“Smith and Jones” stars David Tennant as the Doctor
and Freema Agyeman as Martha Jones with Roy Marsden as Mr. Stoker, Adjoa Andoh
as Francine Jones, Gugu Mbatha-Raw as Tish Jones, Reggie Yates as Leo Jones,
Trevor Laird as Clive Jones, Anne Reid as Florence Finnegan, Paul Kasey as the
Judoon Leader, and Nicholas Briggs as the Judoon Voices. It was written by: Russell T. Davies and
directed by: Charles Palmer 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 31 March 2007 on BBC One.
By the time Doctor Who was renewed for a third
series, Russell T. Davies and Julie Gardner knew that Billie Piper would be
leaving the show at the end of the second series and as such a replacement
companion would have to be introduced.
The decision was made to have the commissioned 2006 Christmas Special
not serve as an introduction to a new companion to allow audiences a gap
between Rose and her replacement, as well as the logistics of not introducing a
new regular months before the third series proper would begin. Once again in preparing the third series,
Davies planned to write six of the fourteen episodes including the Christmas
special, opening episode, the finale, and one episode in between, and in these
initial preparations it is clear that Davies and Gardner had learned from the hectic
productions of the first two series. While
Davies would decide to expand the two-part finale to a three-part finale, there
were no last minute rewrite episodes like “Boom Town” or “Tooth and Claw”, and
once again six other writers would be recruited over the course of the series
with four new contributions and two returning contributions. In designing the new companion, Davies knew
he did not wish to repeat the same character outline as Rose Tyler, going
through several ideas including a schoolgirl and a Victorian maid, the latter
being discouraged by BBC Controller of Drama Commissioning, Jane Trantor. The schoolgirl idea was eventually developed
into Martha Jones, 23 year old medical student, with Davies drafting the Jones
family to include parents and two siblings, although continuing the trend of
dysfunction as Martha’s parents are divorced.
Freema Agyeman was first on the radar of the production
team in 2005 when casting “The Christmas Invasion” where she was under
consideration for the role of Sally, and later cast in “Army of Ghosts” in a
minor role, Phil Collinson already looking for potential actresses for
Martha. She would undergo the audition
process in early 2006 before being cast and formally announced to the public on
July 5, 2006. Russell T. Davies at this
point had made the executive decision to avoid assigning titles to episodes for
the third series until necessary in an attempt to avoid leaks, but considered
opening with “Martha” as an introduction, the title under which it would be
filmed by newcomer to Doctor Who, Charles Palmer, starting the second
production block of the series. This
would be the first of two production blocks under Palmer for the third series while
David Tennant was eager to return for a second series in the role of the
Doctor. Production commenced only a few
weeks after Agyeman had been cast and partway through Davies would change the
title to “Smith and Jones” as a reference to the Doctor’s alias on Earth and
Martha’s surname, a pairing of names he adored and emphasized in editing the
script for “School Reunion”. Despite
changing the title, Davies’ script does draw on the major successes from “Rose”,
mainly focusing on the new companion and their first steps into the Doctor’s
world. Davies’ script and Palmer’s
direction avoids the trappings of following “Rose” directly, there is no zoom
in to the Earth and the explanation of the premise of Doctor Who is
rapid, rightfully assuming people would not need it three series in.
Agyeman sells the episode from her very first scene,
quickly establishing Martha as not only competent, but sure of where her life
is going and only being dissatisfied with the antics her family gets up
to. A background element of the episode
is the drama surrounding Martha’s brother Leo’s, played by Reggie Yates, birthday
party: her mother Francine, played by Adjoa Andoh, is angry at her ex-husband
and his new girlfriend, Clive and Annalise played by Trevor Laird and Kimmi
Richards respectively. Martha and her
sister Tish, played by Gugu Mbathta-Raw, are the only sane ones in the family. Once the episode gets going and the hospital
Martha is training at is transported to the moon, Agyeman really gets to show
off as the only character outside of the Doctor calm enough in the crisis to
realize that there is something more than the transport occurring. She is the one to notice the oxygen isn’t
rushing out of the hospital as the windows are not airtight and that there must
be some force field, this is what attracts the Doctor to her. The Doctor is unable to resist a mind as
sharp as his and that’s what Martha represents.
Agyeman and Tennant also have excellent chemistry throughout as the Doctor
and Martha independently deduce why the Judoon, a band of space rhinoceros
police mercenaries, would be invading this hospital and what the alien they are
looking for could actually be. Davies’
plot is simple and straightforward with the stakes being the approximately
1,000 people in the hospital as air is slowly being used, escalating to half
the Earth once the alien and her escape plan is revealed. There is one moment that sets up much of the
Doctor and Martha’s character arcs through the series as the Doctor kisses
Martha to transfer some of his DNA that the Judoon would be able to check, this
act blossom into unrequited romance on Martha’s part, which is a complete misstep. “The Runaway Bride” essentially establishes
that the Doctor is moving forward from Rose and this establishment, and the way
the Doctor talks about Rose in this episode, is another example of Davies
expanding a character arc for melodrama which is a shame because take these out
and you have a perfect Doctor/companion dynamic with the Doctor and Martha.
“Smith and Jones” is bolstered by the actual alien
plot being one alien Plasmavore, Florence Finnegan played with wonderful camp
by Anne Reid, and her two slag leather androids, sucking the blood and killing Mr.
Stoker, played by Roy Marsden, masquerading her internal biology as human and
bypassing the Judoon’s genetic scans. As
a villain she is one note but Reid plays the character with relish, especially when
the Judoon disintegrate her at the climax of the episode, with a declaration
that the Judoon will “Burn in hell!” in a manner that no special text would adequately
describe the delivery. The Judoon themselves,
voiced by Nicholas Briggs in a very gruff choice, are quite interesting. Some comparison has been made to the
Sontarans, and the similarities are there, especially in their ruthless nature,
but making them a separate species allows Davies to subtly critique the general
police system. Sadly, “Smith and Jones”
is a single episode and has much of its focus elsewhere, but there are hints in
Davies’ script, with the Judoon mercilessly slaughtering a scared human with no
remorse and the system’s backing, giving out compensation to Martha for their
gruff treatment, and leaving once killing the Plasmavore with no real regard to
the humans being left behind. It’s
certainly not a takedown of the oppressive nature of policing (and being
written from a British perspective in 2007 it would not accurately reflect the
current day state of the police), but Davies clearly understands at the very
least the abuse that has become a fact of life for being policed. It’s a small commentary, but a commentary,
nevertheless. And of course, the episode
ends on Martha having her bigger on the inside moment and joining the Doctor,
though being only promised one trip adds a more subtle reflection on the loss of
Rose than his rather annoying declaration that she is not being replaced.
Overall, “Smith and Jones” starts the third series of Doctor
Who just as strong as “Rose” started off the first series, most definitely
free from the limp start of the second in “New Earth”. David Tennant and Freema Agyeman shine as the
Doctor and Martha Jones while the episode is not hampered by attempting to reexplain
the premise of the show to any newcomers this series. The chemistry is there and Russell T. Davies clearly
has had a less stressful series this time around with only the remembrances of
Rose and some of the commentary there not being explored, the former due to
Davies’ attachment to Rose and the latter due to the 45-minute runtime, holding
it back from being the perfect series opener.
8/10.
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