“Utopia” stars David Tennant as the Doctor, Freema
Agyeman as Martha Jones, and John Barrowman as Captain Jack Harkness with Derek
Jacobi as Professor Yana and Chipo Chung as Chantho. It was written by: Russell T. Davies and
directed by: Graeme Harper 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 16
June 2007 on BBC One.
With the first two finales of the revival of Doctor
Who bringing back the Daleks and the Cybermen as each series’ big bad so to
speak, Russell T. Davies decided that the third series finale really needed to
challenge the notion of the Doctor as the last of the Time Lords, and as such settled
on bringing back the Master for what was intended to be a rare appearance for
the revival of the show. Davies’
ambition for the finale would be to setup the final two episodes in the third episode
from the end, building up to the twist that the Master was alive and meant to
be the big bad. This means that the
third series of Doctor Who has one of very few instances of a three-episode
story arc in the revival, the only others thus far coming in the ninth and
tenth series, though other finales would have less direct lead in episodes that
would stand largely on their own. “Utopia”
was quickly titled and the premise quickly undertaken by Davies and as it is
the first of the three episode finale, it is important for readers to note that
this episode’s score will be factored into the final score of the story which
will occur in the next review. Davies
was keen for the finale to also reconnect the audience with Captain Jack
Harkness, played by John Barrowman, connecting Doctor Who with its
spin-off Torchwood, the finale of which would lead into this
finale. Derek Jacobi was also cast as
Professor Yana and a such “Utopia” was placed in the seventh production block
under Graeme Harper to accommodate Jacobi’s schedule, placing it alongside “42”
in the schedule, but this also led to the other two episodes having their own
distinct production team and director.
“Utopia” has a fantastic and simple premise to setup the
big twist. The TARDIS is flung to the
end of the universe, trillions of years in the future, due to Captain Jack
Harkness jumping onto the police box’s exterior while landed in Cardiff. This desolate setting is harrowing, it’s a
barren planet whose own people are down to their last member in Chantho, played
by Chipo Chung, an added parallel to the Doctor’s own Time Lords, and the emptiness
is felt. One of the episode’s few weaknesses
are the addition of a patented Doctor Who monster in the Futurekind, who
are just humans who growl, scream, and have filed their teeth down by evolution. This is an attempt to add the fear of what humanity
may become, but sadly they are only there to be a basic threat and not really
get any significant exploration. The
danger they pose to the human refugees is superfluous and could easily have
been replaced with technological failings that already inhabit the
episode. The threat they pose to the
Doctor, Martha, and Jack could easily have been replaced with the life support of
the human colony failing as suitable. The
Futurekind not getting focus is all to serve Graeme Harper’s brilliant
direction of shooting the refugees of humanity in this incredibly tragic light,
with these lingering point of view shots representing Martha’s uneasiness and
sadness as to what humanity has generally become, remnants waiting to die. Freema Agyeman’s performance in the scene and
the episode in general is fairly understated, but not overshadowed by Tennant, Barrowman,
and Jacobi who are the main powerhouse performances of the episode, Agyeman
getting to add the real human element to the episode. Martha is also paired with Chantho which
allows some exploration of her species and their general culture, both women being
unrequited lovers of brilliant, older men, something that is going to come to a
head in the finale with some interesting results.
The relationship explored between the Doctor and Jack
is also explored with interesting results in “Utopia”, Jack being effectively
immortal and trying to cope with that reality. This immortality is the unnatural effect of
Rose’s actions in “The Parting of the Ways”, with Jack being forced to live through
the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the Doctor theorizing he is an
unnatural fixed point in time. This idea
is that as a Time Lord the Doctor is now genetically averse to Jack, this weird
form of bigotry being genetically coded, an idea that won’t really come up further
outside of the context of these scenes. David
Tennant and Derek Jacobi also play incredibly well off one another, Professor
Yana being such a fun and engaging character allowing Jacobi to avoid his usual
villainous performance that he is often typecast as. Yana is an inventor who has been tearing his
hair out due to the inability to save the human race and get his rocket off the
ground, while the Doctor immediately addresses the problem and fixes it. Tennant doesn’t play the Doctor as boastful,
reassuring Yana that his brilliance shines through by designing the rocket
controls out of repurposed foodstuffs and whatever material was available on
this barren rock. “Utopia” is an episode
all about reaching an impossible dream so this is incredibly fitting. Derek Jacobi’s performance is also
masterfully developed through the episode, guiding the viewer from the kindly
old professor subtly to the reveal that he is the Master. There are these quick moments of annoyance
early on and this musical motif of drums in his head, something we will explore
in the next two episodes to their detriment, but here it’s just this sinister
theme that plays. Yana’s distraction at
points builds to the initial reveal of a fob watch Chameleon Arch like the one
seen in “Human Nature” and “The Family of Blood”, Jacobi subtly altering the
performance to temptation. As soon as
the watch is opened, Jacobi flips the villain switch on and makes the Master
terrifying. The Master kills Chantho, is
shot in retaliation, and steals the Doctor’s TARDIS which leaves the episode on
a brilliant note. As the Master, Jacobi is
only on-screen for minutes but it is the best Master performance in the entirety
of the revival and becomes the cherry on top of an already great episode. 9/10.
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