iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.
iBet uBet web content aggregator. Adding the entire web to your favor.



Link to original content: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Last_of_the_Time_Lords
Last of the Time Lords - Wikipedia Jump to content

Last of the Time Lords

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

187c – "Last of the Time Lords"
Doctor Who episode
Cast
Others
Production
Directed byColin Teague
Written byRussell T Davies
Script editorSimon Winstone
Produced byPhil Collinson
Executive producer(s)Russell T Davies
Julie Gardner
Music byMurray Gold
Production code3.13
SeriesSeries 3
Running time3rd of 3-part story, 52 minutes
First broadcast30 June 2007 (2007-06-30)
Chronology
← Preceded by
"The Sound of Drums"
Followed by →
"Time Crash" (mini-episode)
"Voyage of the Damned" (special)
List of episodes (2005–present)

"Last of the Time Lords" is the thirteenth and final episode of the third series of the revived British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was broadcast on BBC One on 30 June 2007.[1] It is the last of three episodes that form a linked narrative, following "Utopia" and "The Sound of Drums".

The episode is set on Earth one year after the events of "The Sound of Drums". In the episode, the alien time traveller the Master (John Simm) has conquered the Earth and enslaved its population to prepare warships for him to conquer the rest of the universe. The medical student Martha Jones (Freema Agyeman) has spent the previous year travelling the planet as part of a plan to stop the Master.

Plot

[edit]

A year after the Toclafane attacked Earth and the Master took over the planet, humanity is on the verge of extinction. After her escape from the Valiant, Martha has been travelling around the world and avoiding detection. She has been preparing the surviving humans to concentrate their thoughts on the word "Doctor" the moment of the completion of the countdown to the launch of a fleet of rockets the Master is readying to wage war. The Tenth Doctor meanwhile has been spending a year psychically integrating himself into the Master's Archangel network of satellites, which channels the collective psychic energy of the people to the Doctor. Martha creates a cover story about finding four components to a gun the Master is vulnerable to as part of a plan to have Professor Docherty lead Martha back to the Master.

Martha, together with Docherty and medic Tom Milligan, capture a Toclafane. Upon examination they discover the Toclafane are humans who took the rocket to Utopia in the future. They cannibalised their bodies into metal spheres and their minds regressed into children. The Master created the Paradox Machine to allow them to return to the past and kill their ancestors while avoiding the grandfather paradox. Martha and Tom leave to find the last component of the gun, and Docherty provides the Master with Martha's location in exchange for information on her own son.

After killing Tom and cornering Martha, the Master destroys the gun and takes her back to the Valiant so he can kill her in front of the artificially aged Doctor. Martha reveals the gun to be a hoax, and her travels to have been with the aim of focusing the collective psychic energy of the people to think of the Doctor. This energy rejuvenates him, allowing him to overcome his captivity and force the Master to cower in defeat. Jack sets off to destroy the Paradox Machine. The destruction of the machine causes time to snap back right before paradox was created and the Toclafane appeared. The Doctor and his allies consider the Master's fate before the Master is shot by his wife Lucy. The Master refuses to regenerate and dies in the Doctor's arms. After, the Doctor cremates his body on a funeral pyre.

The Doctor returns Jack to Torchwood. An unknown hand is seen picking up the Master's ring from the remains of the pyre. Martha decides to leave the Doctor to care for her family, who can still remember their captivity on the Valiant. She gives him her mobile phone in case she needs to contact him. As the Doctor prepares to travel, the bow of a ship called the Titanic bursts through a wall of the TARDIS control room.

Continuity

[edit]

In the episode's commentary, writer Russell T Davies called the implication of Jack's nickname ("the Face of Boe") "a theory" as to the Face of Boe's origins, prompting Executive Producer Julie Gardner to urge him to "stop back-pedalling" about the two characters being the same. Davies also jokingly termed the hand seen removing the Master's ring from the ashes of his funeral pyre "the hand of the Rani".[2] The hand seen picking up the Master's ring was included in order to leave open the possibility of reintroducing the character at a later date.[2]

The Master makes reference to the Sea Devils (which the Third Doctor and the Master encountered together in the 1972 serial The Sea Devils) and the Axons (which they met in 1971's The Claws of Axos).[3] Earth is referred to as Sol 3, the third planet from the star Sol, as it was in The Deadly Assassin (1976).[3]

Production and publicity

[edit]

"Last of the Time Lords", along with "Utopia" and "The Sound of Drums", are treated in several sources as a three-part story, the first such story in the revived series of Doctor Who. However, Russell T Davies has said that he regards "Utopia" as a separate story, but notes that the determination is arbitrary.[4] "Last of the Time Lords" was a subtitle proposed at one stage for a film version of Doctor Who that was in development from 1987 to 1994.[5]

This episode was planned to be broadcast live to the crowds attending Pride London in Trafalgar Square via a giant screen. However, a local curfew after the nearby attempted terrorist bombing the previous day prevented the screening. Freema Agyeman and John Barrowman attended the event.[6][7]

In order to keep the episode's details secret, access to preview copies of this episode was restricted.[8] There was a similar moratorium on copies of "Doomsday" the previous year and on the series four finale "Journey's End" the following year.[9] The episode was allocated a 50-minute timeslot for its initial broadcast,[10] as with "Daleks in Manhattan" previously, and 55-minute timeslots for the BBC Three repeats.[11][12] According to Russell T Davies in Doctor Who Magazine 384, this is because it ran over-length but they did not wish to lose the material. The final episode of The Trial of a Time Lord was also extended by five minutes in 1986. In the audio commentary, the producers reveal that Graeme Harper filled in to direct some scenes after director Colin Teague was injured.

At the start of this episode, The Master enters the bridge of the Valiant as "I Can't Decide" by the Scissor Sisters plays in the background. He refers to it as "track 3", its place on the Scissor Sisters' second album, Ta-Dah. Two sets of audio commentaries were recorded for the episode: one with producers Russell T Davies, Julie Gardner, and Phil Collinson, which was intended for podcast broadcast to coincide with the episode's initial UK telecast, and the other featuring actors David Tennant, Freema Agyeman, and John Barrowman, which was included on the UK DVD release of the episode as part of the Series 3 box set. However, the Region 1 (North America) release of the DVD saw the actor commentary replaced by the earlier podcast version, although a production error resulted in the set's booklet not indicating this substitution (and the booklet also omits Tennant's name).[13] This episode marked the last regular-episode use of the Doctor Who theme music arrangement by Murray Gold that had been introduced in 2005 and used (notwithstanding minor modifications and an extension of the closing theme in 2006) thereafter. The opening theme would be heard once more in its 2005 arrangement in the Time Crash short episode, before both opening and closing themes would be revised beginning with Voyage of the Damned and continuing into Series 4 in 2008.

Cast notes

[edit]

Reggie Yates is credited as playing Leo Jones; however, the character Leo only appears in this episode as background. The audio commentary for the episode mentions that Leo was originally scheduled to appear in the sequence showing Martha's return to Britain, but Yates was double-booked. Zoe Thorne also voiced the Gelth in "The Unquiet Dead". Uncredited as the hand that picks up the Master's ring was production manager Tracie Simpson.

Broadcast and reception

[edit]

Overnight ratings showed that "Last of the Time Lords" was watched by 8 million viewers with a 39% audience share.[14] When finale ratings were calculated, figures rose to 8.61 million viewers.[15] It received an Audience Appreciation Index of 88, considered "excellent" for a drama.

Stephen Brook, writing on The Guardian's blog, said the episode was "certainly an epic conclusion... but not a satisfying one." He felt it was too epic and too rushed, and "the resurrection of the Doctor... left me cold."[16] SFX reviewer Dave Golder gave the episode three and a half out of five stars, concluding that it was "Good solid fun, with some great performances and memorable visuals but possibly the least satisfying New Who finale so far". Though he thought there was "loads to enjoy" such as John Simm as the Master, Freema Agyeman's performance, and the effects, he wished to explore more of the dystopian world and said of the conclusion, "I liked the message it was trying to get across, but the shots of a ghostly Tennant floating down the steps did unfortunately look like something out of a panto."[17]

IGN's Travis Fickett rated "Last of the Time Lords" 8.4 out of 10, believing it the "weakest entry" of the three-part finale, though it had some "fine stuff", especially the final confrontation between the Doctor and Master and Martha's departure. However, he thought the biggest "misstep" was sidelining the Doctor and the "logically muddy" conclusion.[18] Mark Wright of The Stage called it the "weakest of the season finales for Doctor Who to date", with much of the plot being "lazy" or not making sense and "[played] out as silly and lacks substance". While he praised Martha and the emotional climax, he found Jack "criminally underused" and criticised the representation of the aged Doctor.[19] Stephen James Walker, in his book Third Dimension: The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to Doctor Who 2007, summed up the episode as "bleak and depressing", and listed the ill treatment of the Doctor, the use of a reset button and the underuse of Captain Jack as among the problems he had with the story.[20]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Doctor Who UK airdate announced". News. Dreamwatch. 27 February 2007. Archived from the original on 12 March 2007.
  2. ^ a b ""Last of the Time Lords" Podcast". 27 July 2007. Retrieved 30 June 2007.
  3. ^ a b "Doctor Who - Fact File - "The Last of the Time Lords"". Retrieved 1 July 2007.
  4. ^ Davies, Russell T (4 March 2009). "Production Notes". Doctor Who Magazine. No. 406. Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent: Panini Comics. p. 4. And I certainly feel the Series Three climax was two stories, no matter what the DWM season poll says. I'm sorry! I just do! I could rattle off the reasons, but we're into the mystical land of canon here, where the baseline of the argument simply comes down to "because I think so!"
  5. ^ Lofficier, Jean-Marc (1997). Doctor Who: The Nth Doctor - An in-depth Study of the films that almost were. London: Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20499-9.
  6. ^ "Gripping finale of Doctor Who closes Pride show in Trafalgar Square". Pride London. Archived from the original on 21 June 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2007.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  7. ^ "Doctor Who dropped at London Pride 2007". Outpost Gallifrey. Archived from the original on 11 September 2007. Retrieved 2 July 2007.
  8. ^ "What did Lizo think of Doctor Who?". CBBC. 18 June 2007. Retrieved 21 June 2007.
  9. ^ "Fear Forecast: "Army of Ghosts"". BBC Doctor Who website. BBC. Retrieved 25 February 2007.
  10. ^ Doctor Who - Saturday, 30 June, Radio Times
  11. ^ Doctor Who - Sunday, 1 July, Radio Times
  12. ^ Doctor Who - Friday, 6 July, Radio Times
  13. ^ BBC Worldwide press release, quoted on TV Shows on DVD Archived 20 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine, 18 November 2007 (accessed 20 November 2007)
  14. ^ Dowell, Ben (2 July 2007). "Doctor Who masters rivals". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 March 2012.
  15. ^ "Weekly Top 30 Programmes". Broadcasters' Audience Research Board. Retrieved 29 March 2012.
  16. ^ Brook, Stephen (2 July 2007). "Doctor Who: it's season finale time!". Guardian Unlimited. Retrieved 10 August 2008.
  17. ^ Golder, Dave (30 June 2007). "Doctor Who 3.13 "Last of the Time Lords"". SFX. Retrieved 26 March 2012.
  18. ^ Fickett, Travis (8 October 2007). "Doctor Who: "Last of the Time Lords" Review". IGN. Retrieved 26 March 2012.
  19. ^ Wright, Mark (1 July 2007). "Doctor Who 3.13: Last of the Time Lords". The Stage. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
  20. ^ Walker, Stephen James (2007). Third Dimension: The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to Doctor Who 2007. Telos Publishing. p. 264. ISBN 978-1-84583-016-8.
[edit]

Reviews

[edit]