The Time of the Doctor

241 "The Time of the Doctor"
Doctor Who episode

Promotional poster for "The Time of the Doctor"
Cast
Others
Production
Directed by Jamie Payne
Written by Steven Moffat
Script editor Derek Ritchie
Produced by Marcus Wilson
Executive producer(s) Steven Moffat
Brian Minchin
Incidental music composer Murray Gold
Series Specials (2013)
Length 60 minutes
Originally broadcast 25 December 2013
Chronology
← Preceded by Followed by →
"The Day of the Doctor" "Deep Breath"

"The Time of the Doctor" is an episode of the British science fiction television programme Doctor Who, written by Steven Moffat and directed by Jamie Payne, and was broadcast on 25 December 2013 on BBC One.[1] It features the final regular appearance of Matt Smith as the Eleventh Doctor and the first regular appearance of Peter Capaldi as the Twelfth Doctor following his brief cameo in "The Day of the Doctor". The episode also features Jenna Coleman as the Doctor's companion Clara Oswald, plus several enemies of the Doctor, including the Cybermen, Silence, Daleks, and Weeping Angels.

The episode addresses numerous plot threads developed over the course of Smith's tenure, including the prophecy of the Silence, cracks in the universe, and the Doctor's fate on the planet Trenzalore, while also dealing with the regeneration limit established in "The Deadly Assassin". "The Time of the Doctor" is the ninth Christmas special since the show's 2005 revival, and Matt Smith's fourth and final Christmas special as the Eleventh Doctor.

Plot

Thousands of aliens orbit an unknown planet, from which a message no one can translate is continually being broadcast across time and space. With the assistance of a modified Cyberman head nicknamed "Handles", which he uses as a personal assistant, the Doctor visits two ships before leaving to Earth to pick up Clara and briefly meeting her family. On returning, Handles identifies the planet as Gallifrey, a statement the Doctor vehemently rejects. The Doctor and Clara are invited on board the Church of the Papal Mainframe, a space church headed by Mother Superious Tasha Lem, an old acquaintance of the Doctor. The Church has secured the planet with a force field. Tasha asks if the Doctor wishes to be the first to explore the cause of the message. On arriving on the planet, the Doctor and Clara are attacked by Weeping Angels hiding in the snow of a frozen forest, but using the key under his wig, the Doctor materializes the TARDIS around them. Using the TARDIS, the Doctor and Clara find a town called Christmas, surrounded by a truth field, preventing anyone from lying. The message's origin is quickly identified as a crack in reality in the church tower; this crack is "scar tissue" from the cracks originally closed when the Doctor rebooted the universe ("The Big Bang"). Handles identifies the language of the message as Gallifreyan and with the Doctor's help, translates the message as a question: "Doctor who?" (the "first question" in "The Wedding of River Song"), repeating endlessly.

The Doctor concludes the Time Lords are using the crack and calling to him for help, from the pocket universe in which Gallifrey was trapped ("The Day of the Doctor"), from which they wish to escape. If the Doctor answers the question and speaks his real name, the Time Lords will know they found the right universe and come through. However, this would also trigger a new Time War as the alien species gathered above will attack them, and Tasha will not let this happen: the planet will be destroyed whatever the cost. The Doctor asks its name, and she states "Trenzalore", the planet where he is to die ("The Name of the Doctor"). The Doctor tricks Clara into plugging a device into the TARDIS which transports her home, and remains on Trenzalore to defend it from attacks by the aliens overhead, creating a stalemate where he can't leave without sacrificing his home planet and its people, nor can he forcibly be removed for fear he will speak his name and let them return.

After taking Clara home, the TARDIS begins heading back to Trenzalore, but Clara grabs onto its exterior and goes with it. To protect her from the time vortex, the TARDIS is forced to increase its shields, slowing down the return journey. Arriving back at Christmas, Clara meets a visibly aged Doctor who spent 300 years as its protector. Although he calls himself the eleventh, the Doctor reveals he's used all of his twelve possible regenerations; his incarnation who fought in the Time War and the Tenth Doctor's aborted regeneration ("Journey's End") are counted. He is therefore in his final, regeneration-less body. They are then brought to the Papal Mainframenow the Church of the Silence, where the Doctor learns that during this protracted stalemate, a chapter of the Church broke away and tried to avert these events by killing him off in the past: by destroying his TARDIS ("The Big Bang") and engineering River Song to kill him ("A Good Man Goes to War"). More immediately concerning, however, is the revelation that Tasha and her crew have been taken over by the Daleks, converted into "Dalek puppets" ("Asylum of the Daleks"). The Doctor taunts Tasha, awakening her anger, and allowing her to resist the Dalek conditioning. They all escape and return to the planet, as the Dalek fleet receives reinforcements and masses for war.

Lying that he won't send Clara back again, the Doctor does so and she returns to Earth as the siege of Trenzalore becomes an all-out war. As the centuries pass, most of the races depart or are destroyed, leaving only the Silence (with whom the Doctor joins forces, putting aside their feud) and the Daleks. On the same day (from Clara's perspective), the TARDIS reappears; Clara enters to find Tasha piloting the TARDIS. Noting "flying the TARDIS was always easy, it's flying the Doctor that I've never quite mastered", Tasha returns her to Trenzalore, as "no one should die alone", sending her to meet the now frail and senile Doctor at the point when the Daleks finally win control of the town. With nothing left, the Doctor goes out to face the Daleks in a final stand.

The Eleventh Doctor, about to die from old age, is granted a new regeneration cycle by the Time Lords, subsequently preventing his death.

Clara, unable to watch, returns to the crack and, through it, begs the Time Lords to save the Doctor, urging it's owed to him for all he has done in his lives and reminding them that if the Doctor dies, Gallifrey will be lost forever, the crack then closes. The Doctor prepares to die outside, when the crack appears in the night sky. Regeneration energy flows from the crack and into the Doctor, granting him a new regeneration cycle and saving him from death.

The Doctor uses the excess energy of his regeneration to destroy the Daleks. In the aftermath, Clara finds him young again in the TARDIS console room. He explains this rejuvenation is a "reset" for the new regeneration cycle to begin and the changing of his form is taking a while to start up. He delivers a eulogy to his current form, hallucinates a final farewell to Amy Pond, and regenerates. The Twelfth Doctor then declares that the TARDIS is crashing and asks Clara if she knows how to fly it.

Continuity

As this is the Eleventh Doctor's final regular appearance, numerous plot threads developed over the course of his journey are addressed. Remnants of the cracks in the universe, the major story arc of the fifth series, are being used by the Time Lords in an attempt to break back into the universe after their rescue from the Time War. The intention of the Silence and the rationale behind the prophecy ("Silence will fall when the question is asked") are revealed: to prevent the Time Lords from returning to the Universe and causing the Time War to begin anew. The Silence are also confirmed to be behind the destruction of the TARDIS that happened in "The Pandorica Opens". The resulting explosion is what caused the cracks in the universe in the first place, a development which the Doctor notes is an ontological paradox. The Silence's attempt to kill the Doctor using River Song is also mentioned.

Production

"The Time of the Doctor" is the last episode to feature Matt Smith (left) in the central role, and the second to include Peter Capaldi (right) as the new Doctor, following his cameo in "The Day of the Doctor".

Matt Smith said filming would commence on the episode when he had finished work on the film Lost River. He later revealed filming would start in September.[2] The episode was directed by Jamie Payne, who previously directed the episode "Hide".[3] The read-through for the Christmas special took place on 4 September 2013.[4]

In August 2013, Moffat stated in an interview that the Christmas episode would tie together the remaining story strands from the Eleventh Doctor era, some of which were introduced as far back as "The Eleventh Hour".[5] Production on the episode was scheduled to start on 8 September. Owing to his work on Lost River, which required him to have a buzz cut, Matt Smith had to wear a wig to mimic the Doctor's signature hairstyle.[6] In August 2013, it was revealed that the Cybermen would feature in the Christmas episode, when one of the show's regular stunt artists,[7] Darrelle "Daz" Parker, tweeted that she would be playing a Cyberman.[8]

Fake snow at Puzzlewood for filming.

On 23 November 2013, the teaser trailer released on BBC One after "The Day of the Doctor" revealed that the Daleks, Weeping Angels, and the Silence would also be appearing in the episode. Although the Daleks and the Cybermen had previously met in "Doomsday" and "The Pandorica Opens", this marks the first time that the four species have appeared in an episode together. Revealed in the trailer is the Doctor's return to Trenzalore and the tagline "Silence Will Fall", which has been repeated through Matt Smith's run as the Doctor.

Cast notes

Sheila Reid had previously appeared in Vengeance on Varos in 1985. Karen Gillan appeared as Amy Pond for the first time since "The Angels Take Manhattan". Gillan, like Smith, had to wear a wig after shaving her head to appear in the film Guardians of the Galaxy.[9]

Recasting the Doctor

On 1 June, the BBC announced that Smith would be departing the series after almost four years, with the Christmas special episode being the episode of transition between Smith's Doctor and the next regeneration. The announcement sparked media and fan speculation as to who the next Doctor might be.[10] It was announced on 4 August 2013, during a special broadcast – Doctor Who Live: The Next Doctor – that the twelfth incarnation of the Doctor would be played by Peter Capaldi.[11]

Filming

Filming for the episode began on 8 September 2013. On 10 September, Matt Smith and Jenna Coleman were seen filming on location in Cardiff.[12] The location was Lydstep Flats, which have been previously used in Series 1 and 2 as the Powell Estate where Rose Tyler lived with her mother Jackie.[13] On 19 September 2013, scenes were being filmed in the evening at Puzzlewood with fake snow being scattered over certain areas.[14] During shooting of the episode, elements were also filmed to be incorporated in both the previous and following episodes; Matt Smith also filmed a scene intended to be incorporated into the first episode of Series 8,[15] while Peter Capaldi was filmed for his brief introductory cameo that was part of the 50th anniversary special.[16] On 5 October 2013, Doctor Who producer Marcus Wilson revealed via Twitter that filming was complete.[17]

Marketing

Trailers

A sneak preview for the episode was shown after the simulcast of "The Day of the Doctor", confirming the appearance of the Cybermen and revealing the inclusion of the Silence, Daleks, Sontarans and Weeping Angels, as well as confirming the Doctor's return to the planet Trenzalore.[18] The title and a poster were released on 26 November.[19] In the BBC Christmas 2013 trailer, there were clips confirming the Daleks and the Cybermen.[20] Through the online Doctor Who "Adventure Calendar", more images were released in December.[21] On 11 December, the BBC released a 35-second trailer in which the Daleks pronounce "The Doctor is Regenerating!" there is also the Silence, Cybermen, members of the Church featured in "The Time of Angels"/"Flesh and Stone" and "A Good Man Goes to War", Clara and the Doctor featured in the clip.[22] On 17 December 2013, BBC One released another Christmas trailer, featuring Clara calling the Doctor during a Cyberman attack on the TARDIS.[23] Prior to the episode's broadcast, the BBC released three preview clips.[24][25][26]

Broadcast and reception

"The Time of the Doctor" was broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC One on Christmas Day 2013 when it received initial overnight ratings of 8.30 million viewers (30.7% share) against the long running soap opera Coronation Street which got 7.9 million viewers (though this was later bumped to 8.27 million after the later repeat showing on ITV+1 was factored in). Doctor Who was the second most watched programme of the entire day across all channels, with the final 5 minutes (the regeneration from Smith to Capaldi) receiving the largest peak viewers of the day with 10.2 million.[27] The final viewing figures for the episode were 11.14 million viewers, making it the fifth most watched Doctor Who Christmas special.[28] It was also shown on 25 December in the United States on BBC America,[29] where, with 2.47m viewers, it achieved the highest ever audience figures for the channel, beating the previous record set just over month beforehand with "The Day of the Doctor".[30]

It was also seen in Canada on Space,[31] in Germany on Fox and in Israel on yes Action.[32] In Australia it aired on 26 December on ABC1,[33] and in New Zealand, it screened on Prime Television during Boxing Day evening with 106,390 viewers.[34] It received an Appreciation Index of 83 in the UK.[35]

Critical reception

"The Time of the Doctor" received generally positive reviews from critics. Dan Martin of The Guardian praised the episode as "awfully good". He wrote that Steven Moffat had "performed the fourth remix of the show's mythology in a row, tying up strands that date back to the beginning of Matt Smith's run." He added, "Perfectly, the rebooting of his regeneration cycle was done simply... Who could have guessed the Doctor's renewed regeneration cycle would be dealt with as simply as his best friend just asking nicely?"[36] IGN gave the episode a score of 8.4, "GREAT", writing that "'The Time of the Doctor' was an exemplary exercise in celebrating the departure of a loved one. If you managed to stay dry-eyed during the Doctor's goodbye to Clara (itself a not-entirely-transparent goodbye from Smith to the role he embodied), then you should probably double check your heart's still working," also lauding Karen Gillan's "rather crowd-pleasing, tear-inducing cameo". While criticizing its "rapid, almost breathless pace", they concluded, "It was a melancholic yet ultimately merry end to one of the show's best Doctors to date."[37]

Los Angeles Times said that Matt Smith exited "with comic energy" and "grace", stating, "The Christmas special embodies the heartfelt style and playfulness that Matt Smith brought to his spell as the Time Lord. There are two ways to watch the series. The first requires a deep knowledge of its complicated 50-year-history and an ability to keep complicated strands of time-twisting action straight in one's head. The other way is to watch it for the poetry, the resonances and the connections and a sense of wonder about life (extra-terrestrially dressed at times, but our life underneath)."[38]

Jon Cooper of The Mirror gave the episode a positive review, calling it "Easily the highlight of Christmas telly," and that it "gave Matt Smith a perfect send off." They awarded the episode 4 stars out of 5. He praised Smith saying, "Easily the best he's put in since his tenure began." He criticized the pacing saying, "viewers hoping for an all-out intergalactic bloodbath must've left feeling disappointed, hundreds of years of inter-species warfare were skipped over in the blink of an eye". He also found the need for every single one of the Doctor's enemies to be there pointless, saying "Daleks on their own would have more than sufficed." He also found similarities with The End of Time, mainly the regeneration sequence, with the Doctor removing one piece of his costume before changing, and the now traditional callback to the previous regeneration with Capaldi's entrance with the kidneys line.[39]

The Independent gave a positive review saying that, "Smith gave a cracking final performance before bowing out." They said that the episode "was a sci-fi spectacular!" But they also criticized the plot as being too complicated for its own good.[40]

Morgan Jeffrey of Digital Spy gave the episode 4 stars out of 5 and said that "Matt Smith steals the show, his final turn on Doctor Who is one of his very finest, perhaps even his absolute best." He compared it to David Tennant's final episode and said "Smith's regeneration scene too is a thing of beauty, like David Tennant before him, Smith gets to break the fourth wall, just a little, in his extended final monologue, [...] it's perfect." He also was positive towards Clara and suggested that she was now being written in a more human, empathetic way "in the wake of the Impossible Girl arc", although such efforts were "well-intentioned but rushed", he felt that there were "steps being taken in the right direction" with the character. He praised Jenna Coleman's performance, saying she is "dependably excellent." But he did say "'The Time of the Doctor' is a case of the parts being greater than the whole. It has great scenes and standout moments rather than being a great episode." He also criticized the pacing and felt that "a repetitive story structure robbing many key moments of their power."[41]

Alasdair Wilkins of The A.V. Club was overwhelmingly positive in his review, praising the subtle emotional complexities. "This episode belongs to Matt Smith, and it's entirely likely that this will go down as his finest work in the role. Steven Moffat takes great care to spotlight every aspect of Smith's Doctor. He is alternately grumpy, funny, awkward, flirty, inquisitive, giddy, and heartbroken, and that simply covers the bits up to the reveal of the crack in reality. The old-age makeup isn't entirely convincing—though I'm not honestly sure any old-age makeup has ever been entirely convincing—but Smith nicely modulates his performance to suits the increasingly wizened versions of his Doctor."[42] He praised the episode for being an effective "final act" rather than a standalone story. He gave the episode a rating of "A".[42]

Kyle Anderson of Nerdist wrote the finale "might leave a percentage of fandom cold, but... I can’t think of a better way for the Eleventh Doctor to end his tenure." He stated, "There were lots of loose ends for writer Steven Moffat to tie up, but somehow he did it." Of The Doctor's protection of Trenzalore: "It’s this action that is the perfect farewell to the Eleventh Doctor. He’s the Doctor, more than any other, who has run away and not wanted to be tied to any one place or time... compelled to stay put to save each and every life he can." The final scene "[allowed] the Eleventh Doctor to go out with dignity and both appreciate the sadness of leaving without casting a pall over the new." He added, "We get our first, very fleeting glimpse of the next Doctor, Peter Capaldi, who is just as intense and strange as we probably expected."[43]

Tim Martin of The Telegraph gave the episode three stars, criticizing the complexity of the episode and the fact that loose plot holes were all left to be answered in just 60 minutes: "Every time the Gordian plot-knot gets sonic-screwdrivered into submission for the 60-minute limit, the writers just tap the remnants into Later. What's the deal with the creepy brain-wiping creatures known as The Silence? Later. The name of the Doctor? Later, and then we get The Time of the Doctor, where every second line seems to offer a footnote to some arcane Wikipedia entry on Whovian lore." But he praised Smith's final performance saying, "the actor was so good as the childlike alien."[44]

Radio Times said they were "really warming to the current companion, especially now she's free of the "Impossible Girl" baggage. Perky, resourceful, best-friend material, Jenna Coleman's Clara has a tangible echo of Lis Sladen's Sarah about her." They noticed an End of Time call back, with The Doctor seeing his previous companions before his regeneration and how the Tenth Doctor destroyed the TARDIS with regeneration energy, the Eleventh doctor destroyed a Dalek ship with it. They look forward to seeing Peter Capaldi take over with his "Gaunt, lizard-like [face] and with frou-frou hair. [...] In Peter Capaldi, we have a dream-wish Doctor."[45]

Home media

"The Time of the Doctor" was released on DVD and Blu-ray in the United Kingdom on 20 January 2014,[46] in Australia on 22 January 2014[47] and was released in the United States on 4 March 2014.[48] It is accompanied with a behind-the-scenes feature and two documentaries. The UK and Australian releases additionally comes with an extra disc featuring the Eleventh Doctor's previous Christmas specials, "A Christmas Carol", "The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe" and "The Snowmen". The special was re-released on DVD and Blu-ray on 8 September 2014 as part of a "50th Anniversary Collectors Boxset" alongside "The Name of the Doctor", "The Night of the Doctor", "The Day of the Doctor", "An Adventure in Space and Time" and "The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot".[49]

The ten Christmas specials between "The Christmas Invasion" and "Last Christmas" inclusive were released in a boxset titled Doctor Who – The 10 Christmas Specials on 19 October 2015.[50]

Soundtrack

Selected pieces of score from "The Time of the Doctor", as composed by Murray Gold, were released on 24 November 2014 by Silva Screen Records.[51]

References

  1. BBC One Christmas. "BBC One Christmas 2013 - Schedule Highlights". British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 15 December 2013.
  2. "Smith on his "Final Hour", Hurt Revelations, 12th Doctor". Doctor Who TV. 19 July 2013. Retrieved 21 July 2013.
  3. "Doctor Who: Christmas Special director announced". Den of Geek. 18 June 2013. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
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  5. "Moffat Will Tie Up 11th Doctor Loose Ends". Doctor Who TV. 22 August 2013. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  6. "Matt Smith to start shooting Christmas Special from Sunday". Doctor Who News. 4 September 2013. Retrieved 4 September 2013.
  7. Parker, Darrelle "Daz". "Daz Parker - Showreel". Suunto. Retrieved 29 November 2013.
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  10. "'Doctor Who': Matt Smith Out; New Doctor Revealed in 2013 Christmas Special". Screenrant.com. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
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  12. "Doctor Who Christmas Special filming begins - and Matt Smith's wig looks pretty convincing". Radio Times. 10 September 2013. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
  13. Russell T Davies (19 December 2013). "Aliens of London Transcript".
  14. Rowan Charlton (@RowanCharlton) (20 September 2013). "Fake snow at #Puzzlewood from the filming of #DoctorWho last night".
  15. "Fact File: Deep Breath". Doctor Who. Retrieved 28 August 2014.
  16. Benjamin Cook, "The Clock Strikes Twelve." Doctor Who Magazine #469, January 2014, p. 19
  17. Wilson, Marcus (5 October 2013). "So it's goodnight from me, and it's goodnight from him. That's a wrap. Christmas 2013. Thank you all.". Twitter. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
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  19. "Christmas Special Title and Image Revealed". BBC. 26 November 2013. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
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  27. Jones, Paul (3 December 2013). "Doctor Who Christmas special air date and time confirmed". Radio Times. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
  28. "Most Viewed Xmas Special 2005-2013". Doctor Who TV. 2 January 2014. Retrieved 3 January 2014.
  29. Jeffery, Morgan (4 December 2013). "Doctor Who: Matt Smith Christmas Exit gets US air-date on BBC America". Digital Spy. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
  30. Deen, Sarah. "Doctor Who Christmas special The Time of the Doctor breaks BBC America ratings record". Metro. Metro Newspaper. Retrieved 11 January 2014.
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  32. "yes on Facebook" (in Hebrew). 10 December 2013. Retrieved 11 December 2013.
  33. Knox, David (6 December 2013). "Airdate: Doctor Who: The Time of the Doctor". TV Tonight. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
  34. "TV Ratings: 26 December 2013". Throng. 28 December 2013. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
  35. "Time of the Doctor - AI score". Doctor Who News Page. 28 December 2013. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  36. Martin, Dan (25 December 2013). "Doctor Who recap: The Time of the Doctor". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  37. Snow, Mark (25 December 2013). "Doctor Who: "The Time of the Doctor" Review "Goodbye, Raggedy Man."". IGN. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  38. Lloyd, Robert (26 December 2013). "Review: 'Doctor Who's' Matt Smith exits with comic energy, grace". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
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  42. 1 2 Wilkins, Alasdair (25 December 2013). "Doctor Who: "The Time Of The Doctor"". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 3 January 2014.
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  45. Mulkern, Patrick (25 December 2013). "Doctor Who Christmas special review: a spectacular farewell to Matt Smith but was it too Christmassy?". Radio Times. Retrieved 3 January 2014.
  46. "Doctor Who: The Time of the Doctor & Other Eleventh Doctor Christmas Specials (DVD)". bbcshop.com. 2013-12-20. Retrieved 2013-12-20.
  47. "Doctor Who: The Time of the Doctor & Other Eleventh Doctor Christmas Specials (DVD)". ezydvd.com. 2013-12-20. Retrieved 2013-12-20.
  48. "Doctor Who - 'The Time of the Doctor: 2013 Christmas Special': Date, Cost, Extras, Art!". TVshowsondvd.com. 2013-12-18. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
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  50. "Doctor Who News: Doctor Who - The Ten Christmas Specials". Doctor Who News. 1 October 2015. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  51. Silva Screen Music. "Doctor Who - The Day Of The Doctor/ The Time Of The Doctor - Original Television Soundtrack". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 2014-10-29.
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