The Angels Take Manhattan (TV story): Difference between revisions
(This only includes credited cast members, right?) |
(→Plot: he) |
||
Line 26: | Line 26: | ||
A simple trip to [[New York City]] goes horribly wrong when Rory is sent back to the [[1930s]] by the [[Weeping Angels]]. There he finds that River is investigating the angels and Manhattan has become their hunting grounds. The Doctor and Amy must find Rory before it is too late, but they soon find that not every point in time can be changed. And here, the Doctor must do the one thing he has been dreading - say a final farewell to Amelia Pond. | A simple trip to [[New York City]] goes horribly wrong when Rory is sent back to the [[1930s]] by the [[Weeping Angels]]. There he finds that River is investigating the angels and Manhattan has become their hunting grounds. The Doctor and Amy must find Rory before it is too late, but they soon find that not every point in time can be changed. And here, the Doctor must do the one thing he has been dreading - say a final farewell to Amelia Pond. | ||
== Plot == | DOCTOR BREAK DOWN IN TEARS AT THE DEATHS OF BOTH OF HIS LOVED ONES.== Plot == | ||
Art collector and mob boss, [[Julius Grayle]], has hired private detective [[Sam Garner]], but wonders if Sam believes the reason he has been hired - and that statues can move. Sam simply says he believe what he's told to believe; as long as he's paid. Grayle sends detective Garner to [[Winter Quay]], an apartment building "where the statues live". Once Garner leaves for the Quay, Grayle looks out his office window, and notices one of two statues standing outside his mansion has disappeared when he wasn't looking. When Garner arrivebs at Winter Quay, he notices the residents of the Quay and the surrounding apartment buildings watching his arrival with dread. A little girl sees him from the window of a building across from the Quay, mimicking weeping; he ignores this, thinking the girl is playing games. Garner enters the Quay, unaware of a [[Weeping Angel]] sitting on a plinth near the building awakens as he enters. | Art collector and mob boss, [[Julius Grayle]], has hired private detective [[Sam Garner]], but wonders if Sam believes the reason he has been hired - and that statues can move. Sam simply says he believe what he's told to believe; as long as he's paid. Grayle sends detective Garner to [[Winter Quay]], an apartment building "where the statues live". Once Garner leaves for the Quay, Grayle looks out his office window, and notices one of two statues standing outside his mansion has disappeared when he wasn't looking. When Garner arrivebs at Winter Quay, he notices the residents of the Quay and the surrounding apartment buildings watching his arrival with dread. A little girl sees him from the window of a building across from the Quay, mimicking weeping; he ignores this, thinking the girl is playing games. Garner enters the Quay, unaware of a [[Weeping Angel]] sitting on a plinth near the building awakens as he enters. | ||
Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
In the meantime, Rory has been tossed in the basement and given a book of matches by the guard, who tells him that he'll last longer with them because the lights are out. Left alone in darkness, Rory hears the giggling again, scaring him into lighting a match. He comes across several stone cherubs, and during the time Rory takes to light another match after the other one has gone out, the cherubs move closer and begin to attack him. He repeatedly lights the matches, but they keep extinguishing. Down to one match, Rory watches as a cherub that got close to him blows it out. Above, as Grayle attempts to threaten River, she hears the TARDIS trying to materialise and tells her captor that he'd better watch out when her husband "gets home". With a shockwave, the TARDIS lands, knocking out Grayle. | In the meantime, Rory has been tossed in the basement and given a book of matches by the guard, who tells him that he'll last longer with them because the lights are out. Left alone in darkness, Rory hears the giggling again, scaring him into lighting a match. He comes across several stone cherubs, and during the time Rory takes to light another match after the other one has gone out, the cherubs move closer and begin to attack him. He repeatedly lights the matches, but they keep extinguishing. Down to one match, Rory watches as a cherub that got close to him blows it out. Above, as Grayle attempts to threaten River, she hears the TARDIS trying to materialise and tells her captor that he'd better watch out when her husband "gets home". With a shockwave, the TARDIS lands, knocking out Grayle. | ||
In the TARDIS, the Doctor is busy fixing his hair for his wife, annoying Amy. Once done, they depart and find River. He asks her how [[Stormcage Containment Facility|Stormcage]] is, only to learn that she was pardoned years earlier in her timeline, because her alleged victim, the Doctor, apparently never existed. She has received a posting as a professor of [[archaeology]]. The Doctor tells River they either have to break her wrist or the Angel's to get her free. Unfortunately, Amy read ahead again and knows that River breaks her wrist to get free, so it's the only way now. However, Amy has a brilliant idea to know what's ahead without details or spoilers: they read the chapter titles. Reading one, Amy learns where Rory is and rushes off. After she does, the Doctor reads the table of contents and sees the last chapter is labelled "Amelia's Last Farewell". | In the TARDIS, the Doctor is busy fixing his hair for his wife, annoying Amy. Once done, they depart and find River. He asks her how [[Stormcage Containment Facility|Stormcage]] is, only to learn that she was pardoned years earlier in her timeline, because her alleged victim, the Doctor, apparently never existed. She has received a posting as a professor of [[archaeology]]. The Doctor tells River they either have to break her wrist or the Angel's to get her free. Unfortunately, Amy read ahead again and knows that River breaks her wrist to get free, so it's the only way now. However, Amy has a brilliant idea to know what's ahead without details or spoilers: they read the chapter titles. Reading one, Amy learns where Rory is and rushes off. After she does, the Doctor reads the table of contents and sees the last chapter is labelled "Amelia's Last Farewell". Angry at this, the Doctor tells River to free her wrist and not break it and heads off to find Amy.<!--- DO NOT add a category other than Floor 500 to this page!---> | ||
__NOTOC__ __NOEDITSECTION__ | |||
<mainpage-leftcolumn-start /> | |||
<!-------------------------------------------- | |||
WELCOME TO THE FRONT PAGE OF THE TARDIS INDEX FILE! | |||
---------------------------------------------- | |||
You will note that none of the content of the front page is actually on the front page. For ease of maintenance, all sections of the front page are in a template of their own. Those templates follow the naming pattern {{Doctor Who Wiki/Section Name}}. When those templates are used on this page — and ONLY when they're used on this page — they can be called by dropping "Doctor Who Wiki", as with {{/Section Name}}. This is achieved by linking the subpage with the name of a section to the template with that name. Thus, there is the article subpage: Doctor Who Wiki/Comics and the template page, Template:Doctor Who Wiki/Comics. If you create a new section, you need to create both an article subpage and a template page of the same names. Changing the name of the front page will turn the page into a series of red links. Note that if you want to edit the actual content of the page, you have to click the little symbol of a hand holding a pen (✍) within that section. | |||
Why have we radically changed the coding of the page? In part to protect against vandalism. The front page cannot be totally destroyed by just one action. Rather, each individual section must be attacked for the page to be seriously compromised. It is now possible to fully lock the main page without sacrificing any great editability. New sections can be created, inspected, and vetted before they appear on the front page. And the regular maintenance of the page is now made much easier by allowing editors to just concentrate on the one section they want to change. No more hunting through lines of obscure code to find the bit that changes the "Quote of the week". Now you just click on the edit symbol close to the "QOTW", and change away. Easy. | |||
In terms of actual code used to create the page, it's fairly simple, but it's also fairly precise. You can certainly change the order of different sections. You can certainly add sections. But note that the left and right columns operate as different components — albeit with exactly the same syntax. | |||
======= | |||
Left Column | |||
======= | |||
The following creates the left column. The sections must be precisely here, placed out in a line unseparated by line breaks. Their order, left to right, | |||
indicates their order, top to bottom, on the page. Note that televised episodes are always to be at | |||
the top-most part of the page, so {{/Television}} should always follow {{/Top}}. --> | |||
{| style="width:100%; background-color:transparent"<!--background-color:#FFE600;--> | |||
|- align=center | |||
|{{/Top}} {{/Television}} | |||
|} | |||
{| style="width:100%; background-color:transparent" | |||
|-align=center | |||
|{{/Audio}} {{/Prose}} {{/Comics}} | |||
|- | |||
|<!--{{/Poll}}--> | |||
|} | |||
<mainpage-endcolumn /> | |||
<!-------- | |||
Right Column | |||
---------- | |||
The following creates the right column. The syntax is just like the left column. The trick when figuring out what to put in each column is to try to balance the columns as much as possible. The left column | |||
should be about as long as the right column. This is difficult, and fairly impossible to achieve precisely. Remember to allow for the advertisement | |||
which appears on the right column. Remember too to set your browser width at no more than about 1024px for testing; preferably pull your | |||
browser window width down to the point that the two columns stop collapsing on each other. That way you can guarantee the way this page | |||
will appear on most browsers. --> | |||
<mainpage-rightcolumn-start /> | |||
{| id=mainpage-highlight style="background-color:transparent;text-align:left" | |||
| {{/Aotm}} {{/Quote}} {{/Pics}}{{/FastFacts}}{{/News}}<!--{{Doctor Who Wiki/Help}}--> | |||
|} | |||
<mainpage-endcolumn /> | |||
<br style="clear:both;" /> | |||
{|style="width:98%" | |||
|- | |||
|{{/Categories}} | |||
|-id=mainpage-highlight style="width:96%;background-color:transparent;margin-bottom:20px;padding:10px" | |||
|{{/Forum}} | |||
|-style="background-color:transparent" | |||
|{{/Wikis}}{{/About}} | |||
|} | |||
[[bg:Начална страница]] | |||
[[de:Doctor Who Wiki]] | |||
[[es:Doctor Who Wiki]] | |||
[[fr:Accueil]] | |||
[[nl:Hoofdpagina]] | |||
[[pt:]] | |||
[[ro:Doctor Who Wiki]] | |||
[[ru:Doctor Who Wiki]] | |||
<!--[[he:]] Note that w:c:tardis no longer links to a Hebrew wiki, because there | |||
are 2 of them, both having just 1 page of content. If either of these | |||
2 Hebrew wikis gets a community going, we might relink in the future--> | |||
<!-- Again, please do not put this page in any categories other than Floor 500. Thanks. :) --> | |||
[[Category:Floor 500]] | |||
[[Category:Floor 500]] | |||
Amy checks the basement, only to find Rory gone. She returns to the Doctor, who is now sitting on the stairs, deep in thought. River emerges from the collection room with her scanner, saying that Rory is at [[Winter Quay]], having only been moved in space, rather than time. The Doctor is delighted to see River didn't have to break her wrist to get free. As he grabs her hand however, River grimaces in pain, revealing that she did indeed break it. He heals her hand with a little of his regeneration energy, being scolded by River for wasting the energy. Amy asks River why the Doctor is in a bad mood and River subtly says they should never let the Doctor see them age. They then commandeer one of the mob's cars and drive off to get Rory. However, they leave the doors open. The two statues Grayle watched vanish from their place just as he comes to. He sees them enter and tries running for his life, only to get trapped. | Amy checks the basement, only to find Rory gone. She returns to the Doctor, who is now sitting on the stairs, deep in thought. River emerges from the collection room with her scanner, saying that Rory is at [[Winter Quay]], having only been moved in space, rather than time. The Doctor is delighted to see River didn't have to break her wrist to get free. As he grabs her hand however, River grimaces in pain, revealing that she did indeed break it. He heals her hand with a little of his regeneration energy, being scolded by River for wasting the energy. Amy asks River why the Doctor is in a bad mood and River subtly says they should never let the Doctor see them age. They then commandeer one of the mob's cars and drive off to get Rory. However, they leave the doors open. The two statues Grayle watched vanish from their place just as he comes to. He sees them enter and tries running for his life, only to get trapped. | ||
Line 57: | Line 129: | ||
The group awake back in the cemetery in 2012 Queens with the TARDIS, relieved to be alive, and the Doctor happily explains that Winter Quay's negation from the timeline by the paradox meant that they never went there in the first place. Rory complains that when they came to New York, he wanted to go to a pub. The Doctor decides they can all do that; a family outing. However, as everyone boards the TARDIS, Rory notices a gravestone with his name on it, and immediately vanishes; a surviving Angel (surviving because it didn't eat any paradox corrupted time energy) has snuck up behind Rory and sent him back in time, and the group notice that Rory's gravestone now reads that he was 82 years of age when he died. | The group awake back in the cemetery in 2012 Queens with the TARDIS, relieved to be alive, and the Doctor happily explains that Winter Quay's negation from the timeline by the paradox meant that they never went there in the first place. Rory complains that when they came to New York, he wanted to go to a pub. The Doctor decides they can all do that; a family outing. However, as everyone boards the TARDIS, Rory notices a gravestone with his name on it, and immediately vanishes; a surviving Angel (surviving because it didn't eat any paradox corrupted time energy) has snuck up behind Rory and sent him back in time, and the group notice that Rory's gravestone now reads that he was 82 years of age when he died. | ||
The Doctor explains to a distraught Amy that he cannot go back for Rory. Creating another paradox in New York will destroy the city. Amy asks the Doctor if she would end up where Rory was if the Angel touched her, of which he cannot be certain. River, however, encourages her mother, believing her plan to be sound. Despite the Doctor's attempts to talk Amy out of it, his mother-in-law approaches the Angel. Amy holds her daughter's hand behind herself and addressing her by her birth name, Melody, tells her to take care of the Doctor. Amy turns, crying, to the Doctor, and says "Raggedy Man... goodbye," as the Angel sends her back with Rory. To the Doctor's horror and distress, "And his loving wife, Amelia Williams, aged 87," appears on the grave stone below Rory's name and age. | The Doctor explains to a distraught Amy that he cannot go back for Rory. Creating another paradox in New York will destroy the city. Amy asks the Doctor if she would end up where Rory was if the Angel touched her, of which he cannot be certain. River, however, encourages her mother, believing her plan to be sound. Despite the Doctor's attempts to talk Amy out of it, his mother-in-law approaches the Angel. Amy holds her daughter's hand behind herself and addressing her by her birth name, Melody, tells her to take care of the Doctor. Amy turns, crying, to the Doctor, and says "Raggedy Man... goodbye," as the Angel sends her back with Rory. To the Doctor's horror and distress, "And his loving wife, Amelia Williams, aged 87," appears on the grave stone below Rory's name and age. T | ||
[[File:Tumb.jpg|thumb|left|Amy and Rory's gravestone.]] | [[File:Tumb.jpg|thumb|left|Amy and Rory's gravestone.]] |
Revision as of 14:26, 25 October 2012
The Angels Take Manhattan was the fifth episode of the seventh series of Doctor Who produced by BBC Wales. It saw the final appearances of Amy Pond and Rory Williams, and the return of River Song. It marked the return of the Weeping Angels as well; they've appeared at least once in each season of the Steven Moffat era of Doctor Who so far.
Synopsis
A simple trip to New York City goes horribly wrong when Rory is sent back to the 1930s by the Weeping Angels. There he finds that River is investigating the angels and Manhattan has become their hunting grounds. The Doctor and Amy must find Rory before it is too late, but they soon find that not every point in time can be changed. And here, the Doctor must do the one thing he has been dreading - say a final farewell to Amelia Pond.
DOCTOR BREAK DOWN IN TEARS AT THE DEATHS OF BOTH OF HIS LOVED ONES.== Plot == Art collector and mob boss, Julius Grayle, has hired private detective Sam Garner, but wonders if Sam believes the reason he has been hired - and that statues can move. Sam simply says he believe what he's told to believe; as long as he's paid. Grayle sends detective Garner to Winter Quay, an apartment building "where the statues live". Once Garner leaves for the Quay, Grayle looks out his office window, and notices one of two statues standing outside his mansion has disappeared when he wasn't looking. When Garner arrivebs at Winter Quay, he notices the residents of the Quay and the surrounding apartment buildings watching his arrival with dread. A little girl sees him from the window of a building across from the Quay, mimicking weeping; he ignores this, thinking the girl is playing games. Garner enters the Quay, unaware of a Weeping Angel sitting on a plinth near the building awakens as he enters.
Garner enters a room in Winter Quay that has his name on it, unaware of the Angels stalking him through the building. He encounters an elderly version of himself, who warns him that "they" are going to send him back in time now he is there. Garner is then attacked by the Weeping Angels. He manages to avoid them, as something large is heard approaching Winter Quay from outside. When he finds the Angels have blocked the stairwell, Garner is forced onto the roof and comes face to face with the snarling Statue of Liberty, revealed to be a Weeping Angel of gigantic size. As he succumbs to his fate, someone is writing about Garner's demise on a typewriter.
In 2012 New York, the Doctor and the Ponds are having a picnic in Central Park. Amy is annoyed by the Doctor's habit of reading his pulp paperback novel, Melody Malone: Private Detective in Old New York Town, out loud, while he in turn is perturbed by Amy's use of reading glasses. The Doctor tells Amy that he doesn't like her glasses because they make her eye look "all liney". After taking Amy's glasses off, he realises that the lines are minor wrinkles in her skin and that her eyes look better with with the glasses. Amy then starts arguing with the Doctor about how she looks, asking Rory (who is a safe distance away from his wife) if there are lines around her eyes. Rory claims he never noticed them, walking back to his wife, who happily kisses him. Rory goes off to get more coffee for them as Amy tells the Doctor to tell her a story. The Doctor is amused she has changed her mind. The Doctor tears out the last page, telling Amy that he hates endings. The story will never end now, for him.
On Rory's way back, he hears the sound of children giggling, as a stone cherub under Angel of the Waters in Bethesda Fountain disappears. As Rory passes an archway and enters a darkened Bethesda Terrace, the giggling gets closer and closer. In the meantime, the Doctor's book says Melody saw a thin man appear on 3 April 1938, and followed him until he noticed her; the Doctor is shocked by what the thin man says to Melody: "I was just getting coffee for the Doctor and Amy. Hello, River." "Hello, Dad," River Song replies. The Doctor and Amy run to the TARDIS, while in 1938 Rory questions River about how he got there as he was just walking under the archway in the park. River tells him she has not idea, but he better put his hands up; armed men are surrounding them.
In the meantime, the Doctor and Amy have boarded the TARDIS as Amy continues reading from the book, which has River saying the TARDIS cannot land in New York during this time because of several time distortions. Comparing it to trying to land a plane in a blizzard, she says even she couldn't do it. An annoyed Doctor attempts to land the TARDIS, but it is bounced back to 2012 New York by a wall of temporal energy. Landing in a cemetery in Queens, the Doctor tells Amy to stop reading ahead in the book because reading the events written in it causes them to become fixed in time. However, Amy has read that River and Rory have been taken to Grayle's mansion (406 94th Street, Manhattan), where River comments on the mob boss's taste in Qin artifacts. Hearing this, the Doctor figures out how to get "landing lights". Going back to 221 BCE, he leaves a message on one of the vases: "Yowza!" (in period Chinese).
As River is led into Grayle's office, Rory is placed in the basement with "the babies". Grayle tells River that "they" are everywhere, but no one seems to notice. He then shows her the prize of his collection: a chained and damaged Weeping Angel. River says she's met them before, and that the Angel is screaming out in pain to its comrades; this is why Grayle has so many locks on his doors. However, Grayle quickly turns the tables on River by briefly turning off the lights long enough for the shackled Angel to grab her wrist. Grayle demands to know everything River knows about the Angels.
In the meantime, Rory has been tossed in the basement and given a book of matches by the guard, who tells him that he'll last longer with them because the lights are out. Left alone in darkness, Rory hears the giggling again, scaring him into lighting a match. He comes across several stone cherubs, and during the time Rory takes to light another match after the other one has gone out, the cherubs move closer and begin to attack him. He repeatedly lights the matches, but they keep extinguishing. Down to one match, Rory watches as a cherub that got close to him blows it out. Above, as Grayle attempts to threaten River, she hears the TARDIS trying to materialise and tells her captor that he'd better watch out when her husband "gets home". With a shockwave, the TARDIS lands, knocking out Grayle.
In the TARDIS, the Doctor is busy fixing his hair for his wife, annoying Amy. Once done, they depart and find River. He asks her how Stormcage is, only to learn that she was pardoned years earlier in her timeline, because her alleged victim, the Doctor, apparently never existed. She has received a posting as a professor of archaeology. The Doctor tells River they either have to break her wrist or the Angel's to get her free. Unfortunately, Amy read ahead again and knows that River breaks her wrist to get free, so it's the only way now. However, Amy has a brilliant idea to know what's ahead without details or spoilers: they read the chapter titles. Reading one, Amy learns where Rory is and rushes off. After she does, the Doctor reads the table of contents and sees the last chapter is labelled "Amelia's Last Farewell". Angry at this, the Doctor tells River to free her wrist and not break it and heads off to find Amy.
The Angels Take Manhattan (TV story)/Categories |
The Angels Take Manhattan (TV story)/Forum |
The Angels Take Manhattan (TV story)/WikisThe Angels Take Manhattan (TV story)/About |
Amy checks the basement, only to find Rory gone. She returns to the Doctor, who is now sitting on the stairs, deep in thought. River emerges from the collection room with her scanner, saying that Rory is at Winter Quay, having only been moved in space, rather than time. The Doctor is delighted to see River didn't have to break her wrist to get free. As he grabs her hand however, River grimaces in pain, revealing that she did indeed break it. He heals her hand with a little of his regeneration energy, being scolded by River for wasting the energy. Amy asks River why the Doctor is in a bad mood and River subtly says they should never let the Doctor see them age. They then commandeer one of the mob's cars and drive off to get Rory. However, they leave the doors open. The two statues Grayle watched vanish from their place just as he comes to. He sees them enter and tries running for his life, only to get trapped.
The Doctor, Amy and River arrive at Winter Quay, where Rory has been exploring on his own. They find him on the exact same floor where Sam Garner arrived. At the end of the hall is a Weeping Angel. The way out is blocked. Rory discovers a room marked "R. Williams" and enters with Amy. River and the Doctor linger, only to see the Angel is smiling. Inside the room is an old man who calls to Amy and is revealed to be Rory's future self. Amy holds the older Rory's hand as he passes away.
The Doctor sadly informs Rory this means the Angels will send him back in time and keep him imprisoned in the Quay until he dies, as they've seen. Amy won't be sent with him, explaining why the older Rory was so pleased to see her. Rory decides to defy this. If the Angels aren't able to catch him, he won't die there. However, the Doctor notes that Rory will have to run for his entire life then. River then realises that if Rory escapes, the subsequent negation of the timeline in which the Angels trapped Rory at Winter Quay will create a paradox, which will in turn poison the time energy the Angels feed off of and kill them.
Something large is heard approaching Winter Quay, forcing the group to decide that Rory and River's plan will work. Amy and Rory run out, but the Doctor and River are forced back into the room by two Weeping Angels. Amy and Rory enter the stairway, seeing an Angel is blocking the way out downwards. Thus, they climb up to the roof, where they are confronted by the snarling Statue of Liberty. Back inside, the Doctor causes a distraction that allows him and River to escape the Angels and use the same route as Amy and Rory. Back on the roof, Rory sees the only way out is to jump and commit suicide, thereby preventing the Angels from sending him back in time to become the aged Rory who just died, creating a paradox which would kill the Angels and keep him from having been sent from 2012 to 1938. Amy tries talking him out of it, but defends the idea by reminding her that he has died and come back to life numerous times before. Amy decides to jump with Rory just as the Doctor and River reach the roof. Before the Doctor can stop Amy or Rory, the two jump from the roof, and embrace as they fall to their deaths. The paradox Rory's death has created then begins to take effect.
The group awake back in the cemetery in 2012 Queens with the TARDIS, relieved to be alive, and the Doctor happily explains that Winter Quay's negation from the timeline by the paradox meant that they never went there in the first place. Rory complains that when they came to New York, he wanted to go to a pub. The Doctor decides they can all do that; a family outing. However, as everyone boards the TARDIS, Rory notices a gravestone with his name on it, and immediately vanishes; a surviving Angel (surviving because it didn't eat any paradox corrupted time energy) has snuck up behind Rory and sent him back in time, and the group notice that Rory's gravestone now reads that he was 82 years of age when he died.
The Doctor explains to a distraught Amy that he cannot go back for Rory. Creating another paradox in New York will destroy the city. Amy asks the Doctor if she would end up where Rory was if the Angel touched her, of which he cannot be certain. River, however, encourages her mother, believing her plan to be sound. Despite the Doctor's attempts to talk Amy out of it, his mother-in-law approaches the Angel. Amy holds her daughter's hand behind herself and addressing her by her birth name, Melody, tells her to take care of the Doctor. Amy turns, crying, to the Doctor, and says "Raggedy Man... goodbye," as the Angel sends her back with Rory. To the Doctor's horror and distress, "And his loving wife, Amelia Williams, aged 87," appears on the grave stone below Rory's name and age. T
River comforts the Doctor, knowing that he can never see Amy and Rory again; in the TARDIS, the Doctor apologises to River, as Amy and Rory were her parents. River says that it's okay, reminding the Doctor not to travel alone. He then asks her to travel with him and River says she'd be more than willing to share adventures with him, but not all the time; "one psychopath per TARDIS." Heading up to a room to begin writing the book, River tells the Doctor that while he may not listen to her, he may listen to Amy. After giving her the story for publishing, she'll make sure Amy leaves a message for him in the book's afterword.
The Doctor remembers that he tore out the last page from the book and rushes back to Central Park immediately after their picnic. The Doctor grabs the page and reads Amy's message: "Afterword, by Amelia Williams. Hello, old friend, and here we are. You and me, on the last page. By the time you read these words, Rory and I will be long gone, so know that we lived well, and were very happy. And, above all else, know that we will love you, always. Sometimes, I do worry about you though; I think, once we're gone, you won't be coming back here for a long while, and you might be alone, which you should never be. Don't be alone, Doctor."
Amy has just one more request from her "Raggedy Doctor"; to go back to her seven-year-old self sitting in the garden and tell her a story:
"And do one more thing for me: there's a little girl, waiting in a garden; she's going to wait a long while, so she is going to need a lot of hope. Go to her. Tell her a story. Tell her that, if she's patient, the days are coming that she'll never forget. Tell her she'll go to sea and fight pirates, she'll fall in love with a man who'll wait two thousand years to keep her safe. Tell her she'll give hope to the greatest painter who ever lived, and save a whale in outer space."
The Doctor appears to honour Amy's request as young Amelia is seen waiting for him in the garden and looks up as the sound of the TARDIS is heard; as this happens, Amy finishes the story by narrating "Tell her: This is the story of Amelia Pond - and this, is how it ends."
Cast
- The Doctor - Matt Smith
- Amy Pond - Karen Gillan
- Rory Williams - Arthur Darvill
- River Song - Alex Kingston
- Julius Grayle - Mike McShane
- Sam Garner - Rob David
- Hood - Bentley Kalu
- Foreman - Ozzie Yue
- Old Garner - Burnell Tucker
Crew
Executive Producers Caroline Skinner and Steven Moffat |
|
|
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
Buildings
- The Statue of Liberty is revealed to be possessed by a Weeping Angel.
Cars and trucks
- The Doctor adjusts his hair before exiting the TARDIS, using a brass plaque as a mirror. The plaque reads "Type FD 12 MK V11 Rolls Royce Motors Crewe England". It has a space in which to list a NATO stock number.
Companies
- Rory uses Brightwell & Hyman matches to defend himself from the cherubic Weeping Angels.
- Melody Malone: Private Detective in Old New York Town is published by Pond River.
Foods and beverages
TARDIS
- River tells Rory that the TARDIS Translation circuit 'sticks around' when he sees writing on ancient Chinese vases being translated.
Theories and concepts
- By changing his future and creating a paradox Amy and Rory's actions wipe out the Angels' Winter Quay building.
Time
- The Doctor says that there are significant time distortions around New York.
- If someone learns of their personal future by reading about it, it becomes a fixed point in time and therefore cannot be changed.
- Due to the paradox created by Amy and Rory, the Doctor cannot travel back in time to visit them without destroying New York City.
Timeline
Story notes
- In-universe, Melody Malone: Private Detective in Old New York Town is written by River Song based on what happened to her in New York just before and during the events of TV: The Angels Take Manhattan, and is published by Pond River. PROSE: The Angel's Kiss: A Melody Malone Mystery is an e-book tie-in novel, written by Justin Richards, that segues into the events of River's book and TV: The Angels Take Manhattan. It was released on 4 October 2012.[1][2]
- This is the first episode to feature River Song that is neither part of a two-parter nor at least preceded by a cameo appearance of River in the previous episode.
- As with all of the Series 7 episodes, this episode has individually stylized opening credits: the time vortex appears blue and gray, and the Doctor Who logo resembles the Statue of Liberty in color and pattern.
- Amy asks the Doctor to return to meet a young Amelia Pond the morning after he left her waiting in the garden in The Eleventh Hour to tell her about the adventures they will have together. The older Amy was dreaming about that morning when the Doctor came back to pick her up the night before her wedding at the end of The Eleventh Hour. Steven Moffat said of the scene, "After showing Amelia Pond in the garden as a young girl in The Eleventh Hour, Karen's first episode, the final shot in Saturday's The Angels Take Manhattan is a punchline I have been waiting to tell for two and a half years."
- The text inside Melody Malone: Private Detective in Old New York Town is visible for a second just after the Doctor and Amy bounce off 1938 and land in the graveyard. The book used in the episode is actually The Thin Man by Dashiell Hammett. Melody/River refers to her father as "the skinny guy" when describing his arrival in 1938. Hammett wrote hardboiled detective stories, and the film of one of them, The Maltese Falcon, is the original film noir, a genre which this episode pays extensive homage to.
Ratings
to be added
Rumours
- The Statue of Liberty is a Weeping Angel.[3] This turned out to be true.
Filming locations
- Central Park, New York City (as itself)
- Box Cemetery, Llanelli, Wales (as Queens, New York)
- Glamorgan Building, Cardiff University, Cardiff, Wales (as Julius Grayle's mansion exterior)
- North Building, Queens Complex, Cardiff University, Cardiff, Wales (as Winter Quay entrance)
- HH Wills Physics Laboratory, University of Bristol, Bristol (as Winter Quay foyer and staircase)
- Upper Boat Studios' parking structure's roof (as Winter Quay roof)
- Upper Boat Studios
Production errors
- The Winter Quay is located near Battery Park on the south side of Manhattan, however several shots from the roof show the Chrysler Building nearby in the background, a building located miles north and is not visible from Battery Park.
- The map that The Doctor uses to locate Rory, in 1938, shows both the Battery City Park, as well as the Battery Tunnel. These were not in existence in 1938.
- The Photoshoot PA who was credited did not appear in this episode, but instead appeared in Asylum of the Daleks.
- Just after Amy and Rory jump off of the roof and the Doctor is looking down at them, River is in the background standing normally looking at the Doctor. In the very next shot she is leaning on the ledge, looking down at Amy and Rory.
- As the Doctor examines River's broken wrist, she says it is "pretty bad, too". In this shot, the Doctor has his mouth open as if showing the pain of seeing her hand. But in the next shot, his mouth is closed.
- The envelope under the cash on Julius Grayle's desk shows his address as "406 94th St, Manhattan NY 18095-7_____" Five-digit ZIP Codes were first introduced on 1 July 1963, and many years elapsed before their use became commonplace on personal mail. The "plus-four code" extensions were not introduced until 1983. Whether the code's inclusion was actually a production error, or if the envelope had been posted by a sender from the future, has not been confirmed.
Continuity
- Amy Pond calls the Doctor "Raggedy man". (TV: The Eleventh Hour, The Big Bang, The Girl Who Waited, Pond Life Part 5)
- The Doctor used some of his regenerative energy to repair River Song's hand. He did something similar when recharging the last power source in the TARDIS after it traveled to a Parallel World. (TV: Rise of the Cybermen)
- In response to the Doctor healing her hand, River exclaims "You embarrass me!" much as the Doctor previously said to her. (TV:The Wedding of River Song)
- The afterword Amy wrote in Melody Malone: Private Detective in Old New York Town was a message for the Doctor, which made reference to various adventures the Doctor and Amy had had together: saving a whale in space (TV: The Beast Below), fighting pirates (TV: The Curse of the Black Spot), inspiring a great artist (TV: Vincent and the Doctor), and falling in love with a man who would wait two thousand years for her. (TV: The Big Bang)
- Amy asks the Doctor to return to meet a young Amelia Pond the morning after he left her waiting in the garden to tell her about the adventures they will have together. The older Amy was dreaming about that morning when the Doctor came back to pick her up the night before her wedding. (TV:The Eleventh Hour)
- River mentions that she was pardoned from prison because the man she killed never existed. (TV: The Impossible Astronaut, TV: The Wedding of River Song) Oswin erased the Doctor from the Daleks' memories in TV: Asylum of the Daleks. However, it is unclear how exactly the Doctor was erased from other networks and memories. The conversation between River and the Doctor (and the fact that Solomon couldn't find info about the Doctor or his TARDIS in TV: Dinosaurs on a Spaceship) implies the Doctor is responsible for the other erasures, as he was "getting too big".
- This is the time the Eleventh Doctor has been shown to be aware that River had been pardoned, and would thus appear to be the latest story in her timeline prior to her final date with the Doctor as shown in Last Night.
- River says that she is a professor now. (TV: Silence in the Library)
- While on the roof contemplating jumping, Rory makes a reference to his history of having died multiple times and coming back to life each time. (TV: Amy's Choice, Cold Blood, The Curse of the Black Spot, The Doctor's Wife)
- The Doctor sent a coded message to River from the past ("Yowzah" in Chinese), as River had done with him on Planet One (which was itself a relay of Vincent van Gogh's message in his painting, The Pandorica Opens). through the black box of the Byzantium, (TV: The Pandorica Opens, The Time of Angels) and as she and/or Amy did via the Melody Malone book. Amy and Rory - and (presumably) unwittingly River - likewise contacted the Doctor through a message in the past in Let's Kill Hitler. Amy left the Doctor a message at his instruction in The Lodger. He waved to Amy and Rory from the past in The Impossible Astronaut.
- The Doctor uses the extractor fans once more (TV: Let's Kill Hitler).
- River tells Amy that the Doctor doesn't like to see his companions age. The Doctor once indicated the same. (TV: School Reunion)
- This is Amy's fourth encounter with the Weeping Angels. (TV: The Time of Angels/Flesh and Stone, TV: Good as Gold, PROSE: Touched by an Angel and PROSE: Magic of the Angels)
- When trying to materialise in 1938, the TARDIS makes the same malfunctioning sound it made in TV: Spearhead from Space, The Eleventh Hour, and The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith.
- While in this episode a paradox leads to the Angels' destruction, in PROSE: Touched by an Angel, the Angels try to create a paradox to feed. Since zapping a person into the past creates a paradox, it seems there are good and bad paradoxes. Good paradoxes involve the creation of time energy+alternate realities through transporting people through time, while bad ones change the timeline of the angels, poisoning their food.
- River encourages Amy to go ahead with her plan to join Rory in the past. River was in New York City in 1969 at an earlier point in her adult life, before she was pardoned. (TV: Day of the Moon)
- The Doctor stated that he liked the picture on the cover of Melody Malone, unaware that it was an drawing of his wife and her décollage. (TV: The Wedding of River Song)
- Melody/River is depicted on the book cover blowing the powder smoke from the muzzle of her revolver, just as she did in front of the Doctor upon shooting his stetson, although her wrist is not rotated as it was in the earlier occurrence. (TV: The Impossible Astronaut)
- Just before Rory and Amy are sent back in time from the cemetery, River asks the Doctor if the bulb atop the TARDIS needs changing, to which he replies that he just changed it. He is shown changing it outside of her parents' house in Webcast: Pond Life, Part 5 She will later be distracted out of the TARDIS by the Doctor (earlier in his life) asking her to check the bulb. (TV: Last Night). One of the questions which River's mother, Amy, rattled off when first stepping aboard the TARDIS is if the bulb on top ever needed changing. (TV: Meanwhile in the TARDIS 1)
- Amy uses her married name once sent back into the past. She had signed a divorce document as Amy Williams. (TV: Asylum of the Daleks)
- Melody "Malone"'s lipstick is described as being "combat ready". Melody/River had used an extremely poisonous lipstick in an attempt to kill the Doctor. (TV: Let's Kill Hitler) She used hallucination lipticks against a corrections officer, one or more Roman centurion(s), and a Byzantium guard. (TV: The Pandorica Opens, The Time of Angels) The Tenth Doctor also gave Sarah Jane Smith two Sonic lipsticks. (TV: Invasion of the Bane, Enemy of the Bane)
Behind the Scenes
- The DWM #453 reveals a deleted scene in Steven Moffat's production notes in which Amy reveals that she is 34-years-old.[4]
Home video releases
DVD releases
to be added
Blu-ray releases
to be added
External links
to be added
Footnotes
- ↑ http://www.sfx.co.uk/2012/09/27/doctor-whos-first-e-book-exclusive-inspired-by-the-angels-take-manhattan/
- ↑ http://www.doctorwhonews.net/2012/09/melody-malone-270912171508.html
- ↑ Peter Dyke; Katie Begley (30 July 2012). DOCTOR WHO: WHAT A LIBERTY. Daily Star. Retrieved on 29 September 2012.
- ↑ http://doctorwhotv.co.uk/script-extract-for-deleted-angels-scene-40838.htm