Original Transmission
Date 8th Jul 2006
Time 6.59pm
Duration 46'13"
Viewers 8.2m (8th)
Audience App. 89%

Cast
The Doctor David Tennant
Rose Tyler Billie Piper
Jackie Tyler Camille Coduri
Mickey Smith Noel Clarke
Yvonne Hartman Tracy-Ann Oberman
Dr Rajesh Singh Raji James
Cyber Leader Paul Kasey
Dalek/Cybermen Voices Nicholas Briggs
Dalek Operators Barnaby Edwards Nicholas Pegg Stuart Crossman Anthony Spargo Dan Barratt David Hankinson
Pete Tyler Shaun Dingwall
Jake Simmonds Andrew Hayden-Smith
The Bride Catherine Tate


Crew
Written by Russell T Davies
Produced by Phil Collinson
Directed by Graeme Harper
Daleks originally created by Terry Nation
Cybermen originally created by Kit Pedler & Gerry Davis
1st Assistant Director Susie Liggat
2nd Assistant Director Steffan Morris
3rd Assistant Director Lynsey Muir
Location Managers Lowri Thomas Gareth Skelding
Unit Manager Rhys Griffiths
Production Co-ordinator Jess van Niekerk
Production/Script Secretary Claire Roberts
Production Runners Tim Hodges Sarah Davies
A/Production Accountants Debi Griffiths Kath Blackman Bonnie Clissold
Continuity Non Eleri Hughes
Script Editor Helen Raynor
Camera Operator Roger Pearce
Focus Puller Terry Bartlett
Grip John Robinson
Boom Operators Jeff Welch Bryn Thomas
Gaffer Mark Hutchings
Best Boy Peter Chester
Electricians Chris Davies Clive Johnson Stephen Slocombe
Choreographer Ailsa Berk
Stunt Co-ordinator Abbi Collins
Stunt Performers Paul Kennington James O'Dee
Supervising Art Director Stephen Nicholas
Art Dept Production Manager Jonathan Marquand Allison
Standby Art Director Arwel Wyn Jones
A/Supervising Art Director James North
Design Assistants Peter McKinstry Al Roberts Matthew Savage
Standby Props Phil Shellard Trystan Howell
Standby Carpenter Silas Williams
Standby Rigger Bryan Griffiths
Standby Scenic Artist Louise Bohling
Set Decorator Julian Luxton
Property Master Adrian Anscombe
Production Buyer Catherine Samuel
Assistant Props Master Paul Aitken
Props Chargehand Phil Lyons
Props Storeman Stuart Wooddisse
Forward Dresser Matthew North
Practical Electrician Albert James
Art Department Driver Patrick Deacy
Specialist Prop Maker Mark Cordory
Prop Maker Penny Howarth
Construction Manager Matthew Hywel-Davies
Construction Chargehand Allen Jones
Storyboard Artist Shaun Williams
Graphics BBC Wales Graphics
Costume Supervisor Marnie Ormiston
Costume Assistants Lindsay Bonaccorsi Barbara Harrington
Make-Up Artists Anwen Davies Steve Smith Moira Thomson
Prosthetics Supervisor Rob Mayor
Prosthetics Technicians Jo Glover Martin Rezard
Special Effects Co-ordinator Ben Ashmore
Special Effects Supervisors Paul Kelly Mike Crowley
Special Effects Technicians Danny Hargreaves Richard Magrin
On Line Editor Matthew Clarke
Colourist Mick Vincent
Visual Effects Co-ordinator Kim Phelan
Casting Associate Andy Brierley
Assistant Editor Ceres Doyle
Post Production Supervisors Samantha Hall Chris Blatchford
Post Production Co-ordinator Marie Brown
Dubbing Mixer Tim Ricketts
Sound Editors Paul McFadden Doug Sinclair
Sound FX Editor Paul Jefferies
Finance Manager Richard Pugsley
Original Theme Music Ron Grainer
Casting Director Andy Pryor CDG
Production Accountant Endaf Emyr Williams
Sound Recordist Simon Fraser
Costume Designer Louise Page
Make-Up Designer Sheelagh Wells
Music Murray Gold
Visual Effects The Mill
Visual FX Producer Will Cohen
Visual FX Supervisor Dave Houghton
Special Effects Any Effects
Prosthetics Neill Gorton and Millennium Effects
Editor David Cresswell
Production Designer Edward Thomas
Director of Photography Ernie Vincze BSC
Production Manager Tracie Simpson
Executive Producers Russell T Davies Julie Gardner

Plot Outline from Wikipedia

On a coastline looking at the ocean, Rose continues relating the last story she will ever tell: the story of how she died…
Dr Singh, Mickey and Rose are trapped in a sealed room within Torchwood Tower as the four Daleks who have emerged from the void ship approach them, with a vaguely Dalek-shaped artefact following. As they cry out their intent to exterminate, Rose surprises them by shouting out their name. She approaches the black Dalek and offers to tell them how she knows about the Daleks and the Time War but only if they keep them alive. The black Dalek decides that they are necessary and asks about the status of the artefact — which it calls the Genesis Ark. It orders the awakening to begin and declares that the Ark must be protected above all else.

Surrounded by Cybermen, an upset Jackie asks the Doctor what has happened to Rose. The Doctor gives Jackie his word that he will find Rose and get the two of them out. The Cyber-Leader orders Hartman to make contact with her "Central World Authority" and ask for global surrender. When Hartman snaps back that they have no such Authority, the Cyber-Leader replies that they have now. He begins to broadcast on all wavelengths, telling all humankind not to fear as the Cybermen will remove fear, sex, class, colour and creed. Humanity will be upgraded and become like them.

The Cyberman invasion is met by military resistance but continues to advance. None of them die until a soldier shoots one with a rocket launcher. The Cybermen can deflect bullets, but not high-yield explosives. Back at Torchwood, the Cyber-Leader does not understand why mankind has not submitted to his instructions. The Doctor angrily retorts that the Cybermen have invaded their planet, taken over their homes and taken their children hostage; of course they are going to fight back.

In the Void Ship room, the black Dalek demands that the humans designate which is the "least important". Although Rose tells them that humans do not class each other like that, Singh steps forward to represent the Torchwood Institute. The Daleks wish information on Earth in this time period, and force Singh to kneel. He says he will tell them anything that does not compromise homeland security, but the black Dalek replies that speech is not necessary; rather than interrogate him, they will extract Singh's brainwaves. As three Dalek manipulator arms press against his skull, Singh screams.

The Cyber-Leader has detected alien technology in the "sphere chamber" and sends two Cybermen down to investigate. At the same time, as Singh's burned-out corpse collapses to the floor, the black Dalek has obtained the information about a second species invading Earth. It, too, sends one of the Daleks, which it calls "Dalek Thay", to investigate. Both groups are feeding video information back to their respective leaders, and so the Doctor sees the Dalek as it encounters the two Cybermen. Each side demands that the other identify itself, and the Dalek lets slip its identity when it proclaims that Daleks do not take orders. The black Dalek also notes that the steel cyborgs bear some resemblance to the "inferior species" known as Cybermen.

The Doctor surreptitiously calls Rose using Jackie's mobile phone, confirming that she is still alive when she answers the call. Rose does not speak but keeps the line open, allowing the Doctor to listen in as the Daleks mention the Genesis Ark. The Cybermen propose an alliance to the Daleks: together they could upgrade the universe, but the Daleks refuse. Declaring that "hostile elements will be deleted," the Cybermen open fire on Thay, but their beams simply bounce off its force field. Thay fires in turn, exterminating the two before him.

The Cyber-Leader speaks directly to the black Dalek, accusing him of declaring war. The black Dalek retorts that it is merely "pest control". Both sides continue to taunt each other, boasting of their military might. As the black Dalek cuts off the transmission, however, he sees the image of the Doctor in the background, identifying him as an enemy. The Daleks turn to Rose, demanding that she identify him. Rose does so, noting with satisfaction that while the Daleks are confident of taking on five million Cybermen, the thought of one Doctor frightens them more.

Requiring more troops, the Cyber-Leader orders his captives to be taken away and upgraded. Yvonne and Jackie are escorted away, but the Cyber-Leader keeps the Doctor to learn what he knows about the Daleks. As Hartman is led away to the conversion chamber, Jackie blames her and Torchwood for killing them all. Hartman tearfully repeats that she did her duty to Queen and country, then begins to scream as the sparks start flying.

The Cyber-Leader tells the Doctor that he is proof that emotions are self-destructive. The Doctor agrees, but as he hears a rising sound, states that hope is also a good emotion… and here it comes. A squad of humans pops into existence in the room and quickly wipe out the Cybermen with energy weapons. The leader of the squad destroys the Cyber-Leader with a single shot before revealing himself to be Jake Simmonds. The Doctor is shocked to see Jake here.

The Cybermen sense that the Cyber-Leader has been terminated and begin to download his files into another Cyberman unit. This gives Jackie the chance to escape down the stairwell. Meanwhile, the Doctor tells Jake that they cannot just hop from one universe to another. Jake shows the Doctor the disc-shaped devices they developed with their world's version of Torchwood, and before the Doctor can stop him, Jake transports the two of them. Jake explains that they found out what the parallel Torchwood was doing and the People's Republic took control. As the Doctor asks Jake to take him back, Pete Tyler steps out of the shadows, telling the Doctor that this is their world and for once, he is going to listen.

Mickey shows Rose an identical device, but tells her it only takes one, and he will not leave her. Mickey wonders what the Daleks want with him. Rose tells him about the time she revived a Dalek with her touch. A person travelling in time soaks up harmless background radiation; however, in the Time War, the Daleks evolved to use it as a power supply. If something inside the Ark needs revival, the Daleks would need either one of them. Mickey wonders why the Daleks would build something they cannot open, but the black Dalek breaks in on the conversation, replying that the technology is not theirs, but that of the Time Lords — the last remnant of their homeworld. When Rose asks what is inside, the Daleks tell her "The future."

 

On the parallel Earth, Pete explains that they tried sealing up the Cybermen in the factories, but other people argued that the Cybermen were still people and needed help. As the debate went on, the Cybermen infiltrated the parallel Torchwood, found the Doctor's universe and vanished. The sheer mass of five million Cybermen is why it took them three years to cross while individuals could pop across in a second.

Pete shows off his world, where Great Britain is apparently enjoying a Golden Age, and where Harriet Jones is President. However, ambient temperatures are rising and the ice caps are melting. Pete correctly surmises that it has to do with the breach; the Doctor confirms that every time someone crosses over damage is done, and if it keeps up both worlds will fall into the Void. Pete believes the Doctor can close the breach, but when the Doctor says that doing so will leave the Cybermen on his world, Pete replies that he is only interested in protecting his Earth. The Doctor points out there is a parallel Jackie who is still alive (Pete's Jackie having been cyber-converted in The Age of Steel), but Pete says that there are more important things at stake and asks the Doctor to help them. Seeing Pete's faith in him, the Doctor agrees to help.

The Doctor, Pete and Jake cross back. The Doctor calls up Jackie on her mobile phone, telling her to keep a low profile in the stairwell. The Doctor takes Jake's rifle and modifies it so it can affect polycarbide: the skin of a Dalek. He then goes down to surrender to the Cybermen with a makeshift white flag made from a sheet of A4 paper; in particular, surrendering a very good idea…

The black Dalek demands that Rose activate the Ark, threatening Mickey's life. Rose steps forward to do so, but gleefully tells the Daleks how she met the Dalek Emperor and used the time vortex to turn him to dust. The furious black Dalek is about to exterminate her for this when the Doctor appears in the doorway.

#

The black Dalek asks how the Doctor survived the Time War. The Doctor says that he did that by fighting on the front lines, whereas these Daleks fled. Rose tells the Doctor that these Daleks have names, a fact which the Daleks confirm by declaring each of their names respectively: Dalek Thay, Dalek Sec, Dalek Jast, and Dalek Caan. The Doctor realises that these four Daleks are members of the Cult of Skaro, a secret order above even the Emperor. The Cult's purpose was to think as the enemy thinks, to find new ways of killing, including daring to take on individual identities. When Mickey asks the Doctor about the Ark, the Doctor replies that he does not know what it does; both sides had secrets.

The black Dalek — Dalek Sec — gloats that Time Lord science will ensure the supremacy of the Daleks, and orders the Doctor to open the Ark. The Doctor laughs off the suggestion and produces his sonic screwdriver. He explains that, while it cannot kill, wound, or maim, it is very good for opening doors — a fact he demonstrates by using it to open explosively all the doors leading into the sphere chamber. Jake's squad, side by side with Cybermen, enter and open fire on the Daleks using the modified energy rifles, temporarily disrupting the Daleks' shields and weapons, giving the Doctor and the humans time to escape. However, the Daleks quickly regain control of their weapons. The Cybermen are still no match for the Daleks and are all swiftly exterminated. As the Doctor and the humans rush out of the chamber, Mickey is knocked into the Ark by a damaged Cyberman and his hand presses against its surface. The Ark is primed, steam gushing from the bottom vents, but Dalek Sec says that it needs a space of thirty square miles to activate. The Daleks begin to escort it out of the chamber.

The Doctor and the humans retreat towards the stairwell. Mickey apologises for his slip-up, but the Doctor tells him that he did them a favour because the Daleks would have destroyed the Sun in an attempt to open the Ark. He gives Mickey an affectionate kiss on the head.

Meanwhile, Jackie is found by two Cybermen who lurch forward to capture her for upgrading. However, the Cybermen are shot from behind by Pete, with the Doctor, Rose and Mickey following him. Jackie and Pete see each other for the first time and have an awkward exchange as their parallel counterparts are dead. Although Pete tries to rationalise that Jackie is not really his wife, the two end up running into each other's arms and embracing.

The Daleks and the Ark move into the Torchwood storage area, battling another force of Cybermen. Some human soldiers break in and add to the chaos. The Doctor stumbles into the area as well, grabbing two magnetic clamps before leaving. As the Daleks blast their way through all opposition, the new Cyber-Leader calls for reinforcements. Sec opens the roof, and elevates upward with the Ark. As the Doctor and the others watch, the Ark opens above London and starts spinning, disgorging Dalek after Dalek. The Doctor realises that the "Time Lord science" Sec referred to was the fact that the Ark is bigger inside than outside: the Ark is a prison ship, containing millions of Daleks. As hundreds of Daleks line up in aerial formation, Sec orders them to exterminate all life forms below. The Daleks and Cybermen begin fighting all over the planet, with humans caught in the crossfire.

Pete believes the situation to be hopeless, and prepares to escape back to his world while offering to take Jackie along with him. The Doctor, however, is more optimistic. Wearing his 3-D glasses, he explains that it allows him to see that everything that has crossed the Void between universes has picked up background radiation from it: "void stuff". Since the Daleks and Cybermen have been hiding in the void, they will be saturated in it and will be pulled back into the Void if he re-opens the rift then seals it again.

Rose, however, points out that they are covered in "void stuff" too. The Doctor explains that he will open the breach here, but if Rose and the others go back to Pete's world, they will be safe. The Doctor will hang on to the magnetic clamps so he will not be pulled in. Rose realises that if the breach seals she will never be able to return, and refuses to leave the Doctor despite the prospect of never seeing her mother again. While Rose and Jackie argue about who is leaving, the Doctor and Pete slip the devices around their necks and Pete transports them all across. However, Rose reactivates her device and returns, telling the Doctor she will never leave him.

Rose sets all the coordinates on the Void controls to six on the Doctor's instructions. As the Cybermen climb the stairs, intending to escape back to the parallel Earth, they are met by a Cyberman with a female-sounding voice, that of Yvonne Hartman. She declares that they shall not pass and shoots them with an energy rifle. As she repeats that she did her duty for Queen and country, a tear of oil leaks from the duct below her left eye.

The Doctor and Rose fix the magnetic clamps on the walls. They pull the levers, activating the breach then hold on tightly to the clamps. Outside, millions of Daleks, including the Ark, are drawn towards Torchwood Tower and are rapidly sucked into the breach as the Cybermen are also pulled upward into the sky. However, Sec initiates an "emergency temporal shift" and vanishes.

The power lever on Rose's side begins to shift to the offline position, threatening to abort the process. Unable to reach her lever while still holding on, Rose lets go of her clamp to do so. She pushes the lever back up and power is restored, but Rose is left clinging on for dear life as the void tries to consume her. The Doctor yells at her to hold on.

As the last of the Daleks fall into the breach, Rose can no longer hold on and lets go, flying towards oblivion. The Doctor screams in anguish, but at the last moment, Pete materialises in front of the breach, grabs Rose, and vanishes again. The breach ripples, and seals itself. On the parallel world, Rose beats the wall, sobbing hysterically as Pete notes that his device no longer works. On both sides of the breach, the Doctor and Rose lean against the wall, resting their cheeks against it for a moment as if sensing the other's presence. The Doctor then walks away sadly, alone.

Some time later, Rose has a dream where she hears the Doctor's voice calling her. Rose, Jackie, Pete and Mickey follow the voice to fifty miles outside Bergen, Norway, on the coastline of Dårlig Ulv Stranden — Bad Wolf Bay. There, an image of the Doctor appears; he tells her that he found the last of the breaches, and is transmitting the signal by using the TARDIS to harness the power of a supernova, commenting that he is burning up a sun to say good-bye. With only two minutes, the two share their final farewell. Rose tells the Doctor that her mother is three months pregnant. At first, Rose jokes that she is now back working as a shop girl, but then reveals that she is with the parallel Torchwood, which has re-opened, as they could use her expertise with aliens. The Doctor smiles proudly and says, "Rose Tyler: Defender of the Earth."

The Doctor tells Rose that she is officially listed among those that died on that day. Breaking down, Rose asks what the Doctor will do, and he simply says he will go on, alone. Weeping, Rose tells the Doctor she loves him. As it is his last chance to do so, he begins to reply, but only manages to get out her name before his image fades. Rose, still in tears, turns and runs back into Jackie's arms.

In the TARDIS, the Doctor stands for a minute, lips still parted as if in the middle of a sentence. Wiping his own tears from his eyes, he starts to work the console. Suddenly, he looks up to see a woman in a wedding dress standing in the console room. Dumbfounded, all the Doctor can repeat is "What?" as the bride demands sharply that he tell her where she is…

Analysis from Cuisle

“There was never any question of killing her off,” said Russell T. Davies in the Confidential programme afterwards. But for the last two weeks they have been kidding everyone that they WOULD. “This is the story of how I died!” is the tag line they used at the end of “Fear Her” and they gave no reason last week to think differently.


But Russell explained, that’s not what Doctor Who is about. It’s not Buffy – (just how often did she die?) it’s not the X-Files, its not Stargate. It’s Doctor Who and primarily, as Russell said, it is about positive images of humanity. The few times that somebody significant HAS died on Doctor Who are in the 1960s and 1980s. It doesn’t happen. Some of the critics seem a bit upset about it, but the fact is, what this programme about is The Doctor saving the world EVERY time. He doesn’t fail. Sometimes, the price of his victory is a hard one for him, but he never fails.



And that was the key of this episode. Not whether The Doctor WOULD save the day, but how much it would cost him to do so.

The critics will no doubt complain that this episode played to the fans too much. It laboured too much on the relationships between Rose, The Doctor, Jackie, Mickey, Pete. But so what? Fans don’t just want to see Daleks and cybermen fight each other. Curiously enough that isn’t as interesting as it sounds. We’ve seen both often enough. The two together isn’t twice the interest, it’s the same interest. The same monsters, and we know their strengths and their weaknesses. We know what to expect from them. But what we wanted to know was whether the human stories could be fulfilled. Whether the Jackie without a Pete and the Pete without a Jackie could find each other, whether Rose would go with them to their world or stay with The Doctor. And we were gratified to find that she WANTED to be with The Doctor. She chose the monsters and the danger because, as Madam de Pompadour told her months back, you can’t have one without the other.


That’s how the fans wanted it. But we knew Rose was going out, so we expected, not having been let in on Russell’s little secret yet, that she WAS going to die. When she saved the day by putting the lever back, even though that meant she couldn’t hold on when everything was being pulled into the void, we thought this was it. We thought she was going to die to save The Doctor like Katarina and Adric. His scream of grief overwhelmed hers until the last surprise thought up by Russell, a dedicated fan of Doctor Who who wasn’t going to let us have a Buffy ending. Pete saved her by grabbing her out of the gap of danger and taking her back to the other universe. Alive, reunited with her family, but lost to The Doctor.


The scene where he manages to squeeze through a tiny gap in reality and meet her in Dalig Ulv Stranden, the Norwegian town of Bad Wolf Bay, was pure fandom. It wasn’t relevant to the plot about Daleks and Cybermen fighting for supremacy over humanity. That story was already sorted! The Doctor won. But his Pyrrhic victory deserved an epilogue. In the moments they had to say goodbye Rose was able to tell him that she loved him. As if we didn’t know. But tragically, he didn’t get the chance. His wordiness was his downfall this time. He lost the chance to tell her and when we saw him again, alone in the TARDIS, he was crying bitterly. And let any critic fault that scene. David Tennant was utterly beautiful in that scene. Only one actor could possibly have done as well. And that would be Christopher Eccleston. As it was, David proved himself equal to him in that last scene.


So to the Daleks and Cybermen. The one side want to remove sex and class and colour and creed from humanity by making them all the same. The very antithesis of humanity’s infinite diversity that The Doctor has protected all his days. The Daleks just want to be supreme. The verbal confrontation between them was like a prelude to a fight between two gangs in a school playground. They were virtually daring each other to make the first move. And the fans of Doctor Who monsters as opposed to Doctor Who fans waited with baited breath for them to stop talking and get on with fighting. They got what they wanted eventually. The Genesis Ark proved to be the Daleks sting in their tail – courtesy of the Time Lords. Some fantastic scenes of millions of flying Daleks above London rivalled similar scenes in Parting of The Ways last year. They provided the big, epic spectacular background to the real story – the story of the humans and the Time Lord who had changed their lives. But that’s all they ever were, and maybe, all they ever were. Because ultimately, what are the monsters but the background to The Doctor’s continuing story?

When we come down to specifics, Yvonne Hartman, the supposed villain of the piece, must get a mention. Her defiance as she was taken to be upgraded “I did my duty for Queen and Country” was worthy of every freedom fighter ever taken to be executed for their efforts. But unlike most executed freedom fighters she had her last stand after death. As The Doctor and Rose prepared the doom of the Cybermen and Daleks she, as a cyberman with a last memory of being Human, held the line. She did her duty one last time. The sight of a Cyberman crying what might have been oil or blood, or both was a seminal moment in an episode FULL of seminal moments. It almost rivals The Doctor’s tears in that sense.


And that wraps it all up. Except that one Dalek jumped into a temporal shift to avoid being sucked into the void. They are not gone. They never will be. But The Doctor will ALWAYS be there to fight them as long as they are. And we sleep safe, without nightmares troubling us, as long as we know they do.