Revolution of the Daleks (TV story)

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Revolution of the Daleks was the 2021 New Year Special of Doctor Who. It featured the return of Jack Harkness, and marked the Thirteenth Doctor's reunion with her companions following the events of The Timeless Children.

The episode also saw the departure of Bradley Walsh as Graham O'Brien and Tosin Cole as Ryan Sinclair.

Continuing the Recon Dalek storyline begun in Resolution, a new line of Daleks were introduced, cloned from a remnant of the original recon scout. Their new design is a variant on the Recon Dalek's own casing. It also saw the return of bronze Daleks, last seen in 2017's The Pilot, leading to a battle between both factions, similar to Remembrance of the Daleks and Blood of the Daleks.

Synopsis

As the Thirteenth Doctor marks her days in prison, elsewhere in the universe the Daleks are presented on national television. They are the new Defence Drones, designed to protect the British public.

Left behind on Earth, Yaz, Graham and Ryan need their friend more than ever. Now with Daleks on the assembly line, and a familiar face behind their production... What would the Doctor do?

Plot

367 minutes after the Doctor melted the casing of the Reconnaissance scout, a lorry driver takes the empty casing from GCHQ to Depositary 23, stopping off at a kiosk for a cup of tea. Walking back to his vehicle, he starts to breathe heavily, drops his cup, and collapses.

The woman running the kiosk drags him inside the lorry with the casing and drives it away.

Jo Patterson - the technology secretary - drives to a breakfast meeting with Leo Rugazzi and Jack Robertson to see Leo’s new defence drones.

They oversee a fake riot organised by Jack, where a defence drone effectively disperses the rioters, and Leo also shows the pair how the drones are controlled by AI and solar powered. Robertson and Jo talk in private, and Jo warns him not to tell anyone that she tipped him off about advanced technology being transported from GCHQ. Jack tells her that the drones will take around a year to develop.

In a prison located inside an asteroid, the Doctor wakes up, scratches another mark on her cell wall - the marks cover two walls - says hello to the cameras and her fellow inmates, and thinks. She tries to tell herself a bedtime story, but is interrupted by knocking from the other side of a wall.

Ryan Sinclair and Graham O'Brien walk towards the TARDIS disguised as a house. They go to knock on the door, but it opens for them. Inside the TARDIS control room they find Yasmin Khan surrounded by coloured paper and post it notes covered in writing stuck to almost every surface.

The Doctor wakes up, scratches another mark on her cell wall, says hello to the cameras and her fellow inmates, and sees Jack Harkness in the fenced square for exercise next to her. She’s shocked to see him.

Jack then shows her a temporal-freezing gateway disnhibitor bubble which he activates, joins the Doctor, and tells her to run. They arrive at Jack's cell where he opens a little trap containing a vortex manipulator he smuggled, they then activate it to break out.

Back on Earth, Leo talks to Robertson about the drones, he is worried about the speed of the production but Robertson reassures him, telling him to "live in the worry". Leo then talks to Robertson about the model casing, he explains that by examining it, he found out organic remnants in the machine and cloned them, growing a Dalek mutant. Robertson, horrified by this discovery, demands that Leo incinerate the creature, and tortures Leo to keep it under wraps before leaving, angrily saying that this kind of science is why nobody likes experts.

More to be added here...


Cast

Uncredited

Crew

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References

Species

Popular culture

Individuals

Technology

Locations

  • The prison where the Doctor is being held is 79 billion light-years away from Earth.
  • Ryan reads a story online about a village in Finland that is supposedly dealing with a troll invasion.
  • Graham mentions having heard a story about a quarry in Korea that has been shut down due to reports of "gravel creatures coming to life."

Story notes

  • The opening title card ("A LONG TIME AGO... FAR, FAR AWAY...") is a reference to the famous Star Wars opening title, "A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away...".
  • This was the first televised story of the parent Doctor Who series to be originally released to a streaming service, making its debut on iPlayer around 10 minutes before its BBC One broadcast, rather than shortly afterwards or live and concurrently, as is the norm. However, Series 1 of Class had previously debuted on the same service. (Perhaps coincidentally, the episodes of Class had also debuted on the iPlayer service earlier than the time that they were advertised to be released.)
  • This is the first episode to have a 4K definition in the release, but only on iPlayer. Twice Upon a Time was rereleased in that quality after the airing of the episode.

Ratings

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Filming locations

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Myths

  • Davros would return. This was proven false
  • The prison The Doctor was in would be revealed to be Shada. This is unknown
  • Graham or Ryan would die at the end of the episode. This theory was incorrect as they would both leave the Tardis alive at the end of the episode.

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.

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Continuity

Home video releases

DVD releases

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Blu-ray releases

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Digital releases

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External links