“The Waters of Mars” stars David Tennant as the Doctor
and Lindsay Duncan as Adelade Brooke with Peter O’Brien as Ed Gold, Aleksander
Mikic as Yuri Kerenski, Gemma Chan as Mia Bennet, Sharon Duncan Brewstetr as
Maggie Cain, Chook Sibtain as Tarak Ital, and Alan Ruscoe as Andy Stone. It was written by: Russell T. Davies & Phil
Ford and directed by: Graeme Harper with Gary Russell as Script Editor, Nikki
Wilson as Producer, and Russell T. Davies and Julie Gardner as Executive
Producers. It was originally broadcast on
Sunday 15 November 2009 on BBC One.
Content Warning: This review will contain a discussion
of suicide as it pertains to the episode and characters in Doctor Who “The
Waters of Mars”. Reader discretion is advised.
“The Waters of Mars” is an episode that wasn’t
initially on the schedule for the 2009 specials to say goodbye to Russell T.
Davies, Julie Gardner, and David Tennant.
While the plan was to write a series of specials to be broadcast through
the year, the exact number of episodes that would be part of the special series,
initially believing to be four: “The Next Doctor” which was in production, an
Easter special which would become “Planet of the Dead”, and two further specials
that would become The End of Time.
Another would be added to the schedule to air between “Planet of the
Dead” and The End of Time, bringing the episode count up from five to
six, split across five stories. Davies
was determined to get Phil Ford into the main show before he left the series
after his work on The Sarah Jane Adventures, initially suggesting “The
Midwinter’s Tale” set in a hotel on Mars which evolved into “Christmas on Mars”
or “Red Christmas” before finally focusing in on “The Waters of Mars” for a November
airing, before the holiday season could properly begin. As with “Planet of the Dead”, Russell T.
Davies worked closely with Ford on developing the script in co-written format,
but unlike the former the general idea was actually Ford’s and not Davies’. Davies contributed particularly the character
that would become Adelaide Brooke, designing her as a role for Helen Mirren or
Dame Judi Dench, and the ending of the episode with Ood Sigma appearing as lead-in
to The End of Time. Both agreed
on creating a multinational cast though Davies was also responsible for adding
a robot and the explicit nature of the fixed point in time surrounding Bowie
Base One.
Due to a budgeting issue, “The Waters of Mars” also
had less funds to facilitate the switch to high definition in “Planet of the
Dead”, limiting some of the effects director Graeme Harper could use, something
that works to the episode’s advantage.
Harper has always been one of the best Doctor Who directors, and television
directors in general and this has some of his best work. While it was always scripted as a base under
siege story, being limited with how many sequences could be outside of the base
and the monsters themselves being limited to human actors with minimal effects
is a limitation that just adds to the horror.
The manifestation of the Flood as the script denotes the creatures that take
over the members of Bowie Base One are truly terrifying simply because of the
sheer amount of water yet how dry the faces become adds this uncanny valley that
feels wrong in the absolute best way.
The idea of the water being patient, waiting until the final possible
moments to break into the base once the characters seal themselves in add to
the tension, the audience knows how history will remember this base and how it
must end, something the episode does deliver on while subverting expectations
in the best way possible. This entire
episode is one where the patience and resolve in a crisis ends up being the
downfall, the characters make all the right decisions but it’s still not enough. “The Waters of Mars” is one of the few
episodes of the revival of Doctor Who that is entirely from the Doctor’s
perspective. Even though the rest of the
specials with one-off companions, those companions stayed the focus, but here
it’s all on the Doctor, arriving on the base and almost immediately learning
exactly what is about to happen to these people, something that he is powerless
to stop. Ford and Davies directly
parallel “The Fires of Pompeii” with the Doctor knowing that morally he should
be saving these people, yet because of history he can’t, and this leads to the
point where he snaps, doing it anyway in an incredibly harsh decision to be a Time
Lord Victorious (though the fact that this becomes a thing for a multimedia event
treating it like a prophecy when it isn’t is weird in retrospect).
David Tennant gives one of his absolute best
performances in this episode, his facial acting in particular through the first
half of the episode showing this great sorrow and resistance to actually leave
because why would he? Initially the idea
is that even if he cannot save these people, he has to know what happened. As soon as he arrives the first member of the
crew is infected, the second is infected and found unconscious before being
quarantined, and the bodies start to pile up as the water begins to mobilize. Tennant spends the last ten to fifteen
minutes of the episode having a third act breakdown, screaming and making the
decision to play God and interfere, one of the few times where the deification
of the Doctor in the revival is explicitly shown to be wrong. Tennant’s anger and sorrow is amazing and
placing him against noted character actor Lindsay Duncan just exemplifies this. The Doctor resists until he is forced to
share with Adelaide her fate and what it means for the universe, giving this episode
the lens of asking what it means to be a part of history and how does one
define the big lives when compared to the small ones. This is the woman the Doctor not twenty
minutes earlier was running and enjoying the company of throughout. Duncan in return gives one of the best
performances in Doctor Who’s history, a performance that remains near to
the top position. This was the first
thing I had seen Duncan in and based on this performance alone tells me the
caliber of actress she is. It was
already on the way, but her final silent moments are perfect and some of the
darkest Doctor Who has done. To
prove the Doctor wrong, Adelaide Brooke enters her home and immediately commits
suicide so history can remain on track, one final death to inspire the future. It ends the episode with this horrific
feeling and realization that the Doctor has genuinely gone too far and needs to
regenerate. In fact, if the Tenth Doctor’s
era had ended here and The End of Time didn’t exist we would have one of
the best regeneration stories in the series’ history.
Overall, “The Waters of Mars” is oddly an episode people
sometimes overlook due to being the episode right before the massive two-part
finale. It’s an episode in the midst of
specials that go for spectacle and fanservice over substance, but it also
proves that even in its final moments Russell T. Davies’ era of Doctor Who
knows how to pull out all the stops for one last perfect ride before things can
end. It deserves to be discussed as one
of the Tenth Doctor’s best moments despite the character being at his lowest, something
that would have been the perfect end to the character and the era instead of
what happened in the final two specials.
“The Waters of Mars” is perfect.
10/10.
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