Kill the Moon (TV story)

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Kill the Moon was the seventh episode in series 8 of Doctor Who.

It saw the Twelfth Doctor take Coal Hill School student Courtney Woods on a trip to the Moon following her discovery of his true nature in the previous episode. It also revealed the true nature of the Earth's natural satellite, which had been a fixture of many previous stories.

It revisited the Earth's environmentally disastrous mid-21st century as well as the concept of time in flux, with the Doctor choosing to take a step back and leaving the future in the hands of his human company, a choice that would lead to a divide between the Doctor and Clara.

Kill the Moon was also notable from a production standpoint. Lanzarote was utilised as a filming location for the first time since 1984 when it stood in for Planet of Fire's Sarn. The production team played upon this - early drafts of the script were titled Return to Sarn just to mislead those who theorised that this story would feature the return of the Master.

The concept behind the episode came to writer Peter Harness in 2011, so initially it was written for Matt Smith. Harness expressed a belief that the script better suited Peter Capaldi with the Doctor-Clara dynamic playing out better. (DWM 478)

Synopsis

The Doctor, Clara and Courtney goes to the Moon in 2049, where they discover that the Earth's constant companion is not what it seems...

PLOT

In Coal Hill School, Clara tells the Doctor Courtney's become self-destructive as a result of the Doctor telling her she isn't special. Entering the TARDIS, Courtney's already there, and has bought travel sickness tablets in preparation for her travels, with Clara tells her won't happen. Pestering the Doctor about the effect of his comments, the Doctor offers to make her the first woman on the Moon.

The TARDIS arrives on a space shuttle carrying nuclear bombs, about to arrive on the Luna surface. The astronauts, Lundvik, Duke and Henry discover them, whereupon the Doctor deduces the Moon's increased gravity's been caused by added mass. The astronauts have travelled to destroy the Moon with the bombs. Investigating a disused mining base from a previous, Mexican, mission, they find corpses preserved in webs and research photos showing deformed landmasses; the Moon's disintegrating.

Henry investigates a cave outside the base, and is killed by a large spider, one of which then enters the base and begins menacing the Doctor, Clara, Courtney and Lundvik, and kills Duke. Courtney kills it with a detergent, and the Doctor works-out that they're germs. Courtney asks to return home out of fear.

Courtney's taken back to the TARDIS, and Clara tells the Doctor she knows the Moon isn't destroyed, having seen it above Earth in the future, but the Doctor's open to the possibility of it being a hologram or something similar. The events happening on the moonbase are a fluxed point in time - he doesn't know what happens, so the moon could be destroyed, affecting Humanity's future.

Going to analyse one of the crevices caused by the corrosion, the Doctor, Clara and Lundvik find Henry's corpse, where he's attacked by another spider, which is repelled by the deterring efffects of sunlight. The Doctor jumps down the crevice to gather a sample. The Moon shakes, and sheds more of itself. Based on the seismic activity and the amniotic fluid the Doctor finds, he determines that what everyone calls the Moon is the egg of the real Moon: the creature within. In 2048, it's hatching, after growing for millions of years. Lundvik wants to know how to kill the moon. The Doctor puts her plan in context - to blow up a new creature with nuclear bombs, something they'll have to explain to their descendants. Lundvik reasons that the Moon's disintegration is causing catastrophic weather effects on Earth, and needs to be destroyed to save the world. Not being from Earth or the Moon, the Doctor chooses not to interfere, insisting that only Humans can decide the future of their planet. Courtney wants to return to be a part of the debate, and the Doctor instructs her over her phone how to bring the TARDIS to him. As soon as she does so, he departs, leaving only Clara, Courtney and Lundvik to make the choice. Clara thinks they should take the risk, and deal with any possible consequences if/when they happen. Lundvik has only Humanity's interests to mind, and is prepared to kill the creature to stop the destruction. She activates a timer, after which, she'll detonate the bombs. Ground Control speaks to them over a screen, informing them that Earth's situation is "pretty bad". Clara broadcasts to Earth over the screen, telling them to give their vote. Turning their lights off votes "kill" and keeping their lights on votes "don't kill".

After the timer's elapsed, Earth's voted "kill". Lundvik primes the detonator, but Clara intercepts at the last second and overrides the command, just as the Doctor returns.

Taking them back to Earth, they watch as the Moon disintegrates in space, while the creatures flies away. He tells Lundvik Humanity from this point spreads into space, enduring to the end of the Universe, because they chose not to kill. Courtney realises how special she now is, being one of the three people to allow Human kind to continue.

The Doctor takes Courtney back to Coal Hill School, and Clara demands to know what the Doctor knew in order to leave them with such an important decision. Clara's angry with the Doctor abandoning them, and becomes tearful, then even more angry when the Doctor gives patronising responses to her feelings.

Clara leaves the TARDIS, which dematerialises. Danny finds her in her classroom, and she recounts the story to him. Danny tells Clara her relationship with the Doctor isn't over, because he can still make her angry.

Returning home, Clara gazes out of her window to the Moon, which just hasn't hatched yet.

Cast

Crew

General production staff

Script department

Camera and lighting department

Art department

Costume department

Make-up and prosthetics

Movement

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

cultural references from the real world

  • Courtney has a tumblr. membership. tumblr. is a micro-blogging site allowing users to post multimedia updates, which can be reblogged by other users. BBC America runs the official Doctor Who tumblr. account. BBC One has an official account, as does Neil Gaiman.

Story notes

  • This episode's original broadcast was followed by a teaser for the second series of fellow BBC Saturday night drama, Atlantis, confirming that it would premiere on 15 November, the week following the Series 8 finale of Doctor Who. Atlantis' first episode, The Earth Bull, was bookended by the initial stings promoting The Day of the Doctor.

Continuity

  • Like the Second Doctor, the Twelfth Doctor says "When I say 'run', run".
  • The Doctor tells Courtney to use a DVD in order to bring the TARDIS to him. He also says that she should hold to the console so she won't be left behind. (TV: Blink)
  • The Doctor says that he wouldn't kill Hitler as an example of not interfering with the course of history. (PROSE: Timewyrm: Exodus, TV: Let's Kill Hitler)
  • The Doctor finds amniotic fluid, from which life comes from. (TV: City of Death)
  • Earth of the mid-21st century is shown to be worse for wear enviromentally compared to the start of the century. (TV: The Waters of Mars, Aeolian)
  • The Doctor chooses to take a step back in the face of an potentially apocalyptic event, leaving humanity to choose the future. The Ninth Doctor initially took a similar approach upon witnessing what appeared to be humanity's first contact with alien life. (TV: Alien of London)
  • This is not the first time The Doctor has used a yo-yo to assess the gravity. (TV: The Ark in Space)
  • Clara mentions the previous time the TARDIS made an emergency dematerialisation. (TV: Cold War)
  • This episode reveals that every Whoniverse story set on Earth's moon after the year 2049 actually takes place on the replacement moon "laid" after the creature hatches.
  • The publication date of David Copperfield is written on the whiteboard as 1850. Clara previously argued with the Doctor over the date of Pride and Prejudice's completion. (TV: The Caretaker). In the real world, David Copperfield was published in serial form, which concluded in 1850.
  • Oswald says "Ozzy loves the squaddie". (TV: The Caretaker)

Home video releases

DVD releases

Blu-ray releases

to be added

External links

to be added

References