Great Catastrophe (Sleep No More): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
Tag: sourceedit
No edit summary
Tag: sourceedit
Line 12: Line 12:
So, while, the Fifth Doctor comes ''awfully'' close to saying the words "Great Catastrophe" in ''Frontios'', he doesn't quite make it. Gatiss is therefore connecting some dots that the script doesn't. The connection is also difficult to make since ''Frontios'' is usually considered to take place in the far future, well beyond the 38th century.
So, while, the Fifth Doctor comes ''awfully'' close to saying the words "Great Catastrophe" in ''Frontios'', he doesn't quite make it. Gatiss is therefore connecting some dots that the script doesn't. The connection is also difficult to make since ''Frontios'' is usually considered to take place in the far future, well beyond the 38th century.


== Footnotes ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Events]]
[[Category:Events]]
[[Category:Earth history]]
[[Category:Earth history]]

Revision as of 01:14, 10 October 2016

You may be looking for another Great Catastrophe.

The Great Catastrophe was an event that occurred prior to the Twelfth Doctor's visit to the Le Verrier station of the 38th century. It caused a tectonic realignment which resulted in India and Japan becoming merged into Indo-Japan, and a new Indo-Japanese culture. (TV: Sleep No More)

Behind the scenes

After the airing of Sleep No More, writer Mark Gatiss confirmed that "The Great Catastrophe" was a reference to Frontios where the Earth had collided with the Sun.[1]

However, this assertion is somewhat difficult to prove, using the actual script of Frontios itself. In trying to explain where the Frontios colony of humans came from, the Fifth Doctor stops himself at the word "great", in an apparent attempt to spare Tegan's feelings. But she is insistent:

Tegan: In the great what, Doctor?
Doctor All civilisations have their ups and downs.
Turlough: (reading from TARDIS computer) "Fleeing from the imminence of a catastrophic collision with the sun, a group of refugees from the doomed planet Earth ..."

So, while, the Fifth Doctor comes awfully close to saying the words "Great Catastrophe" in Frontios, he doesn't quite make it. Gatiss is therefore connecting some dots that the script doesn't. The connection is also difficult to make since Frontios is usually considered to take place in the far future, well beyond the 38th century.

Footnotes