Smith and Jones (TV story)
Smith and Jones was the first episode of series 3 of Doctor Who.
It introduced the Judoon, a new version of the sonic screwdriver, and more notably, it was the televised debut of companion Martha Jones and her family. It also firmly established that Harold Saxon was well-known to ordinary members of the British public, and obliquely suggested through set decoration that he was standing for the office of Prime Minister — something which had been previously teased by the episodes Love & Monsters, Captain Jack Harkness and The Runaway Bride.
The soundtrack notably introduced several new leitmotifs — including the much-used "Martha's Theme" that also appeared in Jones's later Torchwood appearances. Furthermore, it featured the first extra-diegetic use of hip hop in Doctor Who history, in the form of Arrested Development's "Sunshine" to introduce Martha and her family at the very top of the episode. Due to a quirk of release scheduling, this was also the first time that Doctor Who served to premiere a song in the United States. "Sunshine" wasn't released in America until Halloween 2007, months after the US release of Smith and Jones.
A special screening of the episode was shown on 25 October 2019 as part of a Doctor Who theme night at Natural History Museum in Kensington as part of their after-hours series Lates.[1]
Synopsis[[edit] | [edit source]]
Just when it seemed it would be yet another chaotic day managing her family's disputes, Martha Jones finds trouble waiting for her at work. Trapped on the Moon with space rhinos looking for a criminal and the air running out, she will have to come to trust a seemingly mad stranger calling himself "the Doctor". But can the Tenth Doctor save the day this time?
Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]
While walking to work, medical student Martha Jones receives a series of phone calls from various members of her family, which includes her sister, her brother and her divorced parents (along with her dad's girlfriend). Each is calling about her brother Leo's 21st birthday party that evening. She is interrupted by a stranger who takes off his tie, smiles and says, "Like so, see?" and walks off. Bemused, Martha continues on to the Royal Hope Hospital, bumping into a black-leather-clad motorbike rider at the entrance, who doesn't bother to even apologise. Later, getting her lab coat from her locker, she receives a small electric shock from the door.
The medical students, under the supervision of Mr Stoker, start their rounds with Florence Finnegan, who is diagnosed as being salt deficient, having had salad every day for the past week. The next patient they move onto is "John Smith", the Doctor, who is posing as a patient admitted with abdominal pain. Martha asks him why he was on Chancellor Street that morning, but he denies having been there. She wonders whether he might have a brother, but he answers, "Not anymore."
Listening to her patient's chest, Martha finds his second heartbeat; he gives her a wink and she smiles back at him. Dr Stoker pushes Martha for an analysis of the patient and suggests it is always best to start with the patient's notes. As he picks up the clipboard, he receives an electric shock and Martha informs him of her own earlier shock. The other trainees all mention having similar incidents as well, but Dr Stoker mentions that it might be related to the incoming thunderstorms, continuing to ask who discovered static electricity. The Doctor correctly answers Benjamin Franklin, but goes on to ramble about how he was there and got electrocuted after being soaked from the rain. This prompts Dr Stoker to ask a nurse to recommend the Doctor for a psychiatric assessment.
Later, Martha is chatting with her sister Tish on the phone about meeting on Martha's lunch break to decide how to deal with their parents at the party. Martha mentions that it is raining outside, but her sister says the weather is beautiful where she is, just a few streets away. She turns the corner and sees the hospital in the middle of its own storm. Martha is dismissive until her co-worker, Julia Swales, and sister both tell her that the rain is going up instead of down. There is a violent tremor, and when Martha looks out again, she realises that the hospital is on the Moon. Back on Earth, there is nothing left of the building, not even the basement; all that remains is the broken pipes, which are spurting water. Tish looks on in horror, as the TARDIS stands nearby (cut off from the Doctor).
Many of the patients and staff are running around in a panic, while Ms Finnegan calmly searches for Mr. Stoker. Martha appeals to the patients for calm as she and Julia head for a window which Martha intends to open, whilst the Doctor nips behind a curtain. Julia panics, telling Martha that if she opens the window all the air will be sucked out. Martha explains that cannot be true as the window is not airtight, so it would have happened already anyway. The Doctor, who has changed into a blue pinstripe suit, pulls back the curtain and tells Martha she's correct. They discuss why they can still breathe, and the Doctor is impressed with Martha's reasoning. He invites her to go step out onto a patients' balcony with him, warning her they might die. Martha calmly replies that they might not, further winning the Doctor's approval. He then says Julia isn't coming as she'd slow them down; Julia breaks down, crying.
Going out on to the balcony, the Doctor asks Martha what she believes is going on. She firmly believes the situation is alien interference, noting that it would have sounded crazy a few years ago, but with the appearance of the Slitheen, Sycorax and Cybermen over the past two years, it's much more believable. Martha mentions that she had a cousin named Adeola, who worked at Canary Wharf; "she never came home." The Doctor tells Martha that he was there in the battle, and apologises for not being able to save her. Focusing back on the matter at hand; Martha tells "Mr Smith" that if they travelled to the moon, there must be a way back. The Doctor tells her that's not his name, telling her his preferred title. Martha assumes he means "Doctor Smith", but he clarifies that he means just "the Doctor". However, Martha tells the Doctor she believes he needs to earn that title. Saying he'd better get working then, the Doctor tosses a stone that bounces off a force field.
Martha then realises that the air in the hospital is all the air they have; over a thousand panicking people are inside, and will use up all the air in no time. Why would anyone isolate them to the moon and leave them to suffocate? As Martha ponders this, the Doctor tells her she can ask them herself as three huge cylindrical ships appear overhead and land outside the hospital. Black armoured soldiers march out in several long lines, and the Doctor grimly identifies them as the Judoon.
Inside his office, Mr Stoker looks on as Florence enters, telling him she needs help. A despondent Mr Stoker reflects on his plans to retire to Florida and how he believes he will never see his daughter again, but Florence insists he can help her and is joined by the two motorcycle delivery men, who are known as Slabs. Florence explains, "There are great tests to come. And terrible deeds, some of them my own". She then explains she was salt deficient because she absorbs it well. However, she needs blood now, specifically his, as she thinks it will be delicious. Telling the Slabs to hold Stoker secure, Florence takes out a bendy straw and advances on him as he screams.
The Judoon Troopers enter the lobby and begin scanning people. Their leader removes his helmet, revealing a head like a rhinoceros, then issues orders in an alien language; the Judoon draw their guns. One of the trainee doctors, Oliver Morgenstern, attempts to speak for the humans, but the leader responds by shoving him against a wall and using a device in order to translate his own speech into English. He then scans Morgenstern, confirms him as human, and using a special marker, makes a black X on his hand. Hiding on a balcony with Martha, the Doctor says they are looking for non-humans — bad news for him, though he is also delighted to see a little shop. Martha does not believe that he is an alien. The Doctor tells her that Judoon are police-for-hire, and if they decide that the hospital is hiding a non-human criminal, every single person in the hospital could be sentenced to death as accomplices.
The Judoon continue upwards through the building, scanning each and every human. Morgenstern tries to keep the patients calm during the procedure, but a male patient panics and strikes a Judoon from behind with a vase, which merely shatters against the Judoon's armour. The Judoon captain quickly charges him with physical assault, declares him guilty, and sentences him to execution, all in under 20 seconds. The soldiers comply and shoot the man with energy weapons that completely incinerate him. As the shocked Morgenstern tells them they didn't have to do that, the commanding Judoon replies, "Justice is swift".
The Doctor attempts to obtain information from a computer but finds the Judoon were stupid enough to wipe the records that could have helped find their target. He explains to Martha he had no idea they were coming and he had only checked into the hospital because of the "plasma coils" — the H₂O scoop lightning — building up. The Doctor is annoyed with himself, realising he should have been looking for the source off-world instead of at the hospital. He asks Martha if she knows anyone who has checked into the hospital in the last week with unusual symptoms; she says Dr Stoker would know and heads to his office. When she arrives, Florence is still sucking his blood. Martha runs off but Florence orders one of the Slabs to kill her. The Doctor runs into her, explaining he got the backup system working, but Martha says she found the alien. Confused, the Doctor immediately grabs her hand and runs when the Slab comes into view.
They run into a room with an X-ray machine. The Doctor seals the door with his sonic screwdriver and tells Martha to activate the machine when he tells her to. The Slab breaks in and the Doctor scorches it with radiation which he has increased to over 5000%. Though Martha is concerned about the Doctor's exposure to the radiation, he explains that for a Time Lord, roentgen radiation like that in x-rays is harmless. He tells her it's safe to leave the control room as he absorbed all the excess radiation; the Doctor says he just has to expel it. He farts and then when that doesn't work, starts frantically hopping on his right foot, while kicking with his left leg, the Doctor directs the radiation into his shoe; he discards it in a hazardous waste container. Martha, astonished, tells him he's mad, to which the Doctor replies that she is right; he would look daft with one shoe. He then takes off the other shoe and discards that as well — "Barefoot on the Moon!"
Examining the Slab, Martha wonders if it comes from another planet; the Doctor denies it, explaining it's a basic drone. Solid leather all the way through; "Someone has got one hell of a fetish." Pulling out his sonic screwdriver from the X-ray machine, the Doctor discovers the emitter portion has been destroyed. He expresses sorrow over losing his favourite toy, but promptly tosses it away when Martha calls him "Doctor" for the first time. Martha tells the Doctor about Florence, and he realises that she is an internal shape-shifter who was drinking the blood to assimilate it and mimic human biology in order to trick the Judoon. He decides they need to find her before the Judoon can get a scan in, but it's too late. Florence has passed their scanning.
As the Doctor and Martha creep around to avoid the other Slab, she wonders if the Doctor has any backup, leaving him annoyed at the human capacity to focus on personal information rather than the bigger picture. However, they round a corner and walk straight into the Judoon, who scan the Doctor; he registers as non-human. Deciding no further evidence is needed, the Judoon try to shoot the Doctor, but he escapes with Martha to a lower floor. They pass Julia, who is giving some extra oxygen to a patient from a tank, and she confirms the oxygen levels are decreasing. The Doctor explains that Judoon will not be affected by the decreasing oxygen, as their lungs have big reserves; he and Martha are okay for now since they’re running on adrenaline.
They return to Dr Stoker's office to find his body drained of blood. The Doctor explains that Florence is a Plasmavore; she's hiding in the hospital "like Ronald Biggs in Rio". He then wonders why she would bother to pass as human when the Judoon could still kill them all. Heading outside, he reads the signs and figures out she's gone to the MRI; he notes that she is almost as clever as him. The Judoon come into the hall, declaring to kill the non-human. The Doctor tells Martha to give him time to find Florence, then kisses her and runs off, leaving a shocked Martha in his wake. Scanning her, the Judoon identify her as human, but with traces of non-human DNA from the kiss; more extensive scanning is ordered.
Meanwhile, the Doctor finds Florence tampering with an MRI device. He plays the fool and babbles a cover story, pretending to be another amazed human with no idea of what's happening. Florence orders her remaining Slab to hold the Doctor while she explains her plan; she plans on overloading the MRI to fry the brain-stems of every living thing within fifty thousand miles, while she remains shielded in the control room. The Doctor, knowing that's overkill just to kill the Judoon, realises that the distance includes the Earth. Florence states that it will only affect the side facing the moon; "call it my little gift." The Doctor feigns ignorance, prompting Florence to reveal she's the alien the Judoon are after; once they're dead, she can steal one of their ships to make her escape.
The Doctor, continuing to play dumb, lets slip that the Judoon are increasing their scans; Florence is taken aback, as she has already been catalogued. However, the Doctor says "big chief rhino" was increasing the scans to setting two. Florence panics, stating she must appear to be human again. Believing that the Doctor's constant joking is the act of a man "laughing on purpose at the darkness", she has her Slab out the Doctor's neck out for her while she uses her straw to drink his blood.
Meanwhile, the Judoon have confirmed Martha is human, giving her a docket to claim compensation in the process, and march to the MRI lab. Martha follows, arriving as the Judoon scans say the Doctor is dead. As Florence declares her humanity, Martha realises he sacrificed his life to save them. She scans Florence, who now registers as alien, having assimilated the Doctor's blood. The Judoon charge her with the murder of the Child Princess of Padrivole Regency 9 and Florence proudly admits her guilt, claiming her victim had deserved it, then orders her Slab to attack the Judoon. They swiftly destroy it, execute Florence and detect the problem with the MRI, but declare their duties fulfilled and swiftly withdraw, angering Martha as the entire situation is their fault in the first place. The oxygen is nearly depleted and the magnetic overload is approaching a critical state. Everyone in the hospital is starting to pass out, near the brink of death from oxygen starvation.
Frustrated, Martha tries to resuscitate the Doctor herself with CPR, eventually thinking to apply compression to both his hearts. He awakens and staggers over to the machine, reaching for his absent sonic screwdriver before just unplugging the machinery. Martha passes out and the Doctor picks her up in his arms, pleading for the Judoon to reverse the H₂O scoop as they take off. It starts raining again and the hospital is transported back to Earth, where Martha's sister is waiting. Martha watches the Doctor leave as paramedics attend to the survivors and sees him head toward a strange blue box, but while she is distracted by her sister both the Doctor and the box disappear.
At Leo's party that night, Martha's family are arguing over Annalise, Martha's father's girlfriend, who mocks Martha's claims of having been to the moon and cites the publicly released cover story, which claimed everyone in the hospital had been drugged. The argument spills into the street, increasing in animosity as Martha's mother Francine vents her resentment toward Annalise, and the whole family storms off, save for Martha, who spots the Doctor watching her on a street corner. She follows him into an alleyway, to see him standing before the blue box. The Doctor, at Martha's asking, identifies himself as a Time Lord and offers her a trip to thank her for her help, but she tells him she does not have the time — she cannot go off into space with him, she has her life and all its problems to deal with. When the Doctor informs her that his ship is also a time machine, Martha does not believe him. To her shock, the TARDIS dematerialises, then rematerialises; the Doctor steps out, looking exactly the same as that morning, still holding his tie in his hand. Martha gapes and sputters, then asks him why he didn't just tell her not to go into work when he saw her that morning. He explains, "Crossing into established events is strictly forbidden... except for cheap tricks."
The Doctor introduces Martha to the TARDIS and invites her to take a look inside. Marvelling at the massive space within, she asks about crew; the Doctor says it's just him now, but sometimes he's had friends — most recently a girl named Rose, who was "together" and is now happily "with her family". He is quick to establish that Martha is not replacing Rose; he is taking her on one trip only to thank her for saving his life. She flirts with him, pointing out the kiss he gave her earlier that day, but the Doctor insists that it was a genetic transfer. Martha assures him that she is not remotely interested — she only goes for humans — but looks sadly at the floor as he turns away to set the ship in motion. As the TARDIS flies through the time vortex it begins to shake violently, while the Doctor and Martha shake hands over the console. The Doctor says, "Welcome aboard, Miss Jones!", to which she replies, "It's my pleasure, Mr Smith!"
Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor — David Tennant
- Martha Jones — Freema Agyeman
- Florence Finnegan — Anne Reid
- Mr Stoker — Roy Marsden
- Francine Jones — Adjoa Andoh
- Tish Jones — Gugu Mbatha-Raw
- Leo Jones — Reggie Yates
- Clive Jones — Trevor Laird
- Annalise — Kimmi Richards
- Morgenstern — Ben Righton
- Julia Swales — Vineeta Rishi
- Judoon Captain — Paul Kasey
- Judoon Voices — Nicholas Briggs
Uncredited Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]
Crew[[edit] | [edit source]]
Executive Producers Russell T Davies and Julie Gardner |
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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. |
Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor burns out his sonic screwdriver by overloading an x-ray machine.
- The Doctor can absorb Roentgen radiation and channel it out of his body, and played with Roentgen cubes on Gallifrey.
- The Doctor goes back in the past and removes his tie in front of Martha then returns to the present to demonstrate his ability to travel through time.
- The Doctor uses the alias "John Smith" while posing as a patient admitted for severe abdominal pains.
- The Doctor claimed to have owned a laser spanner, saying that it was stolen by Emmeline Pankhurst, a "cheeky woman."
- Martha asks the Doctor if he has a brother. The Doctor replies, "No, not anymore. Just me."
Individuals[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Martha says that she had a cousin who worked at Canary Wharf named Adeola, who was killed in the battle of Canary Wharf.
- Martha's parents Francine and Clive Jones are separated, but still talking to each other. Clive has acquired a girlfriend, Annalise.
- Martha has a sister, Tish Jones and a brother, Leo Jones.
- The Doctor mentions Ronald Biggs.
Culture[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Francine says the show Quizmania is too difficult for Annalise.
- The MRI machine Florence is using has logo of Union Aerospace Corporation from Doom videogame series.
Harold Saxon arc[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Behind Martha in the alleyway are several "Vote Saxon" posters.
- When Martha is listening to the radio after returning to Earth, the man on the radio can be heard saying "And it all just proves Mr Saxon right, we're not alone in the universe."
Species[[edit] | [edit source]]
- When Florence reveals that she is an alien, the Doctor, while acting as John Smith, asks if the hospital has an E.T. department.
- CPR can be effective on a Time Lord.
- The Doctor's hearts stop due to blood loss.
Diseases and illnesses[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Martha mentions Ménière's disease.
- A poster for Cancer Research UK is visible.
Story notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- This episode had the working title of Martha.
- Exclusive previews of the episode were also held in five venues across Wales. The Cardiff Bay Odeon, Swansea Odeon, Wrexham Odeon, Aberystwyth Arts Centre and Pwllheli Neuadd Dwyfor all screened Smith And Jones on the morning of 31st March, hours before the television broadcast.
- The title of this episode alludes to the last names of Martha and of the Doctor, using his usual alias of John Smith. In the BBC Eighth Doctor Adventures novel The Eight Doctors, the Eighth Doctor's new assistant Sam Jones pointed out the same coincidence with their names. Martha's appearance in The End of Time saw her married to Mickey Smith — a relationship between "Smith and Jones"; in fact, Martha was called "Martha Smith-Jones" in the credits. "Smith and Jones" is alluded to again by the Eleventh Doctor in Death of the Doctor when referring to Sarah Jane Smith and Jo Jones.
- Swansea's Singleton Hospital was used to represent the hospital for location filming, although the scene in which the Judoon enter the hospital was actually filmed in nearby Swansea University's library. The university commemorates this annually during freshers week with a Dr Who display.
- In the book Doctor Who: The Inside Story, a piece of concept art by Peter McKinstry shows a concept sketch of a "burnt out" sonic screwdriver. The book came out some time in advance of the airing of the episode.
- The line "Judoon platoon upon the Moon" was written as something of a joke towards David Tennant. The Scottish accent, which is Tennant's natural one, makes it difficult to pronounce the sound/syllable "-oon" in an English accent.
- A window cleaner cradle scene intended for use in this episode was reused for Partners in Crime.
- Much like Rose's self-titled introductory story, most of the events of this episode are seen from Martha's point of view.
- On the channel Watch, the execution of the person who attacked the Judoon with a vase was cut out from the episode.
- Mr Stoker was intended by Russell T Davies to be a reference to the character Mr Stoker from the 1989 series Children's Ward, on which he was a producer. However, the design department saw this as a reference to Bram Stoker, author of Dracula, so the sign 'B. Stoker' was placed on the office door during production
- This is the first episode to use a companion's surname in the title.
- This is the first episode not to have a pre-credits sequence since Rose (another series opener, also introducing a new companion). The next series opener, Partners in Crime, would also have no pre-credits sequence.
- Although this featured the first on-screen appearance of Martha, it was not the first story featuring the new companion to be released to the public; a month prior to broadcast, Martha made her debut in the novella PROSE: Made of Steel by Terrance Dicks, which was published as part of the Quick Reads initiative.
- The overall shape of the hospital was also modified to resemble the more square shape of St Thomas' Hospital. Early in the episode, a shot of the front of Singleton Hospital is seen where part of the building has been removed and an image of the London Eye added to make it appear that the hospital is in the location of St. Thomas'.
- A shot in which the Doctor uses a door lock to lock a door was the final thing filmed for the episode, and does not depict David Tennant's own hand. Originally the scene had the Doctor use his Sonic Screwdriver to lock the door. It did not occur to anyone on the production staff that this contradicted a prior scene in which the Sonic Screwdriver is destroyed until post-production. The shot of him using the lock was hastily filmed and inserted.
- The Royal Hope Hospital name was reused in the pilot episode of Law & Order: UK, which starred Freema Agyeman and was written by Chris Chibnall.
- For a number of drafts, a key element of the adventure involved the Doctor and the Plasmavore each trying to reach the hospital basement, where the TARDIS was hidden. Russell T Davies subsequently felt that this was too banal a plot strand, however, and decided to have the time machine left behind on Earth instead.
- A set piece in which the Doctor and Martha flee from the Judoon by scaling down the outside of the hospital in a window cleaner's cradle had to be excised due to its length, but was later resurrected for Partners in Crime.
- Paul Kasey had to be replaced in some scenes because of scheduling conflicts so Ruari Mears played the Judoon Captain in some scenes.
- The original special effect for the Judoon weapons - in which the victim's skin would be seen to boil away - was too frightening, and so this was altered.
- The Doctor sarcastically mouthing along when Martha says "It's Bigger on the Inside!" was an ad-lib by David Tennant.
- When the Doctor first meets with Martha on the moon, most of his initial dialogue with her is in the forms of questions - asking her her views on what has happened and what is happening. This reflects the dialogue Martha and the other student Doctors were having with the consultant when doing the ward rounds. The Doctor is prompting Martha to offer her diagnosis.
- The episode featured the first extra-diegetic use of hip hop in the show's history, in the form of Arrested Development's "Sunshine" to introduce Martha and her family. Due to a quirk of release scheduling, this was also the first time that the series served to premiere a song in the United States. "Sunshine" wasn't released in America until Halloween 2007, months after the US release of Smith and Jones.
- Since Martha needed to be at the centre of the action, Russell T Davies felt that her place of work was an ideal setting for the narrative, with the Doctor originally brought in on a stretcher after having been knocked unconscious by the Plasmavore.
- This episode consisted of Block One of season three, along with The Shakespeare Code. James Strong directed a day's filming when Charles Palmer was busy working on that episode.
- Tish originally appeared in the alleway scene, dashing through the background in pursuit of Annalise. However, the action was simplified so that Gugu Mbatha-Raw would not have to be summoned for such an incidental role.
- Virtually all of the material involving Martha's family was recorded during Block Three, when Adoja Andoh, Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Reggie Yates were also required for The Lazarus Experiment.
- The scene in Martha's living room was added when Russell T Davies felt that the transition to Leo's party at the end of the episode was too abrupt.
- The scene of Martha resuscitating was remounted. However, a continuity error had now crept in, with the Doctor using his sonic screwdriver to open the X-ray room door despite the fact that it had already been destroyed at that point in the narrative. After the mistake was noted by brand executive Edward Russell, Charles Palmer corrected it with additional shots at Upper Boat Studios.
- Russell T Davies would later cast Anne Reid in Years and Years.
Myths[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Michelle Ryan was originally supposed to play the new companion who would debut in this story, but was hired to play the lead role in the Bionic Woman remake, leading to Freema Agyeman being cast instead despite already having appeared as Adeola Oshodi in Army of Ghosts. Agyeman was the only actress ever considered as the new companion for Series 3, and the role of Martha Jones was written specifically for her to play. Her casting was a result of Russell T Davies being extremely impressed with her work in Army of Ghosts, with Martha's being the new companion instead of Adeola simply a result of there not being enough time or money to refilm the prior story to have the latter survive.
Ratings[[edit] | [edit source]]
- 8.71 million viewers - BARB final ratings[2]
- 8.2 million viewers - Overnight ratings
- 1.00 million viewers - BBC3 Repeat ratings
Filming locations[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The scene in which Martha and the Doctor meet in the alley is next to the Market in Pontypridd, South Wales.
- Several scenes of the hospital's reception and exit were filmed in Swansea University's Library and Information Centre.
Production errors[[edit] | [edit source]]
- In the ending scenes when Martha is looking inside and around the TARDIS, the door cuts from open to closed then back.
- In the scene where Martha notices that the hospital is on the moon, when she says the line declaring this you can see that her head moves whilst talking, however the reflection in the window does not.
- In the scene in which Florence assimilates the blood from Mr Stoker, the boom operator can be seen in the reflection of one of the Slabs' helmets.
Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Both Rose Tyler and Martha Jones were persuaded to travel with the Doctor based on the TARDIS's time travel capabilities. Rose, Martha and Donna Noble all decided to travel with the Doctor whilst standing in an alleyway, though Martha is the only one of the three who hadn't seen the TARDIS interior beforehand. (TV: Rose, Partners in Crime)
- Martha's "welcome aboard" scene is almost identical to that of Peri Brown in TV: Planet of Fire. In both cases, the Doctor and the companion fall on the console before the Doctor makes his welcome.
- The Doctor is delighted that the Royal Hope Hospital has a shop. He says that he "loves a shop." In TV: New Earth, he lamented the lack of a shop. In Silence in the Library Donna points out the presence of a shop, which again delights the Doctor.
- Martha recalls the spaceship flying into Big Ben, (TV: Aliens of London) the Christmas incident, (TV: The Christmas Invasion) and the Cybermen invasion in which she lost her cousin. (TV: Army of Ghosts/Doomsday)
- The events of this story are mentioned again in PROSE: Revenge of the Judoon.
- The phrase "burn with me" is used again in TV: 42.
- The Plasmavore has slabs. The Uvodni had slabs. (TV:Warriors of Kudlak)
- In a parallel world created by the Time Beetle in which the Doctor died on Christmas Eve 2007, everyone in the hospital except for Oliver Morgenstern died from oxygen starvation. Martha gave up the last of her own oxygen to save his life. Sarah Jane Smith, Luke Smith, Maria Jackson and Clyde Langer stopped the MRI from wiping out life on half of Earth, but also died in the process. (TV: Turn Left)
- This episode marks the third time the Doctor's sonic screwdriver has been destroyed. (TV: The Visitation, COMIC: The Flood)
- The Judoon reappear in TV: The Stolen Earth, Prisoner of the Judoon, The Pandorica Opens, A Good Man Goes to War, Fugitive of the Judoon and The Timeless Children
- The Doctor has previously visited the Moon. (TV: The Moonbase)
- Upon entering the TARDIS, Martha asks if the doctor has a navigator. The Fifth Doctor once assigned the role of navigator to former companion Adric. (TV: Castrovalva)
- The Doctor is distraught at the sight of his destroyed sonic screwdriver. The last time it was destroyed was in his fifth incarnation's life, where he sombrely described it as "an old friend." (TV: The Visitation)
- The Doctor kisses Martha in order to stall the Judoon so he can stop the Plasmavore. The Doctor and Martha share another non-romantic kiss intended to save everybody's lives in PROSE: Peacemaker.
- When the Doctor tells Martha that he's a Time Lord, she sarcastically states about how pompous it doesn't sound. When the Fifth Doctor and Polly Wright were in an alternative version of the Death Zone, he told her that he was worried that him telling people he was a Time Lord made him sound pompous. (AUDIO: The Five Companions) The Doctor would later get unwarranted treatment concerning the name of his race. (TV: The Caretaker)
- Martha would not initially refer to the Doctor as such, as she believed a person had to earn that title to be called that. River Song would later tell the Eleventh Doctor that the word "doctor" originated from the Doctor himself. (TV: A Good Man Goes to War)
Home video releases[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Complete Series Three DVD box-set
- Smith and Jones, along with The Shakespeare Code and Gridlock, was released on DVD under the title Series 3: Volume 1.
- It is also included in the Series 3 DVD box set.
- The episode was also released as a single DVD with The Sun newspaper.
- This episode was the focus of the Series 3 Volume 1 front cover.
External links[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Official BBC Website - Episode Guide: Smith and Jones
- Smith and Jones at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- The Discontinuity Guide to: Smith and Jones at The Whoniverse
- BBC News - Exclusive Preview
- IMDB - "Doctor Who" Smith and Jones (2007)
Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]
Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- ↑ According to the episode The Sound of Drums, Martha Jones' present day during series 3 of Doctor Who takes place over a six-day period, with the Saxon Master being elected three days after Smith and Jones, and the Toclafane invading Earth five days after Smith and Jones. However, sources differ on which dates these stories are set. According to PROSE: The Paradox Moon, the Toclafane invasion happens on 23 June 2007, placing the events of Smith and Jones on 18 June. According to AUDIO: Hysteria, Smith and Jones takes place in 2008, with a UNIT mission log in AUDIO: Recruits referring to the recovery of moon rocks from Royal Hope Hospital in March 2008. A newspaper clipping in PROSE: The Secret Lives of Monsters places Smith and Jones on a Sunday 4 June, thus placing the Toclafane invasion on Friday 9 June. In the real world, these dates do not fall on a Sunday and Friday in either 2007 or 2008.
Sources[[edit] | [edit source]]
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