“Boom Town” stars Christopher Eccleston as the Doctor
and Billie Piper as Rose Tyler with John Barrowman as Captain Jack Harkness, Noel
Clarke as Mickey Smith, Annette Badland as Margaret Blaine, and Alan Ruscoe as
the Slitheen. It was written by: Russell
T. Davies and directed by: Joe Ahearne with Elwen Rowlands 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 4 June 2005 on BBC One.
The penultimate story of the first series of the
revival of Doctor Who perhaps had the longest gestation period before
the plot was locked in. In Russell T.
Davies’ original pitch document was an idea called “Pompeii”, a historical
story that would eventually be used in the fourth series, abandoned partially
because doing two historical settings back-to-back would have made a larger
portion of the series dedicated to history.
The cancelation of the episode came fairly early on when Davies realized
that of the last five episodes of the series one needed to be a budget saving
episode, and “Pompeii” would require extensive sets and potential location
shoots outside of Cardiff. For a brief
period of time, Davies approached writer Paul Abbott for a now infamous pitch
about the Doctor interfering with Rose’s life and potentially grooming her to
be the perfect companion, but Abbott was busy with a different show, so Davies
developed “The Void” to set a story entirely in the TARDIS. By this point, principle photography has
begun on the series with “Aliens of London” and “World War Three” being shot
and still the eleventh episode of the series lacked even a first draft of a
script. Davies struck gold with the
casting of Annette Badland as Margaret Blaine, being one of the three principal
Slitheen that genuinely sold the story despite the tonal issues and poor
direction, so immediately approached her to return in the eleventh episode
tentatively titled “Dining with Monsters”, but once Davies could actually draft
the script it was adjusted to “Boom Town”.
“Boom Town” is a story that works exclusively because
it is a budget episode. Set entirely in
Cardiff in 2006, with the TARDIS landing on the rift to recharge, the setup
means that the episode can be low key and deal with our three core cast members
of the Doctor, Rose, and Jack, bringing in Noel Clarke as Mickey so he can give
Rose her passport. The first third of
the episode is actually pretty low key, mainly dedicating its time to the
TARDIS team hanging out and getting lunch which allows for some sparkling
dialogue and character interactions.
Bringing in Jack Harkness, played by John Barrowman, is interesting
since it gives another person for the Doctor to almost perform for, taking his
playful standoffishness with Mickey and making it all the more playful here as
Jack does nothing but flirt with everyone in these early scenes. The inciting incident of the episode is the
discovery of Margaret Blaine in the position of mayor of Cardiff and attempting
to build a nuclear power plant in an on the surface good gesture for cheap and
efficient energy. Her actual plan is to
use it to cause a nuclear meltdown and open the rift so she can escape the
planet. Having the Doctor, Rose, Jack,
and Mickey immediately capture her outside of her office in a great chase
sequence full of great comedy means the back half of the episode becomes
something quite different, a character examination for the Doctor. Now as it becomes focused squarely on the
Doctor this does mean “Boom Town” suffers for not having much for Rose and Jack
to do after this point. Rose and Mickey
have some relationship drama that honestly doesn’t work as they break up over
Mickey cheating on Rose because Rose isn’t around and is clearly more
interested in the Doctor. These scenes
are both unnecessary and just add this tension that’s undone immediately the
next time Mickey appears. Perhaps this
is because of how quickly the script was written before production began, but
it brings the episode down sadly when extending the scenes with the Doctor could
have filled things out better.
The scenes between the Doctor and Margaret Blaine are
perhaps some of the best scenes not only in the episode but in this entire
first series. The post-opening credits
sequence primes the viewer to believe that perhaps Margaret Blaine is more
complex and more human than she is letting on: she lets a journalist who has
discovered the danger in the nuclear plant plans live discovering she is with
child. This is after a pre-credits scene
showing the murder of one of Blaine’s advisors to show the duality the
character is grappling. Annette Badland
in this scene voices the version of the character outside of the skin suit, one
of the very few scenes with the Slitheen costumes, and Badland sells the emotions
through her voiceover (Alan Ruscoe plays the Slitheen form). This means that the lengthy dinner sequence,
a last request due to the Slitheen being outlaws on Raxacoricofallapatorius,
has Margaret Blaine desperate to escape.
The scene is directed perfectly by Joe Ahearne, hitting each beat of
danger and resolution perfectly, the Doctor disarming her attempts at
assassination without effort. The way
Badland and Eccleston play off one another is played to perfection. Christopher Eccleston really has the chance
to play the Doctor without companions, allowing the first reflection to see how
the Ninth Doctor has grown over the course of the series. The Doctor holds a single life in his hands
and throughout the episode is grappling with what he’s going to do about
Margaret. The episode’s conclusion actually
finds a compromise, giving Margaret a new chance at life that she almost
doesn’t deserve, she is still self-interested and willing to destroy the world
for personal gain, but the TARDIS reverting her to an egg is a fascinating
ending to the episode, showing that the Doctor is by extension willing to show
some mercy.
Overall, “Boom Town” is perhaps an underrated gem from
the first series of the revival. Wedged
between “The Empty Child”, “The Doctor Dances”, and the two part series finale,
it aired to fairly mixed reviews. While
it’s not an episode without it’s flaws, there are still some comedic moments
that don’t work and Rose’s plot doesn’t feel fully developed instead reading
like needing something to cut away from the Doctor and Margaret interactions,
plus a climax that doesn’t quite come together nicely (the Cardiff earthquake feels
pulled together on a budget), it is an episode that has some of the best
moments for the Ninth Doctor and a redemption for an alien species under a
great director. 7/10.
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