The Impossible Astronaut (TV story): Difference between revisions

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== Plot ==
== Plot ==
In the [[17th century]], [[Charles II]] bursts into a room, demanding of [[Matilda (The Impossible Astronaut)|Matilda]], the [[Eleventh Doctor]]’s whereabouts. By her stands ''"[[My Mysterious Doctor]]"'', a painting of the [[Time Lord]]. She asks [[The "Doctor Who?" running joke|"Doctor Who?"]]. An audible sneeze comes from beneath her skirt and the king lifts its hem with his [[sword]] to find the Doctor naked underneath, saying it is not as bad as it seems.
In the 17th century, [[Charles II]] bursts into his daughter's room, demanding to know the [[Eleventh Doctor]]'s whereabouts. By her stands "[[My Mysterious Doctor]]," a painting of the [[Time Lord]], and his clothes are strewn about the room. His daugher feigns innocence, asking, "Doctor who?" An audible sneeze comes out from beneath her skirt.  The king lifts its hem with his sword to find the Doctor naked underneath, explaining that it's not as bad as it looks.


In [[2011]], [[Amy Pond]] and [[Rory Williams]] are in their kitchen. Amy reads an account of the Doctor, imprisoned in the [[Tower of London]] without trial on the order 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 the Doctor taking part in a [[World War II]] breakout from a POW camp, which doesn't end well in the flashback.
In 2011, [[Amy Pond]] reads to her husband, [[Rory Williams]], from a history book in their kitchen; she recites an account of "a mysterious doctor" who was imprisoned in the Tower of London on the order of the king. Rory is not certain that it is ''the ''Doctor until Amy reads that the man was seen flying away from the Tower two days later. She also reads of the Doctor taking part in a break-out from a POW camp during World War II; the Doctor leads a group of men through a variety of tunnels, but is caught after accidentally digging up into the commandant's office.


Amy ponders whether the Doctor is being deliberately ridiculous to gain their attention. Rory is distracted and doesn’t see the Doctor waving at the camera in a [[Laurel and Hardy]] film. Amy goes through her mail and finds a letter in a TARDIS-blue envelope. There is no name in the letter but it has a map reference, a time and a date. In [[Stormcage Containment Facility]], [[River Song]] receives an identical letter. The prison goes on alert when [[prison Guard (The Impossible Astronaut)|a guard]] warns that she is packing to go to a planet called America.
Amy begins to wonder if the Doctor is being deliberately ridiculous to get their attention, a theory which Rory shrugs off; however, he doesn't notice the Doctor waving at them from a [[Laurel and Hardy]] film. Going through their mail, Amy finds a [[TARDIS]]-blue envelope plastered with stamps and labeled with the number 3; opening it, she pulls out a card with a map reference, date, and time. Though it is not signed, she easily deduces who it is from.  Meanwhile, [[River Song]] receives an identical letter -- the only difference being that hers is labeled number 2 -- in her cell at [[Stormcage Containment Facility]]; the prisoner goes on alert when a guard warns his supervisor that she is packing with the intention of going to a planet called [[America]].


Rory and Amy arrive in [[Utah]] where they are greeted by the Doctor. River arrives shortly after, shooting off the Doctor's hat. In a café, the Doctor and River compare diaries. They have both “done” [[Easter Island]] and met [[Jim the Fish]]. The Doctor says that they're going somewhere new and different: space in [[1969]].
Rory and Amy arrive in Utah, where they are happily greeted by the Doctor; River arrives shortly after.  At a cafe, the Doctor and River compare diaries, and the Doctor informs his companions that they're going to be exploring space in 1969. They picnic by a lake, where the Doctor mentions in passing that he is over eleven hundred years old -- making him nearly two hundred years older than he was when Amy and Rory last saw him. Amy spots a [[The Silence (species)|figure]] watching them from a distant cliff, but forgets about it as soon she looks away.  Not long after, an elderly man pulls up in a truck and waves to the Doctor, but makes no move to join the group. Behind them, an astronaut rises out of the water, wearing an Apollo 11-style spacesuit; spotting it, the Doctor gravely orders his friends that no matter what happens, they're not to interfere, and he approaches the astronaut, which appears to be waiting for him at the edge of the lake.


They picnic by a lake. The Doctor tries [[wine]], spits it out, and mentions in passing that he's eleven hundred three years old, about two hundred years older than the last time Amy and Rory saw him. Amy sees a figure watching them from a distance. As she turns away, she forgets about him. Behind them [[Canton Delaware|an elderly man]] pulls up in his car and waits. From the water an [[astronaut]] rises, wearing an [[Apollo 11]]-style space suit.
[[File:Dining on the sand.jpg|thumb|left|180px|The Doctor dines with his friends.]]The astronaut shoots the Doctor twice, initiating his eleventh [[regeneration]], but shoots again, killing him before the transformation is complete.  The astronaut returns to the water as the Doctor's companions run to his body; River announces that he is truly dead, devastating Amy. The elderly man brings a container of gasoline to them, introducing himself as [[Canton Everett Delaware III]] and explaining that the Doctor told him they would need the gasoline.  River explains that a Time Lord's body is one of the most sought-after things in the universe; they can't just leave him. Spotting a boat moored across the lake, Rory initiates a Viking-style funeral and burns the Doctor's body. Delaware presents River with his TARDIS-blue invitation, labeled with the number 4, and explains that although he won't be seeing them again, they will be seeing him


[[File:Dining on the sand.jpg|thumb|left|180px|The Doctor dines with his friends.]]
The Doctor tells his friends not to interfere and goes to meet the astronaut. Out of earshot, the Doctor announces he knows who is within the suit. The astronaut shoots him twice, initiating his eleventh [[regeneration]], but fires again before the transformation can begin. The Doctor truly dies. The astronaut retreats into the water, unfazed by the bullets River Song fires.


The elderly man approaches and hands the grieving trio a gas can; he, too, was invited here. They perform a Viking-style funeral, burning the Doctor’s body aboard a boat to prevent his corpse being studied. The man shows them he too has an envelope: number four. Rory and Amy have three and River has two. His name is Canton Everett Delaware III, and they will be seeing him again soon though he won't see them again.
River, Amy, and Rory return to the cafe where they previously ate; while Rory and River are eager to figure out what the Doctor was planning, Amy is distraught and insists that it doesn't matter now that he's dead.  Across the cafe, Rory spots another invitation lying on the table; this one is labeled number 1, and appears to have been addressed to the person the Doctor trusted the most.  As they try to deduce who this is, the Doctor himself steps into the restaurant, greeting them happily despite being confused as to why they are all here. River slaps him in fury, remarking that "this is cold," but the Doctor appears to have no knowledge of the emotional turmoil they have just endured; it is only when he mentions that he is nine hundred and nine that his companions realize the version of the Doctor they saw die at the lakeside was a future version. River explains that they have been hired by someone who trusts him to investigate something involving space, 1969, and a man called Canton Everett Delaware III.


River, Rory and Amy return to the café to find letter one on a table. The Doctor emerges from a side door, alive and well. He greets them happily, oblivious to their astonishment until a furious River slaps him. His companions eventually realise this version of the Doctor is younger by some two hundred years, invited by his older self, just the same as they, and is unaware of what they have just witnessed. They tell him they have been "hired" by someone he trusts the most and it involves the year 1969 and a man named Canton Everett Delaware III.
The group returns to the TARDIS, where River tells Amy and Rory in private that they cannot inform the Doctor of his impending death; because he has interacted with his own time stream, his knowledge of it could rip a hole in the universe. The Doctor, meanwhile, is reluctant to heed the mysterious summons; when River asks him to trust them, the Doctor asks who she really is and who she killed, regarding her refusal to answer either of these questions as proof of why he shouldn't.  Amy eventually convinces him to go along with them by swearing on [[fish custard|fish fingers and custard]] -- their first meal together.  The Doctor sets the TARDIS on course for 1969; because of the mission's importance, the Doctor sets the TARDIS to "invisible" and "silent" (with help from River).  Upon landing, the Doctor orders his companions to show some discretion, but is horrified to leave the TARDIS and discover that he has landed it in the Oval Office, where [[Richard Nixon|President Richard Nixon]] is conducting a private meeting with a younger Canton Delaware.  Nixon would like Canton to conduct an investigation -- independent of the FBI, from which Canton was recently fired -- and recover a child that has been calling him every night, begging for help because the "space man" is coming to eat her.  Nixon plays Canton a recording of one such phone call, where the child appears to identify herself as "Jefferson Adams Hamilton."


They return to the TARDIS. River tells Rory and Amy they cannot tell the Doctor of his upcoming death, while the Doctor is reluctant to obey a mysterious summons. Amy manages to get the Doctor to oblige them by swearing on  [[Fish finger]]s and [[custard]].
Canton and Nixon eventually become aware of the Doctor's presence, and Secret Service agents swarm the office.  The TARDIS becomes visible again per the Doctor's request, and his companions step out.  The Doctor proposes to sort out the mysterious phone calls, claiming to be an undercover agent on loan from Scotland Yard. Canton, thoroughly intrigued, tells the Doctor he has five minutes to solve the mystery; the Doctor rises to the challenge, ordering street maps covering all of Florida (among other things, which are not given to him).


They travel in the TARDIS to 1969 to land in the Oval Office after switching the TARDIS to make it invisible and silent. The Doctor emerges alone and listens to President [[Richard Nixon]] and a young Canton Delaware discuss the president being called by an unknown person every day. The Doctor makes notes as a recording of a call is played. Nixon speaks with a young child. When the President asks the child its name, the response is “Jefferson Adams Hamilton”.
While researching the street maps, Amy sees [[The Silence (species)|a mysterious, suited alien]] standing in the doorway of the Oval Office, and remembers their previous encounter on the shore of the lake; but when she looks away, she forgets it again.  Feeling ill, she is escorted to the bathroom, where she finds the alien waiting for her. A woman who happened to be in the bathroom at the time is vaporized by the alien after seeing it and forgetting it numerous times; Amy, realizing the alien's power, takes a picture of it with her camera phone. The alien cryptically informs Amy that she will tell the Doctor "what he must know, and what he must never know" -- alluding to his eventual death.  Amy exits and immediately forgets the encounter.


Canton and Nixon become aware of the Doctor's presence, and the [[Secret Service]] is called in. They overwhelm the Doctor and the TARDIS becomes visible per his request. He proposes to sort out the mysterious calls and claims to be an undercover agent from [[Scotland Yard]]. Canton tells the Doctor he has five minutes to solve the mystery.
[[File:Doc in Oval Office.jpg|thumb|180px|The Doctor dissects the problem.]] In the Oval Office, the Doctor achieves some success and departs in the TARDIS with his companions and Canton, whom he had previously ordered not to follow hi
.  They materialize in a warehouse in Florida, just a few miles away from [[Cape Kennedy]]; Jefferson, Adams, and Hamilton are the names of three streets which intersect in view of the warehouse window. As they explore the warehouse, the Doctor confesses that they have most likely walked into a trap; the warehouse phone cords were cut, and so the child couldn't have possibly called Nixon from here.  Meanwhile, Rory attempts to explain the TARDIS and time travel to a stunned Canton, who eventually recovers. The group discovers what appears to be a large console made of cables and coated in some sort of extraterrestrial slime, as well as numerous boxes of Apollo space equipment.  Amy suggests to River that they find some way to kill the astronaut now in order to prevent it from killing the Doctor in the future; despite acknowledging that time can be rewritten, River explains that it is very complicated and doesn't work in the way that Amy has described.


Amy sees the mysterious creature again as it stands in the hallway, 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. She enters to find [[Silent|the alien]] waiting for her. As she looks at it, she remembers the previous sightings. [[Joy (The Impossible Astronaut)|A woman]] emerges from one of the cubicles and sees the alien. She thinks it one of her co-workers wearing a ''[[Star Trek]]'' mask. She looks at Amy and forgets the alien is there, then looks again and repeats the same words, before looking back to Amy and forgetting ''again''. She looks at the alien a third time. This time, she stops herself from repeating the same phrase, remembering the previous sightings. The alien kills her with [[electricity]], tells Amy the woman's name was Joy, and cryptically instructs Amy to “tell the Doctor what he must know, and what he must ''never'' know”. Amy exits and immediately forgets - but not before taking a photo of the alien on her cell phone. She returns to the Oval Office.
River dicovers a drain leading down into a tunnel network below the warehouse.  Climbing down, she discovers numerous hibernating aliens (the same species that Amy interacted with previously); however, she forgets her encounter as soon as she climbs back up the drain to warn the Doctor, instead calling that it is safe but that she wants to take another look. Suspicious, the Doctor sends Rory down with her. Eventually, River discovers a maintenance room, though the door is locked; while she works to unlock it, she and Rory discuss her relationship with the Doctor. River explains to him that when they first met, she was just an impressionable young girl and the Doctor knew everything about her; when she asks him to imagine herself in this situation, Rory says he doesn't have to. River explains that because she and the Doctor are traveling in opposite directions, at some point in her future, she will meet a version of him that doesn't know her -- and she's certain that it'll kill her. She succeeds in unlocking the door, opening it to find a large control console akin to the TARDIS.  Behind Rory, electricity crackles and something approaches.


[[File:Doc in Oval Office.jpg|thumb|180px|The Doctor dissects the problem.]]
[[File:Astronaut framed.jpg|left|180px|thumb|The astronaut approaches the Doctor and Amy.]]Above, Canton and Amy discuss the former agent's FBI career; he explains that he was kicked out for attitude problems, but that he merely wanted to get married.  He questions her relationship with the Doctor, leading her to explain that she knew him when she was a child and that he came back for her; before she can expand on this, they hear the little girl calling for help and are forced to run after her.  Amy, however, crumples over in pain and the Doctor stays behind to make sure that she is all right while Canton runs ahead.
The Doctor announces success. Nixon answers another of the mysterious calls while the Doctor, his companions, and Canton leave in the TARDIS. The Doctor tells the others that Jefferson, Adams, and Hamilton are three of America’s founding fathers, and that "Jefferson Adams Hamilton" isn't the name of the little girl calling, but of three streets that intersect near where she is calling from; the girl had been trying to tell the President where she was, not who she was. He asserts that the only junction in the United States of those three street names is five miles from [[Cape Kennedy]].


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 suggests to River they neutralise the astronaut now to prevent it killing the Doctor in the future. River tells Amy that it doesn’t work that way as nature of time travel is ''very'' complicated.
They find him further up the corridor, unconscious. As they examine him, Amy tells the Doctor that she is pregnant; he has little time to react to this, however, as he spots the astronaut approaching them. Amy recognizes it from the lakeside and grapples for Canton's gun. Her back is turned when the the astronaut lifts its faceplate, revealing the little girl is inside. Despite the Doctor's protests, Amy insists that she is merely saving his life, and shoots, realizing too late that she has just shot the girl they are supposed to be rescuing.
 
River discovers a tunnel leading down through a drain. She heads down and finds a secret tunnel filed with the mysterious aliens, and quickly runs up to warn the Doctor. She forgets they are there and goes to take another look with Rory. 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.
 
[[File:Astronaut framed.jpg|left|180px|thumb|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. She uses one of her devices. The tunnels cover the Earth and have been there for hundreds of years. Electricity crackles behind Rory and something approaches him.
 
Canton and Amy discuss the former agent's [[FBI]] career; he was kicked out for “attitude problems” as he wanted to get married. Amy hears the little girl calling and runs to the Doctor; Canton runs past them and they follow.
 
They find him unconscious. As they examine Canton, Amy tells the Doctor she is [[pregnant]]. They turn to see the astronaut, who lifts its faceplate. Despite River's warnings, Amy takes Canton's [[firearm|gun]] as the faceplate is fully lifted to reveal the little girl who called the President for help, and shoots her.


== Cast ==
== Cast ==

Revision as of 01:28, 11 November 2011

RealWorld.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 built on the references of the previous series to "the Silence".

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, and figure out just who is Canton Everett Delaware the Third. 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 former-FBI agent Canton in saving a terrified little girl from a mysterious spaceman. [1]


Plot

In the 17th century, Charles II bursts into his daughter's room, demanding to know the Eleventh Doctor's whereabouts. By her stands "My Mysterious Doctor," a painting of the Time Lord, and his clothes are strewn about the room. His daugher feigns innocence, asking, "Doctor who?" An audible sneeze comes out from beneath her skirt. The king lifts its hem with his sword to find the Doctor naked underneath, explaining that it's not as bad as it looks.

In 2011, Amy Pond reads to her husband, Rory Williams, from a history book in their kitchen; she recites an account of "a mysterious doctor" who was imprisoned in the Tower of London on the order of the king. Rory is not certain that it is the Doctor until Amy reads that the man was seen flying away from the Tower two days later. She also reads of the Doctor taking part in a break-out from a POW camp during World War II; the Doctor leads a group of men through a variety of tunnels, but is caught after accidentally digging up into the commandant's office.

Amy begins to wonder if the Doctor is being deliberately ridiculous to get their attention, a theory which Rory shrugs off; however, he doesn't notice the Doctor waving at them from a Laurel and Hardy film. Going through their mail, Amy finds a TARDIS-blue envelope plastered with stamps and labeled with the number 3; opening it, she pulls out a card with a map reference, date, and time. Though it is not signed, she easily deduces who it is from. Meanwhile, River Song receives an identical letter -- the only difference being that hers is labeled number 2 -- in her cell at Stormcage Containment Facility; the prisoner goes on alert when a guard warns his supervisor that she is packing with the intention of going to a planet called America.

Rory and Amy arrive in Utah, where they are happily greeted by the Doctor; River arrives shortly after. At a cafe, the Doctor and River compare diaries, and the Doctor informs his companions that they're going to be exploring space in 1969. They picnic by a lake, where the Doctor mentions in passing that he is over eleven hundred years old -- making him nearly two hundred years older than he was when Amy and Rory last saw him. Amy spots a figure watching them from a distant cliff, but forgets about it as soon she looks away. Not long after, an elderly man pulls up in a truck and waves to the Doctor, but makes no move to join the group. Behind them, an astronaut rises out of the water, wearing an Apollo 11-style spacesuit; spotting it, the Doctor gravely orders his friends that no matter what happens, they're not to interfere, and he approaches the astronaut, which appears to be waiting for him at the edge of the lake.

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

The astronaut shoots the Doctor twice, initiating his eleventh regeneration, but shoots again, killing him before the transformation is complete. The astronaut returns to the water as the Doctor's companions run to his body; River announces that he is truly dead, devastating Amy. The elderly man brings a container of gasoline to them, introducing himself as Canton Everett Delaware III and explaining that the Doctor told him they would need the gasoline. River explains that a Time Lord's body is one of the most sought-after things in the universe; they can't just leave him. Spotting a boat moored across the lake, Rory initiates a Viking-style funeral and burns the Doctor's body. Delaware presents River with his TARDIS-blue invitation, labeled with the number 4, and explains that although he won't be seeing them again, they will be seeing him


River, Amy, and Rory return to the cafe where they previously ate; while Rory and River are eager to figure out what the Doctor was planning, Amy is distraught and insists that it doesn't matter now that he's dead. Across the cafe, Rory spots another invitation lying on the table; this one is labeled number 1, and appears to have been addressed to the person the Doctor trusted the most. As they try to deduce who this is, the Doctor himself steps into the restaurant, greeting them happily despite being confused as to why they are all here. River slaps him in fury, remarking that "this is cold," but the Doctor appears to have no knowledge of the emotional turmoil they have just endured; it is only when he mentions that he is nine hundred and nine that his companions realize the version of the Doctor they saw die at the lakeside was a future version. River explains that they have been hired by someone who trusts him to investigate something involving space, 1969, and a man called Canton Everett Delaware III.

The group returns to the TARDIS, where River tells Amy and Rory in private that they cannot inform the Doctor of his impending death; because he has interacted with his own time stream, his knowledge of it could rip a hole in the universe. The Doctor, meanwhile, is reluctant to heed the mysterious summons; when River asks him to trust them, the Doctor asks who she really is and who she killed, regarding her refusal to answer either of these questions as proof of why he shouldn't. Amy eventually convinces him to go along with them by swearing on fish fingers and custard -- their first meal together. The Doctor sets the TARDIS on course for 1969; because of the mission's importance, the Doctor sets the TARDIS to "invisible" and "silent" (with help from River). Upon landing, the Doctor orders his companions to show some discretion, but is horrified to leave the TARDIS and discover that he has landed it in the Oval Office, where President Richard Nixon is conducting a private meeting with a younger Canton Delaware. Nixon would like Canton to conduct an investigation -- independent of the FBI, from which Canton was recently fired -- and recover a child that has been calling him every night, begging for help because the "space man" is coming to eat her. Nixon plays Canton a recording of one such phone call, where the child appears to identify herself as "Jefferson Adams Hamilton."

Canton and Nixon eventually become aware of the Doctor's presence, and Secret Service agents swarm the office. The TARDIS becomes visible again per the Doctor's request, and his companions step out. The Doctor proposes to sort out the mysterious phone calls, claiming to be an undercover agent on loan from Scotland Yard. Canton, thoroughly intrigued, tells the Doctor he has five minutes to solve the mystery; the Doctor rises to the challenge, ordering street maps covering all of Florida (among other things, which are not given to him).

While researching the street maps, Amy sees a mysterious, suited alien standing in the doorway of the Oval Office, and remembers their previous encounter on the shore of the lake; but when she looks away, she forgets it again. Feeling ill, she is escorted to the bathroom, where she finds the alien waiting for her. A woman who happened to be in the bathroom at the time is vaporized by the alien after seeing it and forgetting it numerous times; Amy, realizing the alien's power, takes a picture of it with her camera phone. The alien cryptically informs Amy that she will tell the Doctor "what he must know, and what he must never know" -- alluding to his eventual death. Amy exits and immediately forgets the encounter.

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

In the Oval Office, the Doctor achieves some success and departs in the TARDIS with his companions and Canton, whom he had previously ordered not to follow hi

. They materialize in a warehouse in Florida, just a few miles away from Cape Kennedy; Jefferson, Adams, and Hamilton are the names of three streets which intersect in view of the warehouse window. As they explore the warehouse, the Doctor confesses that they have most likely walked into a trap; the warehouse phone cords were cut, and so the child couldn't have possibly called Nixon from here. Meanwhile, Rory attempts to explain the TARDIS and time travel to a stunned Canton, who eventually recovers. The group discovers what appears to be a large console made of cables and coated in some sort of extraterrestrial slime, as well as numerous boxes of Apollo space equipment. Amy suggests to River that they find some way to kill the astronaut now in order to prevent it from killing the Doctor in the future; despite acknowledging that time can be rewritten, River explains that it is very complicated and doesn't work in the way that Amy has described.

River dicovers a drain leading down into a tunnel network below the warehouse. Climbing down, she discovers numerous hibernating aliens (the same species that Amy interacted with previously); however, she forgets her encounter as soon as she climbs back up the drain to warn the Doctor, instead calling that it is safe but that she wants to take another look. Suspicious, the Doctor sends Rory down with her. Eventually, River discovers a maintenance room, though the door is locked; while she works to unlock it, she and Rory discuss her relationship with the Doctor. River explains to him that when they first met, she was just an impressionable young girl and the Doctor knew everything about her; when she asks him to imagine herself in this situation, Rory says he doesn't have to. River explains that because she and the Doctor are traveling in opposite directions, at some point in her future, she will meet a version of him that doesn't know her -- and she's certain that it'll kill her. She succeeds in unlocking the door, opening it to find a large control console akin to the TARDIS. Behind Rory, electricity crackles and something approaches.

The astronaut approaches the Doctor and Amy.

Above, Canton and Amy discuss the former agent's FBI career; he explains that he was kicked out for attitude problems, but that he merely wanted to get married. He questions her relationship with the Doctor, leading her to explain that she knew him when she was a child and that he came back for her; before she can expand on this, they hear the little girl calling for help and are forced to run after her. Amy, however, crumples over in pain and the Doctor stays behind to make sure that she is all right while Canton runs ahead.

They find him further up the corridor, unconscious. As they examine him, Amy tells the Doctor that she is pregnant; he has little time to react to this, however, as he spots the astronaut approaching them. Amy recognizes it from the lakeside and grapples for Canton's gun. Her back is turned when the the astronaut lifts its faceplate, revealing the little girl is inside. Despite the Doctor's protests, Amy insists that she is merely saving his life, and shoots, realizing too late that she has just shot the girl they are supposed to be rescuing.

Cast

Crew

General production staff

Script department

Camera and lighting department

Art department

Costume department

Make-up and prosthetics

Movement

Casting

General post-production staff

Special and visual effects

Sound



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.
          

Rhys Jones is credited as a "Prop Chargehand" rather than a "Props Chargehand".


References

The Doctor

  • An older Eleventh Doctor, who is eleven hundred and three years old, begins to regenerate, but is killed before the process completes.
  • The younger Doctor states his current age is nine hundred and nine.
  • 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 American founding fathers mentioned in the girl's message fancied him, although he does not identify which two.
  • In The Wedding of River Song, it is shown that the Doctor was actually the Teselecta in his form.

Music

  • When The Doctor, Amy, Rory and River are in the diner before going to Lake Silencio, "Rolling in the Deep" by Adele is playing in the background.


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, 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 wears a fez in a Laurel & Hardy film, The Flying Deuces.
  • The eleven hundred three year old Doctor wears a Stetson hat, and proclaims that "Stetsons are cool". As with the last time he tried to adopt headgear, it is promptly dealt with by River Song's gun.


Foods and beverages

  • The Doctor thought wine would taste more like 'the gums', referring to wine gums.
  • The Doctor asks for twelve Jammy Dodgers.

Years

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

TARDIS

  • The Doctor makes the TARDIS invisible when he materialises 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 false, 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 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 dedication was omitted from the DVD and Blu-ray release.
  • 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 the 22nd April, 2011, the local date and time in Britain (a 7-hour difference from Utah) would be two minutes after midnight on 23rd April, as DW: Let's Kill Hitler establishes the point of death as 5:02pm local time. 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 tunnelling out of a German POW camp is based on an actual incident that occurred during World War II, immortalised in the film The Great Escape and parodied in the television series Hogan's Heroes.
  • Joy asks if the Silent is wearing a Star Trek mask. Star Trek was cancelled the same year 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. Oddly enough, the Doctor doesn't recognise the reference when River Song calls him 'Benjamin' (her affair) in Let's Kill Hitler
  • William Morgan Sheppard is the real life father of Mark Sheppard.
  • The Silents bear a slight resemblence to The Gentelemen from Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

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 been proven true in A Good Man Goes to War and Let's Kill Hitler.
  • 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.
  • During the Doctor's death scene, someone is visible by Canton's car.
  • When the Doctor is shot the second time during his regeneration cycle, the regeneration energy just cuts off. It does not fade away like during a normal regeneration.
    File:Shadow-impossible-astronaut.jpg
    Production Error - the figure by Canton's car.
  • 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.
  • When Amy and Rory get off the bus, it drives away and then, when the Doctor and Amy hug, the bus is nowhere to be seen.
  • In the scene when the Silent gets ready to kill Joy, electricity can be seen flying into his body, but on the mirror next to him the electricity cannot be seen.
  • Canton Delaware offers another example of British usage by American characters. Referring to the TARDIS ability to travel in space and time and to be bigger on the inside, he asks "How long have Scotland Yard had this?" An American would have said "How long has Scotland Yard had this?"

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

For the present Doctor, Amy and Rory

For the future Doctor

For adult River Song

For young Melody

For the astronaut at the lake

Home video releases

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

Released as Series 6 Part 1 with Day of the Moon, The Curse of the Black Spot, The Doctor's Wife, The Rebel Flesh, The Almost People and A Good Man Goes to War on 11 July 2011.

External links

Footnotes