Series 2: Episode 8 (Life on Mars)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Episode 8
Life on Mars episode

Frank Morgan tells Sam the "truth" about who he is.
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 8
Written by Matthew Graham
Directed by S. J. Clarkson
Original airdate April 10, 2007
Episode chronology
← Previous Next →
"Episode 7" "Ashes to Ashes:
Episode 1
"
List of Life on Mars episodes

The eighth, and final, episode of the second series of the British time travel police procedural television series, Life on Mars, was first broadcast on 10 April 2007. It was produced by Kudos Film & Television for BBC One.

This was the finale of Life on Mars, although three characters (Gene Hunt, Ray Carling and Chris Skelton) returned for the sequel series Ashes to Ashes in 2008.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Sam learns that an operation is to be conducted on him in 2006 to try and revive him from his coma. However, he believes that to return to the twenty-first century, he has to betray his colleagues in 1973 — but can he regard them as real or imagined?

[edit] Plot

Sam hears, via Jimmy Savile on the radio, that he has a tumour on his brain that is operable and could bring him out of his coma. He then hears his mother Ruth say that the surgeon’s name is Mr Morgan. Frank Morgan - the policeman from Hyde - then phones him to say that he must destroy Gene Hunt. Sam interprets this to mean that Gene is a metaphor for the tumour and is the remaining obstacle to his return to the present day.

The coppers find a murdered man called Danny who was secretly informing the police. Sam is angry that Gene didn’t offer him protection in return. Frank later explains that Gene must be exposed for his criminal negligence, prompting Sam to explain about what happened with Danny. Then, Frank promises to bring Sam home once he has the necessary evidence and tape recordings.

Annie hears from Sam that he is going far away and wants to spend more time with her. Before they can speak further, a suspect is brought in for interrogation in the store rooms. Sam has hidden a tape recorder and it captures Gene and Ray brutally treating the man in order to gain answers. The methods work and the name Leslie Johns is supplied.

That night, Annie arrives at Sam’s flat for a word. After a heart to heart, Sam asks for one night together with her, but Annie rejects the short term proposition and leaves. He then sees the demonic Test Card girl enter his flat and suggest that he’s being operated on.

Gene Hunt plans an undercover operation to arrest Johns and an armed gang planning to stage a heist on a train carrying wages. Sam believes that without trained firearms experts involved the officers are being placed in unnecessary danger. Gene then meets Johns, using a false identity, and ensures that he is part of the armed gang. After this meeting Gene plans the operation and informs Sam, Annie, Ray and Chris that they are also to go undercover posing as the train’s staff. Although Sam is still convinced that the operation is risky and irrational, there is a telling moment where Gene Hunt defends his actions saying "I know we're dealing with a cop killer, but I have a responsibility to this city, and I will move heaven and earth to stop this man, now he doesn't play by any rules so neither should we." Sam then looks at Gene with a pained expression, realising for the first time just how difficult he will find it to expose him. Despite their differing methods of policing, it appears as if Sam recognises and respects Gene's simple honesty and fierce sense of duty in his work.

Sam meets Frank to inform him of the latest developments and evidence. He asks to return home, but Frank says he must stay on as part of an anti-corruption unit. Sam then starts making references to the coma and the brain surgery in the future, but Frank is dumbfounded. Sam is startled to learn he was in a crash several months ago before he went undercover and suffers from amnesia, with Frank listing the symptoms of hearing doctors’ voices.

The pair then visit a cemetery with tombstones of Sam’s dead parents, who have the surname Williams. Next to their graves are tombstones bearing the name Tyler, which is where Frank says he took his undercover name from. Shortly afterwards, Frank gives Sam a radio with which to contact him for backup during the train operation.

Nelson the barman then tells Sam that he is only alive when he can feel. The policeman later gives Annie a big hug and confesses that he was always going to leave and that he is working undercover for Morgan to gather evidence against Hunt. Chris and Ray walk in and Sam also tells them the truth about his links with Hyde. They are not pleased, despite Sam’s protestations that he wants to save their lives.

Despite the friction, the team goes ahead with the mission as Gene has already gone undercover. When their train is being robbed, sounds from Sam’s police radio given to him by Morgan alert the crooks to the deception. As shots are fired, Gene breaks his cover to join his colleagues in the shootout. Sam radios Morgan for backup but none arrives. Promising that he will return, Sam makes a break for it and bumps into Morgan at the end of the train tunnel who tells him there is no backup and is happy to let the officers die to prove a point.

A bright, white light appears at the tunnel as Sam’s colleagues make a run for it and are shot down one by one screaming for his help. Sam follows the light and wakes up on a hospital bed to see surgeon Morgan’s face. Later, as Sam leaves the hospital, we see that he has been in the Hyde Ward, Room 2612: a reference to the place and phone number Sam had been contacting Morgan on.

Back in the present day, Sam rejoins the police force and undergoes psychiatric evaluation. He also visits his mother, explaining to her that in some ways he felt more alive in his coma than he’d ever been before. The promise he made to Annie in the train that he’d return starts to haunt him.

At a police meeting, Sam feels nothing. He has no opinion and cannot feel that he was cutting his hand inadvertently. He slips off to the top of the building, alone, and surveys the landscape. He walks, then runs towards the edge and leaps off…

Sam then returns to 1973 and shoots Leslie Johns in the train tunnel before he can put a bullet into the wounded Hunt. Now back on good terms with his colleagues and enjoying a drinking session down the pub, Sam slips outside for some alone time with Annie. They kiss. Gene interrupts them by pulling up in a car to inform them that a robbery is in progress and they must go. The radio on the car has a surgeon’s voice saying that ‘he’s slipping away from us’, but Sam switches channels. As the banter continues between the pair, David Bowie’s ‘Life On Mars’ plays on the radio and the Test Card girl appears in front of the camera to turn the television off...

[edit] Cast

[edit] Cultural references

  • Ray says "Guv's in like Flint." In Like Flint is a spy spoof starring James Coburn as Derek Flint. The film title itself was a play on the phrase "in like Flynn", which had come to mean succeeding easily, particularly in the context of seduction.
  • Sam references RoboCop (a movie that wouldn't come out until 1987) and dialogue from it several times during the course of this episode.

[edit] Production

  • In the scene in Morgan's car, he produces a folder titled:

Metropolitan Accountability and Reconciliation Strategy

M.A.R.S.

  • The surname on the headstones of the graves of Sam's 'parents' is Williams. This was originally to be Sam's surname on the show, but Kudos felt that "Sam Williams" was not striking enough. Co-creator Matthew Graham consulted his daughter and she suggested Tyler after Rose Tyler, from Doctor Who.

[edit] Music

[edit] Viewing figures

Compared to other episodes in this series, this episode gained a very large audience, with an average of seven million viewers (a 28% audience share), [1] despite competition from UEFA Champions League football on ITV1.[2]

[edit] Critical reception

  • Two days after this episode's transmission, Life on Mars was attacked in the British press by the National Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers, who claimed that Gene Hunt's use of homophobic insults in the programme could encourage copycat bullying in schools.[3] The BBC stated that Life on Mars was targeted at an adult audience, and argued that Hunt's characterisation was "extreme and tongue-in-cheek".[3]

[edit] References

[edit] External Links