Original Transmission
Date 10th Dec 2006
Time 10:00pm
Duration 49'14"
Viewers 1.1m (4th)
Audience App. 83%

Working Titles Invisible Eugene

Cast
Captain Jack Harkness John Barrowman
Gwen Cooper Eve Myles
Owen Harper Burn Gorman
Toshiko Sato Naoko Mori
Ianto Jones Gareth David-Lloyd
Eugene Paul Chequer
Young Eugene Luke Bromley
Bronwen Jones Nicola Duffett
Mr Garrett Roger Ashton-Griffiths
Josh Steven Meo
Gary Celyn Jones
Linda Robyn Isaac
Shaun Jones Gareth Potter
Terry Jones Joshua Hughes
Waitress Amy Starling
Café Owner Leroy Liburd
Pete Ryan Chappell


Crew
Written by Jacquetta May
Produced by Richard Stokes Sophie Fante
Directed by James Erskine
Created by Russell T Davies
Co-Producer Chris Chibnall
1st Assistant Directors Nael Abbas Dae Arwyn Jones
2nd Assistant Director Daniella Bowen
3rd Assistant Director Rhian Salisbury Nick Britz
Location Manager Paul Davies
Unit Manager Geraint Havard Jones
Location Scout Iwan Roberts
Runners Joney Lyons Michael Green
Production Co-ordinator Carmelina Palumbo
Asst Prod Co-ordinator Kate Powell
Production Secretary Margarita Felices
Script Secretaries Helen Pugsley Claire Thomas
Accounts Assistants Debi Griffiths Kath Blackman
Continuity Sally Hope
Script Editor Brian Minchin
Camera Operator James Moss
Focus Puller Chris Reynolds
Camera Assistant Gareth Coop
Grip Dave Logan
Boom Operator James Drummond
Gaffer George Vince
Best Boy Suzanne Sanders
Stunt Co-ordinator Roderick P Woodruff
Chief Super Art Director Stephen Nicholas
Supervising Art Director Keith Dunne
Art Dep Prod Manager Jonathan Allison
Art Dep Op Manager Adrian Anscombe
Art Dep Co-ordinator Matthew North
Standby Art Director Cathy Featherstone
Standby Props Matt Bacon Keith Pitt
Standby Carpenter Gareth Thomas
Standby Rigger Neil Ruck
Concept Painter Clive Clarke
Designer Penny Harvey
Property Master Stuart Wooddisse
Production Buyer Catherine Samuel
Props Chargehand Dewi Thomas
Props Fab Manager Barry Jones
Construction Manager Matthew Hywel-Davies
Construction Chargehand Scott Fisher
Graphics BBC Wales Graphic Design
Costume Supervisor Charlotte Mitchell
Costume Assistants Dan Summerville Maxine Brown
Make-Up Supervisors Claire Pritchard Sarah Astley-Hughes
Make-Up Artists Hayley Watkins Ellen Rhian Anwen Hughes Vicky Owen
Casting Associate Andy Brierley
Assistant Editor Matt Mullins
Post Prod Supervisors Helen Vallis Chris Blatchford
Post Prod Co-ordinator Marie Brown
On Line Editors Jon Everett Matthew Clarke
Colourist Mick Vincent
Dubbing Mixer Tom Ricketts
Sound Editor Paul McFadden
Super Sound Editor Doug Sinclair
Sound FX Editor Howard Eaves
Casting Director Andy Pryor CDG
Production Accountant Ceri Tothill
Sound Recordist Jeff Matthews
Costume Designer Ray Holman
Make-Up Designer Marie Doris
Music Murray Gold Ben Foster
Visual Effects The Mill
Vis Effects Producers Will Cohen Marie Jones
Vis Effects Supervisor Dave Houghton
On-Set Vis FX Super Barney Curnow
Special Effects Any Effects
Editor Phil Hookway
Production Designer Edward Thomas
Director of Photography Simon Butcher
Associate Producer Terry Reeve
Production Executive Julie Scott
Executive Producers Russell T Davies Julie Gardner


Plot Outline From Wikipedia

A young man named Eugene Jones wakes up to find himself lying on a road in the country. He makes his way to where police are cordoning off a section of the road, and the Torchwood team are gathered. He calls Gwen, Jack and Tosh by name but they do not hear him. He then notices them examining a bloodied body on the side of the road, killed in a hit-and-run accident: his body. When his hand passes through Tosh, Eugene realises that he might be dead…

Eugene's mobile phone rings near his body. It is Eugene's mother, and Gwen tells her that she has some bad news. Gwen checks the phone, and just finds a few pictures of random shoes. The invisible Eugene cannot remember what happened to him, so he follows the team into the Torchwood SUV.

Eugene thinks back to 1992, when despite being good at mathematics, he blanked during an inter-school maths competition and was responsible for his team losing the final, disappointing his father. To cheer Eugene up, Mr Garrett, his science teacher, gave him an eye-like object that had fallen from the sky during a golf game. That evening, Eugene's father left the family, and Eugene believed his losing was the cause. Eugene also believed the Eye belonged to an alien, and that the alien would return one day to reclaim it. This began his interest in UFOs and alien artefacts. As an adult, he approached Torchwood several times, trying to speak to them — Gwen in particular — but they simply ignored him as a crank.

Gwen speaks with a grieving Mrs Jones as the team searches Eugene's room. They find a flyer to a lecture about black holes at Aberystwyth University's Science and Natural History Museum, and a cabinet of dubious alien artefacts. One, however, appears to be missing. The team take the rest of Eugene's possessions to the Hub for study. Eugene follows.

Gwen wants to find out more about Eugene's death, but Owen accuses Gwen of feeling guilty since Eugene had a "thing" for her. Before the autopsy on Eugene can be carried out, Ianto informs them that the driver who hit Eugene has been found. However, Gwen still wants to investigate further, feeling that something odd is going on, although the others try to convince her otherwise.

The next day, Gwen decides to return Eugene's DVDs to his video shop. She goes to the lunch café that he used to frequent, but the owner does not remember him. Eugene sits next to Gwen as she browses the contents of his phone, frustrated that he cannot remember anything. He suggests that Gwen telephone Gary, and somehow, Gwen picks up on it and does so, leaving a message.

At the video shop, Gwen speaks to the clerk, Josh, who remembers Eugene but dismisses him as ordinary and a loser. Gwen then proceeds to Eugene's place of work, a telemarketing firm, and some more of Eugene's memory comes back. Gwen finds Gary (recognising his shoes from the photographs in Eugene's phone) and another co-worker, Linda, both of whom seem quite upset about Eugene's death. Gwen makes an appointment with Linda for lunch and finds the same lecture flyer found in Eugene's room in Gary's cubicle.

Linda tells Gwen that when she was depressed about her life, Eugene offered to buy her a ticket to Australia. To get the money, he was going to sell the Eye on eBay, bringing it in to show his colleagues. The eye did not get any bids at first, but slowly, then rapidly, began to accumulate bids, ending at £15,005.50. However, Linda does not know who the final buyer was.

Gwen receives a call from and goes to see Mrs Jones, who tells her about who the Eye came from. Eugene's brother Terry reveals that two weeks before his death, Eugene found that his father was working as a cashier at a Cardiff petrol station, rather than holding a glamourous position in America as he had previously believed. Eugene remembers that once he found this out, he felt everything in his life was worthless, including the Eye, so he decided to sell it. At the Hub, Gwen tells Jack about what she has learned. Jack guesses that the Eye is a Dogon Sixth Eye — there used to be a trade in them. Jack gives Gwen permission to find the Eye.

Gwen drives to Aberystwyth for the lecture, and finds Gary there. He and Eugene had arranged to go to the lecture together. Gary confesses that he used aliases to raise the bid price on the eye to cheer Eugene up. However, when the bid jumped to £15,000, Eugene believed that the buyer was the alien, trying to reclaim the Eye. Gwen tries to find out where the exchange was going to take place, but Gary is evasive. Gwen asks why Eugene would take photographs of Gary's shoes and who the other pairs belong to, but Gary just says they are random shoes.

Eugene spends the night lying next to Gwen in her hotel room. Gwen finds a piece of napkin among Eugene's possessions, with a logo that she traces the next day to a roadside restaurant, the Happy Cook, near where Eugene's body was found. She spots the waitress wearing one of the pairs of shoes on Eugene's phone.

Eugene remembers that when he arrived at the Happy Cook, Gary and Josh were there. They revealed that they had artificially raised the bid at first, but when they saw someone else — a collector and not an alien like Eugene believed — was willing to pay £15,000, they decided to raise the bid up by £5.50. However, no more bids came, leaving them the final buyers. Eugene realised that Josh and Gary simply wanted to take the Eye without paying and re-sell it, and so he secretly took photographs of their shoes with his phone. Josh then tried to grab the Eye but Eugene swallowed it and ran from the Happy Cook.

Gwen finds out most of this from the waitress. At that moment, Gary and Josh come in, trying to get the waitress not to speak to anyone before they spot Gwen in the corner. Josh tries to make a run for it, but Gary trips him up. Josh demands to know why, and Gary says that he misses Eugene. Gwen gets the rest of the story from the two: they chased Eugene for a distance but then lost him. Gwen telephones Eugene's father to tell him about Eugene's death. Eugene finally remembers how he ran across a field, stopped in the middle of a road, and did not see the car coming.

Eugene attends his own funeral, seeing his father sing "Danny Boy" as the coffin goes in to be cremated. Gwen collects the Eye from Eugene's ashes, and brings it along to the Jones house, as the rest of the team show up in the SUV. However, Eugene is still puzzled as to why he is still around since the Eye had been removed from his body. Gwen sees Mr Jones reunite with Terry and does not notice a car about to run her down. Eugene calls out to Gwen and runs forward throwing Gwen to the ground, saving her; he has become solid and visible. Everyone looks on in amazement.

Gwen thanks Eugene for saving her and kisses him. Despite her pleas for him not to go, he realises he has to. Eugene bids her good-bye as a white glow surrounds him and he rises into the sky, zooming upwards until the Earth is no longer visible.

Analysis by Cuisle

This was a slow paced episode. Never boring, it has to be said, but slow-paced. It was compared almost immediately to Love and Monsters in the 2006 Doctor Who series because it was a story told from the point of view of a guest character, rather than one of the Torchwood team. But there the resemblance ends, because this story is much more mature than Love and Monsters, which was held back by a monster designed by a 12 year old on Blue Peter.

Eugene was the Team’s chief fan. In particular, he idolised Gwen, who he identified as the most sympathetic and approachable character. So when he was killed and finds himself as a ghost, he tags along with Gwen.

One of the most fascinating aspects of the story is the way Gwen, without knowing he is there, seems to react as if he WAS. We see it first when she orders the meal Eugene likes in the café, then when she dials Gary’s number on Eugene’s mobile phone. It is as if he is reaching her on a subconscious level. I almost forgot at one point that she CAN’T see him. The scene were she looks through him as she looks out of the hotel window and he blows her hair is beautiful. As an interaction between a ghost and a living being it has no rival outside of the film, Ghost. A very beautifully scripted scene.

The journey through Eugene’s rather sad life was well crafted, too. And horribly familiar. There are too many people like the obnoxious Josh from the video shop in this world. People who think breaking somebody’s heart is a joke. Gary, his inept friend seems nearly as bad until he at least decides which side he wants to be on.

This isn’t an exciting episode. It is a story about a man for whom nothing went right, who had only one thing special about him, the fact that he owned an alien artefact. The saddest scene of all was his funeral when the camera panned around those who came to the service. The girl he liked from the office where he worked, his friend Gary, his mother and brother, his estranged father, and Gwen. A precious few people who cared that he was dead. But perhaps those are the people who count. There is a line in a song from the Muppet Christmas Carol “If you want to know the measure of man, then simply count his friends.” I have always thought that line was wrong. Adolf Hitler had lots of friends after all. What counts is the quality of friends, not quantity, and that scene proved that at least Eugene had the love of those who really mattered in his life.

Only then, at the end, after the funeral, did anything truly alien and amazing happen – apart from the fact that Eugene was a ghost that is. He manages to become corporeal long enough to rescue Gwen from the path of a speeding car before being taken up to heaven in a rather pretty way that seems to completely contradict the claim in previous stories that there is nothing else after death. And perhaps THAT might turn out to be significant.

Of course the critics who want minute by minute hard ball action hated this episode. But I think it proved that Torchwood can cover all the bases. This was a very real, Human story about ordinary people. Action can wait for another day.