The Pilot (TV story)

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The Pilot was the first episode of the tenth series of Doctor Who produced by BBC Wales. It introduced the Twelfth Doctor's new companion, Bill Potts.

According to Steven Moffat in a video introduction, "series 10 sort of begins the show again. [The Pilot] introduces everything you need to know about Doctor Who, and tips you into the universe". Indeed, through Bill's eyes now, viewers are introduced again to the character of the Doctor, his TARDIS, his enemies the Daleks, and his versatile tool, the sonic screwdriver.

New viewers are brought into the show with all important information given, and meet the Doctor as a mysterious figure, much like they did through Rose Tyler in series 1's 2005 "pilot", Rose, or through Ian and Barbara in the original 1963 introduction, "An Unearthly Child". Much like Rose, The Pilot follows Bill around in every scene.

This was also the first on-screen depiction of the Dalek-Movellan War since Resurrection of the Daleks, in 1984. The Pilot introduces St Luke's University, where the Doctor has been lecturing for over fifty years, and begins a plot thread surrounding what he and Nardole are hiding in a vault beneath the campus.

Synopsis

The Doctor -- now living and teaching at St Luke's University on Earth -- convinces dinner lady Bill Potts to be his private student. The Time Lord and his companion Nardole soon discover that their new friend has unwittingly made a deal with a prospective girlfriend that threatens their safety in a way that even the TARDIS can't outrun.

Plot

to be added

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

Science

Technology

  • The Doctor has, in his office, several sonic screwdrivers, of various designs from his past.

TARDIS

  • The Doctor tells Bill that "TARDIS" stands for "Time and Relative Dimension in Space". (Other stories have it as "Dimensions".) Bill questions why this acronym only works in English.
  • Bill compares the TARDIS control room design to a kitchen.
  • She also asks where the toilet is.
  • While she discovers the TARDIS is bigger on the inside, Bill at first thinks it's a knock-through behind his office, then that it's a lift.

Culture

Locations

St Luke's University

Story notes

File:Introducing the New Companion... - Doctor Who - BBC File:Pearl Mackie & Steven Moffat - The Aftershow - Doctor Who The Fan Show

  • A working title for this episode was A Star In Her Eye.[1][2][3][4]
  • Before filming started, a two-minute scene featuring the Doctor and Bill known as Friend From the Future was broadcast in April 2016, set during the encounter in the Dalek war zone. Parts of this scene were adapted into the episode. (DWM 511)
  • The setting of this story bears some resemblance to the unfinished TV story Shada. Both stories feature Time Lords (in Shada, Chronotis; in The Pilot, the Doctor) who settle in colleges as eccentric professors for an extended period of time. Both feature opening shots of a student (in Shada, Chris Parsons; in The Pilot, Bill Potts) entering their studies and noticing the TARDIS, parked in the corner.
  • The plot element of having the Doctor travel to various obscure locations in the universe as he continuously encounters the same entity has been used in the Doctor Who universe various times before.
  • A creature which mimicked living people to steal their form previously appeared in TV: Midnight.
  • Another spaceship part seeking a compatible pilot — specifically, one who wants to leave, to travel — previously appeared in TV: The Lodger.
  • The Doctor battled off against sentient water before in TV: The Waters of Mars. A similar effect is used here in The Pilot to indicate that the water is controlling them: the liquid is dripping from their hands, their mouths and their clothes.
  • During the scene when the Doctor is about to wipe Bill's memory and she tells him to imagine if someone did it to him, "Clara's Theme" plays. This is a reference to the events of TV: Hell Bent.[5]
  • "The Sad Man with A Box" plays in the scene in which Bill is introduced to the TARDIS. A happier, more fairy-tale rendition of this same tune, "The Mad Man with a Box", played during the scene in The Eleventh Hour when Amy walked into the TARDIS and saw the interior for the first time.
  • The romance between Bill Potts and her friend, Heather, may be homage to William "Bill" Hartnell, the first actor to portray the Doctor, and his wife, Heather Hartnell.
  • The ringtone for Bill's mobile phone is the same as the one for Martha Jones' phone, which was later kept onboard the TARDIS by the Tenth Doctor.
  • When Nardole shows Bill the Doctor's office, his arm makes a mechanical sound and a bolt falls from it, implying that his body is robotic.

Ratings

to be added

Filming locations

  • The Main Building, the Sir Martin Evans Building, and Tower Building of Cardiff University largely fill in for St Luke's University, while the Reardon Smith Theatre (within the National Museum of Wales) is where the Doctor gives his lectures.
  • The Cardiff Metropolitan University (Llandaff Campus)'s Atrium Cafe is where Bill serves chips.
  • The bar scene was shot at Clwb Ifor Bach in Cardiff.
  • Bill runs into the bathroom in "Australia", in World of Boats in Cardiff.
  • CEMEX's Taffs Well quarry, just outside of Cardiff, is the exotic planet the TARDIS team travel to.

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.

to be added

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

to be added

Footnotes