The Girl Who Waited (TV story): Difference between revisions

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== Plot ==
== Plot ==
[[Eleventh Doctor|The Doctor]] takes [[Rory Williams|Rory]] and [[Amy Pond|Amy]] to the planet [[Apalapucia]], a top holiday destination, but they arrive in a clinically white room, its only exit a door with two buttons. As Amy steps back into [[The Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]] to collect her phone, the Doctor and Rory pass through the door using one of the buttons to find a white room with a giant 'magnifying glass'. Amy follows but uses the other button. She finds a similar room, but no sign of the others.
[[Eleventh Doctor|The Doctor]] brings [[Amy Pond|Amy]] and [[Rory Williams|Rory]] to the resort planet of [[Apalapucia]], one of the top holiday destinations in the universe.  Though he promises views of "sunsets, spires, and soaring silver colonnades," they step out of the [[TARDIS]] to find that they have landed in a clinically white room possessing only an exit door with two buttons, labeled "Green Anchor" and "Red Waterfall.Amy steps back into the TARDIS to retrieve her phone while the Doctor and Rory use the door -- pressing the "Green Anchor" button -- and enter another room, which holds a table on which rests a large magnifying glass. When Amy steps back into the corridor, she also uses the door -- pressing the "Red Waterfall" button -- and finds herself in a similar-looking room, though Rory and the Doctor are not present.  When Rory steps into the Red Waterfall room to find her, she is not there.


The Doctor realises that Amy hasn't joined them. She has ended up in a second, faster time stream, but they can talk through the glass scope. A week has already passed for her. The Doctor and Rory soon find [[Handbot|a faceless, white robot]], who explains they are in the "kindness facility", dealing with a plague, [[Chen-7]], that affects only races [[Binary vascular system|with two hearts]]. [[File:Doctor Who 6x10 The Girl Who Waited 065.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor and Rory are terrified by the virus.]]This includes the native [[Apalapucian]]s and [[Time Lord]]s. The robot, and others like it, do not recognise the two as alien life forms, and tries to inject them with 'medicine' that would kill them. The Doctor warns Amy, and tells her to wait. He will rescue her. Rory and he race back to the TARDIS with the glass scope, using it to lock onto Amy's time stream.
[[File:Doctor Who 6x10 The Girl Who Waited 065.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor and Rory are terrified by the virus.]]The Doctor activates the [[Time Glass]] and sees Amy, who wonders where the Doctor and Rory have gone.  A [[Handbot]] enters the room where the Doctor and Rory are, welcoming them to the [[Two Streams Facility]], which is a "kindness facility."  As the Doctor and Rory are held at bay by the robot, Amy appears to fast-forward within the glass; when the Doctor finally stabilizes it, she angrily informs him that it has been a week since they last spoke.  From this, the Doctor is able to deduce that Amy has wound up in a faster [[time stream]] which they cannot access; their only means of communicating with her is through the glass. The Handbot informs the Doctor and Rory that Two Streams is a facility for victims of the [[Chen-7]], or "one-day," plague, which affects [[Binary vascular system|two-hearted races]] -- including native [[Apalapucian]]s and [[Time Lords]].  Amy's time stream is synced for visits, so that those affected by Chen-7 can watch their family members live out their entire lives within the last day of their survival.


Meanwhile, Amy roams the facility and meet Handbots, which attempt to administer a dose of medicine stored inside their heads. [[File:Doctor Who 6x10 The Girl Who Waited 144.jpg|thumb|right|Amy discovers a gate leading to various entertainment zones.]] She enters a Gate, consisting of a console that controlled access to Two Streams' various entertainment zones, which include: Mountain zone, Roller-coaster zone, Cinema, Aquarium and Garden (the latter of which was a perfect replica of a [[Shill]] governor's mansion on [[Shallanna]]). Amy discovers [[Interface]], providing vocal control over the complex's computer systems, and learns she can mask her presence from the Handbots using the emissions from the time engines driving the accelerated time streams.
The Doctor removes the magnifying glass from the table, but accidentally activates an alarm in the process.  He orders Amy to go into the facility and seek a hiding place where she might wait for him to find her.  Before he leaves, he warns her to not let the Handbots administer any medicine to her; because she possesses only one heart, she is immune to Chen-7, and so the Handbots' "kindness" will kill her. Before departing, Amy asks Rory to save her.  The Doctor and Rory return to the TARDIS, where the Doctor uses the magnifying glass to lock onto Amy's time stream.  Because the Doctor is at risk of becoming infected with Chen-7, he cannot go into the facility; therefore, he sends Rory in his place, though they are in constant communication through a pair of glasses wired with a camera.  The Doctor insists that it is very difficult to break through a time wall, but sends the TARDIS off on course regardless.


The Doctor, forced to stay in the TARDIS for fear of the plague, gives Rory his sonic screwdriver, the glass scope, and a set of glasses that allows the Doctor to see, hear, and communicate with him, guiding him to find Amy. Rory explores the facility. When he find the facility strangely empty, the Doctor suggests Rory to "sonic" the time glass, mixing the filters. They see forty thousand time streams overlapping in Red Waterfall, and the time glass shows the facility full of people. Rory soon is set upon by more robots and he is saved by a much older Amy, who has hidden from the complex' sensors for close to four decades. The Doctor has locked onto her time stream at the wrong point. He tries to get Rory to convince the older Amy to help locate the younger one, but this Amy is bitter, having waited for rescue as the Doctor instructed, growing ever more resentful for exactly thirty-six years, three months and four days, alone save for the complex's computer [[interface]], and a disarmed robot she calls [[Rory (Handbot)|Rory]]. Despite Rory and the Doctor's assurances that rescuing Amy in the past will prevent the older Amy from suffering, she refuses to help; saving the younger version of herself would mean she never existed.
[[File:Doctor Who 6x10 The Girl Who Waited 144.jpg|thumb|right|Amy discovers a gate leading to various entertainment zones.]]Meanwhile, Amy has arrived in the Two Streams lobby, where she is met by a holographic receptionist informing her of all the "entertainment zones" within the facility that she now has access to as a resident. She is also introduced to the [[Interface]], who claims to be Amy's guide within the facility. As Amy strolls along a promenade looking for somewhere to hide and wait for the Doctor, she is met by a series of Handbots, all of whom attempt to inject her with medication.  She seeks shelter from the pursuing Handbots within a vent system in a maintenance room; the smoke from the vent prevents the Handbots from detecting her, and she manages to escape.


Rory angrily blames the Doctor, saying that he should take more care when travelling to avoid situations like this, to which The Doctor replies that is not the way he does things. Rory storms off, throwing his glasses onto the facility floor. Hearing a faint transmission emanating from the broken glasses, The Doctor detects signals from the younger Amy nearby, and Rory finds her through the glass scope, weeping. [[File:Doctor Who 6x10 The Girl Who Waited 316.jpg|thumb|left|Future Amy meets her past self, and vice versa.]]He sets the scope to let the older Amy speak to her younger self; however, the older Amy remembers this discussion from when she was younger and had failed to convince the older Amy to help. This time the younger Amy urges the older Amy to change her mind by asking her to consider Rory. Realising that time can be altered if you are aware of the future timeline, as Amy is, the older Amy decides to help, but demands that the Doctor take her too. The Doctor says this is a difficult but not impossible action and agrees. As Rory reroutes a control panel that maintains the facility's time streams, the Doctor has the two Amys synchronise their thoughts. The two Amys think of the first kiss with Rory, which lets the two exist at the same time.
She arrives in another white room with a console in the center and empty doorways surrounding it; this is the Gate, and the console buttons control various doorways which lead to the entertainment zones. Amy chooses a majestic garden, which the Interface informs her is the perfect replica of [[Shill Governor]]'s mansion on Shallana. Amy asks the Interface about the vent system she hid in earlier. The vent channels the exhaust fumes from the [[Temporal engine|temporal engines]], which hold the multiple time streams in place.  Amy deduces from this that the engines interfere with the Handbots' sensors, and wonders where the temporal engines are located. The Interface points her in the right direction, and Amy prepares to leave in search of them; however, two Handbots materialize around her. Utilizing the sleep sensors on their hands, she presses them together, deactivating both and escaping once more. Arriving at the temporal engines room, Amy scrawls a message for the Doctor and Rory on the door: "Doctor, I'm waiting."
With these changes, the Doctor's glasses fail. Rory and both Amys must race through robots to get to the TARDIS and safety. As they near its location, the older Amy falls back to protect the others. Younger Amy runs into a robot and is sedated. As older Amy covers him, Rory carries younger Amy into the TARDIS. Just before older Amy manages to reach the TARDIS The Doctor locks the doors.


[[File:Doctor Who 6x10 The Girl Who Waited 498.jpg|thumb|right|Amy looks at her home.]]The Doctor tells Rory that it is impossible for both Amys to exist in the same time stream. Rory must choose which Amy he wants. The older Amy and he bid a tearful farewell from behind the shut TARDIS door as older Amy tells Rory that she is giving the younger Amy her days with Rory as a gift, and he should move on without her. The older Amy asks the interface to show her a holographic projection of Earth, her home, as she reflects on the time she fell in love with Rory, and is finally taken by the robots.
Meanwhile, Rory and the Doctor have landed in Amy's time stream, and Rory is exploring the art gallery when he is confronted by a warrior wearing makeshift armor -- made from a dismantled Handbot -- and bearing a katana, who lunges at him with the sword raised. With Rory cornered, the warrior whispers that it waited for him.  As it steps away, it removes the helmet shielding its face to reveal that it is, in fact, Amy -- though she is much older than before.  The Doctor, who is able to see Amy through Rory's glasses, realizes that he landed the TARDIS much later in Amy's time stream than he initially anticipated. Amy takes out a Handbot that has snuck up behind Rory, rewiring its black box with her "[[sonic probe]]" -- which she has constructed during her time in the facility -- to shield her presence from the other Handbots.  Rory questions why Amy is still in the facility when she is clearly much older, and she bitterly replies that it's because they didn't save her as they'd promised. She has been living in the facility for thirty-sixy years, and during that time, she has come to hate the Doctor more than she's ever hated anyone in her life.


Later, the Doctor and Rory have resolved their issues with each other and Rory asks if the Doctor knew all along that two Amys would never work, The Doctor simply states that he promised to save Amy and he has. Rory walks over to Amy. She wakes and asks for her older self. Neither the Doctor nor Rory answer her.
Amy leaves the room, closely followed by Rory, who suggests that they could return the TARDIS to the right time stream and stop Amy's wait from happening; however, the Doctor admits that this is Amy's time stream, so they can't leave.  They return to the temporal engines room to find a Handbot that Amy has literally disarmed and named Rory; it is her sole companion, though she refers to it as a pet.  She continues to berate the Doctor, claiming that all she had for thirty-six years was cold hard reality, and her life is hell.  The Doctor asks to speak to the Interface, insisting that he will put everything right; however, the Interface cannot be activated inside the engine room, and so Amy takes Rory to the garden.  The Interface shows the Doctor where the regulator valve is held, and the Doctor asks Rory to speak to Amy so they can run over "technical specifications."  With the information he gets from her, the Doctor realizes that he can set the time streams right by using the temporal engines to fold the two points of Amy's timeline together.  However, Amy angrily rejects this plan to save her past self.
 
The return to the temporal engines room, with the Doctor pleading for Amy to agree to the plan.  She continues to resist, knowing that helping her past self will mean the past thirty-six years of her life never happened and she would cease to exist.  Instead, she asks for the Doctor and Rory to take her with them, leaving the younger Amy behind to live out the next thirty-six years in solitude.  Rory, who is angry at the Doctor for causing so much trouble, angrily throws the glasses to the ground; the feedback on them allows the Doctor to hear the present Amy crying in her own point on the timeline within the engine room.  Rory uses the time glass to view the younger Amy, and forces the older Amy to confront her own past.
 
[[File:Doctor Who 6x10 The Girl Who Waited 316.jpg|thumb|left|Future Amy meets her past self, and vice versa.]]As the older Amy and her past self communicate, the older Amy bitterly begins to remember the real reason she was never rescued: it wasn't because Rory and the Doctor left her behind, but because her future self refused to help them when it mattered.  The two Amys begin to discuss Rory and how he's always been in love with her -- going so far as to pretend to be in a rock band when they were in school -- and how she needs to be saved for Rory.  After this conversation, the older Amy informs Rory that she is going to "pull time apart" for him, but that she will only help if the Doctor agrees to let her travel in the TARDIS alongside her past self.  The Doctor reluctantly admits that the TARDIS could sustain the paradox.  Through a hijacking of the regulator valves and by insisting that both Amys concentrate on a powerful memory -- which turns out to be their first kiss with Rory -- the Doctor is able to pull the younger Amy into her future self's point in the time stream.
 
They set off through the facility for the room where the Doctor waits in the TARDIS; however, because of the massive paradox, the TARDIS is malfunctioning and, as a result, the group only has eight minutes to get back to it. The older Amy bothers the younger Amy by flirting with Rory.  Once the group reaches the art gallery, they find themselves surrounded by Handbots, which the older Amy agrees to fight off while Rory and her past self run ahead to the TARDIS.  However, the younger Amy is put to sleep by one of the Handbots, and although Rory quickly deactivates it by smashing a painting over its head, she remains unconscious, and he must carry her to the TARDIS.  Inside, the Doctor insists that she's just been given a sedative and that she will be fine.  Rushing back to the doors, he spots the older Amy, who begins running towards him; as he shouts that he's sorry, he closes the door, trapping her outside.  Rory protests, but the Doctor explains that he lied earlier.  There can never be two Amys in the TARDIS, so Rory must choose which Amy he wants to bring along.
 
Through the door, the older Amy tells Rory that, if he loves her, he shouldn't let her in.  Seeing[[File:Doctor Who 6x10 The Girl Who Waited 498.jpg|thumb|right|Amy looks at her home.]] Rory carry the younger Amy to the TARDIS made her realize just how much he truly loves her, and that she'd forgotten how much she loved "being Amy Pond in the TARDIS with Rory Williams."  Rory locks the door, apologizing to her, though he is clearly devastated.
 
The older Amy turns away from the TARDIS to see that she has been surrounded by an army of Handbots, all of whom tell her not to be alarmed because "this is a kindness."  She calls for the Interface, resignedly asking to see Earth.  When the [[hologram]] appears, she asks the Interface if she ever told her about a boy she met there, "who pretended to be in a band?"  The Handbots step through the hologram, dissolving it, and put Amy to sleep by touching her neck.  They subsequently inject her with their medicine, killing her instantly.
 
Rory and the Doctor sit in the TARDIS, waiting for Amy to wake up.  Rory questions whether or not the Doctor always knew that saving both Amys wasn't possible, but he dodges answering, insisting that he promised to save her and he did.  Rory accepts this.  When Amy awakes, she asks after her older self, though the Doctor can only offer a grave look before leaving.


== Cast ==
== Cast ==

Revision as of 22:39, 31 January 2012

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The Girl Who Waited (TV story) was the tenth episode in the sixth series of Doctor Who. The moral choice at the centre of the story made it a character study of the relationship between Amy and Rory.

Synopsis

Amy is trapped in a quarantine facility for victims of a plague on Apalapucia – a plague that can kill the Doctor in a day. The Doctor uses the TARDIS to smash through time and break in, but then Rory is on his own. He must find Amy and bring her back to the TARDIS before the alien doctors can administer their deadly medicine. Rory is about to encounter a very different side to his wife. Can he rescue Amy before she is killed by kindness?[1]

Plot

The Doctor brings Amy and Rory to the resort planet of Apalapucia, one of the top holiday destinations in the universe. Though he promises views of "sunsets, spires, and soaring silver colonnades," they step out of the TARDIS to find that they have landed in a clinically white room possessing only an exit door with two buttons, labeled "Green Anchor" and "Red Waterfall." Amy steps back into the TARDIS to retrieve her phone while the Doctor and Rory use the door -- pressing the "Green Anchor" button -- and enter another room, which holds a table on which rests a large magnifying glass. When Amy steps back into the corridor, she also uses the door -- pressing the "Red Waterfall" button -- and finds herself in a similar-looking room, though Rory and the Doctor are not present. When Rory steps into the Red Waterfall room to find her, she is not there.

The Doctor and Rory are terrified by the virus.

The Doctor activates the Time Glass and sees Amy, who wonders where the Doctor and Rory have gone. A Handbot enters the room where the Doctor and Rory are, welcoming them to the Two Streams Facility, which is a "kindness facility." As the Doctor and Rory are held at bay by the robot, Amy appears to fast-forward within the glass; when the Doctor finally stabilizes it, she angrily informs him that it has been a week since they last spoke. From this, the Doctor is able to deduce that Amy has wound up in a faster time stream which they cannot access; their only means of communicating with her is through the glass. The Handbot informs the Doctor and Rory that Two Streams is a facility for victims of the Chen-7, or "one-day," plague, which affects two-hearted races -- including native Apalapucians and Time Lords. Amy's time stream is synced for visits, so that those affected by Chen-7 can watch their family members live out their entire lives within the last day of their survival.

The Doctor removes the magnifying glass from the table, but accidentally activates an alarm in the process. He orders Amy to go into the facility and seek a hiding place where she might wait for him to find her. Before he leaves, he warns her to not let the Handbots administer any medicine to her; because she possesses only one heart, she is immune to Chen-7, and so the Handbots' "kindness" will kill her. Before departing, Amy asks Rory to save her. The Doctor and Rory return to the TARDIS, where the Doctor uses the magnifying glass to lock onto Amy's time stream. Because the Doctor is at risk of becoming infected with Chen-7, he cannot go into the facility; therefore, he sends Rory in his place, though they are in constant communication through a pair of glasses wired with a camera. The Doctor insists that it is very difficult to break through a time wall, but sends the TARDIS off on course regardless.

Amy discovers a gate leading to various entertainment zones.

Meanwhile, Amy has arrived in the Two Streams lobby, where she is met by a holographic receptionist informing her of all the "entertainment zones" within the facility that she now has access to as a resident. She is also introduced to the Interface, who claims to be Amy's guide within the facility. As Amy strolls along a promenade looking for somewhere to hide and wait for the Doctor, she is met by a series of Handbots, all of whom attempt to inject her with medication. She seeks shelter from the pursuing Handbots within a vent system in a maintenance room; the smoke from the vent prevents the Handbots from detecting her, and she manages to escape.

She arrives in another white room with a console in the center and empty doorways surrounding it; this is the Gate, and the console buttons control various doorways which lead to the entertainment zones. Amy chooses a majestic garden, which the Interface informs her is the perfect replica of Shill Governor's mansion on Shallana. Amy asks the Interface about the vent system she hid in earlier. The vent channels the exhaust fumes from the temporal engines, which hold the multiple time streams in place. Amy deduces from this that the engines interfere with the Handbots' sensors, and wonders where the temporal engines are located. The Interface points her in the right direction, and Amy prepares to leave in search of them; however, two Handbots materialize around her. Utilizing the sleep sensors on their hands, she presses them together, deactivating both and escaping once more. Arriving at the temporal engines room, Amy scrawls a message for the Doctor and Rory on the door: "Doctor, I'm waiting."

Meanwhile, Rory and the Doctor have landed in Amy's time stream, and Rory is exploring the art gallery when he is confronted by a warrior wearing makeshift armor -- made from a dismantled Handbot -- and bearing a katana, who lunges at him with the sword raised. With Rory cornered, the warrior whispers that it waited for him. As it steps away, it removes the helmet shielding its face to reveal that it is, in fact, Amy -- though she is much older than before. The Doctor, who is able to see Amy through Rory's glasses, realizes that he landed the TARDIS much later in Amy's time stream than he initially anticipated. Amy takes out a Handbot that has snuck up behind Rory, rewiring its black box with her "sonic probe" -- which she has constructed during her time in the facility -- to shield her presence from the other Handbots. Rory questions why Amy is still in the facility when she is clearly much older, and she bitterly replies that it's because they didn't save her as they'd promised. She has been living in the facility for thirty-sixy years, and during that time, she has come to hate the Doctor more than she's ever hated anyone in her life.

Amy leaves the room, closely followed by Rory, who suggests that they could return the TARDIS to the right time stream and stop Amy's wait from happening; however, the Doctor admits that this is Amy's time stream, so they can't leave. They return to the temporal engines room to find a Handbot that Amy has literally disarmed and named Rory; it is her sole companion, though she refers to it as a pet. She continues to berate the Doctor, claiming that all she had for thirty-six years was cold hard reality, and her life is hell. The Doctor asks to speak to the Interface, insisting that he will put everything right; however, the Interface cannot be activated inside the engine room, and so Amy takes Rory to the garden. The Interface shows the Doctor where the regulator valve is held, and the Doctor asks Rory to speak to Amy so they can run over "technical specifications." With the information he gets from her, the Doctor realizes that he can set the time streams right by using the temporal engines to fold the two points of Amy's timeline together. However, Amy angrily rejects this plan to save her past self.

The return to the temporal engines room, with the Doctor pleading for Amy to agree to the plan. She continues to resist, knowing that helping her past self will mean the past thirty-six years of her life never happened and she would cease to exist. Instead, she asks for the Doctor and Rory to take her with them, leaving the younger Amy behind to live out the next thirty-six years in solitude. Rory, who is angry at the Doctor for causing so much trouble, angrily throws the glasses to the ground; the feedback on them allows the Doctor to hear the present Amy crying in her own point on the timeline within the engine room. Rory uses the time glass to view the younger Amy, and forces the older Amy to confront her own past.

File:Doctor Who 6x10 The Girl Who Waited 316.jpg
Future Amy meets her past self, and vice versa.

As the older Amy and her past self communicate, the older Amy bitterly begins to remember the real reason she was never rescued: it wasn't because Rory and the Doctor left her behind, but because her future self refused to help them when it mattered. The two Amys begin to discuss Rory and how he's always been in love with her -- going so far as to pretend to be in a rock band when they were in school -- and how she needs to be saved for Rory. After this conversation, the older Amy informs Rory that she is going to "pull time apart" for him, but that she will only help if the Doctor agrees to let her travel in the TARDIS alongside her past self. The Doctor reluctantly admits that the TARDIS could sustain the paradox. Through a hijacking of the regulator valves and by insisting that both Amys concentrate on a powerful memory -- which turns out to be their first kiss with Rory -- the Doctor is able to pull the younger Amy into her future self's point in the time stream.

They set off through the facility for the room where the Doctor waits in the TARDIS; however, because of the massive paradox, the TARDIS is malfunctioning and, as a result, the group only has eight minutes to get back to it. The older Amy bothers the younger Amy by flirting with Rory. Once the group reaches the art gallery, they find themselves surrounded by Handbots, which the older Amy agrees to fight off while Rory and her past self run ahead to the TARDIS. However, the younger Amy is put to sleep by one of the Handbots, and although Rory quickly deactivates it by smashing a painting over its head, she remains unconscious, and he must carry her to the TARDIS. Inside, the Doctor insists that she's just been given a sedative and that she will be fine. Rushing back to the doors, he spots the older Amy, who begins running towards him; as he shouts that he's sorry, he closes the door, trapping her outside. Rory protests, but the Doctor explains that he lied earlier. There can never be two Amys in the TARDIS, so Rory must choose which Amy he wants to bring along.

Through the door, the older Amy tells Rory that, if he loves her, he shouldn't let her in. Seeing

Rory carry the younger Amy to the TARDIS made her realize just how much he truly loves her, and that she'd forgotten how much she loved "being Amy Pond in the TARDIS with Rory Williams." Rory locks the door, apologizing to her, though he is clearly devastated.

The older Amy turns away from the TARDIS to see that she has been surrounded by an army of Handbots, all of whom tell her not to be alarmed because "this is a kindness." She calls for the Interface, resignedly asking to see Earth. When the hologram appears, she asks the Interface if she ever told her about a boy she met there, "who pretended to be in a band?" The Handbots step through the hologram, dissolving it, and put Amy to sleep by touching her neck. They subsequently inject her with their medicine, killing her instantly.

Rory and the Doctor sit in the TARDIS, waiting for Amy to wake up. Rory questions whether or not the Doctor always knew that saving both Amys wasn't possible, but he dodges answering, insisting that he promised to save her and he did. Rory accepts this. When Amy awakes, she asks after her older self, though the Doctor can only offer a grave look before leaving.

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

  • Twitter and a Disneyland on the planet Clom are mentioned
  • The title, The Girl Who Waited references the Doctor's nickname of Amy, given because she waited for him for so long after they first met. (DW: The Eleventh Hour, The Big Bang)
  • When the Doctor looks for the glasses, a small tape player looking device activates on the TARDIS console and the 1963 Doctor Who theme can be heard, played backwards.

TARDIS

The Doctor

  • The Doctor is willing to accept blame for the TARDIS landing too late in Amy's timestream, even though DW: The Doctor's Wife established that such misdirections were often the result of the TARDIS herself making a decision as to where the Doctor should land.
  • This episode shows a much darker side of the Doctor, as he lies to the Amys about their chances of existing at the same time, and in the end locks out the older Amy as she runs for the TARDIS, condemning her to erasure.

Story notes

  • The episode's original title was The Visitors' Room. This changed to The Visiting Hour and later, the one-word title, Kindness. Despite many reports to the contrary, there was no late change to the adventure's title and at no point was it ever called The Green Anchor.
  • The cast list for this episode is the shortest of any full length episode of modern Doctor Who.

Ratings

  • UK Overnight: 6.0 Million
  • UK Final: 7.6 Million

Myths

The episode was going to be called The Green Anchor. This was proven false and was also denied by the writer. However, the Green Anchor button was a key element in the beginning of the episode.

Production errors

  • When Rory holds up the magnifying glass to Amy's lipstick message, the Doctor's view of Rory's vision comes at an angle impossible for Rory to see through his glasses.
    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.
  • Amy's aging makeup is noticeably different from one shot to the next.

Continuity

Home video releases

Series6.2DVD.jpg

This episode will be released on DVD and Blu-ray shortly after the airing of episode thirteen.[2]


Footnotes