“Army of Ghosts” and “Doomsday” stars David Tennant as
the Doctor and Billie Piper as Rose Tyler with Camille Coduri as Jackie Tyler,
Noel Clarke as Mickey Smith, Shaun Dingwall as Pete Tyler, Andrew Hayden-Smith
as Jake Simmonds, Tracy-Ann Oberman as Yvonne Hartman, Raji James as Dr. Singh,
and Paul Kasey as the Cyber Leader.
Dalek Operators were Barnaby Edwards, Nicholas Pegg, Stuart Crossman,
Anthony Spargo, Dan Barrett, and David Hankinson while Dalek and Cybermen
Voices were Nicholas Briggs. They were written
by: Russell T. Davies and directed by: Graeme Harper with Helen Raynor as
Script Editor, Phil Collinson as Producer, and Russell T. Davies and Julie
Gardner as Executive Producers. They
were originally broadcast on Saturdays from 1 to 8 July 2006 on BBC One.
Billie Piper’s decision to leave Doctor Who after
the second series was never in doubt, “Rise of the Cybermen” and “The Age of
Steel” being pitched to plant Rose’s departure as a possibility as Russell T.
Davies realized that tearing apart a relationship that had developed romantically
would have to end with universal separation or the death of Rose Tyler. Davies chose the former because he believed
the latter would be against the core of Doctor Who, and it is this
decision with which contains the root of many of the issues with “Army of
Ghosts” and “Doomsday”, but more on that as this review progresses. Davies was also inspired by the original proposal
for the 1968 serial The Wheel in Space which would have seen the Daleks
and Cybermen fighting one another though this was changed early in scripting
that serial as Terry Nation would not allow the use of the Daleks in this way, something
which in proposing this finale, Nation’s estate changed their tune on. Early in planning this second series also came
the idea to use the dummy title Torchwood as this series story arc, originally
drafting the finale as “Torchwood Rises” and “Torchwood Falls”, however quickly
the titles would revert to what they aired under. What would change in the plans, however,
would be the commissioning of a Doctor Who spin-off series in late 2005
for broadcast in the final months of 2006, approximately three months after the
second series of Doctor Who wrapped up broadcast. This shifted the setting of “Army of Ghosts”
and “Doomsday” from Wales to the middle of London’s Canary Wharf to accommodate
plans for the spin-off to be set in Cardiff.
“Army of Ghosts”, on the whole, is actually a pretty
good setup. Its largest structural issue
is the pre-credits sequence, voiceover from Billie Piper as Rose Tyler recapping
both series thus far and how meeting the Doctor changed her life and establishing
this story being the story of how she died.
The issue comes at the climax of “Doomsday” where Rose doesn’t die and
is saved at the last moment by being taken to the parallel world from “Rise of
the Cybermen” and “The Age of Steel” where she gets to live out the rest of her
life in luxury with that world’s version of her father, plus Jackie and Mickey. The information communicated outside of this
in the pre-credits sequence, mainly foreshadowing that this is going to be Rose’s
exit, is also incredibly superfluous as there are several points throughout
that subtly foreshadow the fact that Rose will be leaving at the end of the adventure. All the pre-credits sequence adds is the subtlety
of these moments being completely undone and the shocking twist that Rose doesn’t
die, but that also means that the monologue feels as if Rose is being over dramatic. What especially hurts is that the first sequence
after the credits in the episode actually has the pacing and would work
incredibly well as a pre-credits sequence, cutting to the credits once the ghosts
appear. This would create the necessary intrigue
many pre-credits sequences have used and given Camille Coduri the chance to
really sell the grief better than the melodramatic pre-credits sequence undercutting
a lot of the examination of grief that the ghosts present. The ghosts, in actuality Cybermen slowly building
power enough to break through and invade the main universe’s Earth, provide an
interesting look at the concept of a slow invasion, taking months to build psychic
connections with humanity to slowly make them believe though without saying a
word, these are their loved ones come back to visit them. It’s kind of a shame that the episode
abandons them once the TARDIS with the Doctor, Rose, and Jackie on board gets
to the Torchwood Institute.
The exploration of the Torchwood Institute, led by
Yvonne Hartman played by Tracy-Ann Oberman, is equally interesting and fun as
the ghost plot had the potential to be.
David Tennant plays these scenes as especially lighthearted as the
Doctor, using that leverage to throw this group of essentially fans of his
off-guard and to trust him. Davies’
script does an excellent job of making Torchwood feel like an institution that has
no genuine idea about how to use and catalogue the alien technology and interactions
at their disposal, once again being a condemnation of the government institutions
and conservatism in general meddling with things for profit without thinking of
the consequences. The episode builds tension
as Torchwood has a sphere from the Void, a ship that is meant to traverse it,
that because of its lengthy exposure to the space between dimensions is lacking
in physical form despite being visible. It’s
described as something that looks wrong when you look at it and Graeme Harper
shoots the sphere incredibly well, always looking at it from low angles so it
looks slightly off kilter to simulate this to the audience. It is largely realized through CGI, and when the
episode gets to the final twist that there are four Daleks inside this ends the
episode on a high note (although the initial shots of the Daleks using CGI are
quite poorly realized which is rectified in the final shots of the episode where
the physical props are used). “Army of
Ghosts” is genuinely good setup but it doesn’t actually have enough focus on
one idea, several plot lines attempting to be the main point of the episode before
being dropped for the big cliffhanger which sets up the Doctor, Rose, Jackie,
and Mickey (who made it over from the parallel universe) stopping a Dalek vs
Cyberman conflict. 5/10.
“Doomsday” is the clear weaker half of the story, but
it is not without its high points. The
actual conflict between the Daleks and the Cybermen themselves had the potential
to create one very good episode and Davies’ script when it comes to writing these
conflicting ideologies, both being conformists but Daleks being supremacists
who wish to destroy while Cybermen wish to convert, it’s great. Sure, it’s become a bit of a meme in Doctor
Who circles, but the humor in the interactions is actually intentional,
Davies understanding that the simple fact of four Daleks is a very dangerous
threat and has been setup that way over the past two series of television. The episode takes its time before the Cybermen
and Daleks meet which allows for both fascinating exposition about these four
Daleks as the Cult of Skaro, four Daleks set apart and allowed creativity to be
the four most ruthless Daleks in existence, and to continue to use Dalek’s
destruction in interesting ways. The doctor
in charge of the sphere has his knowledge absorbed by the Daleks through their suckers
which is a horrific scene in general and once again a reminder of the danger of
the Daleks. The Cybermen also get plenty
of body horror, scenes showing the invasion of homes and the beginning of rounding
humanity together for conversion. The
episode devolves into action that is shot really well and played nicely, until the
Cult of Skaro’s plan is revealed, mainly by having millions of Daleks emerge
from a Genesis Ark, a great idea of a Time Lord prison ship that is bigger on
the inside and can be opened by a time traveler. This is yet another really interesting idea
that sadly doesn’t have any time to really develop as a concept before
devolving poorly into millions of Daleks threatening the Earth. Yes, the Earth’s destruction is the larger
stakes of the finale and begins a trend of Russell T. Davies finales escalating
the stakes until they are unreasonable, though that is a discussion for another
day as present day Earth as the stakes for the second series finale actually
seems reasonable.
The episode devolving into action means that there is
less time for Davies to follow through on the interesting character arcs he
sets up, Yvonne being swiftly converted though saving our heroes as a Cybermen that
cries oil from its blank eye socket, though what really would have worked here
in its place would actually seeing a human eye and not a tear of motor oil. Davies sets up this idea of Pete, played by
Shaun Dingwall, and Jackie coming to love each other, the final scenes
following up with Rose in Pete’s World revealing Jackie is pregnant with a second
child, but these are just hints. The action
gets in the way as it becomes mindless once the Genesis Ark is opened and
millions of Daleks emerge and do really nothing of note. They just become a threat. Had Davies stuck to the four Cult of Skaro
members and kept the Genesis Ark closed, it would have worked much better and
gone further to keep the threat level up.
Mickey and Jake are there to help and they honestly become minor
characters as the episode builds to the point where everyone except the Doctor
and Rose are in the regular world getting ready to send the Daleks and Cybermen
into the Void which would be a death due to crossing the Void leaving particles
attracted to it.
The Doctor’s attempts to send Rose to Pete’s World
with her family is a great moment, probably David Tennant’s best in the episode
as it clearly understands that Rose should not be separated from everyone she
loves and is loved by, and Rose coming back is actually a great setup for her
fall. But then she is rescued at the
last minute and we spend the final ten minutes or so of the episode resolving
the fact that the Doctor and Rose are in different universes. This is another of Davies’ issues with
wrapping up finales with incredibly drawn out sequences of melodrama that doesn’t
work. The Doctor breaking through to
give Rose one final message, built up first by more voiceover from Billie
Piper, is interesting in theory but it takes far too long to actually get going
and conclude. It also means that the
resolution of the episode and how well it will resonate with the viewer will be
down to how well you resonate with the relationship between the Doctor and
Rose. I do not so the metaphoric being
on opposite sides of the same wall and the entire Bad Wolf Bay sequence is
something that just leaves me hollow.
Piper and Tennant are turning in good performances and if perhaps this was
the last we would see of Rose it might resonate slightly better with me. That or if it were just trimmed down and didn’t
follow on from the first half opening with the Rose monologue about how she was
going to die, and she’s not in any meaningful sense (her name is among the dead
on paper so it’s technically true, but it doesn’t feel true). Or even perhaps if Murray Gold’s score,
thematically beautiful, was mixed better into the episode as throughout the climax
and resolution it is blaring far too lout and screaming for the viewer to feel
sad for it which is a shame. “Doomsday” is
just a letdown. 3/10.
Overall, “Army of Ghosts” and “Doomsday” are a series
finale for Doctor Who which fail to live up to a lot of the potential
that the episodes set up. This is one of
the few times where Russell T. Davies stuffs a two-part story with way too many
ideas so there is a fight for whatever finds its way on top. The performances and direction are great but
because of Davies not wishing to kill off a companion in a meaningful or even metaphorical
way and just being overstuffed it brings a quite weak series to a weak
end. 4/10.
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