The Wedding of River Song (TV story): Difference between revisions

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'''''The Wedding of River Song''''' was the thirteenth and final episode of [[Series 6 (Doctor Who)|series 6]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''.
'''''The Wedding of River Song''''' was the thirteenth and final episode of [[Series 6 (Doctor Who)|series 6]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''.


The episode featured an unusually extreme alteration to the course of history resulting from a change to a [[fixed point]] in time. It also showed how the Doctor survived his supposed death and it concluded a long-running story-arc when the Doctor [[marriage|married]] River Song. However, a new arc arose in its place with a prophetic statement about the Doctor's future battles, which would become a pressing matter in [[Series 7 (Doctor Who)|due time]]. It's also the first time since the first half of [[Series 6 (Doctor Who)|Series 6]] that Amy's pain of losing Melody on Demon's Run is mentioned, and she takes her anger out on [[Kovarian]] by killing her.
The episode featured an unusually extreme alteration to the course of history resulting from a change to a [[fixed point]] in time. It also showed how the Doctor survived his supposed death and it concluded a long-running story-arc when the Doctor [[marriage|married]] River Song. However, a new arc arose in its place with a prophetic statement about the Doctor's future battles, which would become a pressing matter in [[Series 7 (Doctor Who)|due time]]. It's also the first time since the first half of [[Series 6 (Doctor Who)|Series 6]] that Amy's pain of losing Melody on [[Demons Run|Demon's Run]] is mentioned, and she takes her anger out on [[Kovarian]] by killing her.


This episode was notable for featuring [[Simon Callow]] to briefly reprise his role of [[Charles Dickens]], who was last seen six years prior to this episode in the [[Ninth Doctor]] story, [[TV]]: ''[[The Unquiet Dead (TV story)|The Unquiet Dead]]''. The [[Eleventh Doctor]] stories had up until then remained somewhat detached from the [[Russell T Davies]]-era, introducing a purely new entourage of human and humanoid characters to work with instead of bringing back the old ones. This cameo effectively broke the practice.
This episode was notable for featuring [[Simon Callow]] to briefly reprise his role of [[Charles Dickens]], who was last seen six years prior to this episode in the [[Ninth Doctor]] story, [[TV]]: ''[[The Unquiet Dead (TV story)|The Unquiet Dead]]''. The [[Eleventh Doctor]] stories had up until then remained somewhat detached from the [[Russell T Davies]]-era, introducing a purely new entourage of human and humanoid characters to work with instead of bringing back the old ones. This cameo effectively broke the practice.
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