“Gridlock” stars David Tennant as the Doctor and Freema
Agyeman as Martha Jones with Ardal O’Hanlon as Thomas Kincade Brannigan, Travis
Oliver as Milo, Lenora Crichlow as Cheen, Anna Hope as Novice Hame, and Struan
Rodger as the Face of Boe. It was written
by: Russell T. Davies and directed by: Richard Clark with Simon Winstone as
Script Editor, Phil Collinson as Producer, and Russell T. Davies and Julie
Gardner as Executive Producers. It was
originally broadcast on Saturday 14 April 2007 on BBC One.
The third production block of Doctor Who’s
third series saw Russell T. Davies conclude what would be his New Earth/5,000,000,000
trilogy of episodes that begun with “The End of the World” and continued in “New
Earth”. Davies was particularly interested
in peeling back the final mystery of the Doctor’s fate as the Last of the Time
Lords, that he was in fact not alone in the universe after all. This fact was originally meant to be revealed
at the end of “New Earth” by the Face of Boe, the Doctor being summoned to his
side, however perhaps due to the tumultuous production schedule of the second
series, it was decided to hold it off for a third adventure to feature the Face
of Boe. Once again a time jump of
approximately thirty years into the future allowed Davies to avoid doing a
direct follow-up to “New Earth”, “Gridlock” only going through minor revisions
before it was to be sent into production.
The large revision was shifting the setting of the Motorway, Davies
always intending the claustrophobic setting but originally involving an
underwater Motorway with aquatic monsters, to a standard science fiction undercity
setting, shifting the unformed potentially eel-like monsters to a “evolved” form
of the Macra from The Macra Terror.
The inclusion of the Macra is perhaps the biggest flaw in the episode, mainly
from the perspective of a fan of the classic series as The Macra Terror
is a serial where the Macra are giant intelligent overlord crabs and “Gridlock”
just turns them into a generic monster that destroys the cars. Direction of “Gridlock” and the other episode
of the third production block was given to another newcomer to the series,
Richard Clark, who does an excellent job with the redressed sets and fairly
minimal location work (the New Earth senate briefly shows all the dead bodies),
the redressing of the sets being incredibly effective at giving the very minor
details to very minor characters.
Davies’ script also has moments at the very beginning where
once again Martha Jones is confronted with being the rebound companion, once again
being part of the point of the relationship between the Doctor and Martha, all
while the Doctor should have moved on to at the very least respecting the woman
he is currently traveling with. It’s
unnecessarily cruel and just out of character for the Doctor in general at this
point, reflected especially when his motivation throughout “Gridlock” is
rescuing Martha who has been kidnapped by carjackers, played by Travis Oliver
and Lenora Crichlow, who wish to use her as an excuse to use the carpool lane. The plot of the episode is really an exercise
in worldbuilding as the Doctor has to be the one to unravel why there are Macra
at the bottom of the Motorway and why the Motorway has been cut off from the
rest of New New York. The reveal is
seeded early on with street vendors selling emotions, Bliss mutated into an
addictive virus that wiped out the Overcity.
The runtime is filled nicely with the quirky characters, all having
lived their lives on the Motorway, and slowly realize that nobody is coming, they
are completely cutoff, so when the Motorway is open at the climax of the
episode seeing the sun feels like an actual event. This is all paired with the Doctor actually
speaking of Gallifrey by name for the first time in the revival, Davies’ script
pulling directly from the description in The Sensorites. David Tennant plays the episode perfectly in
these scenes, and the final sequence of saving the day and finding Novice Hame,
played once again by Anna Hope, and the Face of Boe just seeds what the rest of
the series with the message of “you are not alone”. The episode in general is also a little
difficult to discuss since the plot is simple but effective, Davies’ quirks as
a writer allows some very fun character designs, and the occasional very odd
one. It’s the episode that also allows
Martha Jones to be a full time companion and be in the Doctor’s full trust
which is a very nice moment that sadly in future episodes will not drop Martha
Jones as the rebound companion, not making full use of the wonderful Freema
Agyeman.
Overall, “Gridlock” is a solid episode that misuses a
classic monster, something most fans overlook since it’s a rather overlooked
classic monster. The character work,
whenever the Doctor is not pining after Rose and underutilizing Martha, is
wonderful for the Doctor’s character development after the Time War. Richard Clark’s direction is wonderful while
being a budget saver and the atmosphere of the episode just works from start to
finish making this a highlight of early Series 3. 8/10.
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