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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 2005)|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 [[Demons Run|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 2005)|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, as well as stories after this one, 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, as well as stories after this one, effectively broke the practice. |