The Rebel Flesh (TV story): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Line 48: Line 48:


== Story notes ==
== Story notes ==
*The music playing in the background when the vat of The Flesh is first shown is ''Flying'' by Tomandandy, who composed for the film ''Resident Evil: Afterlife''.
*The music playing in the background when the vat of The Flesh is first shown is ''Flying'' by Tomandandy, who composed for the film ''Resident Evil: Afterlife''. ''Flying'' was one of the background pieces that was used in the film.
*When Amy and Rory are playing darts, the music in the background is ''Supermassive Black Hole ''by ''Muse.'' Muse have also supplied many tunes to Si-Fi dramas, most notebly ITV and Watch's ''Primeval.''
*When Amy and Rory are playing darts, the music in the background is ''Supermassive Black Hole ''by ''Muse.'' Muse have also supplied many tunes to Si-Fi dramas, most notebly ITV and Watch's ''Primeval.''
*The song played by Buzzer on the turntable when the Tardis crew arrives and later by the Gangers is Dusty Springfield's ''You Don't Have to Say You Love Me'', her version of the Italian song ''Io che non vivo (senza te)''.
*The song played by Buzzer on the turntable when the Tardis crew arrives and later by the Gangers is Dusty Springfield's ''You Don't Have to Say You Love Me'', her version of the Italian song ''Io che non vivo (senza te)''.

Revision as of 08:41, 22 May 2011

RealWorld.png

ProtectedTab.png
TVStub.png

The Rebel Flesh was the fifth story of the sixth series of Doctor Who. Like many previous stories, it saw the Doctor duplicated and it was the second time the Eleventh Doctor was copied following The Eleventh Hour.

Synopsis

A solar tsunami sends the TARDIS hurtling towards a futuristic factory on Earth, where human doppelgangers are used to mine dangerous acid, as the time-travelling adventures continue.

A second wave hits and the "Gangers" separate. They can remember every second of their "original's" life and feel every emotion they've ever experienced. But are these memories stolen or have they been bequeathed? Are the Gangers merely faulty machinery that must be shut down or are they living, breathing, sentient beings? Can the Doctor convince the terrified humans to accept these "almost people" and prevent an all-out civil war before the factory explodes? [1]

Plot

to be added

Cast

Crew

to be added

References

to be added

Story notes

  • The music playing in the background when the vat of The Flesh is first shown is Flying by Tomandandy, who composed for the film Resident Evil: Afterlife. Flying was one of the background pieces that was used in the film.
  • When Amy and Rory are playing darts, the music in the background is Supermassive Black Hole by Muse. Muse have also supplied many tunes to Si-Fi dramas, most notebly ITV and Watch's Primeval.
  • The song played by Buzzer on the turntable when the Tardis crew arrives and later by the Gangers is Dusty Springfield's You Don't Have to Say You Love Me, her version of the Italian song Io che non vivo (senza te).

Ratings

to be added

Myths

  • The TARDIS will be cloned.[2] This was proven to be false.

Filming locations

to be added

Production errors

  • The positions of the two cards on top of the card pyramid slightly alter between scenes.

Continuity

Home video releases

Part One, which will contain episodes one to seven will be released in Summer, shortly after the airing of episode seven.[3]

External links