The Woman Who Fell to Earth (TV story)
The Woman Who Fell to Earth was the first episode of series 11 of Doctor Who. In the United Kingdom, it earned the highest overnight ratings for a regular episode of Doctor Who since 2008's Partners in Crime and was the most-watched debut for a Doctor — again, in terms of overnights — since Christopher Eccleston's initial turn in Rose.[2]
Woman was widely marketed as a landmark Doctor Who episode because it was the first to star a female Doctor. It was further notable for introducing an all-new regular cast — the largest since 1983's Terminus — and a new production team under show runner Chris Chibnall. As a result, this episode had the biggest crew shift since 2010's The Eleventh Hour.
Unusually, it had a global premiere, with many markets around the world having at least the same start time. Oddly, though, it was initially broadcast in an altered visual form in some markets. Although it was the first episode of the programme filmed in a 2:1 aspect ratio, its global premiere on networks like BBC America and Space was actually in the previous standard of 16:9. This had the effect of truncating some of the frame.
It did not include a title sequence and was the second episode of Doctor Who to have its title given in the end credits after Sleep No More three years earlier. As such, viewers had to wait until after the episode was over[3] to hear the new arrangement of the Doctor Who theme by incoming composer Segun Akinola.[4]
Synopsis
A newly-regenerated Doctor must rally her newfound friends to defeat an alien attack upon a northern city — without the TARDIS to help her.
Plot
Ryan Sinclair is trying to ride a bicycle with his grandmother Grace and her husband Graham O'Brien, on a hill side in Sheffield. Ryan struggles because of his dyspraxia, and falls off the bike. Frustrated, he throws the bike into a forest. Grace and Graham comfort him, though insist Ryan collect the bike to try again another time while they head off to the train station. As Ryan ventures to retrieve it, he sees glowing golden lines suspended in the air. He taps one and a purple coloured, plant-like pod emerges. Ryan calls the police.
Yasmin Khan, probation police officer, settles a petty dispute between two women, before calling a superior. She asks for more demanding opportunities, and after much pestering, her superior gives her Ryan's case. As she arrives, she and Ryan quickly realise that they knew each other at primary school. Yasmin presumes Ryan's just pulling a prank but Ryan remarks he can't even touch the entity, as it is freezing. Yasmin touches finding it burns her hand. Bewildered, she continues questioning Ryan.
Meanwhile, Grace and Graham are riding on a train with a man named Karl when there is a disturbance which causes the train to come to a screeching halt. Grace checks through the window, finding the passengers have fled the train. However, she finds the doors locked, meaning that they are unable to do the same. They call for Ryan and Yasmin, before being encroached by an erratic, electrified tentacle creature. Grace calls Ryan, who rushes to the scene with Yamin. Graham orders Grace and Karl to the back of the carriage but finds it locked. Before the creature can reach them, they are temporarily saved as the Thirteenth Doctor comes crashing down through the ceiling and electrocutes the creature with a metal pipe. She turns to them, insisting she can help however she finds her pockets empty meaning she can't use her sonic screwdriver to open the door. The creature awakens and pins down Karl, who panics. The Doctor insists he remain calm as it hasn't killed them yet so won't kill them now. Yasmin and Ryan enter the train, standing in shock at the creature. The creature scans him then sends a surge of electricity through the passengers before fleeing.
The Doctor begins to take charge of the situation only for Yasmin to ask who she is. The Doctor, bewildered by the use of "she", realises that she has regenerated into a woman. She starts explaining as such but returns to her investigating. She enters the driver's cart, the train's driver dead. Yasmin initially thinks the woman was murdered but the Doctor corrects that she actually died from shock. Returning to the others, Yasmin insists the Doctor stop, claiming she will call back up but the Doctor convinces her to hold off on such until they figure out exactly what the alien was.
Yasmin takes to questioning Karl instead, getting his phone number to keep in touch for further inquiries. The Doctor presses to other matters though, insisting the group needs to think of ways to learn more about the alien. Graham is sceptical that it was alien in origin, though Grace and Ryan voice they believe the Doctor. Karl, siding with Graham, backs away, wanting to leave for work and just forget about the incident. Letting him go, the Doctor asks the others for information about the creature. Ryan voices the pod he found earlier, which Yasmin agrees to take the group to. However, when they get there, they find it has already been taken.
Meanwhile, Andy, who has the pod in the back of his van, is delivering it to Rahul. On arriving, he expresses some concern for Rahul's well-being before reluctantly leaving when he pays him. Rahul surrounds the pod with video cameras to record it, then sits down and watches it intently.
Elsewhere, the Doctor asks the others to figure out if anyone in town has knowledge regarding strange alien activity. Ryan checks his phone for news on social media but finds nothing. Yas returns to her police station to ask her boss but he dismisses her given her history of moaning for more work. Grace checks in with friends from when she was a chemotherapy nurse but similarly turns up nothing. Graham tries to ask his friends from the bus station he used to work at but one, Gabriel, just makes a joke about his wife and her friends playing bingo.
Unable to come up with anything, the Doctor voices her displeasure yet finds herself fading, a result of post-regenerative trauma. She loses consciousness. Grace and Ryan take her back to their house where the Doctor sleeps, leaking regeneration energy through her mouth and skin while doing so, unnerving the pair. Later on, she awakes with a shock to the two, plus a returned Graham and Yasmin.
- to be continued
Cast
- The Doctor - Jodie Whittaker
- Graham O'Brien - Bradley Walsh
- Ryan Sinclair - Tosin Cole
- Yasmin Khan - Mandip Gill
- Grace - Sharon D Clarke
- Tim Shaw - Samuel Oatley
- Karl - Jonny Dixon
- Rahul - Amit Shah
- Sonia - Asha Kingsley
- Janey - Janine Mellor
- Ramesh Sunder - Asif Khan
- Andy - James Thackeray
- Dean - Philip Abiodun
- Dennis - Stephen MacKenna
- Gabriel - Everal A Walsh
Crew
Executive Producers Matt Strevens and Chris Chibnall | ||||||||||||
Co-executive producer Sam Hoyle | ||||||||||||
Series Producer Nikki Wilson |
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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
The Doctor
- The Doctor has recently regenerated from her twelfth incarnation.
- Before remembering her name, the Doctor states she is looking for a doctor.
- Grace discovers that the Doctor has two separate pulses.
- Recovering from her regeneration, the Doctor needs time to recuperate. Grace and Ryan see her hands and face glow with regeneration energy.
- The Doctor says she's good at building things, "probably".
- The Doctor recalls having had longer legs.
- The Doctor has not bought women's clothes in "a while".
TARDIS
- The Doctor attempts to track the trail of artron energy from the TARDIS. She teleports to its approximate coordinates, but accidentally transports Ryan, Yasmin and Graham with her.
People
- Graham O'Brien was once a bus driver.
- Yasmin Khan is a police officer.
- Ryan Sinclair is a warehouse worker, while training to be a mechanic.
- Ryan has dyspraxia.
- Grace O'Brien was once a chemotherapy nurse.
- Tim Shaw is a Stenza warrior with plans to become their leader.
- Karl Wright has been randomly selected for hunting by the Stenza.
- Karl works as a crane operator for his father's company, Skylark Building Services.
- Graham asks his friend Gabriel if he's seen anything strange lately. Gabriel responds about his wife going to karaoke with her friends.
- Graham's friend Kevin locates the Gathering Coil.
- Rahul lost his sister, Asha Chandra, to the Stenza.
- Rahul pays Andy to transport the pod in his lorry.
- Dennis, the security officer, has a granddaughter named Daisy. He video chats with her just before he's killed.
Technology
- Ryan tries to learn to ride a bicycle.
- Yasmin feels compelled to check CCTV footage, but the Doctor questions why she won't trust her own eyes.
- DNA bombs are planted on the Doctor and her new friends.
- The Doctor tracks the origin signal with Ryan's mobile phone, which she's recalibrated for this function.
- Some of the Doctor's new sonic screwdriver is made from Sheffield steel.
- The Doctor can make a new sonic screwdriver from scrap, using both Earth and alien technology.
- Rahul has a Logitech keyboard, and a Samsung monitor.
- Tim Shaw uses a short-range teleport.
Culture
- Ryan uploads a vlog of himself talking about his late grandmother to YouTube. The video is simply titled "Hey", and his YouTube channel is called RyanS.
- The number of likes and dislikes on Ryan's video equals thirteen.
- Ryan searches Twitter.
- Grace uses WhatsApp to communicate with her fellow nurses.
- Karl listens to You Are Valued, a motivational series.
- Graham supports West Ham United.
Food and beverages
- The Doctor is craving a fried egg sandwich, and promises they'll all have a cuppa', as well as the sandwich.
- Dean was littering by throwing bits of salad on the floor.
Organisations
- Yasmin works for Hallamshire Police.
- Karl and Dennis work for Skylark Building Services.
- Hallamshire Online posts on Twitter about a community hall exhibition which might interest UFO fans.
- There is an advert aboard the train for the University of South Yorkshire, which lists the phone number as 03069 990 181.
Species
- The Stenza are a warrior race and self-proclaimed conquerors of the Nine Systems.
- The Gathering Coil is an engineered bio-tech weapon, described as a "semi-species" by the Doctor.
Science
- According to one of the newspaper clippings collected by Rahul, a solar storm recently passed the UK without incident.
Biology
- The Doctor can't remember the name of her tongue, until prompted by Ryan.
- The Doctor uses her nose to time when she will lose consciousness.
- The DNA bombs appear as lights on their victims' collarbones.
- The Stenza keep the teeth of those they kill, as trophies.
Medicine
- Graham has cancer, which is now in remission.
- Grace suggests that the Doctor go to A&E, but the Doctor says she "never [goes] anywhere that's just initials".
Locations
- The episode heavily features in and around Sheffield, only leaving the city for the cliffhanger.
- The train stops between Hathersage station and Grindleford station.
- Karl lives at 52 Northover Street, and works in Sheffield.
- A 98 bus which passes the bus station is headed for Totley Brook.
- Rahul has a pennant flag for Upper Canada Village up on the wall, on the cork board behind his computer.
Story notes
- The episode doesn't feature an opening title sequence, but the new Doctor Who theme, composed by Segun Akinola, is partially played in the scene in which we are introduced to the Doctor, and then over the closing credits, which have returned to a scrolling sequence, not seen since TV: The Time of the Doctor.
- The episode title, while at first glance appears to reference the Doctor's fall from her TARDIS, is also potentially a reference to Grace's death since the episode is framed as a story that Ryan Sinclair is telling about the greatest woman he ever knew, his grandmother Grace.
- This is the first Doctor Who episode not to be scored by Murray Gold since the start of the revived era in 2005.
- This is the third post-regeneration story to feature no scenes inside the TARDIS, following TV: Spearhead from Space and TV: Robot, and the first in which the TARDIS does not appear at all.
- It is also the tenth television story in which the TARDIS does not appear at all, following Mission to the Unknown, Doctor Who and the Silurians, The Mind of Evil, The Dæmons, The Sea Devils, The Sontaran Experiment, Genesis of the Daleks, Midnight, and The Lie of the Land.
- Similarly to TV: Sleep No More, the episode title as well as the writer, producer and director credits are shown at the beginning of the end credits instead of having a regular opening title sequence.
- The end credits feature a preview of the remainder of the season, similar to TV: The Eleventh Hour and TV: The Pilot, including the names of several upcoming guest stars.
- The initial two broadcasts on BBC America did not feature even the end credits. Viewers in America had to wait until the episode was available on demand to hear the full, new theme arrangement. Instead, BBCA ran a live "after party" celebrity analysis of the episode beginning immediately after the final scene.
- This is the first non-special episode not to air on a Saturday since TV: Survival.
- The Doctor's scream as she falls through the roof of the train is reused from TV: Twice Upon a Time.
- At the premiere of the episode in Sheffield on the 24 September, Jodie revealed that for this episode only, she did all of her own stunts. Tosin Cole additionally added that he acted being bad at riding a bike.[5] This would prove to be because Ryan has dyspraxia.[6]
Ratings
Filming locations
- Sheffield, England
- Cardiff - filling in for Sheffield
- Police station, exterior - Hallamshire Police HQ[14]
- Roath Lock Studios
Production errors
to be added
Continuity
- The Doctor makes her entrance by crashing through the ceiling of the stopped train, after having been dropped from the TARDIS. (TV: Twice Upon a Time)
- The Doctor exhibits a northern English accent. She previously had one in her eighth (TV: Doctor Who) and ninth incarnations. (TV: Rose, et al.)
- The Doctor recalls having just been a "white-haired Scotsman", and that her TARDIS is now missing. (TV: Twice Upon a Time)
- The Doctor emits regeneration energy while resting. (TV: The Christmas Invasion, The Eleventh Hour)
- The Doctor mentions an exploding TARDIS could be the end of the world. (TV: The Pandorica Opens, The Big Bang)
- The Doctor spends almost the entire episode wearing her predecessor's clothes, as the Eleventh Doctor had done. (TV: The Eleventh Hour)
- While making her sonic screwdriver, the Doctor holds up a spoon excitedly, as her predecessor had done. (TV: Robot of Sherwood, Heaven Sent, Hell Bent)
- The Doctor previously fell from a great height and survived. ( Logopolis, The End of Time)
- The Doctor once again suffers from post-regenerative memory loss (TV: Doctor Who, The Time of the Doctor) and loses consciousness because of the process. (TV: The Christmas Invasion, Deep Breath)
- Earth has been used as a hunting ground before. (AUDIO: Moving Target, COMIC: Bloodsport)
- The Doctor makes her own sonic screwdriver. Amy Pond once similarly created a sonic probe. (TV: The Girl Who Waited)
- The Gathering Coil plants DNA bombs, albeit of a different design to that which afflicted John Hart. (TV: Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang)
- The Doctor admits to craving a fried egg sandwich. The Eleventh Doctor also experienced cravings after regenerating. (TV: The Eleventh Hour)
- The Doctor wears similar safety goggles to the ones the Eleventh Doctor once used. (TV: The Doctor's Wife)
- The Doctor confronts Tim Shaw on a rooftop with her companions. He also mentions that she is not human. The Eleventh Doctor had a similar confrontation with the Atraxi immediately after his regeneration. (TV: The Eleventh Hour)
- Before jumping from the crane, the Doctor says "If you want something done" without finishing. (TV: The Time of the Doctor)
Home video releases
DVD releases
to be added
Blu-ray releases
to be added
Digital releases
to be added
External links
- Official The Woman Who Fell to Earth page on the Doctor Who website
Footnotes
- ↑ The episode was globally broadcast, simultaneously, on several networks around the world, including BBC One, BBCA, Space, ABC and others.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Press Association (8 October 2018). Doctor Who: Jodie Whittaker's debut is most watched launch for 10 years. The Guardian. Retrieved on 8 October 2018.
- ↑ Some viewers didn't get the new theme arrangement, even at the end of the episode. On the BBCA initial broadcast, an "after-party" event in which celebrities analysed the episode started immediately after the final scene. The end credit sequence wasn't available on BBCA until the episode went to its "on demand" version, later in the day.
- ↑ A tiny snippet of the new theme was used incidentally underneath the Doctor's initial appearance.
- ↑ https://www.radiotimes.com/news/tv/2018-09-27/doctor-who-series-11-jodie-whittaker-stunts/
- ↑ http://www.digitalspy.com/tv/doctor-who/news/a867121/doctor-who-ryan-tosin-cole-dyspraxia-chris-chibnall/
- ↑ https://www.radiotimes.com/news/tv/2018-09-27/doctor-who-series-11-bradley-walsh-wig/
- ↑ Fullerton, Huw (8 October 2018). Jodie Whittaker’s Doctor Who debut watched by more than 8 million. RadioTimes. Retrieved on 8 October 2018.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Dixon, Emily (7 October 2018). Where Was 'Doctor Who' Series 11 Filmed? Sheffield Featured Heavily In The First Episode. Bustle. Retrieved on 8 October 2018.
- ↑ Windham, Dan (21 November 2017). This is why you may have spotted TV stars and camera crews in Sheffield yesterday. The Star. Retrieved on 8 October 2018.
- ↑ Burke, Darren (13 February 2018). Pictures: Tardis spotted in Sheffield as Doctor Who filming takes place in city. Doncaster Free Press. Retrieved on 8 October 2018.
- ↑ https://www.directenquiries.com/information/Sheffield%20Bus/731021/summary/4052-0100524/73/information.aspx
- ↑ Windham, Dan (22 November 2017). Does this picture prove that Doctor Who is being filmed near Meadowhall?. The Star. Retrieved on 8 October 2018.
- ↑ Fullerton, Huw (7 October 2018). Behind the scenes on Jodie Whittaker’s very first Doctor Who episode. RadioTimes. Retrieved on 8 October 2018.