The Waters of Mars (TV story)
It's taken me all these years to realise that the Laws of Time are mine...AND THEY WILL OBEY ME!
The Waters of Mars was the second of the 2009 Specials leading up to the end of the David Tennant era. It aired on 15th November 2009 on BBC One.
Synopsis
Mars. 2059. Bowie Base One. Last recorded message: "Don't drink the water. Don't even touch it. Not one drop."
Plot
The TARDIS arrives on Mars and the Doctor steps out in his spacesuit, seemingly just to relax and enjoy the landscape. Stumbling across a base inhabited by a team from Earth, the Doctor is detained by a remote-controlled robot called "GADGET" and brought inside. The base commander, Adelaide Brooke, is at first suspicious of the Doctor, but after a tense interrogation, decides to trust him. The Doctor learns that the date is 21st November 2059, and that this is in fact Bowie Base One, the first human outpost on Mars. History has it that on this date the base was destroyed in a mysterious explosion and Brooke and her crew were all killed. Unwilling to break the laws of time and interfere with fixed points in history, the Doctor decides to leave. However, at the very same moment a crisis is developing: two crewmembers, Andy Stone and Maggie Cain, have been infected by a mysterious life form which takes over their bodies and causes them to gush copious amounts of water. Adelaide confiscates the Doctor's spacesuit, reasoning that he could be responsible for the infection in some way, and orders him to come with her and another crewmember, Tarak Ital, to investigate.
The infection spreads, with Andy passing on the condition to Tarak. The two men are contained in the base's "bio-sphere" section while Maggie is secured in the medical wing. In a conversation with colleague Yuri Kerenski, the organism occupying Maggie's body reveals its desire to reach Earth, a planet rich in water. The crew plan to evacuate in an escape shuttle, and the Doctor breaks the news to Adelaide that she must die today, on Mars, if events are to unfold as they should. However, he also tells her that her death will inspire her descendants to travel further into space and establish peaceful relations with numerous extraterrestrial species. Unwillingly, Adelaide lets him leave. As the Doctor is making his way back to the TARDIS, Maggie breaks out of confinement, infiltrates the shuttle and infects pilot Ed Gold, Adelaide's deputy. Before the condition takes a hold over him, Ed manages to trigger the shuttle's self-destruct mechanism, which traps the infection on Mars but also leaves the surviving crew with no means of escape. The destruction of the shuttle is witnessed by the Doctor who, overcome by defiance against time itself, returns to the base to save the others.
Realising that there is no way to change the course of history, Adelaide activates Bowie Base's self-destruct sequence. The infected personnel mount the roof of the control centre and exude more water, which pours into the room and claims GADGET's operator, Roman Groom, and Steffi Ehrlich. However, the Doctor uses GADGET to access the TARDIS, operate its controls remotely and transport the time and space machine into the base, rescuing Adelaide, Yuri and Mia Bennett from the resulting nuclear explosion.
The TARDIS materialises outside Adelaide's house on Earth. Mia and Yuri are shocked by their experiences on Mars and Doctor's power and depart, bewildered. In a conversation with Adelaide, the Doctor reflects on why he ultimately decided to save her and the others. He argues that the Time Lords' rules were only valid while their civilisation existed, and that since he is the last of his race he has total authority over time. He proudly declares himself the "Time Lord Victorious" and remarks that with this power he will now be able to save influential figures such as Adelaide as well as "little people" the likes of Yuri and Mia. Scolding the Doctor for his new found arrogance, Adelaide returns home and commits suicide, reverting the changes that the Doctor has made to the timeline.
Only now understanding the full impact of his actions, the Doctor is overcome with horror and realises that there will be a price to pay for his interference. Ood Sigma appears in the street, prompting the Doctor to ask him whether he has finally gone too far — whether the time has come for him to die. Unresponsive, Sigma vanishes, and the Doctor staggers back into the TARDIS to the ominous sound of the Cloister Bell. With a defiant "No!", he begins to work the machine's controls.
Cast
- The Doctor - David Tennant
- Adelaide Brooke - Lindsay Duncan
- Ed Gold - Peter O'Brien
- Tarak Ital - Chook Sibtain
- Andy Stone - Alan Ruscoe
- Maggie Cain - Sharon Duncan-Brewster
- Mia Bennett - Gemma Chan
- Yuri Kerenski - Aleksander Mikic
- Steffi Ehrlich - Cosima Shaw
- Roman Groom - Michael Goldsmith
- Emily Brooke - Lily Bevan
- Mikhail Kerenski - Max Bollinger
- Ulrika Ehrlich - Anouska Strahnz
- Lisette Ehrlich - Zofia Strahnz
- Adelaide's Father - Charlie De'ath
- Ood Sigma - Paul Kasey
- Young Adelaide - Rachel Fewell
Crew
References
- Adelaide was 10 years old when the Earth was stolen by the Daleks, she witnessed one herself.
- Whilst on Earth when the Doctor is in the TARDIS the cloister bell is audible.
- "Bowie Base One" has simliar layout like the Moonbase from Gerry Andersons TV serie "UFO"
- "What the hell is that noise?" the sound is a Proximity Alarm, used in the Movie: "2001, a Space Odyssey"
Earth history
- Adelaide Brooke says that the last forty years on Earth have been chaos, with massive climate change, ozone degradation, and "the oil apocalypse"; humanity "almost reached extinction" during this period. Andy's obituary mentions "appalling storm conditions" in 2040, and climate change affecting agriculture in 2045.
- Maggie believes the Doctor may be a Filipino or Spanish astronaut, as the Philippines are rumoured to be building a Mars rocket and Spain have a "space link" that they managed to keep secret. Andy Stone's sister worked for the Spanish space programme. Ed Gold believes the Doctor is from a non-state independent group, referring to the Branson Inheritance.
- Various lunar missions have been carried out, including ten German missions and Project Pit Stop, establishing a refueling station on the moon. Mars was landed on in 2041, with Adelaide Brooke as part of the crew. Thirty years after 2059, Brooke's granddaughter Susan will pilot the first lightspeed ship.
- At least one of the webpages -- the one showing Brooke's granddaughter -- dates from the 2080s or later, suggesting the Internet still exists in some form in the late 21st century.
- In 2059 flares emanating from the Solar System's Sun are preventing clear communications between Earth and Mars.
Locations
- Bowie Base One is Earth's first off world colony.
- "Bowie Base One" is a reference to the David Bowie song "Life on Mars", which is also the name of a BBC TV series set in 1973 starring John Simm, who currently plays The Master.
- Bowie Base One is located on Mars in the Gusev Crater.
Races and Species
- The Doctor mentions the Ice Warriors and suggests that they may have frozen the Flood.
Robots
- The Doctor said that he hates "funny robots" but notes that he'd be okay with a robot dog.
- Gadget was built by Roman Groom using parts from the drones that constructed Bowie Base One.
Story Notes
- This story was initially envisaged as a Christmas special, several festive references remain, such as the crew on Mars preparing for Christmas dinner, and it snowing when the Doctor arrives back on Earth as he exclaims how he likes snow.
- This story was originally entitled; Red Christmas.
- The title "The Waters of Mars" can be rearranged to spell Wars of the Master or The Master of Wars.
- Lindsay Duncan becomes the oldest actress, and briefly the oldest individual, to be cast in the companion role (although like several before her, her official status as a companion will remain debatable). As Bernard Cribbins will be taking on the companion role in The End of Time, he will become the elder male actor and elder individual in this role.
- The episode ends with a dedication to Barry Letts. The former Doctor Who producer and writer had died several weeks before the broadcast.
- The Doctor's mention of Mia being only 27 may be a reference to Matt Smith, David Tennant's successor to the role, who was 27 at the time the episode aired.
Ratings
- 10.32 Milion
- 33.9% of TV share
Filming Locations
- Victoria Place, Newport
- National Botanic Gardens of Wales, Carmarthenshire
- Taff's Well quarry, Cardiff, Wales
Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors
- If no Human had ever heard of the Ice Warriors then how can the events of NA: The Dying Days not be known by the Humans? (The novels may not be considered canon, by the current production team, also that event may have been in flux. It is never explicitly stated that Humans have never heard of the Ice Warriors. When the Doctor mentions them, Adelaide simply states, "I haven't got time for stories.")
- After the explosion of the shuttle, several fires are burning all around the site. Taking into account the initial explosion was fueled by the base's oxygen, and given that Mars has no appreciable atmosphere, how can these smaller fires burn in the vacuum? (Because Mars does have an atmosphere, albeit one with a pressure roughly equivalent to one hundredth that of Earth's atmosphere.)
- Given that Mars's thin atmosphere consists primarily of carbon dioxide, with a very small concentration of oxygen (which is required for combustion), how can the smaller fires after the explosion burn? (There is a lot we don't know about Bowie Base One. We don't know what sort of fuel they're using, and we don't know how the self-destruct mechanism on the rocket works.)
- In Father's Day The Reapers turned up due to Rose saving her father when somebody who was dead is now alive - surely this should be the case now for Yuri and Mia as they should have died but are now alive. (The Reapers only showed up in Fathers Day due to Rose saving her father's life, as then, that altered the timeline meaning that in the future Rose wouldn't have travelled to the past to save her father, causing a paradox, the Doctor only changed the future when he saved Adelaide's life. Had Adelaide's granddaughter travelled back in time to save her grandmother, for instance, that would more likely have caught the Reapers' attention. Also, as Adelaide almost immediately kills herself, thereby maintaining the timeline save for relatively minor alterations, there was no need for the Reapers to appear.)
- The news article on Adelaide claims that she was born in 1999 and yet was also 10 when her parents died in 2008. (Newspapers, or family's writing obituaries, often blur the specific ages - e.g., 9 years, 9 months is rounded up to 10 years)
- The news article on the mission refers to "Dr Tarak Ital MD." It would be correct to write either the "Dr" or the "MD," but both at once is redundant and grammatically incorrect. Ital's obituary also misspells "Havana". (It is correct if the person has both an MD and a PhD.)
- The article on Susie Fontana Brooke's first "Faster then Light" flight lists Adelaide's team at the end as hers. If Mia and Yuri were both in their twenties during the Mars mission it wouldn't be impossible for them to still be working thirty years later. They would only be in the late fifties by then.
- Why would the Doctor comment on Mia's age when Roman is two years younger than her? (Mia appears much younger, and the Doctor's ongoing interest in female companions would suggest additional sympathy for her.)
- When it is revealed that Maggie is one of the creatures, the outer shot shows her hair back while in the closer shot, it is around her face.
- Why didn't the Doctor simply take the crew into the distant future or the distant past? History would have been preserved as the records would show the crew were killed in the nuclear explosion. At this point the Doctor wasn't just concerned with saving the crew - he was, as he said, fighting the very laws of time themselves. In that state of mind, delivering the crew to another point in time would not have been as great a victory for him. He wanted to break the laws of time.
- Didn't the Doctor's helmet break already in DW: The Satan Pit? (There was more than enough time for the Doctor to have fixed or replaced it.)
- In Yuri Kerenski's profile near the beginning of the episode, Tarak Ital's name is incorrectly spelt as "Tarek".
Continuity
- The Doctor speaks partially to the events of DW: The Fires of Pompeii.
- There is a flashback to (which includes a cameo by a Dalek) DW: The Stolen Earth / Journey's End
- The spacesuit the Doctor wore was the same suit from DW: The Impossible Planet / The Satan Pit.
- Mars appears not to have much of an atmosphere, however NA: The Dying Days suggests otherwise.
- SJA: The Mad Woman in the Attic is also (partially) set in 2059.
- Carmen's prophecy "he will knock four times" is mentioned from DW: Planet of the Dead.
- Sound clips of the Doctor talking about the Time Lords and The Time War are used from DW: Gridlock, Utopia / The Sound of Drums / Last of the Time Lords.
International Broadcasts
- Prime - New Zealand: 29th November 2009[1]
- ABC1 - Australia: 6th December 2009[2]
- BBC America: 19th December 2009
- Space - Canada: 19th December 2009[3]
DVD release
- It has been announced that the four specials plus The Next Doctor will be released in North America on both DVD and Blu-Ray in a box set on 2nd February 2010.[4]
External links
- BBC - Doctor Who - The Waters of Mars - Episode Guide
- The Waters of Mars at Shannon Sullivan's A Brief History of Time (Travel)
- The Waters of Mars at The Locations Guide
Footnotes
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