.
  • Another idea put forth is that River Song is actually the Doctor's mother. This is based on a joke that Steven Moffat said in the pod cast. Although it would explain how she knows his name it does not explain why she constantly states he hasn't met her yet or her forwardness towards him. That said, it was Moffat who invented the phrase "wibbly wobbly, timey wimey"... This theory does not explain why she was so forward towards him (for example the playfully flirtatious tone of her retort "spoilers" when the Doctor asked her why she had handcuffs).
  • It has been rumoured that River Song is the Doctor's future wife. A hint at this may be when Mr. Lux said, "squabbling like an old married couple", which was followed by River and the Doctor looking into each others eyes, and then River revealing that she knows the Doctor's name.

Filming Locations

  • The Library halls were filmed in Swansea Library.
  • The Area where everybody was returned was filmed in the Brangwyn Hall, Swansea
  • The control room where River sacrificed herself was filmed in ALCOA industries, in Fforestfach, Swansea.

Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors

  • It is never explained how the Doctor got out of the handcuffs as it was shown that he couldn't reach the sonic screwdriver and there is no evidence that anyone freed him. There were 4,022 people in the Library. There is a very high chance that one of them found him and handed him the screwdriver. This well may have been Donna as the Doctor knew straight away that she was looking for Lee the first time we see them properly together in this episode. Or perchance he simply reached for it with his foot.
  • If the Vashta Nerada are now living on the planet, does that not mean that CAL and its hardrive will be destroyed? Vashta Nerada only eat meat. The hardrive is not edible and therefore not threatened.
  • During the scene when everything goes white, when Lee bursts through the door - he shouts Donna! But Lee could not say her name properly because he had a stammer.Stammers are often caused by stress - there were several scenes in which he spoke without the stammer.
  • The future Doctor apparently places one of the communicator links in the sonic screwdriver to save River's mind, yet the suit she is wearing when she dies also has one of the links. We don't know if the communicator on her suit was intact after her death. If the transfer fried her brain, it may also have fried the communicator (which mirrors her brain activity).
  • When the shadows are stretching from Anita to the Doctor, the shadows of the equipment move away. (These shadows have Vashta Nerada in them, and they are moving as well)
  • How come the Data Ghosts in the system didn't get transferred out? CAL brought the crew of Mr. Lux's expedition back through the computer not their Data Ghosts. It is possible that the Vashta Nerada Data Ghosts did not get uploaded but the Miss Evangelista disfigured Data Ghost should still have been brought back out (downloaded). The 4022 people in the system were alive when teleported into the system. The crew's Data Ghosts were indeed captured by the system and downloaded into the system. But as they have no physical body outside the computer they can only exist inside.
  • After the people have been teleported back into the library, Strackman Lux says "4,022 people saved!". However, including Donna, there were actually 4,023 people. He didn't actually know that Donna went into the computer
  • Why would the Doctor need years to think of a way to save River when he already knows? Perhaps the Doctor did not originally save River, and decided to change history by giving his younger self the means to save her,although the doctor is very against changing history. Alternatively, it could be that the Doctor needed years to refine the neural chip he places in his screwdriver so that it only stores River's consciousness. Remember wibbly wobbly, timey wimey.
  • The library was shut down over 100 years ago. However, CAL was Lux's "Grandfather's youngest daughter." He also claimed that the library was built for CAL. It is frankly impossible that his grandfather had a child over 100 years ago, which would mean the library was invaded before it was built.( seeing as this story takes place far in the future it is a very real possibility that Lux's grandfather lived a very long time and had a child at an advanced age)
  • If nothing can get through the TARDIS forcefield system when she appears in the TARDIS how did Donna get eaten and put on a parallel world? Nothing got through the force-field. Donna was teleported into the TARDIS, but CAL managed to change the data, teleporting her away from the TARDIS and into the central computer core.

Continuity

  • The Doctor says that the auto destruct in The Library could 'crack the planet open like an egg' the Seventh Doctor said the same about what the Imperial Dalek mothership's weapons could do to the Earth (DW: Remembrance of the Daleks).
  • River Song says the Doctor has taken her to the "end of the universe", suggesting the Doctor at some point returns to the general time period seen in Utopia which is also described as being at the end of the universe. She could also mean "end of the universe" as a location, supposing that the area of the universe is finite, however the paradoxes that the Toclafane caused may have averted the end of the universe to an even further date.
  • The question of the Doctor's real name dates back to the earliest days of the series (DW: An Unearthly Child, Silver Nemesis), though in more recent episodes (DW: The Girl in the Fireplace, The Shakespeare Code, The Fires of Pompeii, etc.) the fact his name is a mystery has been amplified. An earlier Moffat-written episode The Girl in the Fireplace, directly addressed this issue when Madame de Pompadour reads the Doctor's mind and discovers that the Doctor's true name is hidden (it is not, however, indicated whether she actually learns his true name).
  • At the end of this episode, River states that some days "Everybody lives!". This is very similar to what the Doctor says at the end of another of Steven Moffat's episodes, The Doctor Dances ("Everybody lives, Rose! Just this once — everybody lives! I need more days like this.").
  • The Doctor says to River Song "history can be rewritten" to which Song replies "not one line" a reference to DW: The Aztecs.
  • The Doctor has previously spoken his name in EDA: Vanderdeken's Children and also EDA: Interference
  • The teleport system is similar to that used in DW: The Ark in Space in that it is limited to three at one time.
  • The squareness gun used by River Song to blast a hole in the wall of the Library is the same gun used by Jack Harkness when he first met the Doctor. It was left behind in the TARDIS when Jack Harkness was teleported out with the Doctor & Rose into the game shows on Station Five. (DW: The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances/Bad Wolf) (Per Steven Moffat, Doctor Who Confidential: "River Runs Deep")
  • Despite his explicit statement to the contrary, the Doctor has given away a sonic screwdriver or two. Liz Shaw has one in Inferno, and Sarah Jane Smith has her sonic lipstick. Although he could be referring to never giving away his screwdriver. Liz Shaw's device was only ever shown to open the door to the Doctor's workshop. It was referred to as a "door handle." He never gives them as a gift. In Sarah Jane's case he may have given it with the intention that she use it along with the other artefacts he gave her to protect the Earth.
  • Just as in DW: The Girl in the Fireplace and Last of the Time Lords the Doctor maintains that he is "always all right" in the wake of a great loss.
  • The Doctor says that having 4,022 minds talking inside one's mind (referring to CAL) is like being him. In the Eighth Doctor Adventure The Gallifrey Chronicles, it is revealed that the Doctor had downloaded the entire Matrix into his head, effectively meaning that he had every single Time Lord's mind inside his own. Whether or not this line is an indication that the Matrix is still present in the Doctor's mind is unclear. It could also be referring to the Doctor's ability (referenced in The Parting of the Ways) to see "all that is, all that was, all that ever could be". It is generally assumed that some point after The Gallifrey Chronicles, the Doctor restored the Time Lords and Gallifrey, presumably removing the Matrix from his mind, only for them to be destroyed in the Last Great Time War. In Gallifrey: Panacea, Irving Braxiatel is implied to have heard rumours of the impending Time War and engineered the removal of the Time Lord biodata archive from Gallifrey. This may also be a reference to the Time Lord Intelligentsia referenced in The Invisible Enemy, described as the intellectual power of a thousand Time Lords. The Doctor remarked, however, that he hadn't had access to that since he left the Time Lords.
  • No mention is made of the fact that the 4,022 people brought back to physical existence at the end of the story are now alive 100 years later than they were "saved," which would likely mean they now have no jobs, homes or living direct family — so what's to become of them? They probably sued the Felman Lux Corporation for billions.

DVD and other releases

Series 4 Volume 3 DVD Cover

External Links

Template:Series 4