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192 – "Voyage of the Damned"
Doctor Who episode
275px
Bannakaffalatta, Astrid, Mr Copper, and the Doctor are under attack from the Host while trying to save the ship.
Cast
Doctor David Tennant (Tenth Doctor)
Companion Kylie Minogue (Astrid Peth)
Production
Writer Russell T. Davies
Director James Strong
Script editor Brian Minchin
Executive producer(s) Russell T. Davies
Julie Gardner
Production code 4.X
Series Christmas Special (2007)
Length 71 mins
Originally broadcast 25 December 2007
Chronology
← Preceded by Followed by →
"Last of the Time Lords" (episode)
"Time Crash" (special)
"Partners in Crime"[1]
IMDb profile

"Voyage of the Damned" is an episode of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It is 71 minutes long and was broadcast on BBC One at 6:50pm on 25 December 2007. It is the third Christmas special of the revived Doctor Who series by Russell T. Davies, and the first episode to be made available for free on the internet by the BBC iPlayer service immediately after its first showing (the internet version is available in the UK only). The episode introduces a new variation on the opening and closing Doctor Who theme tune and companion Astrid Peth and is dedicated to the memory of the founding producer of Doctor Who, Verity Lambert.

This story continues from the final scene of "Last of the Time Lords" and "Time Crash", in which a luxury space cruiser called the Titanic breaches the walls of the TARDIS console room. The Doctor teams up with Titanic waitress Astrid Peth in order to fend off a new enemy called the Host.

On its original airdate, "Voyage of the Damned" attracted 13.8 million viewers at its peak, with an overnight rating of 12.2 million viewers earning the episode 50% of the total television audience. It was the second most-watched program of the day, being beaten by the 8 p.m. episode of EastEnders. These were the highest viewing figures for Doctor Who since 1979's City of Death.[2]

Contents

Plot

As the Doctor leaves Earth, the bow of the Titanic crashes through the TARDIS' wall. Though momentarily stunned, he quickly pushes some buttons to repair the TARDIS walls and push the ship out. The TARDIS then materialises aboard the ship. The Doctor soon learns the Titanic is a large luxury spaceship from the planet Sto, orbiting present-day Earth. He decides to stow away to enjoy the party, only confessing his unauthorized status to lively waitress Astrid Peth, who reveals her own desire to travel the stars.

Astrid has found her new job disappointing, as she is not allowed off the ship to visit destination planets. The Doctor cheers her up by sneaking her onto an excursion to London via teleport, along with couple Morvin and Foon Van Hoff, and a small alien with a red head, called Bannakaffalatta, and the ship's historian Mr Copper, who gives a skewed description of British culture. However, London is deserted, except for a few people including the Royal Family and a newspaper seller called Wilfred Mott, due to the public's fear of a third consecutive Christmas attack.

Meanwhile, on the Titanic's bridge, Captain Hardaker dismisses all the officers so they can take a break. Only one, Midshipman Frame, refuses to go, due to regulations that two officers must remain on the bridge. The party returns to the ship just as Hardaker commits an act of sabotage by causing meteors to collide with the ship, wounding Frame when he attempts to prevent the disaster. Hardaker is killed in the resulting collision, as are the bulk of the crew and passengers. With the teleport system offline and the engines losing power, the Titanic is heading for an extinction-level collision with the Earth. The Doctor makes contact with Frame, and then leads a small group of survivors in a climb through the shattered vessel to reach him.

Complicating matters are the Host, information androids resembling angels that have been reprogrammed to kill everyone onboard. The Doctor's party is harassed by Host all the way, and the Doctor's sonic screwdriver proves to be useless against them. While fleeing, Bannakaffalatta reveals to Astrid that he is actually a cyborg, which he kept a secret on Sto for fear of being an outcast. While crossing a bridge over the engine, he saves the party from a Host attack by transmitting an electromagnetic pulse from his cybernetic implants, killing himself in the process. At this point, the Van Hoffs also die: Morvin falls from the ledge into the nuclear engines, and Foon subsequently commits suicide while pulling a surviving Host down with her, causing the Doctor to make a grim promise that no-one else will die. The survivors take Bannakaffalatta's EMP unit with them as their only effective weapon against the Host.

The Doctor sends the remaining survivors on ahead with the EMP unit and the sonic screwdriver, while he attempts to reach the place from which the Host are controlled. He convinces the Host to take him to their leader, who is the cruise line's owner, Max Capricorn, who is revealed to be mostly robotic. Having been forced out by the company's board of directors, he is seeking revenge. The collision of the Titanic into a heavily-populated world will not only break the company, but see the board charged with murder. Outnumbered by Host and faced with death, the Doctor is saved by Astrid, who had teleported to his position and rammed Capricorn with a fork-lift truck until both are forced off a precipice to their deaths.

Assuming control of the Host upon Capricorn's death, the Doctor makes his way to the bridge. Working with Frame, he uses the heat from entry of the Earth's atmosphere to try to re-start the ship's engines, but discovers that they are headed straight for one of the few places in London currently inhabited, Buckingham Palace, which the Doctor calls to evacuate before managing to get control of the ship.

With the danger over, the Doctor suddenly realises that there might be hope for Astrid after all. As she was wearing a teleport bracelet at the time of her death, her molecular pattern might still be stored in the teleport's system's buffers. However, despite desperate efforts, only a shadow of Astrid can be generated due to extensive damage to the system. The Doctor watches allows her to dissipate into atoms that float free into space, so she can at least fulfill her dream of exploring the universe, forever.

The Doctor teleports back to earth with Mr Copper, who is no expert on Earth, but a former salesman who lied his way onto the ship to explore the stars. The Doctor leaves him on the planet to build a new life, funded by the ship's expenses card, which contains £1,000,000. The Doctor then heads off in the TARDIS, alone.

Cast

Cast notes

Continuity

  • Although the special takes place aboard an otherworldly namesake of the famed ocean liner, the RMS Titanic and its sinking was mentioned previously within the series in Robot (1974), The Robots of Death (1977), The Invasion of Time (1978), "Rose" (2005) and "The End of the World" (2005). The Titanic also appeared in the Virgin New Adventures book The Left-Handed Hummingbird, written by Kate Orman, and the 1989 Doctor Who Magazine comic strip Follow That TARDIS!.
  • This episode introduces a new variation of the Doctor Who theme tune arranged by Murray Gold. It features a musical nod to Peter Howell's 1980s version.[4]
  • London has been evacuated due to alien attacks the previous two Christmases - referring to "The Christmas Invasion" and "The Runaway Bride". Clips from each of these episodes appear as part of news footage.
  • The BBC broadcast near the end makes matter-of-fact statements about alien invasions and the London public (due to the evacuation and the dialogue from the street vendor), a difference to previous episodes where the public is either in denial or it's covered up; most recently in "The Sound of Drums", where the Master stated the government "told you nothing".
  • Earth was previously referred to by its Gallifreyan name "Sol 3" in The Deadly Assassin and Last of the Time Lords. Earth was also previously refered to as a "Level 5" civilization in City of Death. This episode also marks the first time in the revived series of Doctor Who that the Doctor has referred to Gallifrey as being in the constellation of Kasterborous.[4]
  • Excluding Jack Harkness's repeated deaths, Astrid is the first companion to die in the revived series (and the first since Kamelion in 1984's Planet of Fire), although she is partially resurrected. She is also the first alien companion since Kamelion, and the first in the revived series to never set foot in the TARDIS.
  • The Doctor previously had a close encounter with Queen Elizabeth II in the Seventh Doctor story Silver Nemesis.
  • Once again, the Doctor uses the phrase allons-y ("let's go" in French). He had previously said it in "Army of Ghosts", "Evolution of the Daleks" and "42". He was surprised when Midshipman Frame told him that his first name was Alonzo, commenting that there was "something else I've always wanted to say". As he starts to steer the ship, he yells "Allons-y, Alonzo!" In "Army of Ghosts", when he thought of using allons-y, he thought that the name Alonzo would go nicely with it, and later asked Yvonne Hartman whether Torchwood has anyone named Alonzo.
  • The Doctor notes that "this suit is bad luck", he previously wore it in "Rise of the Cybermen"/"The Age of Steel" and "The Lazarus Experiment". Both times he had been attending a seemingly normal party which goes wrong.
  • Just like in the 2005 & 2006 Christmas specials, it is revealed at the end that the 'snow' falling is actually something else (debris from the Titanic). The Doctor wonders if it will ever snow for real. In "The Christmas Invasion", the 'snow' was ash from the Sycorax spaceship, and in "The Runaway Bride", the Doctor uses 'basic atmospheric excitation' supplied by the TARDIS to make it snow.
  • The Doctor refers to himself as being 903 years old, contradicting the serial Time and the Rani where he states his age as 953.[5]

Outside references

Pre-broadcast publicity

  • Kylie Minogue was initially reported by tabloid newspapers to be appearing in this episode.[6] Russell T Davies dismissed this story, but a statement by Minogue indicated that she would be in the episode.[7][8] The BBC officially confirmed her role in early July.[9]
  • On 19 July 2007, The Sun published a photograph of an actor on set in Wales, in make-up, supposedly playing a red, spiky creature called "Porg".[10]
  • On 20 July 2007, the Paisley Daily Express reported that David Tennant's mother, Helen McDonald, had died from cancer,[11] and SyFy Portal noted that filming had been delayed by one week so Tennant could attend his mother's funeral.[12]
  • The Series 3 Doctor Who soundtrack includes a track named "The Stowaway", which Amazon.co.uk have confirmed is a song appearing in this episode, in the same vein as "Song for Ten" and "Love Don't Roam" in previous Christmas specials (both of which were on the original soundtrack).[13] The full song was released online at SilvaScreen Records' MySpace page.
  • On the 4 December 2007, Radio Times mentioned that the gold creatures are new monsters and are referred as 'the Hosts'.[14]
  • On December 8, the BBC released a series of three short clips,[15] showing the Doctor, Astrid and the Titanic floating in space, above the Earth. This was accompanied by a 90-second long trailer for the episode in British cinemas, which was released on the BBC website on December 14th.

Reception

[[Image:Angelic Doctor.jpg|A scene where the Doctor is lifted through the ship by the angelic Host caused offence to the group Christian Voice.|right|thumb|275px]] Before its broadcast, the episode drew criticism from Millvina Dean, the last living survivor of the 1912 Titanic sinking, who stated that it was "disrespectful to make entertainment of such a tragedy".[16] The organisation Christian Voice expressed offence at the religious imagery of a scene in which the Doctor is lifted through the ship by robot angels.[17] The episode's Christmas Day UK broadcast received 13.8 million viewers, an audience narrowly exceeded by the 13.9 million who watched the BBC soap EastEnders.[18] The average across all 70 minutes was 12.2 million viewers. This was the highest total of viewers for the new series, exceeding the previous record set by "Rose", and the highest for Doctor Who overall since 1979 (specifically, the final episode of "City of Death" which aired while rival network ITV suffered programming disruptions due to a strike).[19]

Gareth McLean, reviewing a preview screening for The Guardian's TV and radio weblog, appreciated the episode's use of "the disaster movie template" and came to a favourable overall conclusion: "For the most part, The Voyage of the Damned is absolutely smashing." Its main flaw, in his view, was the "blank and insipid" acting of Kylie Minogue.[20] James Walton of The Daily Telegraph called the episode "a winning mixture of wild imagination and careful writerly calculation".[21] Tim Teeman of The Times however, found that the episode "sucks", stating that "It was boring, despite the endless dashing about and CGI flimflam". [22]

References

  1. ^ “Production Notes”, Doctor Who Magazine (no. 390): p. 4, 2008-01-09 (cover date) 
  2. ^ "Titanic Success!", BBC, 2007-12-26. Retrieved on 2007-12-26. 
  3. ^ Phil Collinson on Doctor Who. SFX (2007-12-13). Retrieved on 2007-12-18.
  4. ^ a b c d e Doctor Who - Fact File - Voyage of the Damned. BBC (2007-12-25). Retrieved on 2007-12-26.
  5. ^ Doctor Who - The Classic Series - The Doctor's Age. BBC. Retrieved on 2007-12-27.
  6. ^ "Christmas Episode 2007", Outpost Gallifrey, 2007-05-12. Retrieved on 2007-07-01. 
  7. ^ "Davies dismisses Kylie rumour", Outpost Gallifrey, 2007-04-27. Retrieved on 2007-07-01. 
  8. ^ "Kylie confirms Doctor Who role", Digital Spy, 2007-05-12. Retrieved on 2007-07-12. 
  9. ^ "Step Back In Time", BBC, 2007-07-03. Retrieved on 2007-07-03. 
  10. ^ "Have you tried low tardis fags?", The Sun, 2007-07-19. Retrieved on 2007-07-19. 
  11. ^ "Tributes pour in for Helen", Paisley Daily Express, 2007-07-20. Retrieved on 2007-07-21. 
  12. ^ "'Doctor Who' Filming Delayed This Weekend", SyFy Portal, 2007-07-20. Retrieved on 2007-07-21. 
  13. ^ Doctor Who Original Music from Series Three. Amazon.co.uk (2007-10-13). Retrieved on 2007-10-14.
  14. ^ “Voyage of the Damned Preview”, Radio Times, 2007-12-04 
  15. ^ Advent(ure) Calendar update. BBC (2007-12-08). Retrieved on 2007-10-08.
  16. ^ "Doctor Who Slammed By Titanic Survivor", Daily Record, 22 December 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-26. 
  17. ^ Adam Sherwin. "Christians protest as Doctor Who is portrayed as 'messiah'", The Times, 21 December 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-26. 
  18. ^ "EastEnders pips Dr Who on Christmas", Reuters UK, 26 December 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-26. 
  19. ^ Neil Wilkes. "'Doctor Who' gets best ratings since 1979", Digital Spy, December 26, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-26. 
  20. ^ Gareth McLean. "The Doctor Who disaster movie is a great success", theblog: tv&radio, Guardian Unlimited, 20 December 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-26. 
  21. ^ James Walton. "Telegraph pick: Doctor Who (BBC1)", telegraph.co.uk, 26 December 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-26. 
  22. ^ Tim Teeman. "Christmas Day TV: Doctor Who; EastEnders; Coronation Street", timesonline.co.uk, 26 December 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-29. 

External links