Doctor Who: The Bedtime Story (TV story): Difference between revisions

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== Home media releases ==
== Home media releases ==
Following its broadcast on television, ''Doctor Who: The Bedtime Story'' was added to [[BBC iPlayer]]'s ''[[Whoniverse (BBC iPlayer)|Whoniverse]]'' catalog of ''Doctor Who'' content as a title separate from ''[[Doctor Who (TV series)|Doctor Who]]'' and ''[[CBeebies Bedtime Stories (series)|CBeebies Bedtime Stories]]'', although it was also released as part of the latter, albeit with an expiration time of thirty days.
Following its broadcast on television, ''Doctor Who: The Bedtime Story'' was added to [[BBC iPlayer]]'s ''[[Whoniverse (BBC iPlayer)|Whoniverse]]'' catalog of ''Doctor Who'' content as a title separate from ''[[Doctor Who (TV series)|Doctor Who]]'' and ''[[CBeebies Bedtime Stories (series)|CBeebies Bedtime Stories]]'', although it was also released as part of the latter, albeit with an expiration time of thirty days.
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== External links ==
== External links ==

Revision as of 14:12, 10 January 2024

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Doctor Who: The Bedtime Story, also known as The Doctor - The Way Back Home[nb 1] was a Doctor Who-themed episode of CBeebies Bedtime Stories, broadcast on 24 November 2023[1] as part of the 60th anniversary celebrations. It starred David Tennant as the Fourteenth Doctor and the story read was The Way Back Home, written and illustrated by Oliver Jeffers.

Synopsis

Where will you go and Who will you meet on Planet Bedtime Stories tonight?

Plot

The Fourteenth Doctor arrives on Planet Bedtime Stories, exiting his TARDIS after it materialises, and warmly introduces himself. Recognising his location, he takes a seat and asks an audience where would they go if they had a spaceship, wondering if they would go to another world or meet someone in particular. The Doctor has a story prepared about such a question, about a boy who travelled to space and made a friend.

The Doctor tells the story of the boy, who found an aeroplane in his cupboard and took it for a flight, until he ran out of petrol and got stuck on the Moon. Alone and afraid, his torch began dimming, but a Martian soon joined him after his spaceship's engine broke down. They showed each other how they had become stuck on the Moon and discussed ways to get back home; the boy jumped down to Earth, landing in the sea and swimming back home for supplies. Upon reaching his home, the boy had become tired and went for a rest, sitting down to eat a snack in front of his television. Suddenly remembering the Martian, the boy took the necessary supplies and travelled to higher ground and alerted the Martian, who threw down a rope for him to climb. Reuniting, they restored each other's ships and made their farewells, setting off home and wondering if they would ever meet again. Soon after, a parcel arrived for the boy, containing a walkie-talkie so he and the Martian could continue to talk to each other.

The Doctor concludes, impressed by the story. He begins to tell another "great" story about "someone who went to space and started helping people", gesturing as he detailed how a "big blue box" landed in a junkyard, but cuts himself off when he realises that it is a long story, much longer than he has time for, but promises to save it for another bedtime story. Telling his audience that he will see them again soon, he enters the TARDIS and dematerialises.

Cast

Characters

Worldbuilding

The Way Back Home

  • The boy didn't remember leaving the aeroplane in his cupboard.
  • Before the boy and the Martian meet each other after their eyes adjusted to the dark, both had "feared the worse" when they first heard each other.
  • The boy got the supplies from his cupboard.
  • The boy fixed the Martian's engine with a spanner.
  • the delivery man had a moustache and carried a clipboard.

Notes

to be added

Continuity

  • The Doctor's "great" story he begins to tell, about a box in a junkyard, references the first Doctor Who episode, "An Unearthly Child" [+]Part of An Unearthly Child, Loading...{"namedpart":"An Unearthly Child","1":"An Unearthly Child (TV story)"}.
  • The Doctor tells the viewer that he will be seeing them again "very soon", a reference to the The Star Beast [+]Loading...["The Star Beast (TV story)"] being broadcast the very next day.

Home media releases

Following its broadcast on television, Doctor Who: The Bedtime Story was added to BBC iPlayer's Whoniverse catalog of Doctor Who content as a title separate from Doctor Who and CBeebies Bedtime Stories, although it was also released as part of the latter, albeit with an expiration time of thirty days.

External links

Footnotes

References

Notes

  1. The episode was listed twice on BBC iPlayer, both as part of CBeebies Bedtime Stories and as a standalone episode. The entry for the standalone episode was named Doctor Who: The Bedtime Story, and was included as part of the Whoniverse. The entry that was listed under CBeebies Bedtime Stories kept with the established naming precedent of the series (Reader - Story), and named it The Doctor - The Way Back Home.