The Witch's Familiar (TV story): Difference between revisions
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'''''{{StoryTitle}}''''' was the second episode of the [[series 9 (Doctor Who)|ninth series]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' produced by [[BBC Wales]]. It probed the reason why [[the Doctor]] had fled from [[Gallifrey]] and gave a needed explanation as to why [[Skaro]] had returned after it was shown to be destroyed in ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'', as the [[Dalek]]s were said to have remade the planet anew. It also divulged how [[Missy]] had escaped her in ''[[Death in Heaven (TV story)|Death in Heaven]]'' through the use of [[Missy's device|a device]] to teleport away nanoseconds before she was shot by a [[cyber-converted]] [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Brigadier]], which made it appear that she had been disintegrated. | '''''{{StoryTitle}}''''' was the second episode of the [[series 9 (Doctor Who)|ninth series]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' produced by [[BBC Wales]]. It probed the reason why [[the Doctor]] had fled from [[Gallifrey]] and gave a needed explanation as to why [[Skaro]] had returned after it was shown to be destroyed in ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)|Remembrance of the Daleks]]'', as the [[Dalek]]s were said to have remade the planet anew. It also divulged how [[Missy]] had escaped her in ''[[Death in Heaven (TV story)|Death in Heaven]]'' through the use of [[Missy's device|a device]] to teleport away nanoseconds before she was shot by a [[cyber-converted]] [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|Brigadier]], which made it appear that she had been disintegrated. | ||
This story was further notable for exploring several new narratives with [[Davros]]. It was the first time he was shown outside of his chair, and this revealed that he has no legs at all and both his spinal column and defunct left arm are a combination of robotic Dalek technology hooked into the machine. The episode also shows Davros turn off his eyestalk bulb and open his own eyes for the first time in all his appearances, and toyed with the possibility of him dying an indisputable death. | This story was further notable for exploring several new narratives with [[Davros]]. It was the first time he was shown outside of his chair, and this revealed that he has no legs at all and both his spinal column and defunct left arm are a combination of robotic Dalek technology hooked into the machine. The episode also shows Davros turn off his eyestalk bulb and open his own eyes for the first time in all his appearances, and toyed with the possibility of him dying an indisputable death as well as him possibly regretting his actions. | ||
In that same respect, the mechanics of a Dalek were given an in-depth look, showing how they control their casing functions, the weaponry and how their capacity for speech is filtered and conditions them so they must not utter anything which betrays their basic functions of hatred, as well as giving a rational explanation for why they repeatedly shout, "Exterminate!" in the bulk majority of their appearances. | In that same respect, the mechanics of a Dalek were given an in-depth look, showing how they control their casing functions, the weaponry and how their capacity for speech is filtered and conditions them so they must not utter anything which betrays their basic functions of hatred, as well as giving a rational explanation for why they repeatedly shout, "Exterminate!" in the bulk majority of their appearances. | ||
In addition, having given the young Davros his [[sonic screwdriver]] and it wearing out with age, the Doctor decided against carrying around another screwdriver and instead revealed that he now has a pair of [[sonic sunglasses]]. The Doctor also lost a large portion of [[regeneration]] energy as well, resulting in the birth of a new hybrid race of [[Time Lord]]-Daleks. The long-term consequences of losing this energy are as of yet unknown. However, as the Doctor claims to been aware of Davros' plan, and to have let him take the energy as part of his plan to stop the Daleks, it is possible he prepared a way to prevent himself suffering consequences such as the loss of any regenerations. | In addition, having given the young Davros his [[sonic screwdriver]] and it wearing out with age, the Doctor decided against carrying around another screwdriver and instead revealed that he now has a pair of [[sonic sunglasses]]. The Doctor also lost a large portion of [[regeneration]] energy as well, resulting in the birth of a new hybrid race of [[Time Lord]]-Daleks. The long-term consequences of losing this energy are as of yet unknown. However, as the Doctor claims to been aware of Davros' plan, and to have let him take the energy as part of his plan to stop the Daleks, it is possible he prepared a way to prevent himself suffering consequences such as the loss of any regenerations, unlike when [[Journey's End (TV story)|he last encountered Davros in his tenth incarnation]] when he chose to abort and waste a regeneration, which resulted in the creation of a [[Meta-Crisis Tenth Doctor|Human/Time Lord hybrid clone]] of himself. | ||
== Synopsis == | == Synopsis == |
Revision as of 14:39, 27 September 2015
The Witch's Familiar was the second episode of the ninth series of Doctor Who produced by BBC Wales. It probed the reason why the Doctor had fled from Gallifrey and gave a needed explanation as to why Skaro had returned after it was shown to be destroyed in Remembrance of the Daleks, as the Daleks were said to have remade the planet anew. It also divulged how Missy had escaped her in Death in Heaven through the use of a device to teleport away nanoseconds before she was shot by a cyber-converted Brigadier, which made it appear that she had been disintegrated.
This story was further notable for exploring several new narratives with Davros. It was the first time he was shown outside of his chair, and this revealed that he has no legs at all and both his spinal column and defunct left arm are a combination of robotic Dalek technology hooked into the machine. The episode also shows Davros turn off his eyestalk bulb and open his own eyes for the first time in all his appearances, and toyed with the possibility of him dying an indisputable death as well as him possibly regretting his actions.
In that same respect, the mechanics of a Dalek were given an in-depth look, showing how they control their casing functions, the weaponry and how their capacity for speech is filtered and conditions them so they must not utter anything which betrays their basic functions of hatred, as well as giving a rational explanation for why they repeatedly shout, "Exterminate!" in the bulk majority of their appearances.
In addition, having given the young Davros his sonic screwdriver and it wearing out with age, the Doctor decided against carrying around another screwdriver and instead revealed that he now has a pair of sonic sunglasses. The Doctor also lost a large portion of regeneration energy as well, resulting in the birth of a new hybrid race of Time Lord-Daleks. The long-term consequences of losing this energy are as of yet unknown. However, as the Doctor claims to been aware of Davros' plan, and to have let him take the energy as part of his plan to stop the Daleks, it is possible he prepared a way to prevent himself suffering consequences such as the loss of any regenerations, unlike when he last encountered Davros in his tenth incarnation when he chose to abort and waste a regeneration, which resulted in the creation of a Human/Time Lord hybrid clone of himself.
Synopsis
As he's trapped in a terrifying Dalek city, the Doctor is without his sonic, and without his TARDIS and is all on his own.
Can the Doctor resist his greatest temptation, and will he show his greatest enemy compassion?
Plot
to be added
Cast
- The Doctor - Peter Capaldi
- Clara - Jenna Coleman
- Missy - Michelle Gomez
- Colony Sarff - Jami Reid-Quarrell
- Davros - Julian Bleach
- Boy - Joey Price
- Voice of the Daleks - Nicholas Briggs
- Daleks - Barnaby Edwards, Nicholas Pegg
Crew
Executive Producers Steven Moffat and Brian Minchin |
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Not every person who worked on this adventure was credited. The absence of a credit for a position doesn't necessarily mean the job wasn't required. The information above is based solely on observations of the actual end credits of the episodes as broadcast, and does not relay information from IMDB or other sources. |
References
- Daleks are incapable of saying anything that contradicts the parameters of their existence.
- Daleks are genetically designed to never die even as their bodies degenerate.
- Daleks channel their emotions of hate to fire their weaponry, and repeat the word "exterminate" in order to reload their guns.
- When teasing the Dalek she and Clara captured, Missy taunts it in a Texan accent.
- Missy claims she had a daughter.
- Missy has a pendant made of a dark star alloy, able to breach the Dalek case, which the Doctor gave to her when they were in Gallifrey.
Story notes
- Missy is seen in a sewer, and pushes Clara down into it. Previously, in the Doctor Who spoof The Curse of Fatal Death, an incompetent version of the Master was shown falling into an absurdly vast sewer three times and taking three hundred years to climb out each time.
- A dying Davros telling the Doctor that he wants to look at him with his own eyes is very similar to a scene in Star Wars: Return of the Jedi when Anakin Skywalker says he wants to look at his son Luke with his own eyes as he is dying, and, like Davros, has been hooked up to mechanical apparatuses after suffering crippling injuries, including a mask over his face as part of his Sith identity as Darth Vader.
- On 27th September, the day after the broadcast of The Witch's Familiar, the two-part opener was broadcast together on BBC One and BBC One HD as one single feature-length episode.
Ratings
to be added
Filming locations
to be added
Production errors
to be added
Continuity
- The Doctor donates some regenerative energy to heal an injured associate. (TV: The Angels Take Manhattan)
- Clara, trapped inside a Dalek, tries to identify herself to the Doctor, but actually says "I am a Dalek". A previous version of herself was locked inside a casing for so long it conditioned her to say only things that a Dalek would speak. (TV: Asylum of the Daleks)
- The Doctor is surprised to know that the Daleks know the word "mercy". (TV: The Big Bang)
- Davros asks the Doctor if he himself is a "good man". He also tells the Doctor that he's "not a good Doctor". (TV: Into the Dalek)
- Davros ponders over the idea of "to hold in your hand," something precious. (TV: Genesis of the Daleks)
- Davros is in possession of the Doctor's confession dial and his sonic sunglasses. (WC: Prologue, TV: The Magician's Apprentice)
- Davros utters the phrase "No! This cannot be correct!" upon learning that the Doctor has tricked him. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks)
- The Doctor reveals that he has replaced his traditional sonic screwdriver with a pair of sonic sunglasses. The sunglasses were seen in the previous episode. (TV: The Magician's Apprentice)
- This is not the first time the Doctor has gone for an extended period of time without his sonic screwdriver. (TV: The Visitation et.al., TV: Doctor Who)
- The TARDIS's apparent destruction is revealed to be the work of the Hostile Action Displacement System in action. (TV: The Krotons, Cold War)
- The Doctor tells Davros that Gallifrey is alive and somewhere in the universe, and that he saved it. (TV: The Day of the Doctor, The Time of the Doctor)
- During the Doctor's first visit to Skaro, another companion of his (Ian Chesterton) disguised inside a Dalek case. (TV: "The Escape")
- The Fourth Doctor and the First Doctor momentarily appear in a flashback told by Missy.
Home video releases
DVD releases
to be added
Blu-ray releases
to be added
External links
to be added
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