The Power of the Doctor (TV story): Difference between revisions

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Also returning in mental manifestations of the Doctor’s [[consciousness]] were  [[David Bradley]], [[Peter Davison]], [[Colin Baker]], [[Sylvester McCoy]] and [[Paul McGann]], all reprising their roles as their respective Doctors and [[Jo Martin]] as the [[Fugitive Doctor]].
Also returning in mental manifestations of the Doctor’s [[consciousness]] were  [[David Bradley]], [[Peter Davison]], [[Colin Baker]], [[Sylvester McCoy]] and [[Paul McGann]], all reprising their roles as their respective Doctors and [[Jo Martin]] as the [[Fugitive Doctor]].


The story notably marked the first onscreen [[retro-regeneration]], after the Master taking over the Doctor's existence with his own [[regeneration]], something he failed to do before to the [[Eighth Doctor]], with this brief possession brought on being the first [[forced regeneration]] seen since ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'' and causing the possessed Doctor to take on the Master's appearance. With the Master using the [[The Doctor (title)|name of the Doctor]], this technically makes [[Sacha Dhawan]] the first actor to have portrayed both the Master and the Doctor onscreen in the same story. The special also marked the first time the Doctor was seen to [[regenerate]] more than once within the same television story.
The story notably marked the first onscreen [[retro-regeneration]], after the Master taking over the Doctor's existence with his own [[regeneration]], something he failed to do before to the [[Eighth Doctor]], with this brief possession brought on being the first [[forced regeneration]] seen since ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'' and causing the possessed Doctor to take on the Master's appearance. With the Master using the [[The Doctor (title)|name of the Doctor]], this technically makes [[Sacha Dhawan]] the first actor to have portrayed both the Master and the Doctor onscreen in the same story. The special also marked the second time the Doctor was seen to [[regenerate]] more than once within the same television story, following [[Twice Upon a Time (TV story)|''Twice Upon a Time'']].


The special introduced [[David Tennant]] as the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] in its closing moments, marking the first time on screen the Doctor had regenerated into a different incarnation with the same appearance as a previous incarnation, and making Tennant the sixth actor to have portrayed multiple different incarnations of the Doctor.  
The special introduced [[David Tennant]] as the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] in its closing moments, marking the first time on screen the Doctor had regenerated into a different incarnation with the same appearance as a previous incarnation, and making Tennant the sixth actor to have portrayed multiple different incarnations of the Doctor.  

Revision as of 13:58, 2 November 2022

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The Power of the Doctor was the 2022 Doctor Who Centenary Special, broadcast as part of the BBC 100 celebrations. Marking the end of Jodie Whittaker's tenure as the Thirteenth Doctor, this was also the final entry to be penned by Chris Chibnall as showrunner.

Power saw the return of the Spy Master and Ashad, following their apparent demise at the end of The Timeless Children, and marked the first time the Master, the Cybermen and the Daleks all worked together onscreen. The special also sees the apparent end of the Spy Master, with his plans once again thwarted and his body fatally weakened.

Several past Doctor Who companions returned for the special, including Bradley Walsh as Graham O'Brien and Janet Fielding as Tegan Jovanka, and Sophie Aldred as Ace. Appearing in cameo roles are Bonnie Langford and Katy Manning as Melanie Bush and Jo Jones, with Langford returning since her exit in Dragonfire, and Manning returning to Doctor Who since her character's last appearance in The Sarah Jane Adventures story Death of the Doctor. Notably, joining Langford and Manning in a cameo role was William Russell as Ian Chesterton, marking the character's first onscreen appearance in the series since The Chase in 1965.

Also returning in mental manifestations of the Doctor’s consciousness were David Bradley, Peter Davison, Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy and Paul McGann, all reprising their roles as their respective Doctors and Jo Martin as the Fugitive Doctor.

The story notably marked the first onscreen retro-regeneration, after the Master taking over the Doctor's existence with his own regeneration, something he failed to do before to the Eighth Doctor, with this brief possession brought on being the first forced regeneration seen since The War Games and causing the possessed Doctor to take on the Master's appearance. With the Master using the name of the Doctor, this technically makes Sacha Dhawan the first actor to have portrayed both the Master and the Doctor onscreen in the same story. The special also marked the second time the Doctor was seen to regenerate more than once within the same television story, following Twice Upon a Time.

The special introduced David Tennant as the Fourteenth Doctor in its closing moments, marking the first time on screen the Doctor had regenerated into a different incarnation with the same appearance as a previous incarnation, and making Tennant the sixth actor to have portrayed multiple different incarnations of the Doctor.

Synopsis

Famous paintings have been mysteriously defaced around Earth, semiologists have gone missing, there is strange activity occurring in volcanoes and across the stars a bullet train is pursued by CyberMasters. The Doctor doesn't understand how it all connects. All she has is a message from an old enemy - "this is the day you die"...

Plot

The Doctor and her companions rescue a space-going bullet train from a Cyberman attack, but Dan is nearly killed during the escapade. The Cybermen manage to escpe with the train's cargo, which seems to be a young human child. Having developed a sense of his own mortality, Dan parts ways with the Doctor in order to get back to living his life. A renegade Dalek contacts the Doctor, claiming to have decided the Daleks need to be destroyed due to them being a perversion of the Kaled race. It offers information about a plot to destroy humanity, promising to communicate a time and location. Kate Stewart also contacts the Doctor and informs her that various pieces of famous artwork have been defaced with the Master's visage and several seismologists abducted.

After briefly reuniting with former companions Tegan Jovanka and Ace McShane, the Doctor confronts the Master and learns he and his CyberMasters have teamed up with the Daleks and enslaved the child the Cybermen captured, who is in reality an energy being called the Qurunx, to end humanity by setting off eruptions from all volcanoes on Earth simultaneously. The Doctor meets the renegade Dalek, but discovers it had been allowed to contact her in order to lure her out, leaving the Daleks including their commander to kill the traitor and capture her.

The Master is arrested by UNIT, but reveals he sent a miniaturised Ashad to Tegan, pretending to be the Doctor. The miniaturised Ashad enlarges and acts as a portal to bring a fleet of Cybermen into UNIT HQ, freeing the Master. The Daleks take the Doctor to 1916 and hand her to the Master, who uses Gallifreyan technology to force her to regenerate into him. An AI program the Doctor created, taking the images of the Fifth, Seventh, Fugitive, and Thirteenth Doctors, leads Ace to meet with fellow former companion Graham O'Brien and destroy the Dalek volcano machine, Tegan to destroy the Cyberman converter created in UNIT HQ and destroy the CyberMasters before they convert Kate, and Yaz and previous ally Vinder to capture the Master and force him to undo the Doctor's transformation. Defeated, the Master mortally wounds the Doctor with the Qurunx' energy beam, causing her to begin her regeneration.

The Doctor takes Yaz home. Yaz meets with a group of former companions including Graham, Dan, Ace, Tegan, Ian Chesterton, Jo Jones, and Melanie Bush. The Doctor finds a beautiful sunrise to watch before she regenerates. She says a fond farewell to her current self before saying to her next self “tag, you’re it” and regenerates into her next incarnation. After the explosive regeneration finishes, resulting in a male incarnation once again and also a change in his clothes, the Fourteenth Doctor immediately realises something isn't right. By checking his teeth, he realises out loud in a very familiar voice and accent that he actually he knows the feeling of his new teeth, alarmed by this he begins to examine his new body. Recognising his new hands before noticing his predecessor's clothing has completely been altered by the regeneration, he feels the shape of his new face and discovers to his shock that he has regenerated into a body virtually identical to his tenth incarnation. The new Doctor can only exclaim in amazement and utter confusion "What? What? What!?"

Cast

And Introducing David Tennant as The Doctor

Uncredited 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.


References

The Doctor's clothing

TARDISes

Culture

Locations

Story notes

Ratings

  • Overnights: 3.71 million[10]
    • Regeneration: 4.04 million[10]
  • Consolidated: 5.30 million[11]

Myths

  • Dan Lewis would die. (This ended up being false. The rumour came about as no promotional material depicted Dan outside the space bullet train mission)
  • Kate Stewart would either die or be converted into a Cyberman. (Both of these ended up being false. Although she was shown going through the conversion process)

Filming locations

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Production errors

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.
  • The Master's incarnation of the Doctor loses the Thirteenth Doctor's earring after changing his clothes. It momentarily returns during one scene, before disappearing once more until Jodie Whittaker's return to the role where it returns permanently without explanation.
  • On the ABC, "Qurunx" was misspelt as "Quaranx" in the subtitles.
  • As the Doctor and Yaz initially approach the second police box on the Cyber-planet, the TARDIS has the usual "pull to open" signage. In a shot immediately after, as the characters get closer, they see the signage which now says "HAHAHAH AHAH".

Continuity

Footnotes