The Beast Below (TV story): Difference between revisions
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She seems to be conducting similar investigations to the Doctor, though confusingly was made aware of the Doctor's presence in the first place by a mysterious man seemingly linked to the various hooded figures previously seen. She gives the Doctor a device which she says will lead him to Amy. | She seems to be conducting similar investigations to the Doctor, though confusingly was made aware of the Doctor's presence in the first place by a mysterious man seemingly linked to the various hooded figures previously seen. She gives the Doctor a device which she says will lead him to Amy. | ||
Amy, meanwhile, regains consciousness in a small room which is revealed to be a [[Voting Booth|voting booth. A machine with TV screens scans Amy, identifies her and reveals her age to be 1,306 years old, which amuses her, and her marital status to be "unknown", which unsettles her. | Amy, meanwhile, regains consciousness in a small room which is revealed to be a [[Voting Booth]] |voting booth. A machine with TV screens scans Amy, identifies her and reveals her age to be 1,306 years old, which amuses her, and her marital status to be "unknown", which unsettles her. | ||
[[File:Amy's message.png|thumb|[[Amy Pond|Amy]]'s message to herself.|200px]] | [[File:Amy's message.png|thumb|[[Amy Pond|Amy]]'s message to herself.|200px]] | ||
The screen she is watching then shows a man in a smart suit who tells her that she will now be shown the truth of the spaceship's travels, and afterwards she will be faced with a choice of whether to "Forget" everything she's learned in the booth, or to "Protest", which might have terrible consequences for everyone on board. She sees the film, which shows an extremely fast succession of subliminal images, suggesting a huge inflow of information into Amy's mind. After the film, Amy quickly chooses to "Forget". An image of Amy herself then appears on the screen, telling herself to send the Doctor back and stop him investigating anything. | The screen she is watching then shows a man in a smart suit who tells her that she will now be shown the truth of the spaceship's travels, and afterwards she will be faced with a choice of whether to "Forget" everything she's learned in the booth, or to "Protest", which might have terrible consequences for everyone on board. She sees the film, which shows an extremely fast succession of subliminal images, suggesting a huge inflow of information into Amy's mind. After the film, Amy quickly chooses to "Forget". An image of Amy herself then appears on the screen, telling herself to send the Doctor back and stop him investigating anything. |
Revision as of 18:49, 15 April 2010
Though the man above may say hello, expect no love from the Beast below!
The Beast Below is the second episode of Matt Smith's first series.
Synopsis
The Doctor takes Amy on her first trip in the TARDIS to the distant future, where she finds Britain in space. Starship UK houses the future of the British people, as they search the stars for a new home. But as Amy explores, she encounters the terrifying Smilers and learns a deadly truth inside the Voting Booth.
Plot
On the Starship UK in the year 3295, school children are in class. A boy called Timmy does not want to line up; his friend Mandy says he has to. He stands behind everyone else, where they are waiting for a Smiler to give them their result. When it gets to Timmy's turn, the Smiler says he is a bad boy, its face changes, and says he gets a zero. As the students walk out the classroom, Mandy tells Timmy that can't take the vator, as he got a zero. She enters the vator with everyone else, and the doors close. Not wanting to walk twenty floors to London, Timmy enters a second vator. Instead of heading to London, the vator drops to Floor 0, and the floor opens as the Smiler in the vator shows its anger.
The Doctor is showing Amy space above the Starship UK; she is suspended in space, with the Doctor in the TARDIS holding her ankle. The Doctor notices Starship UK and as he brings Amy back in, he informs her that in the 29th Century, solar flares roast the Earth and the entire Human race moved out until it was all over. While they admire the ship's infrastructure, he states that they are observers only and they cannot get involved, all the while watching Mandy silently crying on the monitor. Amy begins to inquire whether it's hard to be "just an observer", only to notice the Doctor speaking to Mandy. She exits the TARDIS and is surprised and astounded by everything around her. They explore an area known locally as London Market, with the Doctor encouraging Amy to noticing all sorts of changes. The Doctor approaches a man with a glass of water and places it on the floor for a brief moment, only to put it back on the table. He informs Amy that it is a police state and that the Government controls everything. The Doctor spots Mandy crying and they go up to her only to be followed by a dark robed individual. The man phones Hawthrone, controller of the Smilers.
He phones to report that he has seen the Doctor.
Hawthorne then calls a cloaked woman saying that there has been a sighting of someone looking at the water. The woman has a Porcelain Mask with her and says she will have a look with the monitors.
The Doctor tells Amy that the girl is not receiving attention from any of the adults, which means that something is wrong and they know about it. He tells Amy that the adults are afraid of something. The Doctor then encourages Amy to pursue the girl.
Amy finds Mandy, they find a booth that is sealed of, Amy tries to enter it, only to find Mandy saying, they are not supposed to talk about the Smilers and "Below". Mandy asks Amy whether she's Scottish, and then informs Amy that Scotland possess their own craft, which amuses her, all the while the Smiler's face changes from frowning to angry. As Amy infiltrates the tent, she discovers a giant tentacle rising from below, which proceeds to attack her. She escapes, only to find that four robed men have surrounded her, who put her to sleep, in front of Mandy.
The Doctor climbs down a ladder, and, after examining the surrounding area, meets a masked woman who calls herself Liz 10. She seems to be conducting similar investigations to the Doctor, though confusingly was made aware of the Doctor's presence in the first place by a mysterious man seemingly linked to the various hooded figures previously seen. She gives the Doctor a device which she says will lead him to Amy.
Amy, meanwhile, regains consciousness in a small room which is revealed to be a Voting Booth |voting booth. A machine with TV screens scans Amy, identifies her and reveals her age to be 1,306 years old, which amuses her, and her marital status to be "unknown", which unsettles her.
The screen she is watching then shows a man in a smart suit who tells her that she will now be shown the truth of the spaceship's travels, and afterwards she will be faced with a choice of whether to "Forget" everything she's learned in the booth, or to "Protest", which might have terrible consequences for everyone on board. She sees the film, which shows an extremely fast succession of subliminal images, suggesting a huge inflow of information into Amy's mind. After the film, Amy quickly chooses to "Forget". An image of Amy herself then appears on the screen, telling herself to send the Doctor back and stop him investigating anything.
The Doctor comes into the room and deduces that a machine in the lamp above her head has made her forget everything she learned in the last twenty minutes. The machine then tries to scan the Doctor but is not able to because, he suspects, it knows he is not human, leading Amy to discover the Doctor is not human. When she states he looks human, he merely responds that she "looks Time Lord", but they came first. When she inquires whether there are more of them, the Doctor informs her that there are no other Time Lords, simply because there was a "bad day".
After tinkering with the machine to no avail, the Doctor presses the 'Protest' button, which causes the door to shut and the floor to roll back, sending him and Amy hurtling down a chute to the same red abyss the boy Timmy fell into at the start of the story. They land in some red liquid, apparently containing food refuse. The Doctor tells Amy that this is the tongue of a large beast, presumably anyone who chooses to protest is eaten by the beast. He then uses his Sonic Screwdriver to make the owner of the tongue vomit the Doctor and Amy out.
As they are thrown out of the beast's mouth with the vomit, the Doctor cries 'Geronimo' while Amy screams.
They land into a sort of pipe where they are confronted with a door and another "Forget" switch. Presumably if they press the switch they will forget what they have just seen and be readmitted into the main part of the ship. On refusing to press the switch, two watching Smilers not only rotate their heads to show their angry face, but also open the door of the booths and to the astonishment of the Doctor and Amy, stand up and start to chase them. They are rescued by Liz 10, who has followed the Doctor using the device she gave him earlier, and who has a gun capable of temporarily disabling the smilers.
Liz10 reveals herself to be Queen Elizabeth the Tenth of the United Kingdom. The Doctor deduces that the creature who owns the tongue is sending out roots, like the tentacle that Amy discovered in the workman's tent. It is initially suggested the creature has infested the ship and is a threat. Liz10, who has the girl Mandy with her, explains that she has been investigating the creature for ten years, since she came to the throne aged forty (she says she looks younger than her fifty years because they "slowed her body clock"), because she believes her government are conspiring against her, and feeding her subjects to the beast. She explains that while investigating she wears the mask to hide her identity. The Doctor notes the mask has been made to fit her perfectly so it stays on by itself.
The mysterious man is made aware that the Queen is close to uncovering the creature conspiracy, and he tells a hooded man to start a pre-agreed protocol. The Doctor, Amy, Liz10 and Mandy are then captured by hooded figures. When the Queen protests the men's faces rotate to reveal them to be half-human and half-smilers.
They are taken to the Tower of London in the bowels of the ship where Liz10 meets the mysterious man, who is called Hawthorne, and who seems to be a senior member of the government. It is discovered that the ship has no engine because a star whale is providing its power and propulsion, goaded by a ray penetrating its brain and hurting the creature. The Doctor and Liz10 are outraged at the cruelty being unleashed onto the star whale, with the latter demanding it be set free. Hawthorne insists he is simply obeying orders from a higher authority, implying Liz10 herself is that higher authority. He also reveals that while the creature will eat adults sent falling into its mouth, it will never hurt children.
The Doctor then deduces that Liz10 has actually been Queen for hundreds of years (and not ten as she said), but has chosen to forget her past years of rule whenever she discovers the truth about the star whale. He has deduced this because the Queen's mask is hundreds of years old, yet was clearly made specifically for Liz 10. A video of Liz 10 is then played confirming this to be true.
In it, she explains how the British people faced destruction when Planet Earth was devastated by solar flares, and that the British children cried. Then the star whale - thought to be the last such creature in the universe - appeared like a "miracle", and they captured it and used it to power their space ship. Liz10 is then presented with two buttons, but instead of "Protest" the second button says "Abdicate". Pressing that button would release the star whale and destroy the ship and all who are on board.
The Doctor, after allowing the humans present to hear the star whale's screams of pain by using his sonic screwdriver, then takes control and tells the assembled people that he has no choice but to kill the conscious functions of the creature in order to avoid its feeling pain and to avoid killing the humans. He says this is a horrible solution, but better than killing all the humans on board or allowing the star whale to continue to feel horrific pain. He expresses anger with all the humans who allowed this to happen, and with righteous indignation tells Amy off for pressing the 'Forget' button, even though she probably did so to prevent him from having to make such a difficult decision regarding the fate of the whale and humanity. He then tells Amy that when he's "done here, you're going home".
But as the Doctor sets up the large shot of power to make the space whale brain dead, Amy remembers the Doctor's encouragement to her in the previous story The Eleventh Hour to 'notice everything' and spots that while the star whale's tentacles attack adults they do not attack children, rather the tentacles caress and play with them. She then realises the star whale is in fact benevolent, and has been voluntarily paddling the ship for the humans. She presses the 'Abdicate' button and the stimulus to the brain of the creature stops. However, the creature continues to power the ship and Hawthorne observes that they have, in fact, increased speed.
Explaining her deduction, Amy says that "if you are very old and the last of your kind", like the star whale (although she is looking at the Doctor as she says this), that "you couldn't just stand there and watch the children cry". The Doctor and Amy are reconciled, and disappear without saying goodbye and hurry back to the TARDIS.
Amy is about to reveal to the Doctor that she is engaged to be married when the phone in the TARDIS rings; it's the Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, who is in a spot of bother, as the shadow of a Dalek glides into view. The Doctor and Amy set off to help Churchill. As the Space Whale continues to guide humanity through the stars, another crack in the universe glows within the hull of the ship...
Cast
- The Doctor - Matt Smith
- Amy Pond - Karen Gillan
- Liz 10 - Sophie Okonedo
- Hawthorne - Terrence Hardiman
- Morgan - Christopher Good
- Timmy - Alfie Field
- Peter - David Ajala
- Mandy - Hannah Sharp
- Poem Girl - Catrin Richards
- Winder - Jonathan Battersby
- Voice of Smilers \ Winder - Chris Porter
- Winston Churchill - Ian McNeice
Crew
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. |
References
- The Doctor tells Amy about some of the events that happened in The End of Time and how he is still coping with the fact that he is the last of the Time Lords since all the others were taken back to the day Gallifrey was destroyed.
- Scotland wanting its own ship, and Amy's response of "some things never change", is a joke about Scottish nationalism.
- The Vators resemble and use the London Underground logo, as well as warn people to "mind the doors" ("mind the gap").
- The message shown in the voting booths resembles older 20th century BBC news broadcasts.
Story Notes
- Like DW: The End of the World, this episode featured the Doctor taking a new companion into the distant future for her first trip in the TARDIS.
- Also like DW: The Doctor Dances, the resolution to the main problem of the plot is solved by the way people have at first believed to have caused another effect and so previously tried to avoid (Nancy tried to avoid her son Jamie of fear of becoming a Gas-maked zombie whilst Liz 10 always chose to forget since she believed that by releasing the Star Whale it would destroy Starship UK).
- This story leads directly into the next.
- Another crack could be seen at the very end of the story, in roughly the same shape as the crack on Amy's wall and the TARDIS monitor in DW: The Eleventh Hour, continuing the new theme of cracks appearing throughout the universe.
- Nobody is killed in this story, as with previous Moffat stories (which only feature deaths from natural causes on screen and sometimes have nobody die at all), unusually for the series.
- Counting his flashback appearance in the previous story, this is the first episode to not show David Tennant since Series 1's The Parting of the Ways.
- This is the first average length Doctor Who episode since DW: The Stolen Earth, the intervening episodes all being specials or extended.
- If Amy Pond's age is said to be 1306 years old, and she was 21 in 2010, then the year is most likely 3295.
Ratings
6.7 million
Filming Locations
- Mamhilad, Monmouthshire, Wales
Rumours
- It was originally rumoured that Sophie Okonedo was to play the character called "Liz Ten" which then was rumoured to be "Queen Elizabeth X". Sophie Okonedo was confirmed to play The Masked Woman. In dialogue, it was confirmed that her character was indeed "Elizabeth X". In the credits, she was listed as "Liz 10".
- It was rumoured that The Doctor and Amy will be swallowed by a creature 'The Beast' and have to make the 'Beast' regurgitate then to escape. This is proven more likely with them both being drenched (having wet clothes) in the trailer[1]. The Doctor and Amy actually managed to escape being swallowed, only entering the creature's mouth. [2].
Production errors
To Be Added
Continuity
- A sign with Magpie Electricals can be seen, the brand was first created by Mr Magpie in DW: The Idiot's Lantern and has continued to appear in many stories set years later.
- The advent of the Earth being rendered uninhabitable by solar flares not long before the 30th century is a plot point previously featured in DW: The Ark in Space/The Sontaran Experiment.
- Winston Churchill calls the Doctor at the end of the episode, and the shadow of a Dalek is seen.
- Liz Ten is the queen of Starship UK. She mentions the Doctor being knighted and exiled by Queen Victoria (DW: Tooth and Claw) and his relationship with the "Virgin Queen" (DW: The End of Time , The Shakespeare Code), as well as being an old drinking buddy of Henry XII and having tea and scones with Liz 2.
- The Doctor tells Amy Pond about being the last of his race shortly after she joined him, much like he did with Rose, Martha, and Donna shortly after they joined him.
- Minor reference is made to the events of DW: The End of Time
- The crack, previously seen on Amy's wall and the TARDIS' monitor (DW: The Eleventh Hour), is seen on the side of Starship UK.
- The Doctor's "You look human/You look Time Lord" exchange with Amy mirrors a similar conversation between his previous incarnation and Lady Christina de Souza. (DW: Planet of the Dead)
- The concept of a gigantic space-borne "whale" was first devised by Pat Mills for his unused Who script, The Song of the Space Whale. The Star Whale may be a nod to that.
- The Star Whale's exposed brain being restrained by humans is similar to the Ood Brain in DW: Planet of the Ood. Just as in that story, the brain was released in the end, and the restrained creature was freed. Similarly, The Doctor allows the beast's screams to be heard, just as The Doctor allowed Donna to listen to the Ood Song
- As in a previous Moffat story, The Girl in the Fireplace, the "villains" are clockwork (or at least clockwork-based) androids. In both episodes however they are not the true villains, but working under commands given to them.
DVD/Blu-Ray release
- BBC Video - Doctor Who Series Five - Volume One is scheduled for release on DVD and Blu-Ray on 7th June 2010 (UK only), featuring The Eleventh Hour, The Beast Below, Victory of the Daleks, and the featurette The Monster Diaries. [1]
External Links
to be added
Footnotes
- ↑ Doctor Who News Page - Matt Smith First DVD Release Date, accessed 3rd March 2010