“Father’s Day” stars Christopher Eccleston as the
Doctor and Billie Piper as Rose Tyler with Shaun Dingwall as Pete Tyler and
Camille Coduri as Jackie Tyler. It was
written by: Paul Cornell and directed by: Joe Ahearne with Helen Raynor as
Script Editor, Phil Collinson as Producer, and Russell T. Davies, Julie
Gardner, and Mal Young as Executive Producers.
It was originally broadcast on Saturday 14 May 2005 on BBC One.
With the cancellation of Doctor Who in 1989 it
only took two years before the continuation came in the form of original
novels, the New Adventures, continuing Andrew Cartmel’s push for bringing new writers
into the show and subsequent franchise.
It is with these novels that Russell T. Davies got his start in Doctor
Who long before the revival came along, but among the now prolific Doctor
Who authors who got their start in these books, among them Kate Orman,
Jonathan Blum, and one of the few to make the leap to television Paul
Cornell. The eighth episode of the
revival was always meant to be a story about the death of Rose’s father,
however, it didn’t really take shape until Cornell was assigned to write “Broken
Time” with the premise that Rose would in the spur of the moment decision save
her father from the car crash that would claim his life. Time would then start breaking down with
several eras blending into one another.
This pitch would be refined into “Wounded Time”, eventually placing the
setting in a church before a wedding and the refinement of the monsters into
flying creatures come to sterilize the wound, before further refinement led to
the broadcast title “Father’s Day”, again a few months before broadcast.
The consequences of changing history is something that
Doctor Who had toyed with throughout the classic series with serials
like The Aztecs and The Reign of Terror having established
historical events with the potential to be altered as something that cannot
happen. Pyramids of Mars showed
time in a state of flux in the middle of the events that would have seen the
villain succeed, however, rarely was anything concrete concerning what would
happen when history changed. “Father’s
Day” attempts to rectify this with the concept of the Reapers, extratemporal
beings which rip people’s lives out of the timestream throughout the
episode. This actually poses a problem
for Doctor Who going forward since there are several examples of other
stories where history is significantly changed, however, the Reapers do not
appear again. They are also a classic
example of a Doctor Who story having some sort of monster added for
tension which this story honestly doesn’t need, at least not concretely. Giving the Reapers a physical form actually
hurts the episode as they could have been fairly unseen which would have assisted
the original intent of this episode to be a budget episode with less need for
special effects. The Reapers just have
an identity and easily recognizable form when the episode does want them to be
a recognizable villain.
Outside of the villain that doesn’t need to be there, Cornell
does what he does best with this episode: using some aspect of science fiction
to explore our characters and what makes them tick. The episode is framed by this little frame
story of Jackie Tyler telling a young Rose stories about her father, romanticizing
the man to have been the perfect father and husband. Camille Coduri as an actress is often
underestimated for the more comedic relief portrayals of Jackie Tyler in Doctor
Who but this episode may just be her best performance in the show. The frame story shows Jackie as someone who
while having come to terms with being a single mother and losing her husband by
romanticizing it, her love being the way she remembers him. This is an immediate contrast with the
reality of the situation, Jackie and Pete had a fairly normal marriage that at
the point where Pete dies it was in a rough patch. Pete Tyler, played by Shaun Dingwall, is a
mediocre man with very few prospects, business schemes piling up in their flat
and a genuine fear that there won’t be enough for food. Jackie has also become paranoid that Pete is
being unfaithful and all these little things boil over into Coduri’s performance
which is fueled by frustration and anger.
Cornell’s script and Joe Ahearne’s direction is also very careful to not
boil over this relationship into hatred.
Pete is also just a mediocre man and that comes through
in Dingwall’s performance. He probably
would have been a good father to Rose, but what really shows this are his final
acts in the episode. Pete sacrifices
himself so time is corrected after the Doctor’s plan to fix things goes awry
due to the Blinovitch Limitation Effect allowing the Reapers inside the church. Billie Piper as Rose is also great throughout,
Rose making the mistake of changing time in such a way that the Doctor should
kick her out of the TARDIS for failing, but he doesn’t. Mainly because Rose genuinely just wanted to be
with her dad when he died alone in the road after being hit by a car. Eccleston as the Doctor also has this great
rage and sadness throughout, thinking he’s finally found a companion who won’t
ruin the web of time, hinting at regret at his own actions and perhaps some
previous companion who wasn’t so good.
His best scene, however, is one seeing the bride and groom, friends of
the Tyler’s, and hearing about how they met and why they’re getting
married. It’s a small little scene, but
it’s the little moments of human joy that keep the Doctor going through times
like these, something that while recurring perhaps a bit too much in the
revival, really works here because of proximity to the Time War.
Overall, “Father’s Day” is an excellent example of
what Paul Cornell does at his best. Yes,
the monsters don’t need to be there, but this is a necessary episode to really
see what happens when history is changed, moving Doctor Who into new
territory as well as progressing the Doctor and Rose’s relationship with
revelations about a romanticized past just being human. And being human is sometimes the best thing
in the world. 9/10.
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