“The Christmas Invasion” stars David Tennant as the
Doctor and Billie Piper as Rose Tyler with Camille Coduri as Jackie Tyler, Noel
Clarke as Mickey Smith, Penelope Wilton as Harriet Jones, and Sean Gilder as
the Sycorax Leader. It was written by: Russell
T. Davies and directed by: James Hawes with Helen Raynor as Script Editor, Phil
Collinson as Producer, and Russell T. Davies and Julie Gardner as Executive
Producers. It was originally broadcast on
Sunday 25 December 2005 on BBC One.
There were several hurdles for executive producers
Russell T. Davies and Julie Gardner after wrapping production on Series 1 of Doctor
Who. First, Mal Young stepped down
as executive producer leaving Davies and Gardner to work along. Then Christopher Eccleston made the firm decision
to leave the role of the Doctor after issues with the production, though this issue
would be solved by Davies and Gardner agreeing to cast David Tennant in the
role of the Doctor after working with him in Casanova. The series had not been renewed past “The
Parting of the Ways” however so there was a chance that Doctor Who did
not continue into the Tenth Doctor’s era.
Luckily a month before the series launched, Jane Tranter informed Davies
and Gardner that the BBC were impressed with what they had seen and some of the
press materials for the series and commissioned two further series to be aired
in 2006 and 2007. With this renewal also
came the final snag for Davies and Gardner, an expansion of the episode count
from 13 episodes to 14 with added Christmas specials to be aired ahead of the
second and third series, meaning a rescheduling of the production
schedule. This altered Davies’ plans for
the series overall by allocating one episode of each Series 2 and 3 to be
written as a Doctor light episode so two episodes could be made at once, for
Series 2 that would be the final episode in production, only written after the
airing of the 2005 Christmas Special.
“The Christmas Invasion” as a story was one that was
also written quickly. Davies had several
ideas for where a potential second series of Doctor Who in development upon
receiving the news of the Christmas special being added to the schedule and knowing
that this would be the first full episode to feature David Tennant as the
Doctor and by necessity the first episode to be filmed, Davies’ script focuses
specifically on exploring the aftermath of the regeneration through the entire
runtime. The decision was made to make
the Tenth Doctor’s first adventure structured like a classic alien invasion
storyline, set at Christmas with Jackie and Mickey as major supporting
characters as the TARDIS crashes at the Powell Estate in the pre-credits
sequence. The invasion itself, while
hinted at early on, doesn’t occur until the halfway point of the episode with
the spaceship of the Sycorax hanging over London and 1/3 of the Earth’s
population poised on the tops of very tall buildings to jump to their
deaths. This as a plot point is incredibly
dark, and while the climax of the episode reveals there is no danger, it’s this
element that really strikes the emotional chord with the viewer. As the Doctor is out of action for much of
the episode, this amount of danger really brings home how Rose is out of her
element despite her best efforts. Davies’
script through the first half of the episode is fascinating as it has Rose
unsure of what to make of the new Doctor.
Written without the addition of “Born Again” as setup, the uncertainty
is perhaps laid on a little too thick, but there are moments where Rose realizes
that while he is different he is still the Doctor. This adds to the ending where the Doctor
makes his actual grand entrance in the episode, waking up after a good cup of
tea to reset his synapses and fighting the Sycorax leader in single combat. David Tennant’s performance when he isn’t
asleep is actually quite good, despite Davies’ script not always having a clear
direction on where the Tenth Doctor is going to go as a character. Some of that is genuinely because in the
episode the Doctor hasn’t had time to really do anything to establish himself
but it also is a sign of the episode’s script being rushed.
The Sycorax as a threat are also interesting, their design
and the makeup work done by Anwen Davies, Steve Smith, and Moira Thomson is
great. Davies gives them a warlike race as
an almost false bravado as the tactics they use to scare planets into selling half
their conquests into slavery are tactics that scientifically don’t work but
play on the fear of what they deem lesser species see when their technology is
employed. This means the first danger
the Tenth Doctor faces is a race of bullies, using intimidation tactics to get
what they want. The actual fight
sequence is perhaps the one place where James Hawes’ direction is let down, edited
with several quick cuts and feeling quite a bit disjointed, only its beginning and
ending, where the Tenth Doctor establishes himself as giving no second chances,
really stand out as finished sequences.
The sequences on the Sycorax ship also feel like a marked shift in tone
as the first half of the episode takes a more campy approach to the idea of an
invasion occurring at Christmas, there are killer robot Santas using brass
instruments of death and a spinning Christmas tree of death which are both so over
the top yet so entertaining, Piper, Noel Clarke, and Camille Coduri selling the
scenes perfectly. The Christmas elements
are perhaps the best utilized of many of the Christmas specials that will come
after “The Christmas Invasion” as there is real character drama throughout with
Penelope Wilton returning as Harriet Jones, now Prime Minister, doing her best
to keep the UK and the world calm. Her
arc ends here, making the terrible decision to shoot down the Sycorax ship as
it is leaving, something the Doctor uses to bring about her downfall. It's a chilling note to resolve the episode
on and the way Wilton sells these final scenes are perfect.
Overall, “The Christmas Invasion” serves as a great reintroduction
to Doctor Who despite being a script written on rather short notice and
as an added episode to an already hectic production schedule. While sidelining the Doctor doesn’t work as
well as it could and the climax becomes a bit too messy, it’s still a great
example of the longevity of the show in selling David Tennant as the Doctor,
the first regeneration to successfully occur without any large production
troubles since 1984’s The Caves of Androzani. “The Christmas Invasion” then becomes a very
important episode for the show’s future as it balances drama, horror, and oddly
camp fun for a very enjoyable experience.
7/10.
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