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Blink (Doctor Who)

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190 - Blink
Cast
Production
Directed byHettie MacDonald
Written bySteven Moffat
Script editorHelen Raynor
Produced byPhil Collinson
Executive producer(s)Russell T. Davies
Julie Gardner
Production code3.10
SeriesSeries 3
Running time1 episode, 45 mins
First broadcast9 June 2007
Chronology
← Preceded by
"The Family of Blood"
Followed by →
"Utopia"

"Blink" is an episode of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was broadcast on BBC One on 9 June 2007,[1] and is the tenth episode of Series 3 of the revived Doctor Who series. It was a single episode story, written by Steven Moffat.

As with 2006's "Love & Monsters", the Doctor and his companion feature little, due to David Tennant and Freema Agyeman being busy filming other episodes.[2]

Synopsis

Sally Sparrow is a photographer investigating disappearances in an old abandoned house. But, inside, the Weeping Angels are waiting. She must decipher several messages from 1969, all directed at her from a strange man called the Doctor.

Plot

Sally Sparrow searches for her friend Kathy, unaware she is being watched by the Weeping Angels.

The episode, set mainly in 2007, focuses upon Sally Sparrow, who breaks into a dilapidated house called Wester Drumlins to take photographs. There she discovers behind the peeling wallpaper a message from "the Doctor" dated 1969, calling her by name and telling her to "duck now", just before an object launched from behind nearly hits her.

She returns the next day with her friend, Kathy Nightingale. A man soon arrives at the door with a decades-old letter from Kathy, who has just disappeared. Sally thinks this is a prank, and while searching for her, Sally encounters three Weeping Angel statues, one holding a Yale key. She takes the key and leaves the house, unaware that the Weeping Angels are watching her from the windows.

Sally reads the letter, wherein Kathy explains that the Weeping Angels transported her back to 1920. The letter asks Sally to explain her absence to her last close relative — Kathy's brother Larry, who runs a store that sells rare DVDs. Larry has also discovered a message from the Doctor, which features him carrying on half of an unfathomable conversation, as an easter egg hidden on seventeen unrelated DVDs. Larry gives Sally a list of the DVDs that have the Doctor on them.

Sally goes to the police, where a Detective Inspector, Billy Shipton, shows her a car park full of abandoned vehicles found at Wester Drumlins, including a fake police box with a Yale lock that cannot be opened. Before Sally realises that the Yale key could be used to open the police box, Billy is transported by the Weeping Angels to 1969. The Doctor finds him and asks him to deliver a message to Sally once he lives his way back to the present: that she should check the list of DVDs. Stuck in the past, Billy goes into the video business and reveals to Sally that he was responsible for adding the easter eggs.

After realising that the list exactly matches her own DVD collection, Sally and Larry enter Wester Drumlins, and watch the Doctor's message on a DVD. This time Sally provides the other half of the conversation, which Larry adds to a transcript he brought with him. The Doctor explains several things: he has a complete transcript of the incomplete conversation, which is possible due to the non-linear nature of time; and that the Weeping Angels are "quantum locked", meaning they turn to stone when observed, but when unobserved they are fast and can be deadly, hence it is of utmost importance that she does not blink.

While trying to escape from an Angel in the room they are watching the DVD in, Larry and Sally discover the TARDIS in the cellar. Unwilling to let their prey escape, the Angels cause a light bulb, the room's only light source, to flicker, allowing them to draw closer to the TARDIS. Larry and Sally manage to get into the TARDIS and shut the doors, just as the Angels manage to surround it. The DVD that Larry and Sally brought with them activates a protocol in the TARDIS, causing it to return to the Doctor. Sally and Larry are left behind, leaving the Angels trapped forever in a circle, tricked into observing each other.

The final scene takes place a year later, with Sally and Larry running the DVD store together. The Doctor and Martha emerge from a taxi outside the shop, and Sally gives the transcript and list of DVDs to the Doctor, who has not yet experienced the episode's events (causing an ontological paradox). Sally, Larry and the Doctor exchange goodbyes. The episode ends with a repeat of the Doctor's warning to Sally, this time directed at the viewer, overlaid with flashes of famous bronze and stone statues.

Cast

Cast Notes

Continuity

  • A holographic projection of the Tenth Doctor can be seen in this episode. Earlier projections of the Doctor are that of the Seventh and Eighth Doctors in the television movie, the Ninth seen in "The Parting of the Ways", and another of the Tenth Doctor's projections in "Doomsday".
  • The TARDIS fading away around Sally and Larry is similar to the effect used in "The Parting of the Ways", where the TARDIS materialises around Rose and a Dalek. A similar trick is used in "The Runaway Bride" where it fades in around the Doctor and Donna, and in Logopolis where it materialises around the Master's TARDIS.
  • The Doctor says "I'm rubbish at weddings, especially my own" when explaining to Sally that he experiences events out of sequence. He has in the past referred to being a father ("Fear Her"), and formerly travelled with his granddaughter. In "The Family of Blood", the Doctor as John Smith foresees an alternate future as a human where he has a successful marriage and raises a family.

Outside references

  • Larry describes the house as "Scooby-Doo's house", a reference to the dilapidated mansions that the Scooby-Doo gang (Mystery Inc.) would usually visit. The BBC fact file notes that 1969, the year Martha, the Doctor and Billy are sent to, is the first year Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! aired.[4]
  • The newspaper shown to Kathy in 1920 has the headline "Hull FC to play Hull Kingston Rovers", a reference to the two professional Rugby League teams in Hull.[5]
  • Billy mentions that the windows of the TARDIS are the wrong size for a real police box. In 2004, when the first photographs of the new series' TARDIS prop were revealed, there was a vigorous discussion of the box's dimensions on the Outpost Gallifrey Doctor Who discussion forum, in which some fans complained that the prop's windows were too big. Writer Steven Moffat has confirmed that this line is an in-joke aimed at the Outpost Gallifrey forum.[6]
  • The name of the dilapidated house, Wester Drumlins, is taken from a previous residence of Steven Moffat from the late 1990s.[7]

Production and publicity

  • The BBC Fear Forecasters gave this episode a 5.5 rating ("Off the Scale"). The only other episode with a rating above 5 is "The Impossible Planet", which received a 6 ("Beyond Fear"). A notice for parents was also attached to the top of the page, recommending that parents record the episode and watch it in the daytime with their children, as it was one of the scariest episodes yet.[8] This warning is similar to the warning that was attached for "The Empty Child"/"The Doctor Dances", both of which were also written by Steven Moffat.[9][10]
  • Part of the story of "Blink" is based on Moffat's own Ninth Doctor short story from the Doctor Who Annual 2006 called "What I Did on My Christmas Holidays by Sally Sparrow".[11] "Blink" is thus the third story of the revived series to be adapted for television by the same writer from a piece of their spin-off writing. It follows "Human Nature"/"The Family of Blood", which were adaptations by Paul Cornell of his novel Human Nature, and "Dalek", which had the basic premise as well as some scenes and dialogue adapted by Robert Shearman from his audio drama Jubilee.
  • The Doctor and Martha's absence from the majority of the episode was due to the filming of two episodes simultaneously.[3]
  • This is the first episode since the Sixth Doctor serial The Mark of the Rani to be directed by a woman.
  • This episode's next time trailer was the shortest ever, at 16 seconds long. It features no music at all.
  • This episode ties with Rose in having the shortest number of syllables in the title, an earlier episode of this season, 42, has the shortest ever title.

References

  1. ^ "Doctor Who UK airdate announced". News. Dreamwatch. February 27, 2007. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ "Who Horizons". SFX. January 2007. p. 46.
  3. ^ a b Griffiths, Nick. (June 15, 2007) Radio Times Hells Angels Issue 9; Pages 14-15.
  4. ^ "Doctor Who - Fact File - "Blink"". Retrieved 2007-06-09.
  5. ^ "Hull Times mockup, BBC website". Retrieved 2007-06-10.
  6. ^ Moffat, Steven (2007-06-12). "Re: Moffat hates fans?" (free registration required). The Doctor Who Forum at Outpost Gallifrey. Shaun Lyon. Retrieved 2007-06-12. I put in the Windows gag SPECIFICALLY to make this forum laugh. It was for us lot here - the rest of the world didn't notice. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ Moffat, Steven (2007-06-12). "Wester Drumlins" (free registration required). The Doctor Who Forum at Outpost Gallifrey. Shaun Lyon. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  8. ^ "Fear Forecast: Blink". BBC. June 6, 2007. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. ^ "Fear Forecast: The Empty Child". BBC.
  10. ^ "Fear Forecast: The Doctor Dances". BBC.
  11. ^ "What I Did on My Christmas Holidays by Sally Sparrow" (BBC Website)