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Last of the Time Lords

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191c – "Last of the Time Lords"
Doctor Who episode
File:Doctor archangel.jpg
The Doctor, newly rejuvenated, shows the Master the power of the human race.
Cast
Others
Production
Directed byColin Teague
Written byRussell T. Davies
Produced byPhil Collinson
Executive producer(s)Russell T. Davies
Julie Gardner
Production code3.13
SeriesSeries 3
Running time3 of 3 episodes, 52 mins
First broadcast30 June 2007
Chronology
← Preceded by
"The Sound of Drums"
Followed by →
"Time Crash" (special)
"Voyage of the Damned" (episode)
List of episodes (2005–present)

"Last of the Time Lords" is an episode of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was broadcast on BBC One on 30 June 2007,[1] and is the thirteenth and final episode of Series 3 of the revived Doctor Who series.

Synopsis

One year after the events of "The Sound of Drums", the Master has conquered the Earth and enslaved its population. He holds the aged Doctor prisoner, and prepares warships for a new Time Lord Empire. Now it is up to Martha Jones to carry out the Doctor's plan and save the universe.

Plot

A year after the events of "The Sound of Drums", Earth has been closed to all species and labelled as in "terminal extinction". Martha returns to Britain, having travelled the world since teleporting away from the Valiant at the moment of the Master's triumph. Her TARDIS key, still generating a perception filter, has kept her hidden all this time. She meets Thomas Milligan, a doctor-turned-freedom-fighter, who can lead her to one Professor Docherty. Martha herself has become a figure of hope against the Master, rumoured to be the only one capable of killing him.

Meanwhile, on the Valiant, the Master is keeping the aged Doctor in a 'dog-kennel' tent as his humiliated prisoner, Martha's family as his servants, and Jack Harkness in chains. Lucy Saxon is still his companion, but shows evidence of physical abuse. The Master shows the Doctor the world he has created: the new Time Lord Empire. Across the planet, warships are being built to wage war on the rest of the universe. The Doctor has "only one thing to say", but the Master doesn't want to hear it. After a failed attempt by the Jones family, Jack, and the Doctor to gain control by stealing the Master's laser screwdriver, the Master sends out a transmission intended for Martha. Watching in Docherty's lab, she sees the Master suspend the Doctor's capacity to regenerate and age him by a further nine hundred years, shrinking him into a tiny, frail creature. Instead of being dismayed, Martha draws hope from the Doctor's continued survival.

Though the Toclafane have proven to be virtually invincible, Martha reveals that she stumbled upon one that was struck by lightning, and with the data gathered from the incident Docherty is able to replicate the required conditions. Upon examining the sphere thus captured, they make a horrifying discovery: the Toclafane contain the conscious remains of the humans from the year 100 trillion. The Toclafane claims there was no Utopia, only more darkness, and with everything dying around them the humans cannibalised and regressed themselves, becoming the child-like Toclafane. The Master brought them back in time using the TARDIS, which could only travel between Utopia and present-day Earth. The contradiction of the Toclafane killing their own ancestors is made possible by the paradox machine built by the Master. Martha is horrified when the Toclafane quotes young Creet that she met on Malcassairo, telling her that the Toclafane have shared memories of the last of humanity. When questioned as to why it wishes to kill its own ancestors, the Toclafane responds, "Because it's fun" and laughs maniacally. Tom, sickened and horrified, shoots it dead.

When Docherty asks if the rumours about Martha are true, Martha reveals a gun, developed by Torchwood and UNIT, purportedly able to kill a Time Lord and prevent the ensuing regeneration. Martha has retrieved three of the four chemicals needed for the gun from their hiding places around the world, and has returned to London to find the fourth. After Martha and Thomas depart for a shelter in Bexley to hide, Docherty (who is desperate for information regarding her missing son) reveals their whereabouts to the Master.

The Master thus comes to Earth's surface to capture Martha, killing Tom, destroying the special gun and taking her back to the Valiant. He intends to execute her before the Doctor and her family, at the moment his fleet is launched. As the clock counts down, Martha reveals the real reason she travelled the globe. It wasn't for a fictional anti-regeneration gun, or to fight back, but merely to talk. She told everyone about the Doctor; specifically, she told everyone to think of the Doctor at the same time the Master plans to launch his fleet. Docherty's betrayal was expected, engineered by Martha so that she would be brought on board the Valiant to rejoin the Doctor. Combined with the Master's Archangel satellite network, which the Doctor has had an entire year to get in tune with, this has the effect of charging the Doctor with the combined psychic energy of the people of Earth. Now renewed with powerful psychokinetic abilities, the Doctor restores his youthful physiognomy and ends the Master's control. As the Master cowers, the Doctor says the words the Master was afraid to hear: "I forgive you".

With the Master out of the picture, Jack rounds up some soldiers to destroy the paradox machine, but is delayed by the Toclafane. The Master, using Jack's vortex manipulator, teleports himself and the Doctor to Earth, threatening to detonate his fleet and take the Earth with it. The Doctor knows that the Master would never kill himself, and manages to teleport both himself and the Master back to the Valiant just as Jack destroys the paradox machine, rewinding time to just after the US President is killed and just before the Toclafane arrive. All those on the Valiant remember the events due to being at "the eye of the storm", but nobody else will know of the Master's reign of terror in "the year that never was".

The Master, now defenceless, is handcuffed and stands before the Doctor. The Doctor announces that, since the Master is a Time Lord, he is the Doctor's responsibility and will be imprisoned on board the TARDIS, but Francine Jones grabs a gun and is ready to shoot the Master. As she says, he still committed the atrocities she was forced to witness, even if they have been reversed, but the Doctor talks her out of committing murder, and she collapses in tears. However Lucy Saxon, with a glazed expression, seizes the gun herself and shoots him. Rather than be a prisoner for the rest of his lives, the Master lets himself die, refusing to regenerate despite the Doctor's pleading for him to do so. Just before dying in his opponent's arms, the Master muses on the constant drumming in his head, wondering if it will finally stop, and with a smile says, "I win" before he dies, leaving the Doctor to weep uncontrollably for his lost adversary, as he is once again the last of the Time Lords. The Doctor cremates the Master's body on a pyre. However, after he leaves, a female hand wearing red nail polish is seen taking the Master's signet ring from the burnt-out pyre, with malevolent laughter echoing in the background.

In Cardiff, Jack decides to remain behind to look after his team, "defending the Earth". The Doctor disables Jack's vortex manipulator to keep him from jumping through time unsupervised. The Doctor then tells Jack there's nothing that can be done about his immortality: it seems likely he'll never be able to die — though he isn't sure about aging. Thinking about what he might look like millions of years from now, Jack confesses his vanity and recalls how, as the first person from the Boeshane Peninsula to join the Time Agency, his good looks earned him the nickname "the Face of Boe", much to the surprise of the Doctor and Martha.

With the TARDIS repaired, the Doctor is ready to move on. Martha, however, has decided to stay so she can look after her family and finally qualify as a medical doctor. She gives the Doctor her phone so they can keep in touch and says she will see him again, but when someone is in love and it's unrequited, they have to get out: "this is me getting out". The Doctor (now in possession of his severed hand) sets the TARDIS controls - until the room is suddenly shaken with great force, and the bow of a ship smashes through the console room wall. Picking up a lifebelt, he finds Titanic written on it, to which he can only respond flatly, "What?!"

Cast notes

  • Reggie Yates is credited as playing Leo Jones; however, the character Leo only appears in this episode as background. The audio commentary for the episode mentions that Leo was originally scheduled to appear in the sequence showing Martha's return to England, but Yates was double-booked.
  • Zoe Thorne also voiced the Gelth in "The Unquiet Dead".
  • Uncredited as the hand that picks up The Master's ring, was production manager, Tracie Simpson.

Continuity

  • In the episode's commentary, writer Russell T. Davies called the implication of Jack's nickname ("the Face of Boe") "a theory" as to the Face of Boe's origins, prompting Executive Producer Julie Gardner to urge him to "stop back-pedalling" about the two characters being the same. Davies then mentioned the addition of a line in "Gridlock" in which the Face of Boe calls the Doctor "old friend", suggesting a strong connection between him and the Doctor. Jack previously referenced the Face of Boe in the Ninth Doctor Adventure The Stealers of Dreams, though the canonicity of spin-off material is unclear. Davies also jokingly termed the hand seen removing the Master's ring from the ashes of his funeral pyre "the hand of the Rani".[2]
  • The Master makes reference to the Sea Devils (which the Third Doctor and the Master encountered together in the 1972 serial The Sea Devils) and the Axons (which they met in 1971's The Claws of Axos).[3] The Doctor also makes references to the Daleks; the Daleks were previously seen to have dealings with the Master in Frontier in Space (1973) and in the 1996 Doctor Who TV movie.
  • Earth is referred to as Sol 3, the third planet from the star Sol, as it was in The Deadly Assassin.[3] Sol is the Latin name for the Sun, and is often used in science fiction.
  • The Master's laser screwdriver is said to be isomorphically controlled, a property the Doctor attributed to the TARDIS controls in Pyramids of Mars.
  • Clips from "Smith and Jones", "Utopia" and "The Sound of Drums" are used in this episode.
  • After receiving a great amount of psychic energy, and rejuvenating himself, the Doctor says the line: "I'm sorry, I'm so sorry", a frequently used catchphrase of his.
  • Martha mentions that she once met William Shakespeare ("The Shakespeare Code").
  • The final fight between the Doctor and the Master at the rocket launch bay is reminiscent of the fight between the Doctor and the Master at the end of Survival.
  • When the Master is shot by Lucy Saxon he says, "It's always the women." He was previously shot by Chantho in "Utopia". The Doctor's granddaughter Susan also shoots the Master in the novel Legacy of the Daleks. In the novel First Frontier, it is Ace who shoots the Master.
  • The Doctor's severed hand from "The Christmas Invasion", "Utopia", "The Sound of Drums" and various Torchwood episodes can be seen at the end of the episode inside the TARDIS.
  • At the end of the episode, the Doctor says "What?!" three times, after the RMS Titanic crashes through the TARDIS wall, which is also his response to Donna at the end of "Doomsday", when she appears onboard the TARDIS.
  • This does not appear to be the Doctor's first encounter with the Titanic. In "The End of the World" the Ninth Doctor stated that he had been onboard an "unsinkable" ship and that he "ended up clinging to an iceberg". In "Rose", Clive shows Rose evidence that someone that looked like the Ninth Doctor prevented a family from boarding the ship. In The Invasion of Time, the Fourth Doctor assures Cardinal Borusa that he had nothing to do with the Titanic's demise. The Doctor has also been on the Titanic in novels (for example, the Seventh Doctor in the Virgin New Adventures The Left-Handed Hummingbird), but the canonicity of the novels is in question. The idea of the Doctor revisiting historical events is suggested in the episode Blink, in which Martha states that she and the Doctor witnessed the Apollo 11 moon landing four times.
  • The hand seen picking up the Master's ring leaves open the possibility of reintroducing the character at a later date, although Russell T. Davies stated in the podcast for this episode that this would not occur in the 2008 series.[4]
  • Martha mentions that both UNIT and Torchwood have been studying Time Lords for several decades. Torchwood was set up in "Tooth and Claw" for the specific purpose of tracking the Doctor, while the Doctor worked for UNIT in the mid-20th century. During the Doctor's tenure with UNIT, a full season of stories revolved around the Master, ending in his capture by UNIT in The Dæmons.
  • In the 1971 Jon Pertwee serial The Mind of Evil, the Master's ultimate fear is revealed to be an all powerful, godlike Doctor towering over him, exactly as he does at the end of The Last Of The Time Lords.
  • The 2007 Children in Need mini-episode "Time Crash" takes place within the last few minutes of this episode.
  • The Doctor tells Martha he's never met mystery writer Agatha Christie, although the 8th Doctor in the Big Finish audio drama "Terror Firma" insists that at some point Agatha Christie once travelled as the Doctor's companion for some time--canonicity, as always, is in question for these adventures. The Doctor will encounter her in an episode of the 2008 series.

Outside references

  • The Master refers to the aged version of the Doctor as "Gandalf" from J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings.
  • Whilst attempting to mend a television to pick up the broadcast from the Master, Professor Docherty remarks on a fondness for Countdown and states that "it's never been the same since Des took over. Both Deses", referring to Des Lynam and Des O'Connor's hosting of the show after the death of Richard Whiteley in 2005.
  • Professor Docherty refers to Martha as the Queen of Sheba.
  • While working on a troublesome computer to access the data from the one Toclafane struck down by lightning, Professor Docherty says, "Who ever thought that we would miss Bill Gates?"

Production and publicity

  • "Last of the Time Lords" was a subtitle proposed at one stage for a film version of Doctor Who that was in development from 1987 to 1994.[5]
  • This episode was planned to be broadcast live to the crowds attending Pride London in Trafalgar Square via a giant screen. However, a local curfew after the nearby attempted terrorist bombing the previous day prevented the screening. Freema Agyeman and John Barrowman attended the event.[6][7]
  • In order to keep the episode's details secret, access to preview copies of this episode was restricted.[8] There was a similar moratorium on copies of "Doomsday" the previous year.[9]
  • The episode was allocated a 50-minute timeslot for its initial broadcast,[10] as with "Daleks in Manhattan" previously, and 55-minute timeslots for the BBC Three repeats.[11][12] According to Russell T. Davies in Doctor Who Magazine 384, this is because it ran over-length but they did not wish to lose the material. The official run time from freemaagyeman.com for the episode is almost 52 minutes. The final episode of The Trial of a Time Lord was also extended by five minutes in 1986.
  • In the audio commentary, the producers reveal that Graeme Harper filled in to direct some scenes after director Colin Teague was injured.
  • At the start of this episode, The Master enters the bridge of the Valiant as "I Can't Decide" by the Scissor Sisters plays in the background. He refers to it as "track 3", its place on the Scissor Sisters' second album, Ta-Dah.
  • Two sets of audio commentaries were recorded for the episode: one with producers Russell T. Davies, Julie Gardner and Phil Collinson, which was intended for podcast broadcast to coincide with the episode's initial UK telecast, and the other featuring actors David Tennant, Freema Agyeman and John Barrowman, which was included on the UK DVD release of the episode as part of the Series 3 box set. However, the Region 1 (North America) release of the DVD saw the actor commentary replaced by the earlier podcast version, although a production error resulted in the set's booklet not indicating this substitution (and the booklet also omits Tennant's name).[13]

References

  1. ^ "Doctor Who UK airdate announced". News. Dreamwatch. February 27, 2007. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ ""Last of the Time Lords" Podcast". 2007-07-27. Retrieved 2007-06-30.
  3. ^ a b "Doctor Who - Fact File - "The Last of the Time Lords"". Retrieved 2007-07-01.
  4. ^ ""Last of the Time Lords" Podcast". 2007-07-27. Retrieved 2007-06-30.
  5. ^ Lofficier, Jean-Marc (1997). Doctor Who: The Nth Doctor - An in-depth Study of the films that almost were. London: Virgin Books. ISBN 0426204999.
  6. ^ "Gripping finale of Doctor Who closes Pride show in Trafalgar Square". Pride London. Retrieved 2007-06-25.
  7. ^ "Doctor Who dropped at London Pride 2007". Outpost Gallifrey. Retrieved 2007-07-02.
  8. ^ "What did Lizo think of Doctor Who?". CBBC. 2007-06-18. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Text "accessdate2007-06-21" ignored (help)
  9. ^ "Fear Forecast: "Army of Ghosts"". BBC Doctor Who website. BBC. Retrieved 2007-02-25. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  10. ^ Doctor Who - Saturday, 30 June, Radio Times
  11. ^ Doctor Who - Sunday, 1 July, Radio Times
  12. ^ Doctor Who - Friday, 6 July, Radio Times
  13. ^ BBC Worldwide press release, quoted on TV Shows on DVD, Nov. 18, 2007 (accessed Nov. 20, 2007)

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