The Impossible Astronaut (TV story): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Line 103: Line 103:
*Amy Pond and Rory Williams watch a Laurel & Hardy film, ''The Flying Deuces'', on television.
*Amy Pond and Rory Williams watch a Laurel & Hardy film, ''The Flying Deuces'', on television.
*This story shares numerous similarities with the 1988 John Carpenter film ''They Live, ''in which the primary protagonist discovers a hidden alien race living amongst humans and using subliminal messages to influence their development.
*This story shares numerous similarities with the 1988 John Carpenter film ''They Live, ''in which the primary protagonist discovers a hidden alien race living amongst humans and using subliminal messages to influence their development.
*The Doctor refers to River Song as Mrs. Robinson - a character from the 1967 film ''The Graduate''.


===[[:Category:Fashion and clothing|Fashion and clothing]]===
===[[:Category:Fashion and clothing|Fashion and clothing]]===

Revision as of 19:00, 5 June 2011

RealWorld.png

TVStub.png
ProtectedTab.png

The Impossible Astronaut was the first episode of the sixth series of Doctor Who. This story is perhaps most notable as the first opening two-parter of the BBC Wales series. Behind the scenes, it was notable for the significant amount of location filming with cast and crew travelling to Utah in the United States of America.

Narratively, it saw the reappearance of River Song with some insight into her back story. Yet again, questions of her trustworthiness were posed. Additionally, it introduced the Silence as a species, building on the references of the previous series.

Synopsis

Four envelopes, numbered 2, 3 and 4, each containing a date, time and map reference, unsigned, but TARDIS blue: who sent them? And who received the missing envelope numbered 1? This strange summons reunites the Doctor, Amy, Rory and River Song in the middle of the Utah desert and unveils a terrible secret the Doctor's friends must never reveal to him. Placing his life entirely in their hands, the Doctor agrees to search for the recipient of the fourth envelope and figure out just who Canton Everett Delaware the Third is. Also what is the relevance of their only other clue: 'Space 1969'? Their quest lands them—quite literally—in the Oval Office, where they are enlisted by President Nixon to assist enigmatic former-FBI agent Canton in saving a terrified little girl from a mysterious spaceman. [1]

Plot

In the 17th century, Charles II bursts into a room, questioning Matilda, who is present, as to the Doctor’s whereabouts. By her stands "My Mysterious Doctor", a painting of the Time Lord. She asks “Doctor Who?”. An audible sneeze comes from beneath her skirt and the man lifts its hem with his sword to find the Doctor hiding naked underneath.

In 2011, Amy Pond and Rory Williams are in their kitchen. Amy reads an account of how the Doctor was imprisoned in the Tower of London without trial on the personal request of the king. Rory is not certain that it is the Doctor until Amy reads that he was seen flying from the tower two days later on a sphere. Rory now believes it is the Doctor. She reads of how the Doctor took part in a World War II breakout from a POW camp, (which didn't end up so good for him in the flashback.)

Amy ponders whether he is being deliberately ridiculous in order to gain their attention. Rory is distracted and so doesn’t see the Doctor waving at the camera in a scene from a Laurel and Hardy film. Amy answers the door and is handed her post. She finds a letter in a TARDIS blue envelope. There is no name in the letter but it gives her a map reference, a time and a date. In Stormcage Containment Facility, River Song receives an identical letter. The prison goes on alert after a guard warns that she is packing and planning to go to a "planet" called America.

Rory and Amy arrive in Utah where they are greeted by the Doctor. River Song arrives shortly after. In a café, the Doctor and River compare diaries. They have both “done” Easter Island and met Jim the Fish. The Doctor says they're going to space in 1969.

They move to sit by a body of water, there they dine and the Doctor tries wine again, immediately disliking it. The Doctor mentions he's 1,103 years old; this means he's about 200 years older than the last time Amy and Rory saw him. Amy sees a mysterious figure but, as she turns away, she forgets.

Behind them an elderly man pulls up in his car, and from the water an astronaut rises wearing an Apollo 11 style space suit.

File:Dining on the sand.jpg
The Doctor dines with his friends.

The Doctor tells them not to interfere and moves to face the astronaut. Out of earshot of the others, he announces that he knows who is within the suit. The astronaut shoots twice him, initiating the Doctor's eleventh regeneration and fires again before regeneration can complete and save his life. The astronaut then retreats into the water, unfazed by the bullets River Song fires.

The elderly man approaches and hands the grieving trio a canister of gasoline. They orchestrate a Viking-style funeral by burning the Doctor’s body aboard a boat to prevent his body being studied. The man shows them that he too has an envelope: number four. Rory and Amy have three and River has two. He then tells them that his name is Canton Delaware, and that they will be seeing him again soon.

River, Rory, and Amy return to the café and find letter number one on a table. They ask the owner who was seated there and he replies “some guy”. They turn and the Doctor emerges from a side door - fully alive and unharmed. The Doctor greets his companions happily, acting completely oblivious to their stunned expressions until a furious River slaps him. His companions eventually come to realise that this is a younger version of the Doctor, by some two hundred years. They tell him that they have been hired and it involves 1969 and Canton Delaware III.

They return to the TARDIS and River tells Rory and Amy that they cannot tell the Doctor of his coming death while the Doctor is reluctant to go to a location a mysterious person summons him to. Amy manages to get the Doctor to trust her and not to ask why he is doing the mission (unbeknownst to him) his older self had asked him to conduct by swearing on the meal they shared the first time they met (Fish fingers and custard).

They use the TARDIS to travel back to 1969, and land in the Oval Office after switching the TARDIS to a setting in which it is invisible and silent. The Doctor emerges alone and listens to Richard Nixon and a young Canton as they discuss the president being called by a mysterious source. The Doctor makes notes as a recording of one call is played. The recording mentions “Jefferson Adams Hamilton”.

Canton and Nixon become aware of his presence and security is called. They quickly overwhelm the Doctor and the TARDIS becomes visible. The Doctor proposes to sort out the mysterious calls and pretends to be an undercover agent sent from Scotland Yard. Canton agrees, telling the Doctor he has five minutes to solve the mystery.

Again Amy sees the mysterious creature, more clearly now as it stands just a few feet from her. Rory blocks her vision and she again forgets what she has seen. She feels ill and asks to go the toilet. Canton allows her to do so. She enters to find one of the aliens. She remembers the events she forgot. A woman emerges from one of the cubicles and sees the alien, thinking its one of her co-workers wearing a Star Trek mask. She looks away and forgets, looks again and repeats the same words. She looks for a third time and the alien kills her with electricity. The alien tells Amy that the woman's name was Joy. It then instructs Amy to “tell the Doctor what he must know, and what he must never know”. Amy then exits and immediately forgets - but not before taking a photo of the alien on her cell phone. She returns to the Oval Office.

File:Doc in Oval Office.jpg
The Doctor dissects the problem.

The Doctor finds the only place the calls can be coming from. Another call from the mysterious caller is answered by Nixon. The Doctor and his companions leave with Canton in the TARDIS. The Doctor tells the others that Jefferson, Adams and Hamilton are three of America’s founding fathers and the only place with the three street names on one junction is an area five miles from Cape Kennedy Space Center.

Rory explains to a stunned Canton that the TARDIS is bigger on the inside. They search a building at the junction, unaware of the astronaut’s presence. Amy and River both discuss neutralising the astronaut to prevent it from killing the Doctor. However, River tells Amy that it doesn’t work that way.

River discovers a tube leading down through a drain. She heads down once and finds a secret tunnel filed with the aliens and quickly runs up to tell the Doctor. However, she soon forgets and says she will take another look. The Doctor sends Rory with River this time. This time, the tunnel is empty and River opens a locked room, entering a large cavern. In the centre sits a structure akin to a TARDIS console.

The astronaut approaches the Doctor and Amy.

They set off an alarm and Rory checks if anything is coming. He sees many of the aliens but forgets as soon as he turns to warn River. River, using one of her devices, discovers that the tunnels cover the Earth and have been around for hundreds of years. Electricity crackles behind Rory and something approaches him.

Meanwhile Canton and Amy discuss the former agent's FBI career; he was kicked out for “attitude problems” as he wanted to marry. Amy hears the little girl calling and runs to the Doctor Canton runs on ahead of them and they quickly follow..

However, they find him unconscious after he yelled from something hitting him. As they examine Canton to make sure he's okay, Amy tells the Doctor that she is pregnant. They then turn to see the astronaut, who begins to lift its faceplate. In order to prevent the Doctor's death, Amy picks up Canton's gun as the the faceplate is fully lifted to reveal the little girl calling for help. Before Amy can see the little girl, she fires off a shot much to the Doctor's and her horror.

Cast

Crew

References

The Doctor

  • An older Eleventh Doctor who is 1,103 years old, begins to regenerate, but is killed before the process completes.
  • The Doctor states his current age as 909 years old.
  • The Doctor says that he is late for a biplane lesson in 1911 but gets confused and wonders if it is actually knitting.
  • The Eleventh Doctor still dislikes wine.
  • The Doctor claims that two of the founding fathers mentioned in the girl's message fancied him, although he doesn't identify which two.

Films

  • Amy Pond and Rory Williams watch a Laurel & Hardy film, The Flying Deuces, on television.
  • This story shares numerous similarities with the 1988 John Carpenter film They Live, in which the primary protagonist discovers a hidden alien race living amongst humans and using subliminal messages to influence their development.
  • The Doctor refers to River Song as Mrs. Robinson - a character from the 1967 film The Graduate.

Fashion and clothing

  • The Doctor is shown wearing a fez in a Laurel & Hardy film, The Flying Deuces.
  • The 1103 year old Doctor is wearing a Stetson hat, and proclaims that "Stetsons are cool".

Foods and beverages

  • The Doctor thought wine would taste more like 'the gums', referring to wine gums.

Years

  • The Doctor states that the year 1482 is full of glitches, but also says 1969 is 'easy'. This suggests that some years are harder to travel to than others.

TARDIS

  • The Doctor makes the TARDIS invisible when he materializes in the Oval Office. The Doctor states that this causes a huge drain on the TARDIS energy. When he tries to re-enter the TARDIS, he smashes into it.
  • The Doctor also manages to land the TARDIS silently.
  • The Doctor claims that the TARDIS scanner cannot be activated when the TARDIS is invisible. This is later shown to be an exaggeration, as River makes adjustments inside the TARDIS and operates the scanner, as the Doctor's later dialogue indicates he had expected her to do.

Story notes

  • This episode had the working title The Year of the Moon[2]
  • This is the first two part opening episode of the revived series, and the first since Attack of the Cybermen.
  • A prequel for this story was released on the official BBC website.[3]
  • The monsters in this episode were said to be "the scariest monsters yet".[4]
  • The episode was dedicated to Elisabeth Sladen, who had passed away four days before the episode's initial broadcast. The dedication was shown before the episode on BBC1 and Space, and after the episode on BBC America.
  • The version supplied for broadcast in the United States and Australia is the first episode of Doctor Who to have a voiceover introductory sequence before the main titles, with the voice of Amy explaining her relationship with the Doctor.
  • While the local date and time when the Doctor is killed is the evening of April 22, 2011, the local date and time in Britain (a 7-hour difference from Utah) would be just after midnight the morning of April 23. Thus, this is the third story in the revived series whose airdate coincides with in-story events (the first being DW:The End of Time on December 25, 2009, and the second being DW: The Big Bang on June 26, 2010).
  • The attempted regeneration in this episode occurs in front of six witnesses, the greatest number in the revived series (Amy Pond, Rory Williams, River Song, Canton Delaware, the Astronaut, and a Silent).
  • This is the first episode of the revived series to feature a regeneration (albeit an unsuccessful one) outside the TARDIS.
  • The sequence with the Doctor inserted into the Laurel and Hardy clip is a reference to the 1992 American Academy Awards. Host Billy Crystal was digitally added into the same clip and was depicted dancing alongside Laurel and Hardy. In this version, the Doctor begins to dance with Laurel and Hardy at the end of the clip, standing in the same spot that was occupied by Crystal.
  • The repeated phrase "Space: 1969" is a reference to the British science fiction series "Space: 1999", which is set on the Moon.
  • The Doctor asks the Secret Service agents for a SWAT team. The first SWAT (Special Weapons And Tactics) team had only been established the year before in 1968 (by Darryl Gates in Los Angeles) and it's possible the agents might not have even known what the Doctor was talking about.
  • The idea of tunneling out of a German POW camp is based on an actual incident that occurred during World War II, immortalized in the film The Great Escape and parodied in the television series Hogan's Heroes.
  • Joy asks if the Silence is wearing a Star Trek mask. Star Trek was cancelled the same year as this story takes place, with the last episode airing on June 3, 1969.
  • The Doctor calls River Song "Mrs. Robinson", referencing the character from the film The Graduate. Mrs. Robinson is notorious for having an affair with a younger man, so the nickname may be the Doctor's way of teasing Song about their relationship and the fact that physically she appears to be older than he is.

Ratings

  • 8.86 million. (43.3% market share)
  • Viewership for the episode on BBC America was 1.3 million, breaking the station's previous viewership record which had been set by the premiere of The Eleventh Hour. [5]
  • The episode was the most recorded show in UK history with 4.1 Million viewers

Myths

  • We will see River Song as a child.[6] This was proven to be true in A Good Man Goes to War.
  • The second episode will air the day after the first.[7][8][9] This has been proven false.
  • Overnight figures for BBC was 6.4 million making this the least watched series opener since the 2005 relaunch. The Daily Mail and other places were comparing the overnight-only ratings of this episode to the full consolidated BARB ratings for the previous season openers, which include people watching time-shifted playback and recordings (such as with Sky+). The consolidated figures were 8.86 million, which compares favourably to other series openers.

Filming locations

Production errors

  • While the Doctor appears in the Laurel & Hardy film, Rory's shifts through the pages of the history book which appear underneath the screen imply the film footage was overlaid on the actual shot.
  • When The Doctor approaches the Astronaut he leaves the picnic with a wine bottle in his hand. In the next shot the bottle is gone.
  • When Amy is talking to the agent outside of the toilet, a boom mic can be seen over his shoulder.
  • When the Doctor exits the TARDIS control room he opens the right door but when he walks out to the Oval office he goes out the left.
  • One of the Mission Patches on the Astronaut's space suit is an anachronism; the "Vitruvian Emblem" was first used during the Space Shuttle missions of the early Eighties.
  • The Secret Service agents all carry revolvers, which were more commonly in use during the period, however by 1969 the Secret Service had transitioned to the semi-automatic Colt M1911.
  • There are two African-Americans on the president's detail. The first African American Secret Service agent assigned was Abraham Bolden in 1961, but such appointments were comparatively rare until some years later.

Continuity

If you'd like to talk about narrative problems with this story — like plot holes and things that seem to contradict other stories — please go to this episode's discontinuity discussion.

Timeline

  • The Impossible Astronaut takes place after DW: Time.
  • The Impossible Astronaut takes place sometime after DW: Day of the Moon for the future Doctor.
  • The Impossible Astronaut takes place before DW: Day of the Moon for the present Doctor.
  • The Impossible Astronaut takes place before DW: The Big Bang for River Song.

Home video releases

Series-6-part-1-dvd-cover.jpg

The DVD will be released in two halves. Part One, which will contain episodes one to seven, will be released in Summer, shortly after the airing of episode seven.[10]

External links

Footnotes