Into the Dalek (TV story)
Into the Dalek was the second episode of the eighth series of Doctor Who produced by BBC Wales, and marked the Twelfth Doctor's first encounter with the Daleks.
Synopsis
To be added
Plot
Journey Blue's ship is being shot at by a Dalek ship, and her brother Kai is unconscious. As it explodes, she appears in the TARDIS console room.
She points her gun at the Doctor, demanding that he take her back to her command ship, the Aristotle. He waits for her to ask nicely, then complies. The TARDIS materialises and they step outside.
The pair walk onto the the Aristotle, a base for Combined Galactic Resistance the Galaxy's united front against the Daleks, while the other soldiers initially plan to kill the Doctor Journey points out they have need of one.
Journey's uncle colonel Morgan Blue takes the Doctor to a dying Dalek later named Rusty that they have managed to capture. At first the Doctor is uninterested in helping the creature until it voices it's desire to slaughter the rest of it's kind. Meanwhile at Coal Hill School a new Maths teacher Danny Pink, a war vet, is introducing himself to his class.
Danny ends class early after one of his students asks if he's ever killed a civilian before, which visibly brings him to tears. Later Danny meets with Clara Oswald one of his fellow teachers who asks him out, do to the awkwardness from the obvious connection between the two he initially declines, although she's able to ask him out for Coffee.
Returning to her office Clara discovers the Doctor standing there with the coffee she sent him for three weeks ago. The Doctor claims he needs Clara's help urgently and takes the liberty of asking her if she thinks he's a good man, a answer that she honestly doesn't know. The Doctor takes her back to the Aristotle and introduces her to Rusty.
The Doctor explains that a malfunction that is also killing it has given the Dalek a conscious, and fascinated by the idea agreed to help it. The group consisting of the Doctor, Clara, Journey and two other rebel soldiers Ross and Gretchen are shrunk down and enter the Dalek through it's Eye stalk and begin exploring the upper levels.
The Doctor takes the liberty of introducing the group to Rusty's artificial memory drive which filters out good memories and reinforces bad ones, calling it evil refined and turned into a machine. The Doctor takes the liberty of asking Rusty what made it turn on it's own kind, to which it says that it saw a star being born and made it realise the futility of the Dalek's mission.
Realizing that they have to go down Ross sets up a zip line and inadvertently damages Rusty's body which triggers the release of Anti-Bodies. Realizing that he can't save Ross the Doctor has him swallow a pill that allows him to track where the Anti-bodies stores his obliterated remains so that they can hide there. From there the group makes it way to the lower regions where they find the batteries.
Discovering a crack in one of the batteries that is leaking deadly radiation that is both killing Rusty and now them the Doctor seals it off. Now that the Rusty is fixed it immediately returns to it's programming and begins slaughtering the station's soldiers. The Doctor however is ecstatic as his belief that there is no such thing as a good Dalek is restored.
Clara is enraged by the Doctor's apathy and points out to him that what they have learned is not that there is no such thing as a good Dalek but that it is indeed possible. Inspired by Clara's words the Doctor instructs her, Gretchen and Journey to make their way to the Memory station and try to restore Rusty's memories of the star while he tries to reason with Rusty.
Gretchen sacrifices herself to set up a Griphook to get Clara and Journey to the memory core while she fends off the Anti-bodies coming after her. Dying from the Anti-bodies Gretchen meets Missy whom welcomes her to Heaven. Meanwhile Rusty calls for back up from the rest of the Daleks and plots to join in their slaughter of the rebels.
Clara is able to deduce how Rusty's memory core works and reactivates all of his suppressed memories. With this the Doctor is able to form a Psychic link with Rusty where he absorbs all of his memories. However instead of reawakening it's good side Rusty is inspired by the Doctor's own "Divine Hatred" to instead try to wipe out the rest it's kind, whom it once again sees as evil.
Rusty slaughters the rest of the Daleks on the station and everyone is returned to their proper size. Rusty has broadcasted signal to the rest of the Daleks voicing the Humans completely fictional intention to set the station to self destruct leading them to retreat. Rusty rejoins it's kind stating it will continue to sabotage them.
Before it goes Rusty agrees with the Doctor's assessment that there is no such thing as a good Dalek, that said the Doctor would make a "Good Dalek." The Doctor also views it as something of a hollow victory: someone looked into his soul and saw nothing but hatred. Clara is returned to Coal Hill where, after she tells him that, while doesnt know, he tries to be a good man (which is the important thing), she joins Danny for their date.
Cast
- The Doctor - Peter Capaldi
- Clara - Jenna Coleman
- Journey Blue - Zawe Ashton
- Colonel Morgan Blue - Michael Smiley
- Danny Pink - Samuel Anderson
- Gretchen - Laura Dos Santos
- Ross - Ben Crompton
- Fleming - Bradley Ford
- School Secretary - Michelle Morris
- Mr Armitage - Nigel Betts
- Courtney - Ellis George
- Dalek - Barnaby Edwards
- Voice of the Daleks - Nicholas Briggs
Uncredited cast
Crew
Executive Producers Steven Moffat and Brian Minchin |
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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
- Journey says the TARDIS is "smaller on the outside.”
- A molecular nanoscaler is used to shrink down the Doctor, Clara, Journey, Gretchen, and Ross.
Story notes
- The conclusion of this story is similar to the conclusion of the Big Finish Doctor Who audio stories Jubilee, where a lone Dalek notices the error of its comrades and stops an invasion.
- While this is the Twelfth Doctor's first proper encounter with the Daleks, he had previously appeared briefly in both the episodes The Day of the Doctor and The Time of the Doctor, which also featured the Daleks.
- Footage of the extermination of security guard Bywater in Dalek and the Dalek attack on the Valiant in The Stolen Earth is seen in 'Rusty's' Dalek memories, and the destruction of the Daleks and the Crucible in Journey's End is seen when Rusty looks into the Doctor's mind.
- This is the first episode since The Waters of Mars to have two credited writers. Like The Waters of Mars, it is co-written by Phil Ford and the show's head writer (then Russell T Davies, now Steven Moffat).
- The Vent joke exchanged between The Doctor and Clara is a reference to the vent scenes from "The Ark in Space (TV story) between the Fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith.
- This is the first episode since The End of Time Part one to not feature the Eleventh Doctor.
Ratings
5.2 million (overnight)[1]
Filming locations
to be added
Production errors
to be added
Continuity
- The Doctor greets Clara with the coffee he got in Glasgow, three weeks late. (TV: Deep Breath)
- Clara is still getting used to the new Doctor following his regeneration. (TV: The Time of the Doctor, Deep Breath)
- The Doctor states that morgues are easy to break out of. The Eighth Doctor previously broke out of a morgue shortly after his regeneration. (TV: Doctor Who)
- Colonel Blue suspects the Doctor of being a Dalek duplicate. (TV: Resurrection of the Daleks)
- 'Rusty' tells the Doctor that he is a "good Dalek". The 'Metaltron' encountered by the Ninth Doctor previously told him that he "would make a good Dalek." (TV: Dalek) The Eleventh Doctor also once stated that there was no such thing as a "good Dalek". (COMIC: The Only Good Dalek)
- Rusty sees the Doctor blowing up numbers of Daleks and also the Crucible, when looking into his mind. (TV: Journey's End)
- This is not in fact the first time the Doctor has encountered the use of shrinking for medical purposes. (TV: The Invisible Enemy)
- The miniaturisation technique used to enter Rusty is not unlike that of the Teselecta. The Dalek also houses defensive antibodies just as the Teselecta did. (TV: Let's Kill Hitler)
- The Sixth Doctor met a Dalek that notices an error in the Dalek race, with his then-companion Evelyn Smythe helping the Dalek to find this. (AUDIO: Jubilee)
- Rusty's epiphany concerning his people and its adamance that the Daleks must be destroyed mirrors Dalek Caan after he lost his mind following his breaking of the time-lock. (TV: Journey's End)
- The Second Doctor once made "good Daleks" by converting them with the Human Factor. He actually gave them names. Due to the introduction of human thought processes, they questioned the other Daleks, leading to a riot after which the Daleks were destroyed. (TV: The Evil of the Daleks)
- The Doctor expresses a dislike for soldiers. The Tenth Doctor shared this. (TV: The Sontaran Stratagem/The Poison Sky) The Eleventh Doctor also expressed guilt at having turned Martha Jones into a soldier. (TV: Let's Kill Hitler)
- Clara is teaching at Coal Hill School. (TV: The Day of the Doctor, Deep Breath)
- Journey refers to the TARDIS as being "smaller on the outside". (TV: The Snowmen) The Doctor tells her it's much more exciting when experienced the other way around. Donna Noble previously first encountered the TARDIS from within, and then marvelled at its external dimensions. (TV: The Runaway Bride)
- The Doctor recalls his first encounter with the Daleks on Skaro, (TV: The Daleks) and comments on how that experience shaped his identity.
Home video releases
to be added
External links
to be added
Footnotes
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