Utopia (Doctor Who)

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191a – "Utopia"
Doctor Who episode

The Doctor's greatest enemy regenerates.[1]
Cast
Doctor David Tennant (Tenth Doctor)
Companions Freema Agyeman (Martha Jones)
John Barrowman (Jack Harkness)
Guest stars
Production
Writer Russell T. Davies
Director Graeme Harper
Script editor Simon Winstone
Producer Phil Collinson
Executive producer(s) Russell T. Davies
Julie Gardner
Production code 3.11
Series Series 3
Length 1 of 3 episodes, 45 mins.
Originally broadcast 16 June 2007
Chronology
← Preceded by Followed by →
"Blink" "The Sound of Drums"
IMDb profile

"Utopia" is an episode of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was broadcast on BBC One on 16 June 2007[2] and is the eleventh episode of series three of the revived Doctor Who series. It is the first of a three-part story, followed by "The Sound of Drums" and "Last of the Time Lords".

This episode is set upon the planet of Malcassairo in the year 100 trillion, where a professor is working to send the last remnants of the human race to a place called "Utopia". It sees the return of Jack Harkness and the Master.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

As Captain Jack stows his way back into the Doctor's life, the TARDIS lands at the end of the universe. But as the last of the human race sets out to their dream homeland, the vicious Futurekind threaten to scuttle the rocket.

[edit] Plot

The TARDIS lands in Cardiff to refuel from the Rift. The Doctor states that this will only take twenty seconds (in contrast to his previous visit), noting that the Rift has been active recently. Captain Jack Harkness races towards the TARDIS, grabbing onto it as it dematerialises, causing it to hurtle out of control to the end of the Universe.

After landing in the year 100 trillion on the planet Malcassairo, Jack confronts the Doctor about abandoning him on Satellite 5, and asks about Rose Tyler. Jack reveals that he returned to Earth using a vortex manipulator, but was stranded in the 19th century. Exploring, they find a dead city and encounter the Futurekind, cannibalistic humanoids who are hunting a human. The human is attempting to reach a transport to "Utopia", the last hope of the human race.

At the transport site, the TARDIS crew meet the elderly Professor Yana and his insectoid assistant Chantho, who are desperate for help. The spacecraft to Utopia can't launch due to problems with its experimental engine system. Despite the unfamiliar technology, the Doctor solves the scientific problems, and Jack makes final preparations in a heavily irradiated room. As Jack does this, he and the Doctor discuss Jack's inability to die, saying that his resurrection is why the Doctor abandoned him on Satellite 5. The rocket finally takes off for Utopia, leaving the Doctor, Yana, Chantho, Martha, and Jack behind.

A separate plot shows that Yana has been hearing a constant drumbeat inside his head — a condition he reports having had all his life, with the drums getting louder of late. Words such as "regeneration" and "TARDIS" — elements of Time Lord lore — exacerbate the problem. When Martha expresses concern over the Professor's uneasiness, he reveals a long-standing concern with time, and shows Martha a broken fob watch he has had since he was found as a child, identical in design to John Smith's watch in "Human Nature" and "The Family of Blood". Concerned about the implications, Martha rushes to inform the Doctor.

When the Doctor hears about Yana's timepiece, a flashback sequence inter-cut with the letters of the Professor's name makes clear that "Yana" is an acronym of "You are not alone", the Face of Boe's last words to the Doctor. At the same time, Yana opens the watch, releasing his Time Lord essence. Frantic and horrified, the Doctor races towards Yana's laboratory but is hindered as the Professor closes the doors and allows the Futurekind to enter the base. Yana reveals his true identity to Chantho: he is the Master. He electrocutes her, but Chantho manages to shoot him before dying.

The Doctor arrives in Yana's laboratory just as the Master enters the Doctor's TARDIS, taking the severed hand (which Jack recovered after the events of "The Christmas Invasion" and had carried ever since) with him. He then deadlock seals the TARDIS doors, preventing the Doctor from opening it. Dying from Chantho's shot, the Master regenerates into a younger body, whose voice Martha recognises. After taunting the Doctor, he leaves in the TARDIS, stranding the three time travellers in the distant future, with the Futurekind about to break through the door.

[edit] Cast notes

  • This is Derek Jacobi's third involvement in Doctor Who. The first was in the September 2003 audio drama Deadline,[3] where he played a screenwriter who believes himself to be the Doctor. The second was several months later, in the webcast Scream of the Shalka, where he played an android version of the Master.[4]
  • John Bell is a nine-year-old who won a Blue Peter competition to appear in this episode.[5]

[edit] Continuity

[edit] Jack Harkness and Torchwood

  • Captain Jack was last seen at the end of the Torchwood episode "End of Days", looking off-screen while the familiar sound of the TARDIS is heard in the background. The Torchwood team find Jack gone, and the place in a mess. While refuelling, the Doctor notes that the Rift has been active recently; this was due to Abaddon escaping through the Rift in the same episode.
  • Jack says that he used a Vortex Manipulator to travel back from the year 200,100. Stolen Vortex Manipulator technology was also used by the Family of Blood in "Human Nature" to track the Doctor through time.
  • One of the items in Jack's backpack is the severed hand of the Doctor. This was first seen in "The Christmas Invasion", when the hand was cut off by the Sycorax leader, and was a recurring background item on the Torchwood Three Hub set. This episode confirms that the hand is indeed the Doctor's.

[edit] The Master

  • Derek Jacobi plays the fifth version of the Master whom the Doctor has encountered on screen, and John Simm is the sixth.[6] At least one television pundit speculated whether "Mister Saxon" was an intentional anagram of "Master No. Six" or was perhaps "a big red herring".[7] However, when asked, Russell T. Davies stated that it was not deliberate.[8][9]
  • The episode marks the first time the Master has been shown undergoing regeneration; in previous episodes ("The Keeper of Traken", the TV movie) the Master has been shown appropriating someone else's body, which is not the same as regeneration. This is the second episode to show a Time Lord other than the Doctor regenerating on screen, the first being the regeneration of K'anpo in "Planet of the Spiders" (the regeneration of Romana occurred off-camera).

[edit] References to other stories

  • Martha inquires about the earthquake in Cardiff a couple of years ago, and the Doctor claims he had a bit of trouble with the Slitheen. This refers to the events of the 2005 episode "Boom Town". He also states that he was a different man back then; the episode took place during the Ninth Doctor's tenure.
  • The Doctor informs Jack he knew Rose had brought him back to life ever since he left Satellite 5. The Doctor was shown to be aware of this in the untitled Children in Need special.
  • The Doctor speaks about Rose's actions in "The Parting of the Ways" as "the last act of the Time War".
  • This episode contains clips from "The Parting of the Ways", "The Christmas Invasion", "Human Nature" and "Gridlock". It also features sounds of previous Masters when the Professor's watch is beckoning him to open it, including Anthony Ainley's laugh and a line Roger Delgado spoke in The Dæmons.[6][10]
  • Yana recalls that he was found as a child "on the coast of the Silver Devastation", a place from where the Face of Boe was said to have come from in the 2005 episode "The End of the World".
  • The truth behind the existence of 'Utopia' and the fate of the humans seen in this episode is revealed in "Last of the Time Lords".
  • While walking through the Silo, The Doctor comments on how the human race has survived to the end of the universe, describing them as 'indomitable'. The Fourth Doctor gave a similar speech about the human race in The Ark in Space, the speech ends with the words, 'They're indomitable...indomitable.'

[edit] Production and pre-broadcast publicity

  • This is the first episode in the revived series to credit three principal cast members within the title sequence, with the addition of John Barrowman, who plays Captain Jack Harkness.
  • Music originally composed for Torchwood can be heard in the background of this episode: a variation of the Torchwood theme plays when Jack runs towards the TARDIS and a motif plays when Jack lies dead, having ridden on the TARDIS through the Vortex.
  • This episode was announced to be the first of a three-part story in Totally Doctor Who, broadcast the day before. Prior to this, only the following two instalments had been linked.
  • The drumming motif is suggestive of the fifth and subsequent bars of the Doctor Who theme tune as composed by Ron Grainer and realised by Delia Derbyshire.[11]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Utopia". Writer Russell T. Davies, Director Graeme Harper, Producer Phil Collinson. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One, Cardiff. 2007-06-16.
  2. ^ "Doctor Who UK airdate announced", News, Dreamwatch, 27 February 2007. 
  3. ^ A New Doctor, A New Dimension?. Retrieved on 2007-06-11.
  4. ^ "Jacobi confirmed for Dr Who role", BBC News, BBC, 25 January 2007. 
  5. ^ "Future Boy", News, BBC Doctor Who website, 7 June 2007. 
  6. ^ a b Doctor Who - Fact File - "Utopia". Retrieved on 2007-06-17.
  7. ^ Of a Thursday. Digital Spy (2007-04-01). Retrieved on 2007-06-17.
  8. ^ Radio Times 30 June–6 July 2007: Doctor Who Watch
  9. ^ Doctor Who Magazine issue 384: Return of the Master
  10. ^ "Utopia" Podcast (2007-06-16). Retrieved on 2007-07-09.
  11. ^ Freema Agyeman, Trevor Laird, Gugu Mbatha-Raw. The Sound of Drums commentary BBC's Doctor Who microsite Podcast accessed on 2007-06-25

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