The Big Bang (TV story)

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For the event known as the Big Bang, see Event One.

The Big Bang was the thirteenth episode of Series 5 of Doctor Who, and concluded the story that began in The Pandorica Opens. Though the Doctor rectifies the problem at the end of the episode, it left the audience wondering what the Silence is and why it wanted the TARDIS to explode.

Synopsis

The Doctor is trapped in the Pandorica, the TARDIS has been destroyed and silence has fallen. The only hope for all reality is a little girl who still believes in stars.

Plot

The Pandorica opens, revealing Amy Pond.

In 1996, Amelia Pond sits in her bedroom, praying to Santa Claus for help in mending the crack in her bedroom wall. Believing she has heard something in her back garden, she runs to her window. The garden is empty. Some time later, she presents a drawing that she has done of the night sky -- complete with stars and the moon -- to her psychiatrist, Christine. Christine gently explains to her there are no stars; the night sky is devoid of all light apart from the moon. That night, Amelia overhears Christine and her aunt talking about her; as she eavesdrops at the top of the stairs, she sees a pamphlet advertising the National Museum slipped through the letterbox. There is a circle drawn around a notice of the Pandorica exhibit and a note reading, "Come along, Pond.

Amelia and her aunt go to the museum. Amelia separates herself from her aunt and makes her way towards the Pandorica exhibit, passing a variety of strange machines on display. Arriving at the exhibit, Amelia sees that another note has been stuck to the face of the box. It reads, "Stick around, Pond."

After the museum's close -- and Aunt Sharon's failure to find her -- Amelia returns to the Pandorica and sets a hand on it. Mechanisms on the face of the box begin to glow green. The Pandorica opens to reveal a fully grown and resurrected Amy Pond, who explains that this is where things get complicated.


In 102 A.D., a dead Amy Pond is cradled by the Auton Rory, comforting himself by telling her how the universe ended. Suddenly, the Doctor appears in front of them; he tells Rory that he needs his help to bring Amy back. He gives Rory his sonic screwdriver to open the Pandorica and asks him to put it in Amy's top pocket when he's finished with it; he disappears again. Rory follows the Doctor's instructions, opening the Pandorica to release the current version of the Doctor, who deduces the Doctor who contacted Rory was a future version. Hearing of Amy's death, he orders Rory to put her inside the Pandorica; it is a prison so secure anyone inside cannot escape even by dying. However, to fully heal Amy, an external DNA supply is required, and the nearest one is still two thousand years away. He sets River's vortex manipulator for two thousand years in the future, but Rory opts to remain behind to protect the Pandorica; because he is still plastic, the Doctor warns him to avoid heat, radio waves, and trouble.


In the museum, Amy explores the Pandorica exhibit, discovering a video on the Lone Centurion -- a man in Roman armor who protected the Pandorica where it went. He was last seen in 1941, dragging the box away from an incendiary bomb. Amy realises he was Rory, but there is little time for her to dwell on this; the restorative light within the Pandorica has reactivated a stone Dalek, part of the exhibition. Until it was touched by the light, the Dalek was merely an echo in time, left behind as a result of everything in the universe being erased.

The Doctor appears, having used the vortex manipulator to travel straight to 1996; he and Amy reunite, but are shot at by the Dalek and forced to take cover with the young Amelia. A museum guard appears, and the Dalek deems it to be unarmed; however, the guard uncaps his hand, revealing a laser gun which he uses to disable the Dalek's weapon systems. Amy rejoices when she sees that the guard is the Auton Rory.

File:Pandorica-Spoilers-5.jpg
The Stone Dalek comes to life.

The Doctor leads the group away from the Dalek and, with Rory's guidance, restores the timeline by traveling back to 102 A.D. and ordering that version of Rory to let him out of the Pandorica; he leaves the notes for Amelia, all of which lead her to this point.

As they head for the roof, another version of the Doctor appears at the top of the stairs, badly injured; he falls down the stairs and whispers something into the Doctor's ear before dying. The Doctor announces he has only twelve minutes to live. When Amy expresses confusion about what is happening, the Doctor draws her attention to Amelia's disappearance; the universe is still collapsing, things are being erased from existence, and the Doctor and his friends are temporarily alive because they stand at "the eye of the storm." The Dalek begins to reactivate, and the trio flees


On the building's roof, the Doctor's attention is drawn to the "sun" in the sky; the sun was erased with every other star in the universe. The object keeping the Earth warm and light is his TARDIS, exploding at every moment in history. Rory's enhanced hearing picks up a voice in the sky, which the Doctor amplifies with a satellite dish; it is River Song, whose last words -- "I'm sorry, my love" -- are repeated over and over. The TARDIS's emergency protocols have locked the console room in a time loop to save her life. The Doctor uses her vortex manipulator to rescue her and bring her back to the roof, where the group is shot at by the regenerated Dalek and forced to retreat to the museum below.

Running through the museum, the Doctor deduces that, along with the restoration field, the Pandorica contains a few billion atoms of the universe as it was; this explains how the Dalek was able to come back despite being erased from history. The Doctor formulates a plan involving these atoms, the restoration field, and the exploding TARDIS, but just as he is about to reveal it, he is shot by the Dalek, who has followed them. He uses the vortex manipulator to disappear; Amy and Rory know where he is and go to him while River stays behind and shoots the Dalek dead, first making beg for mercy.


Downstairs, Amy and Rory are confused, The Doctor's body is not where they left it; River returns to remind them the Doctor lies; he had pretended to die to distract them. The trio returns to the exhibit and find the Doctor has strapped himself into the Pandorica. He will use the vortex manipulator to fly the box into the heart of the TARDIS, exploding at every point in history. The explosion will release the atoms of the preserved universe, restoring it. River gravely admits that the plan will only work if the Doctor seals himself on the other side of the cracks; the entire universe will be restored apart from the Doctor, who will never have existed at all.


The Doctor and Amy say their goodbyes, the Doctor encouraging Amy to remember her parents -- who weren't killed when Amy was young, but consumed by the Time Field in her bedroom wall. He pilots the Pandorica into the explosion and resets the universe ... and sits up on the floor of the TARDIS console room. He believes that he has survived being erased -- until he sees Amy and himself from a week before, when they were traveling to Space Florida. He calls to Amy, and while she hears him, she cannot see him. His life rewinds further; he is in a street in Colchester, watching Amy leave a note for him underneath Craig's advertisement for a new lodger. She still cannot see him. The Doctor notices a crack in the road behind him, sealing itself. Next, he rewinds to the Byzantium; he approaches Amy -- her eyes closed to avoid being killed by the Weeping Angel -- and encourages her to remember what he told her when she was seven. He rewinds back to 1996 and discovers Amelia asleep in her back garden, eagerly awaiting his return; he carries her to bed and tells her the story of how he stole -- or, rather, "borrowed" -- the TARDIS, romantically describing it as "ancient and new, and the bluest blue ever." He sees the crack in her wall and tells her it can't properly close until he's on the other side and steps through as the crack in her wall closes. She wakes, but finds the room empty and quickly goes back to sleep.


In 2010, Amy wakes up on her wedding day and is surprised to see her mother bringing her breakfast; her reaction to her parent strikes her as odd, and she has the lingering feeling that there is someone or something else missing. When she phones Rory to see if he feels the same way, he blithely agrees.

Amy excitedly gets ready for her wedding. At the reception, she spots River Song walking past the window outside. Rory presents her with a wedding gift someone has left for them -- River's blue TARDIS diary, all its pages blank. Amy begins to cry from sadness; Rory tries to explain away the diary by reminding her of the old wedding saying: "Something old, something new, something borrowed, and something blue."

Amy interrupts her father's speech to announce that her imaginary childhood friend, "the raggedy Doctor," was real, and he is late for her wedding. Abruptly, the TARDIS materializes -- old and new, borrowed and blue -- in the middle of the room. The Doctor steps out, admitting that he is completely astonished.


Later, after dancing maniacally and amusing Amy and Rory, the Doctor leaves to return to the TARDIS, now parked in Amy's garden. River Song appears behind him

File:Yes.png
River tells the Doctor a clue to her identity, a deadly warning for who she is.

; he returns her vortex manipulator and her diary before asking if she is married. She wonders if he is asking, and he says "yes," then stammers when he realizes he has just unwittingly proposed to her. River teases him with further affirmations. The Doctor wonders who she really is. She replies that he will find out very soon, and that's when everything changes. She promptly leaves via vortex manipulator.


Amy and Rory, still in their wedding finery, enter the TARDIS and encourage the Doctor to take the night off; however, he is reluctant -- they still do not know what led the TARDIS to the date of the temporal explosion and deliberately destroyed it, much less why. He has also not figured out the meaning of the "silence." As he ponders, he takes a phone call: an Egyptian goddess is on the loose on the Orient Express in space, and the royal on the other end is concerned. The Doctor turns to bid Amy and Rory goodbye, but Amy promptly runs to the door, bids her house and former life farewell, and closes the TARDIS doors. The Doctor smiles and fires up the engines, sending the TARDIS spinning through the time vortex.

Cast

Production 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.
          

This story had no direct Visual Effects credit, which means that it unusually didn't credit The Mill. Instead, the roll credited many more workers from The Mill than usual, and even changed Will Cohen's normal title to the grander, "Executive Visual FX Producer".

References

Cultural references from the real world

  • Prominent scientist Richard Dawkins is mentioned as being involved in a "Star Cult" which believes stars are real. Dawkins is a self-professed fan of Doctor Who, and is married to former star Lalla Ward, to whom he was introduced by his friend and former series writer/script editor, the late Douglas Adams. This was the second consecutive series finale to reference Dawkins. In the first he appears in a cameo role being interviewed about the planets in the sky (DW: The Stolen Earth).
  • The music playing to which the Doctor briefly dances very badly is "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" by British rock band Queen.

The Doctor

Individuals

  • River Song mentioned she once went out with a Nestene duplicate who had swappable heads.
  • Rory states he remembers being an Auton. He would later compare his Auton memories to a door in his head; he could open it when he wanted to, but tended to keep it shut. (DW: Day of the Moon) Having spent two millennia guarding the Pandorica, Rory became a very effective warrior, as shown in A Good Man Goes to War.
  • Tabetha mentions taking Amy to psychiatrists about her 'imaginary friend'.

Objects

  • The Doctor wears a fez during the episode. He believes "fezzes are cool". Neither Amy nor River are impressed by it though, the former grabbing it and throwing it in the air, the latter destroying it with her blaster.
  • The fez may have also been a small nod to DW: Silver Nemesis, wherein the Seventh Doctor briefly wore a fez while going through the storage room at Windsor Castle looking for Nemesis' silver bow.

Theories and concepts

Story notes

  • This is the first episode in the entire history of Doctor Who where the current Doctor has interacted with a version of himself in the same incarnation. The Third Doctor did briefly speak with a future version of himself in the same incarnation in DW: Day of the Daleks, but did not have physical contact with his counterpart. Similarly, the Ninth Doctor saw an earlier version of himself in the same incarnation in DW: Father's Day, but did not speak nor interact with himself at all.
  • This episode was incorrectly entitled Cyber War and Enemies of a Time Lord.[source needed]
  • Both the date of the in-universe 'unidentified explosion' and the real-world date of broadcast was 26/06/2010.
  • The Pandorica and a Stone Dalek appeared in the museum that Amelia visited.
  • Rory and Amy get married in this story, and continue their travels in the TARDIS. This marks the first occasion a married couple have been companions.
  • This is the first time a BBC Wales finale does not feature the departure of a main character. However, it does result in a change of cast, in that Rory, who had previously been a recurring character who had ostensibly died, becomes a full-time companion in the final scene.
  • Amy is the first new series companion since Rose to travel with the Doctor through a whole season, and to continue doing so after the finale.
  • The museum included a number of anomalies as a result of the altered timeline, including penguins in the Nile, Egyptians in the Himalayas, and dinosaurs in ice.
  • This is the first finale of the BBC Wales series that didn't feature David Tennant; the first since The Parting of the Ways not to feature Freema Agyeman; and the first with no reference to the Torchwood Institute whatsoever. It is also one of only two finales not to include John Barrowman.
  • According to the DVD commentary, director Toby Haynes continued to use playback while recording this episode, just as he had for The Pandorica Opens. In particular, it was used with Caitlin Blackwood's solo scenes in the museum.
  • River's main costume in this story was deliberately designed to evoke both Princess Leia and Han Solo, so that she looked like, according to Toby Haynes, a "female Han Solo". (DCOM: The Big Bang)
  • According to Toby Haynes, this episode had no bigger budget, "and maybe even a little less", than other episodes in the series. (DCOM: The Big Bang)
  • According to Russell T. Davies, closing the cracks in time resulted also in the closing of the Cardiff Rift.[1]

Ratings

  • 6.7 million.

Rumours

  • A sinister voice declaring "silence will fall" in the previous episode The Pandorica Opens, led some fans to speculate that Omega or another rogue Time Lord would appear in this episode. While this wasn't the case and the ultimate identity of the sinister voice is unknown, Steven Moffat has suggested the mystery antagonist will play a key role in the next series.
  • The Internet Movie Database incorrectly stated that Doctor Who veteran actor Philip Madoc would guest star. He did not appear.

Filming locations

  • Miskin Manor - Cardiff

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.
  • In the museum, when the trio see the "future" Doctor die, Amy walks up the stairs. The camera cuts to the Doctor, then back to Amy, when she walks up the stairs again. It was too quick for her to go back down the stairs.
  • Also, when the Amy that has just came out of the Pandorica compares height to younger Amy and guesses the date, you can see a shadow back away from the side of the camera when it pans out.
  • In the museum, the Doctor is talking but a shot of him turning around shows that his lips are not moving
  • The museum scenes are set in 1996, but when the Doctor and crew make it to the roof, you see the Gherkin in the skyline - a building that was built in the twenty-first century.
  • When the stone Dalek rises above the museum to exterminate the Doctor, Amy, Rory and River Song just after they have destroyed the fez, the Dalek is the Supreme Dalek, not the stone Dalek. This is corrected when the camera zooms into the Dalek which is then seen to be the stone Dalek.
  • While travelling backwards, the Doctor is seen wearing the vortex manipulator in the TARDIS on the way to Space Florida. In the next scene, while telling Amy to remember, it is absent. It returns in the following scene when he picks up the younger Amy.

Continuity

Timeline

For the Doctor

For River Song

Home video releases

Series-5-volume-4-dvd-cover.jpg

BBC Video - "Doctor Who Series Five - Volume Four" features Vincent and the Doctor, The Lodger, The Pandorica Opens and The Big Bang. It was released on 6 September 2010 (UK Only) on DVD and Blu-ray see picture below.[2] It was released on a full series box set on 8th November 2010 but as two sets. One is a limited edition steelbook and the other one is a Lenticular Sleeve.

Footnotes

  1. Torchwood Updates
  2. DWM 421, Page 18

External links