Original Transmission
Date 22nd Oct 2006
Time 9:52pm
Duration 47'46"
Viewers 2.5m (2nd)
Audience App. 83%

Working Titles New Girl


Cast
Captain Jack Harkness John Barrowman
Gwen Cooper Eve Myles
Owen Harper Burn Gorman
Toshiko Sato Naoko Mori
Ianto Jones Gareth David-Lloyd
Rhys Williams Kai Owen
Private Moriarty Adrian Christopher
Sgt Johnson Ross O'Hennessy
Carys Sara Lloyd Gregory
Banksy Ceri Mears
Matt Justin McDonald
PC Andy Tom Price
Ivan Fletcher Brendan Charleson
Gavin Rob Storr
Mikey Lloyd Everitt
Eddie Gwynne Alex Parry
Bethan Felicity Rhys
Receptionist Naomi Martell
Mr Weston David Longden


Crew
Written by Chris Chibnall
Produced by Richard Stokes
Directed by Brian Kelly
Created by Russell T Davies
Co-Producer Chris Chibnall
1st Assistant Director Peter Bennett
2nd Assistant Director Steffan Morris
3rd Assistant Director Lynsey Muir
Location Manager Paul Davies
Unit Manager Geraint Havard Jones
Production Co-ordinator Carmelina Palumbo
Asst Prod Co-ordinator Kate Powell
Production Secretary Margarita Felices
Script Secretary Helen Pugsley
Contracts Assistant Kath Blackman
Continuity Llinos Wyn Jones
Script Editor Brian Minchin
Camera Operator Gareth Hughes
Camera Assistant Mani Blaxter Paliwala
Focus Puller Duncan Fowlie
Grip Dai Hopkins
Boom Operator Jeff Welch
Gaffer Dave Fowler
Best Boy Steve Slocombe
Stunt Co-ordinator Garry Connery
Stunt Performers Maxine Whittaker Curtis Rivers
Chief Super Art Director Stephen Nicholas
Supervising Art Director Keith Dunne
Art Dep Prod Manager Jonathan Marquand Allison
Art Dep Op Manager Adrian Anscombe
Assistant Art Director Matthew Savage
Art Dep Co-ordinator Matthew North
Design Assistants Ben Austin Rob Dicks
Standby Art Director Dafydd Shurmer
Standby Props Brian Patrick Henry
Standby Carpenter Will Pope
Standby Rigger Keith Freeman
Concept Artists Ian Bunting Peter McKinstry
Designer Julian Luxton
Property Master Nick Thomas
Production Buyer Ben Morris
Props Storeman Charlie Malik
Specialist Props Maker Mark Cordory
Props Maker Nick Robatto
Construction Manager Matthew Hywel-Davies
Construction Chargehand Scott Fisher
Graphics BBC Wales Graphic Design
Costume Supervisor Debra Haggett
Costume Assistants Bobby Peach Sam Benbow
Make-Up Supervisor Claire Pritchard
Make-Up Artists Sarah Astley-Hughes Kate Roberts
Casting Associate Andy Brierley
Assistant Editor Matt Mullins
Post Prod Supervisors Helen Vallis Chris Blatchford
Post Prod Co-ordinator Marie Brown
On Line Editor Matthew Clarke
Colourist James Bamford
Vis Effects Co-ordinator Natalie Stopford
3D Artists Nick Webber Paul Burton Andy Guest
2D Artists Sara Bennett Bronwyn Edwards
Dubbing Mixer Peter Jeffreys
Supervising Sound Editor Doug Sinclair
Sound Editor Paul McFadden
Sound FX Editor Howard Eaves
Senior Prod Accountant Endaf Emyr Williams
Casting Director Andy Pryor CDG
Production Accountant Ceri Tothill
Sound Recordist Jeff Matthews
Costume Designer Ray Holman
Make-Up Designer Marie Doris
Composers Murray Gold Ben Foster
Visual Effects The Mill
Visual Effects Producers Will Cohen Marie Jones
Visual FX Supervisor Dave Houghton
On-Set Visual FX Supervisor Barney Curnow
Special Effects Any Effects
Prosthetics Neill Gorton & Millennium Effects
Editor William Webb
Production Designer Edward Thomas
Director of Photography Mark Waters
Associate Producer Marcus Prince
Production Executive Julie Scott
Assistant Producer Sophie Fante
Executive Producers Russell T Davies Julie Gardner


Plot Outline from Wikipedia

Gwen Cooper is having a night out with her boyfriend Rhys on the eve of starting her new job with Torchwood, when suddenly a meteor streaks over the Cardiff night sky, trailing flame. It impacts just outside the city, and as people in the street gape, Gwen receives a message on her mobile phone. It is Torchwood, and she has to go to work.

The Torchwood vehicle drives towards the crash site with Jack, Toshiko, Owen and Gwen aboard. They arrive only to see that the Army is already there. The team push their way past the troops using their Torchwood authority and examine the meteor in the impact crater. As the others move into action, taking samples and readings, Gwen feels inexperienced and out of place. When Owen taunts her, calling her the "New Girl", Gwen tosses a chisel at him and misses, puncturing the skin of the meteor. A purplish gas hisses out of the meteor, coalescing and rising into the air, speeding away.

In an alley next to a nightclub in the city, a young woman, Carys, leaves an angry and weepy voice mail to her boyfriend when she is confronted by the gaseous creature. It backs her against a wall, then flows into her body. Suddenly sexually aggressive, she regains entry into the club by kissing the bouncer, and picks up a man, Matt, standing at the bar. Pushing him into the women's toilet, they proceed to have sex, and at the moment of climax, Matt dissolves into a glowing cloud of dust, the energy portion of which Carys appears to absorb.

Gwen continues to apologise for her mistake, and promises that she will sort out whatever has happened. Ianto informs them of the incident at the nightclub. Arriving, the team finds the CCTV tapes that show Carys and Matt having their deadly sex, and then the alien taking her over in the alley. Jack arranges for a body to be taken out of storage to fake a suicide for Matt, the concept of which horrifies Gwen.

While the team tries to track Carys by cross-checking video from the surveillance cameras with a database containing the faces of the UK population, Carys is feeling the effects of the alien in her body, which is causing her pain. The postman arrives, and Carys pulls him into her house for sex, but the team manages to arrive before she can do the deed. She nearly manages to get away, but Owen uses a portable prison cell, an alien device that throws up a force bubble around her.

Back at the Hub, Gwen places Carys in a holding cell. The alien consciousness takes over Carys momentarily, explaining to Gwen that it is not here for conquest, but to feed off human orgasmic energy. Pain racks Carys's body again, and when Gwen goes in to help, the two women start kissing passionately. However, Carys pushes Gwen away after a while, saying that it has to be a man. Gwen promises Carys that she will help her, and leaves the cell.

As the base computers gather more information from Carys, the others have some Chinese food. When Jack leaves the table, Owen and Toshiko start grilling Gwen about Jack; even after some time working with him, they know very little about his background. Gwen feels that Jack and the others have lost touch with humanity. She tracks down as much information on Carys as she can to remind them that the girl is still a person who needs their help, which impresses Jack.

Toshiko discovers the alien presence in Carys is producing an ultra-powerful cloud of pheromones around her, turning her into a walking aphrodisiac, which explains Gwen's reaction to her. They realise, too late, that Owen might be affected, and they find him naked and cuffed in the cell. Jack chases Carys around the Hub, but she grabs the case with the severed hand, which upsets Jack. Carys holds it hostage, reaching the Hub's front entrance. She throws it to the floor, distracting Jack long enough for her to leave the Hub. By the time the others enter Roald Dahl Plass, Carys has vanished.

Owen has interpreted the results of the bioscan, and has determined that the physiological changes caused by the alien will eventually cause Carys's body to explode. Meanwhile, Carys wanders the streets of Cardiff, being bombarded by images of sex in the advertising around her. The team tries to imagine where Carys would go, and Toshiko suggests the ex-boyfriend. Once again, the team gets there too late; Carys has taken her revenge and all that is left of Eddie is dust.

Checking her background, the team discovers that Carys had temporarily worked as a receptionist at a fertility clinic, an ideal source of orgasmic energy. They also determine that the alien takes hosts because Earth's atmosphere is poisonous to it. Carys is already at the clinic, dragging the sperm donors into rooms. When the team arrives, there are piles of dust everywhere. When they surround her, Carys collapses, too weak to fight the alien anymore. Jack kisses her, giving up some of his life force to revitalise her.

Gwen then offers to take the host into herself, asking the alien to spare Carys. When the alien flows out of Carys's body, Jack drops the portable prison cell and traps it inside. Separated from its host, the alien dies, falling into a pile of dust. Gwen kisses Jack as a thank you, leaving him with a surprised and thoughtful expression. Gwen and Jack then take Carys back to her father.

Back at the Hub, Jack tells Gwen not to let the job consume her. Gwen has a life and perspective, which is what the team needs. Gwen asks Jack who he is, but he just tells her to lead her normal life, for him. She does so, having a quiet dinner with Rhys, and then going to bed.


Analysis by Cuisle

A bit of a Men in Black/X Files feel to the first scene when they’re investigating an alien spaceship that has crash-landed outside of Cardiff. There the resemblance to anything else in science fiction ends. Well, ok, there is one other reference. Aliens in gaseous form – Doctor Who got there first in Unquiet Dead. But this alien isn’t interested in keeping it's host body alive. It just wants to feed on a certain form of energy – the energy given out by men when they reach sexual climax – at which point they explode and turn to little piles of dust. The various types of insect that kill the male after mating, preying mantis, black widow spider, etc., come to mind at this point.
Interlaced with the plot of trying to separate the innocent girl, Carys from the alien that has invaded her body, bringing to mind yet another science fiction idea – the Gou'ald of Stargate, we get to know just a bit more about the Torchwood crew. For one thing we find out that none of the others know anything much about Jack – except that he is gay. Gwen tries to get to the bottom of him but as he says ‘knowing the answers doesn’t make it easier.’ Again the audience knows some of the answers. But only SOME of them.
But the scene that stops this episode in its tracks is the one in which Jack lets his emotions get the better of him. When he puts saving a severed hand from being destroyed before stopping the alien controlled Carys from escaping. The audience know there is only one severed hand that would get Jack Harkness THAT upset. The Doctor’s hand, cut off when he fought the Sycorax. Of course we don’t KNOW for sure, but The Doctor is Jack’s one and only unrequited love. If that’s his only relic of his relationship who can blame him for feeling a little precious about it. Kudos to John Barrowman for a brilliant bit of emotional response as he cradles the hand.
As for the final sequence, Jack holding Carys and kissing her in his own way, giving her some of the extra life he has in his body, is a beautiful moment. Capturing the alien afterwards is almost unnecessary.
Looking at these two first episodes it strikes me that Jack Harkness has taken on some of the characteristics we had come to associate with The Doctor, specifically the Ninth Doctor, the one Jack knew and loved. Even though he is Human he seems to have developed an other-worldliness, a remoteness from Human life and feelings. And like the Ninth Doctor, who had Rose to show him what it was all about, Gwen seems to be showing Jack the way back to Human feelings.