Rogue (TV story): Difference between revisions

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*[[Susan Twist]] was included in the pre-released cast list, but is not included in the episode's credits, as she only appears as a portrait of a dead woman.<ref name="Cast">{{Cite_web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00204dk|title=Doctor Who, Season 1, Rogue|website name=bbc.co.uk|publisher=[[BBC]]|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20240529205920/https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00204dk|archivedate=2024-04-29}}</ref>
*[[Susan Twist]] was included in the pre-released cast list, but is not included in the episode's credits, as she only appears as a portrait of a dead woman.<ref name="Cast">{{Cite_web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00204dk|title=Doctor Who, Season 1, Rogue|website name=bbc.co.uk|publisher=[[BBC]]|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20240529205920/https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00204dk|archivedate=2024-04-29}}</ref>
* This episode, like ''[[wikipedia:Music of Bridgerton|Bridgerton]]'', contains covers of pop songs by the Vitamin String Quartet – [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PWUbCwmBmgE Billie Eilish's "Bad Guy"] when the Doctor and Rogue first meet, and [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnjV-4ULp9w Lady Gaga's "Poker Face"] when Ruby overpowers and impersonates the Chuldur. Additionally, the string orchestra at the ball plays Astor Piazzolla's ''[[wikipedia:Libertango|Libertango]]'' (composed in 1974) and Mozart's ''[[wikipedia:Eine kleine Nachtmusik|Eine kleine Nachtmusik]]''.  
* This episode, like ''[[wikipedia:Music of Bridgerton|Bridgerton]]'', contains covers of pop songs by the Vitamin String Quartet – [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PWUbCwmBmgE Billie Eilish's "Bad Guy"] when the Doctor and Rogue first meet, and [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnjV-4ULp9w Lady Gaga's "Poker Face"] when Ruby overpowers and impersonates the Chuldur. Additionally, the string orchestra at the ball plays Astor Piazzolla's ''[[wikipedia:Libertango|Libertango]]'' (composed in 1974) and Mozart's ''[[wikipedia:Eine kleine Nachtmusik|Eine kleine Nachtmusik]]''.  
** In addition, "[[Can't Get You Out of My Head]] by [[Kylie Minogue]] can be heard on [[Rogue (Rogue)|Rogue's]] ship. Minogue previously played [[Astrid Peth]] in {{cs|Voyage of the Damned (TV story)}}.
** In addition, "[[Can't Get You Out of My Head]]" by [[Kylie Minogue]] can be heard on [[Rogue (Rogue)|Rogue's]] ship. Minogue previously played [[Astrid Peth]] in {{cs|Voyage of the Damned (TV story)}}.
* According to VFX coordinator Livvy Edwards, the photograph of Richard E. Grant during the scanner sequence was taken especially for this episode.<ref>[https://x.com/livvyedwards97/status/1799378872888390016]</ref>  
* According to VFX coordinator Livvy Edwards, the photograph of Richard E. Grant during the scanner sequence was taken especially for this episode.<ref>[https://x.com/livvyedwards97/status/1799378872888390016]</ref>  
* This episode marks the first time since {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}} nearly ten years earlier that the Doctor has kissed or been kissed by another character.
* This episode marks the first time since {{cs|Dark Water (TV story)}} nearly ten years earlier that the Doctor has kissed or been kissed by another character.

Revision as of 14:29, 8 June 2024

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Rogue is the sixth episode of Season 1 of Doctor Who,[1][2], broadcast in 2024 and written by Kate Herron and Briony Redman.[3][4].

The episode depicts the Fifteenth Doctor becoming romantically involved with the titular character; although the Doctor, in male incarnations specifically, has been depicted as sharing intimate moments with members of the same sex before, this marks the first explicit instance of a male Doctor earnestly pursuing a romance with another male character.

Another, more curious aspect of the episode, comes in the form of a direct reference to the "aristocrat" Ninth Doctor as portrayed by Richard E Grant in the 2003 webcast, Scream of the Shalka [+]Loading...["Scream of the Shalka (webcast)"]; a hologram of his face is displayed alongside those of the Doctor's other previous, TV-established incarnations, including his "mainstream" counterpart played by Christopher Eccleston.

Synopsis

The Doctor and Ruby visit 1813 to go to a Duchess's party, but when they meet a mysterious Rogue and a family of murderous shapeshifters, drama to rival Bridgerton ensues.

Plot

In 1813 Bath two men are arguing, Lord Galpin is demanding that Lord Barton take accountability for ruining the reputation of his sister. Barton resolutely refuses, taunts Galpin and insists that the latter duel him if he wishes satisfaction. Galpin reflects and decides that Barton’s life is far, far more fun than his, gambling, affairs, insulting others. Galbin grabs Barton, electricity flashes, and a burnt husk of Barton’s body falls to the ground, another copy of Barton standing atop it.

The Doctor and Ruby Sunday dance in a ballroom, Ruby marvelling at how she’s keeping up when she doesn’t know the steps. The Doctor tells her the earrings she’s been given are psychic - they beam the information directly to her, and she can adjust the dance, so long as she stays off of battle mode. Their hostess, the Duchess of Pemberton, walks over to them and the trio become acquainted. Ruby notices some interference in her earrings, some feedback, and the Doctor endeavours to determine the source as the Duchess pulls Ruby away to find a suitable suitor.

Lord Barton approaches Ruby, and she finds him to be quite off-putting and rude, walking away. Barton latches on soon after to Emily Beckett, and Ruby, sensing drama, follows them into the library. Using his sonic screwdriver the Doctor narrows the frequencies to be coming from a strange man standing on a balcony, watching the party from above. The man introduces himself as Rogue, and after some extended verbal sparring, suggests that the two should venture outside.

The Duchess finds herself outside, and notices her housekeeper is visible to the partygoers, which she takes to be scandalous. As the Duchess tells her off, the housekeeper replies that she made a stupid mistake being staff, working all day. And the housekeeper grabs the Duchess; lightning flashes.

Ruby watches Barton and Beckett in the library, their lives a melodrama. Barton insisting that he won't marry Beckett, even as she tempts him, Beckett begging him to leave her reputation intact as she wrestles with his continued presence. Ruby stumbles into some shelves, prompting Barton to leave. Ruby tries to comfort Beckett, and ultimately the pair decide to go back to the dance floor. As they dance and after they dance, Ruby and Emily continue to bond, Ruby trying to convince Emily that there's more to life than just marrying a man and settling down - she can do whatever she wants to.

The Doctor and Rogue walk through the gardens, talking, much to Rogue's consternation, as they find the husk of the Duchess. The Doctor scans her with his screwdriver, trying to determine what's happened, and the Doctor and Rogue both come to the same conclusion - that this happened due to otherworldly technology. And each blames the other. Each insists it was the other. And then Rogue pulls a weapon on the Doctor. The pair walk back to Rogue's ship, cloaked in a field, Rogue insisting that the Doctor is a Chuldur, a shapeshifter.

As the Doctor enters Rogue's ship, he's placed inside a tri-form, stuck in place until it charges and sends him to an incinerator. Just for the paperwork, Rogue does a scan of the Doctor and determines that he's a shapeshifter, justifying his decision to incinerate him. The Doctor, desperate to hold on to life, tosses his psychic paper at the scanner, turning it back on, showing his old faces, showing that he's a Time Lord, convincing Rogue to let him free.

Free, the Doctor takes Rogue back to the TARDIS, where he modifies the tri-form to deposit its prisoner to an empty dimension rather than into an incinerator. The pair flirt as this happens, the Doctor offering to take Rogue to Gallifrey some time in the future. The Doctor and Rogue return to the ballroom to find Ruby and inform her of what they've figured out. As they talk, they realize that the reason the Chuldur are taking the forms of people is cosplay, to experience the drama and scandal of people they inhabit. The Doctor suggests that he and Rogue dance, and the pair move out onto the floor.

As they dance, the entire room's eyes draw towards them, the room growing still and silent, only the band continuing to make noise. When enough attention is focused on them, the pair fake an argument, mock disagreement and a mock proposal, leading to the Doctor storming out and Rogue following. The Chuldur are enraptured and follow, determined to play them. Four Chuldur follow them outside, Rogue and the Doctor only having planned for one. The Doctor and Rogue run and hide, the Chuldur family chasing after them, failing to find them among the carriages in the courtyard. As the Chuldur leave, they contemplate the wedding later that night, and then their next moves: to London, to plot wars against the rest of Europe; cosplay on a massive scale. Watching them depart, the Doctor boosts the output on the tri-form, it now can carry 6 people at once, but it will be one-time use, there'll only be one shot.

Emily is in the library, stressing herself out as to what's going on. Ruby tries again to comfort her, and eventually decides to tell her that she's from the future. As she hears this, Emily reveals that she's a Chuldur and grabs Ruby, saying that she wants to be Ruby as electricity flashes.

The Chuldur return to the ballroom in their true forms, surprising the guests, declaring that a wedding will be taking place, as the Doctor and Rogue watch from above. The Chuldur who played Barton entered, someone who appears to be Ruby on his arm. As the wedding commences, the Doctor walks downstairs and bursts in on the proceedings, objecting to the affair. He places the tri-form around the Chuldur wedding party as they threaten him, trapping them in place. Ruby asks him how long she has until the transport activates, insisting that she's the real Ruby Sunday, naming her mother and grandmother. The Doctor is sceptical at first, but accepts it as he hears more details - Ruby used battle mode on her earrings to escape from Emily.

The Chuldur who played Emily runs into the room behind the Doctor, attacking him, but Rogue picks her up and places her in the tri-form. Rogue insists that he press the button, sending them to the barren dimension. But the Doctor refuses, he won't abandon Ruby. Ruby says it's fine. Rogue insists. But the Doctor is unable. Rogue kisses the Doctor, steals the trigger, and dives into the tri-form, shoving Ruby out. He tells the Doctor to find him, pressing the button, and the six vanish.

As the sky brightens from the dawn, the Doctor sends Rogue's ship into orbit around the Moon. When Ruby asks if they can use the TARDIS to find him, the Doctor opines that there are countless dimensions to search, and he doesn't even know Rogue's real name. When Ruby moves to comfort him, he jumps into action, ready to move on, but Ruby stops him and hugs him. As she leaves, he pulls the ring Rogue offered in the mock proposal from his pocket, and slips it onto his pinkie finger.

Cast

Post-Cast

Uncredited

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.
          

This episode was produced with the support of incentives for the Irish film industry provided by the Government of Ireland.


Worldbuilding

Technology

Notes

  • Since the Doctor Who crew, as of 2022, with the 60th Anniversary Specials, began filming content far in advance, the fanbase would become aware of bits of information about episodes before their announcement, with this episode becoming known among fans as "Regency" as a result of a comment from Ncuti Gatwa. This eventually led to Russell T Davies himself calling it that in DWM 598.[2]
  • The episode's official title was first revealed on the official Doctor Who Twitter account on 31 March 2024.[1]
  • In his column for DWM 602, Davies said that Rogue had less FX than other episodes in the season, and that he and his team had recently watched and enjoyed the episode's final cut, describing it as having "one of the best monsters ever". He also revealed a line of dialogue from the episode: "Live vivisection!"[6]
  • Ncuti Gatwa and Millie Gibson considered it their favourite episode of the season.[7]
  • This episode is the first with multiple credited writers since the show's return in 2005 in which neither writer is the current showrunner. It is also the first since The Haunting of Villa Diodati in which neither credited writer had previously written for the series.
  • Susan Twist was included in the pre-released cast list, but is not included in the episode's credits, as she only appears as a portrait of a dead woman.[8]
  • This episode, like Bridgerton, contains covers of pop songs by the Vitamin String Quartet – Billie Eilish's "Bad Guy" when the Doctor and Rogue first meet, and Lady Gaga's "Poker Face" when Ruby overpowers and impersonates the Chuldur. Additionally, the string orchestra at the ball plays Astor Piazzolla's Libertango (composed in 1974) and Mozart's Eine kleine Nachtmusik.
  • According to VFX coordinator Livvy Edwards, the photograph of Richard E. Grant during the scanner sequence was taken especially for this episode.[9]
  • This episode marks the first time since Dark Water [+]Loading...["Dark Water (TV story)"] nearly ten years earlier that the Doctor has kissed or been kissed by another character.

Myths

Filming locations

Ratings

to be added

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.

to be added

Continuity

Home media releases

to be added

Gallery

Main article: Rogue (TV story)/Gallery

External links

Footnotes

Notes

  1. This rumour came along because of Rogue's similarity to Jack and the belief that the BBC would avoid rehiring John Barrowman due to allegations of sexual misconduct against him in 2021.

References