Odin (The Girl Who Died): Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox Individual
{{retitle|"Odin" (The Girl Who Died)}}{{Infobox Individual
|image = Odin The Girl Who Died.jpg
|image = Odin The Girl Who Died.jpg
|species = Mire
|species = Mire
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|clip = Odin Unleashes The Mire! - The Girl Who Died - Doctor Who - BBC
|clip = Odin Unleashes The Mire! - The Girl Who Died - Doctor Who - BBC
}}
}}
'''Odin''' was an alias used by the leader of the [[Mire]] - supposedly one of the deadliest [[warrior]] races in [[Mutter's Spiral|the galaxy]] - during their incursion to [[Earth]] during the [[9th century]].<ref>In the television story ''[[The Woman Who Lived (TV story)|The Woman Who Lived]]'', which is set in the year [[1651]], [[Ashildr]] mentions having had 800 years of adventure.</ref>
"'''Odin'''" was an alias used by the leader of the [[Mire]] - supposedly one of the deadliest [[warrior]] races in [[Mutter's Spiral|the galaxy]] - during their incursion to [[Earth]] during the [[9th century]].<ref>In the television story ''[[The Woman Who Lived (TV story)|The Woman Who Lived]]'', which is set in the year [[1651]], [[Ashildr]] mentions having had 800 years of adventure.</ref>


"Odin" utilised a [[hologram]] projection to make himself appear [[human]], and adopted the name and guise of [[Odin]], the [[Norse mythology|Norse god]], when he presented himself to the inhabitants of a [[Viking]] village his army had targeted. Inviting the warriors of the village to dine with him in the halls of [[Valhalla]], he in reality transported the Vikings aboard his [[Mire spaceship|spaceship]], where they were later killed. The [[adrenalin]] and [[testosterone]] extracted from the warriors during their deaths were transformed into a fluid - dubbed "warrior juice" by [[Clara Oswald]] - consumed by the Mire for sustenance.
"Odin" utilised a [[hologram]] projection to make himself appear [[human]], and adopted the name and guise of [[Odin]], the [[Norse mythology|Norse god]], when he presented himself to the inhabitants of a [[Viking]] village his army had targeted. Inviting the warriors of the village to dine with him in the halls of [[Valhalla]], he in reality transported the Vikings aboard his [[Mire spaceship|spaceship]], where they were later killed. The [[adrenalin]] and [[testosterone]] extracted from the warriors during their deaths were transformed into a fluid - dubbed "warrior juice" by [[Clara Oswald]] - consumed by the Mire for sustenance.
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== Behind the scenes ==
== Behind the scenes ==
* "Odin" is one of the [[Mire]] enemies in the ''[[Legacy (video game)|Doctor Who: Legacy]]'' mobile game. "Odin" was the second on-screen Doctor Who villain to be named after [[Odin|the Norse god]], the first being [[WOTAN]] in ''[[The War Machines (TV story)|The War Machines]]''.
* "Odin" is one of the [[Mire]] enemies in the ''[[Legacy (video game)|Doctor Who: Legacy]]'' mobile game. "Odin" was the second on-screen Doctor Who villain to be named after [[Odin|the Norse god]], the first being [[WOTAN]] in ''[[The War Machines (TV story)|The War Machines]]''.
* [[Brian Blessed]] was originally cast in the role, but had to bow out due to health problems.
* [[Brian Blessed]] was originally cast in the role, but had to bow out due to health problems.

Revision as of 23:41, 24 February 2022

"Odin" was an alias used by the leader of the Mire - supposedly one of the deadliest warrior races in the galaxy - during their incursion to Earth during the 9th century.[1]

"Odin" utilised a hologram projection to make himself appear human, and adopted the name and guise of Odin, the Norse god, when he presented himself to the inhabitants of a Viking village his army had targeted. Inviting the warriors of the village to dine with him in the halls of Valhalla, he in reality transported the Vikings aboard his spaceship, where they were later killed. The adrenalin and testosterone extracted from the warriors during their deaths were transformed into a fluid - dubbed "warrior juice" by Clara Oswald - consumed by the Mire for sustenance.

"Odin" in the Mire spaceship, accompanied by his foot soldiers. (TV: The Girl Who Died)

"Odin" also transported Clara and Ashildr aboard the Mire spacecraft, but spared their lives after realising they possessed the sonic sunglasses, fearing the superior alien technology they represented. Although almost persuaded by Clara to leave the Earth in peace, he was incited by Ashildr's declaration of war against the Mire to stay and fight. He gave the remaining people of the village a single day to prepare.

When "Odin" arrived in the village with ten Mire footsoldiers the following morning, he found the villagers not preparing for combat, but partying and dancing. Confused, he failed to realise that the celebration was a distraction; the villagers, under the command of the Twelfth Doctor, had constructed an elaborate trap for the Mire, which involved using electric eels and metal wiring to play havoc with their equipment. The plan culminated in Ashildr using a stolen Mire helmet to project the image of a terrifying sea dragon over a harmless wooden puppet, which the Mire were convinced was real. Outmatched, they fled to their ship, leaving their leader alone.

Afterwards, the Doctor revealed the truth of the deception, and also revealed that Clara had recorded the entire humiliating defeat on her mobile phone. On danger of having the footage uploaded to the Galactic Hub, "Odin" and the rest of the Mire fled the planet, promising to one day enact vengeance. (TV: The Girl Who Died)

The Ship used an avatar of Odin as a defence mechanism, so as to stop Me from venturing too deep into Branscombe Wood. (PROSE: The Ghosts of Branscombe Wood)

Behind the scenes

External links

Footnotes

  1. In the television story The Woman Who Lived, which is set in the year 1651, Ashildr mentions having had 800 years of adventure.