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the trickster was able to remove such paradoxes, it stands to reason the bug could, too
Continuity: claiming the thing that set this whole thing up fix things like Pompeii is OR. Unless it is stated in the episode or commentary it is unusable
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===Continuity===
===Continuity===
This episode revisits the events of most of the present-day stories since Donna first met the Doctor, including "[[The Runaway Bride (Doctor Who)|The Runaway Bride]]", "[[Smith and Jones (Doctor Who)|Smith and Jones]]", "[[Voyage of the Damned (Doctor Who)|Voyage of the Damned]]", "[[Partners in Crime (Doctor Who)|Partners in Crime]]", and "[[The Sontaran Stratagem]]" / "[[The Poison Sky]]". The Doctor's absence during the events led to the deaths of [[Martha Jones]], [[Sarah Jane Smith]] (and her companions), [[Gwen Cooper]], and [[Ianto Jones]]. [[Jack Harkness]] was also transported to Sontar.
This episode revisits the events of most of the present-day stories since Donna first met the Doctor, including "[[The Runaway Bride (Doctor Who)|The Runaway Bride]]", "[[Smith and Jones (Doctor Who)|Smith and Jones]]", "[[Voyage of the Damned (Doctor Who)|Voyage of the Damned]]", "[[Partners in Crime (Doctor Who)|Partners in Crime]]", and "[[The Sontaran Stratagem]]" / "[[The Poison Sky]]". The Doctor's absence during the events led to the deaths of [[Martha Jones]], [[Sarah Jane Smith]] (and her companions), [[Gwen Cooper]], and [[Ianto Jones]]. [[Jack Harkness]] was also transported to Sontar. However the major paradox of having the Doctor dying before he can save the Earth from the Pyroviles on August 24, 79 (''[[The Fires of Pompeii]]'') and how there can still be humanity on Earth is not fully addressed.


''[[Torchwood]]'' characters Gwen Cooper and Ianto Jones are mentioned by name for the first time in ''Doctor Who'', while a short segment of music from the soundtrack of ''Torchwood'' plays in the background. Sarah Jane Smith is mentioned for the first time since "[[The Girl in the Fireplace]]", along with the first mentions of ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'' characters [[Luke Smith]], [[Clyde Langer]], and [[Maria Jackson]].
''[[Torchwood]]'' characters Gwen Cooper and Ianto Jones are mentioned by name for the first time in ''Doctor Who'', while a short segment of music from the soundtrack of ''Torchwood'' plays in the background. Sarah Jane Smith is mentioned for the first time since "[[The Girl in the Fireplace]]", along with the first mentions of ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'' characters [[Luke Smith]], [[Clyde Langer]], and [[Maria Jackson]].

Revision as of 05:45, 23 June 2008

201 – "Turn Left"
Doctor Who episode
Cast
Others
  • Bernard CribbinsWilfred Mott
  • Jacqueline KingSylvia Noble
  • Joseph Long – Rocco Colasanto
  • Noma Dumzwemi – Captain Marissa Magambo
  • Chipo Chung – Fortune Teller
  • Marcia Lecky – Mooky Kahari
  • Suzann McLean – Veena Brady
  • Natalie Walter – Alice Coltrane
  • Neil Clench – Man in Pub
  • Clive StandenUNIT Soldier
  • Bhasker Patel – Jival Chowdry
  • Catherine York – Female Reporter
  • Ben Righton – Morgenstern
  • Loraine Velez – Spanish Maid
  • Jason Mohammad – Studio News Reader
  • Sanchia McCormack – Housing Officer
  • Lawrence Stevenson – Soldier #1
  • Terri-Ann Brumby – Woman in Doorway
  • Lachele Carl – Trinity Wells
  • Paul Richard Biggin – Soldier #2[1]
Production
Directed byGraeme Harper
Written byRussell T. Davies
Script editorBrian Minchin
Produced bySusie Liggat
Executive producer(s)Russell T. Davies
Julie Gardner
Phil Collinson
Production code4.11
SeriesSeries 4
Running time50 mins
First broadcast21 June 2008
Chronology
← Preceded by
"Midnight"
Followed by →
"The Stolen Earth"
List of episodes (2005–present)

"Turn Left" is the eleventh episode of the fourth series of British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was broadcast on BBC One on 21 June 2008. This episode marks the return of former companion Rose Tyler following brief non-speaking appearances earlier in the series. The episode revisits the settings of a number of previous Doctor Who episodes in the last two years, showing how they might have turned out if the Doctor had not been there to help.

Plot

Synopsis

While enjoying time on the planet of Shan Shen, which has an ethnic Chinese culture, Donna Noble is offered a free fortune reading. The fortune-teller presses Donna to reveal her past and focuses on a point in her past on modern-day Earth where she was driving to her temporary job at H. C. Clements, despite her mother's wishes to take up a permanent job nearby. As a large beetle climbs onto Donna's back, the teller convinces Donna to change her mind in the past, taking a right at the intersection per her mother's wishes instead of a left.

The narrative turns to the alternate history created by Donna's choice, far bleaker than the course of events established in previous episodes. The Doctor dies during the Racnoss' attack on London ("The Runaway Bride"), Donna having not been there to make him leave. Royal Hope Hospital is taken to the moon and returned ("Smith and Jones"), but only one person, Martha's fellow medical student Oliver Morgenstern, survives. Martha Jones and Sarah Jane Smith are among the dead (the latter apparently having foiled Florence Finnegan's plan). The Titanic crashes into the centre of London, wiping out the city and irradiating most of southern England ("Voyage of the Damned"). In the United States, 60 million people are turned into creatures made of fat ("Partners in Crime"). The Sontarans attempt to turn Earth into a breeding world ("The Poison Sky"), which is stopped by Jack Harkness and his remaining Torchwood team of Gwen Cooper and Ianto Jones. However, Gwen and Ianto are killed and Jack is transported to Sontar.

Throughout all these events, Rose Tyler keeps appearing before Donna. Aware of the events to come, she steers Donna away from mortal danger but refuses to give her name. After the latest tragedy, Rose urges Donna to come with her, even though she will die. Donna initially refuses, but three weeks later, as she and her grandfather talk about recent events, the stars begin disappearing throughout the sky. Donna tells Rose that she is ready.

Rose escorts Donna to a UNIT base where the dying TARDIS is being used to help power a makeshift time machine. Rose uses the system to show Donna the beetle that crawled onto her back during the fortune-telling. It is in temporal flux and cannot be removed, but Rose explains that Donna herself is also a point of flux. In order to set things right, they prepare to send her back in time to stop herself from going right. Donna agrees to go, but when she asks if she will get to live this time, Rose remains silent. Donna is sent back in time, but ends up a half-mile away and with only four minutes to spare. Falling just short of the mark on the past Donna's right, she realises what Rose meant about her death and throws herself in front of a removal van. Traffic backs up; the past Donna hears the sound of the disturbance, and turns left instead of waiting. As the future Donna lies on the ground, Rose leans over and whispers two words to pass on to the Doctor.

Back on Shan Shen, the beetle falls off of Donna's back and the fortune teller flees, scared of Donna's power. The Doctor finds Donna and the beetle. He explains that it normally affects only the person it attaches to (the universe merely "compensates"), but in Donna's case created a parallel world. The Doctor is curious about the other alternate realities that seem to form around Donna ("Forest of the Dead"). He ponders the coincidences surrounding Donna and himself, as if something is binding them together. When Donna insists that she is nothing special, the Doctor tells her that she is brilliant, which triggers her fading memories of Rose. She tells him about Rose's warning that "the darkness is coming" and that it is affecting all worlds. At his insistence, Donna tells him the words Rose said; "Bad Wolf". Horrified, the Doctor runs outside to find that the words "Bad Wolf" are all about them, even on the TARDIS. Inside the Cloister Bell is ringing and the TARDIS interior is glowing red. When Donna asks about the meaning of "Bad Wolf", the Doctor replies, "It's the end of the universe."

Continuity

This episode revisits the events of most of the present-day stories since Donna first met the Doctor, including "The Runaway Bride", "Smith and Jones", "Voyage of the Damned", "Partners in Crime", and "The Sontaran Stratagem" / "The Poison Sky". The Doctor's absence during the events led to the deaths of Martha Jones, Sarah Jane Smith (and her companions), Gwen Cooper, and Ianto Jones. Jack Harkness was also transported to Sontar. However the major paradox of having the Doctor dying before he can save the Earth from the Pyroviles on August 24, 79 (The Fires of Pompeii) and how there can still be humanity on Earth is not fully addressed.

Torchwood characters Gwen Cooper and Ianto Jones are mentioned by name for the first time in Doctor Who, while a short segment of music from the soundtrack of Torchwood plays in the background. Sarah Jane Smith is mentioned for the first time since "The Girl in the Fireplace", along with the first mentions of The Sarah Jane Adventures characters Luke Smith, Clyde Langer, and Maria Jackson.

The recurring "Bad Wolf" motif, primarily from series 1, returns at the conclusion of this episode to warn the Doctor of the events that are causing Rose to return. The TARDIS's Cloister Bell, last used in "Time Crash", can also be heard at the end of the episode. Sylvia Noble mentions that the bees are disappearing, which has been mentioned by Donna in "Partners in Crime", "Planet of the Ood", and "The Unicorn and the Wasp".

Donna's father, who appeared in "The Runaway Bride", is mentioned for the first time since "Partners in Crime". It is implied that he was ill during the timescale of "Smith and Jones", and that he died by the time of "Voyage of the Damned". His character was intended to be used in place of Wilfred Mott during series 4, but was retired after actor Howard Attfield died before his scenes were finished.

The "Time Beetle"[2] on Donna's back is described by the Doctor as part of "the Trickster's brigade". The Trickster was a time-altering villain in The Sarah Jane Adventures story Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?. The beetle on her back was also referenced by Lucius Dextrous in "Fires of Pompeii" with the line, "Daughter of London, there is something on your back!".

Sarah Jane Smith is said to write for Metropolitan magazine as previously mentioned in The Time Warrior. Rose mentions a "causal nexus", a phrase previously heard in Logopolis.[3]

Production

The episode, filmed at the same time as "Midnight", saw the Doctor with very little screen-time, while "Midnight" saw Donna with little screen-time.[4]

The appearance of the Giant Spider of Metebelis 3 that clung to Sarah Jane Smith's back in Planet of the Spiders influenced the design and concept of the "Time Beetle" that clings to Donna's back in this episode.[2]

Cast notes

Clive Standen reprises the role of Private Harris (credited in this episode as "UNIT Soldier") from "The Sontaran Strategem" / "The Poison Sky". Here he is shown to have been in attendance during the Webstar crisis. Ben Righton reprises the role of Oliver Morgenstern from "Smith and Jones", in this episode the only survivor when the hospital is returned to Earth, Martha Jones having given him the last oxygen pack. Lachele Carl returns as American newsreader Trinity Wells, who previously appeared in the Doctor Who episodes "Aliens of London"/"World War Three", "The Christmas Invasion", "The Sound of Drums" and "The Poison Sky", in addition to The Sarah Jane Adventures story Revenge of the Slitheen. Chipo Chung, who plays the fortune-teller, previously appeared as Chantho in the episode "Utopia".

References

  1. ^ "Credits". BBC. 2008-06-21. Retrieved 2008-06-21.
  2. ^ a b Here Come The Girls. Doctor Who Confidential. 2008-06-21. BBC. BBC Three. {{cite serial}}: Unknown parameter |city= ignored (|location= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ Nick Setchfield (2008-06-21). "TV REVIEW: Doctor Who 4.11 "Turn Left"". SFX. Retrieved 2008-06-21.
  4. ^ "Doctor Who Magazine" (396). Doctor Who Magazine. 2008-05-29. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

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