“Midnight” stars David Tennant as the Doctor and Catherine
Tate as Donna Noble with Lesley Sharp as Sky Silvestry, Rakie Ayola as the
Hostess, David Troughton as Professor Hobbes, Ayesha Antoine as Dee Dee Blasco,
Lindsey Coulson as Val Cane, Daniel Ryan as Biff Cane, and Colin Morgan as
Jeethro Cane. It was written by: Russell
T. Davies and directed by: Alice Troughton 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 Saturday 14
June 2008 on BBC One.
The second and third series of the revived Doctor
Who did an excellent job on using the fourteenth slot to write Doctor light
episodes, even if only one of those episodes were good. It was a great way to produce an extra
episode without extending production time and saving on costs, so much so that
Russell T. Davies devised a plan for the fourth series to include the Doctor
light episode “Turn Left” as the penultimate episode towards the finale, but
earlier in the series the potential for a companion light story. This was initially penciled in as “Century
House” by Tom MacRae, to be directed by Alice Troughton in the seventh
production block. MacRae completed
several drafts of the script and it was intended to air as the eighth episode
of the series after “The Unicorn and the Wasp”, both having settings of old
country houses and MacRae’s script would have been another comedic episode. This would involve completely changing “Century
House” and as MacRae had already written several drafts of the script, the
decision was made amicably with MacRae to drop the episode all together, with
Davies wishing to write the replacement around the idea of survivors of some sort
of accident. This would evolve into “Crossing
Midnight” later amended to “Midnight”, a script written deliberately to be
isolated to three sets, the majority of the episode being filmed on one. It was the first episode since Genesis of
the Daleks to not feature the TARDIS in any capacity, a leisure resort
being used to bookend the episode with Donna relaxing as she would be absent
from the majority of the episode. The
other two sets were the passenger cabin and driver’s cabin of the Crusader 50,
a pleasure excursion to the sapphire waterfalls on the planet of Midnight. Now “Midnight” was not an episode without its
own production issues despite the lack of location footage, everything was
completed in studio for the episode: before filming Sam Kelly, originally cast
to play Professor Hobbes, broke his leg and could not appear, so only days
before production was to begin the role was recast as David Troughton.
“Midnight” is Russell T. Davies’ best episode, not
only of his own ability, but of his entire era.
This is because it is one of those episodes which does something entirely
different, potentially due to the shorter notice of writing the script when “Century
House” was dropped meant that Davies wasn’t entirely thinking about the family
audience for the script. It’s explicitly
a horror story, the Doctor books himself a last minute trip on the Crusader 50
because he wants to see the Sapphire Waterfalls on the planet Midnight, a
planet whose surface and system are uninhabitable to all forms of light. Nothing can live on the surface of Midnight,
but due to natural erosion the original route is blocked and the brief detour
the Crusader 50 makes stops the vessel and briefly opening the shields to see
outside reveals that something, only for the briefest of moments moves on the surface. There is something alive on Midnight, and it
wants inside. It physically rips the crew
cabin from the rest of the vessel, and in the brief moments where our
characters discover this, it gets inside, possessing one of the passengers, Sky
Silvestry played by Lesley Sharp. “Midnight”
at its core works because the audience and characters have no frame of
reference for what this entity could be.
It’s only heard banging on the outside of the ship and once it takes over
Sky, it begins repeating what the other passengers say. It doesn’t have a motive, it doesn’t even
truly have a form. Alice Troughton’s
direction, although having moments where some physical aspect could be shown, goes
for showing the characters who explicitly see something only mention
that they see something, mainly a formless moving shadow. This is also a piece of Doctor Who
lore that luckily hasn’t been expanded in any general form in the expanded
universe, something integral for keeping this episode working in the way that
it does. The lack of knowledge is key,
it keeps the Doctor as scared as the humans he is trapped with.
The episode follows the three-act structure perfectly:
the first 15 minutes introduce our characters as Davies includes this light
montage to give backstories for each and every character, even if these are
drawing from general stock characters.
There’s a family of three, the professor and his assistant, a woman
running away from her lover, and the faithful stewardess. Normal people, reacting normally under
pressure. The second 15 minutes are the
actual breakdown itself, exploring the knocking of the creature outside, the
characters denying the situation even when it becomes impossible to deny that
here is something out there trying to get in.
The final 15 minutes is the creature inhabiting Sky, the tension growing
to the rest of the humans turning on the Doctor, the creature finding a way to
immobilize him and adapt enough to convince most of them except the stewardess,
played by Rakie Ayola, and student assistant Dee Dee Blasco, played by Ayesha
Antoine. The denouement of the episode
is the hostess throwing herself and Sky out of the airlock, ending the episode on
the harrowing note that nobody even knew her name. “Midnight” works so well because David
Tennant’s performance as the Doctor are desperate attempts to get these people to
go against their scared nature and just stay calm and not allow the creature to
learn from them until other people can isolate her with resources to study
it. This is a doomed endeavor, as the
creature is intelligent enough to isolate the Doctor, the repeating sequence
being perfectly played by Lesley Sharp, keying into each beat while Murray Gold
provides this subtle, almost ambient score in places to keep the tension
up. Even the resolution doesn’t really
relieve the tension so you end the episode with all the right questions in your
mind. Davies is playing on humanity at
its worst, the seemingly nice family is ready to throw the creature out before
it even does anything, when the passengers are posed the question of if they
could kill another sentient being there isn’t any hesitation.
People used to use “Blink” as the episode to get people into Doctor Who,
but “Midnight” is an example of what Doctor Who is at its absolute
best. It’s one of the few times the
revival was able to go to incredibly dark places, though all without making the
episode an ‘adult’ episode, it’s one that the adults watching and rewatching
will become more and more disturbed by as they grow, while children will be scared
in general by the atmosphere and performances.
It’s sadly all too human and that’s part of why it’s so scary. 10/10.
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