The Day Of The Doctor Full Episode Download
240 – "The Day of the Doctor" | |||
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Physician Who episode | |||
Cast | |||
Doctors
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Companion
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Others
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Production | |||
Directed past | Nick Hurran | ||
Written by | Steven Moffat | ||
Script editor | Richard Cookson | ||
Produced by | Marcus Wilson | ||
Executive producer(s) |
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Incidental music composer | Murray Gold | ||
Series | Specials (2013) | ||
Running time | 77 minutes[one] | ||
Start circulate | 23 November 2013 (2013-11-23) | ||
Chronology | |||
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"The Day of the Doctor" is a special episode of the British science fiction television programme Physician Who, marking the programme's 50th anniversary.[2] [3] [4] It was written by Steven Moffat,[5] an executive producer alongside Faith Penhale.[6] It was shown on BBC 1 on 23 November 2013, in both 2nd and 3D.[7] [8] The special was broadcast simultaneously in 94 countries,[eight] [9] and was shown concurrently in 3D in some cinemas.[10] Information technology achieved the Guinness Globe Record for the largest ever simulcast of a TV drama[9] and won the Radio Times Audience Award at the 2014 British Academy Television Awards.[11]
The 77-infinitesimal episode shows the last day of the Time War, in which the War Medico (John Hurt) chooses to kill both Daleks and his own race of Fourth dimension Lords to terminate the destructive disharmonize, paralleling this with a present-day selection by paramilitary organisation Unit of measurement to destroy London rather than permit an alien invasion. Revising the dorsum story, the Doc succumbs to Clara Oswald's plea to change his listen; and instead he freezes his war-torn dwelling planet in a single moment in time and hides it in a pocket universe, rather than destroy it. Unfortunately the fourth dimension distortions incurred causes all only his latest incarnation to have no retentiveness of his changed conclusion.
The episode starred Matt Smith as the Eleventh Doctor and Jenna Coleman as his companion, Clara Oswald. Previous lead actors David Tennant and Billie Piper returned for the episode, Tennant reprising his role as the 10th Doctor, while Piper portrayed a sentient doomsday weapon called the Moment, projected as an image based on her graphic symbol Rose Tyler. She is invisible and inaudible to everyone simply the War Doctor (John Hurt). Other appearances included a very cursory glimpse of the then-upcoming Twelfth Doctor (Peter Capaldi), and a invitee appearance by Quaternary Doc actor Tom Baker, in his belatedly 70s. Rounding out the invitee cast were Joanna Page equally Queen Elizabeth I[12] and Jemma Redgrave as Kate Stewart, the daughter of 1970s primal figure Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart.[13] The special also featured the return of the Daleks[14] and the Zygons, shape-shifting aliens who had previously appeared merely in Terror of the Zygons (1975).[15]
Every bit the episode celebrates l years of the program, it references and alludes to diverse concepts featured throughout the show'south run. It received critical acclaim and has been described by series producer Marcus Wilson as a "love letter to the fans" and by the controller of BBC Ane, Danny Cohen, every bit an "event drama".[5] [sixteen]
Mini-episodes [edit]
Two mini-episodes written by Steven Moffat, "The Nighttime of the Dr." (14 November 2013) and "The Concluding Day" (21 Nov 2013), were released shortly prior to "The Day of the Doctor", depicting in-series events occurring during the Time War between the Physician's ain race of Time Lords and his nemesis, the Daleks.
"The Nighttime of the Doctor" depicts the Eighth Doctor's regeneration into the State of war Doctor. After being resurrected temporarily past the Sisterhood of Karn in the backwash of a spaceship crash, the Doctor is persuaded by the sisters to have action to end the Time War, offer him a option of potions to control his regeneration.
"The Last Day" is filmed from the first-person perspective of a soldier who has had a camera implanted in his caput when the Gallifrey city of Arcadia falls to the Daleks. The "Fall of Arcadia" becomes the fundamental battle of the Time War effectually which "The Mean solar day of the Doctor" is centred.
Plot [edit]
In the midst of the Time State of war between the Fourth dimension Lords and the Daleks, the War Doc — an incarnation of the Physician about 400 years younger than the Eleventh Medico — decides to trigger an aboriginal and sentient weapon called the Moment to destroy both sides. The Moment's humanoid interface, resembling Rose Tyler, shows what the War Doctor'south time to come would be after the Time Lords are destroyed but the Doctor survives. The Moment opens a fissure linking the War Dr. to the Tenth and Eleventh Doctors in 1562 England. In 1562, the Zygons enter 3-dimensional paintings made with the Time Lords' stasis cubes, and go into suspended blitheness to emerge in the present. After breaking out of the paintings in the National Gallery in the present, the Zygons take the forms of members of the military organisation Unit so that they can utilise weapons and engineering kept by Unit of measurement in the Tower of London.
Unit head Kate Stewart starts a countdown for a nuclear warhead beneath the Belfry that will destroy the advanced technology along with London. The Doctors, unable to land a TARDIS in the Tower, utilize the stasis cube applied science to enter a painting. They exit the painting in the Tower in the nowadays and utilize Unit of measurement'southward mind-wiping equipment to render the UNIT members and Zygons temporarily unaware which of them are which. The countdown is stopped and all present negotiate a peace treaty.
The War Doctor, convinced that detonating the Moment volition salve many more than lives in the longer term, is returned to his time. The other two Doctors follow him with the intention of helping him detonate the Moment. When Clara insists they do not destroy their people, the Doctors devise an culling solution. The Doctors, aided by 10 of their other incarnations, programme to use the stasis engineering to freeze Gallifrey in a pocket universe. When Gallifrey disappears, the surrounding Dalek warships would obliterate themselves in the inevitable crossfire.
"I have a new destination. My journey is the same as yours, the same as anyone'southward. Information technology's taken me so many years, so many lifetimes, but at terminal I know where I'm going. Where I've always been going. Home, the long manner round."
–The Eleventh Md
Afterward Gallifrey disappears, the Doctors and Clara render to the Gallery, unsure whether the plan worked. The State of war and 10th Doctors realise they will not remember what happened; they volition continue shouldering the guilt. The War Doctor begins to regenerate afterward leaving. Hinting that the programme worked, the gallery's curator, who resembles the Doc's fourth incarnation reveals to the Eleventh Md that one of the three-dimensional paintings is called Gallifrey Falls No More than. The Eleventh Medico vows to find Gallifrey.
Continuity [edit]
As the show'due south 50th anniversary special, the episode contains a multitude of references to previous episodes. It opens with the championship sequence and theme system used at the series' debut in 1963. Echoing the opening of "An Unearthly Child", the first episode of the first Physician Who serial, a policeman is shown walking past the sign for I.M. Foreman, the scrap merchant in whose yard the TARDIS was located, and its offset few seconds are in monochrome (as had been the case in The Two Doctors (1985), the concluding time more than one Medico had featured in an official story). Coal Hill School, which the Doc's granddaughter Susan Foreman attended when they were on Earth in 1963 in the very first story, also featured in the 1988 serial Remembrance of the Daleks. According to the school sign, the chairman of the school governors is now Ian Chesterton, i of the Commencement Doctor's original three companions and a science teacher at the school, and the headmaster is W. Coburn, a reference to Waris Hussein and Anthony Coburn, who respectively directed and wrote An Unearthly Kid.[17] Clara rides out of Coal Hill School on the Eleventh Doctor's anti-gravity motorbike from "The Bells of Saint John" at 5:16, the fourth dimension An Unearthly Child originally aired on BBC Television set (the first broadcast began one minute xx seconds afterward its scheduled time of 17:15 GMT on 23 Nov 1963).[eighteen] [19]
When the TARDIS is picked up past Unit of measurement, the telephone call sign used by the helicopter to refer to Unit of measurement is "Greyhound leader", reflecting that of Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart,[20] whose daughter Kate is now portrayed every bit having his role as commander of Unit of measurement. Lethbridge-Stewart was a primal character in the Third Doctor'southward era and also several of his successors', originally appearing in the Second Medico serial The Web of Fear (1968) and making his last advent in Doctor Who in 7th Doctor serial Battlefield (1989), which is also referenced. An image of the Brigadier is seen alongside images of various companions of the Doctor. The UNIT dating controversy, regarding whether the 3rd Doc era stories took place in the 1970s or 1980s, is alluded to in dialogue by Kate Stewart, when she mentions that events occurred in "the '70s or '80s depending on the dating protocol used".[xx]
The Tenth Doctor's era is also heavily revisited. His marriage to Queen Elizabeth I, mentioned in "The Shakespeare Lawmaking" and "The End of Time", is finally depicted.[21] The Tenth Doc mentioned the Fall of Arcadia in "Doomsday" (2006). When the Eleventh Md tells Clara that the situation is "timey-wimey stuff," and the State of war Doctor ridicules him for it, the Tenth Md remarks, "I have no idea where he picks that stuff up"; the Tenth originally used the phrase in "Blink" (2007).[21] When he leaves afterwards learning of Trenzalore, the Tenth Doctor remarks, "I don't want to go…", his incarnation's terminal words from "The End of Time"; the Eleventh Doctor tells Clara that "he always says that" later his TARDIS leaves.[17] The Moment device was originally mentioned in "The Terminate of Fourth dimension",[22] only had not been explored in depth until at present, where it takes the grade of "Bad Wolf", a seemingly omnipotent being and personalisation of the Time Vortex itself, which manifested in Rose Tyler when she absorbed the Time Vortex in the first series finale, "The Departing of the Ways" (2005).[17] During the negotiations with the Zygons Kate mentions the Sycorax from "The Christmas Invasion" (2005).
The Belfry of London'southward Blackness Annal, containing alien artefacts collected by Unit of measurement, has photographs of the Md'south many companions. Additionally, River Vocal's high heels from "The Time of Angels"/"Mankind and Rock" (2010), the mass canceler from 2nd series finale "Doomsday",[23] a Supreme Dalek head from fourth series finale, "The Stolen World"/"Journey'southward Finish" (2008), a Dalek tommy gun from "Daleks in Manhattan"/"Development of the Daleks" (2007), the restraining chair which held both the Master and the Physician in "The End of Time", and a Cyberman caput are contained within the Annal. The vortex manipulator in the Annal was donated to Unit past Helm Jack Harkness, a companion of the Ninth Doctor who was reunited with the Tenth Doctor on multiple occasions. The Black Archive was also seen in The Sarah Jane Adventures story Enemy of the Bane (2008).[ citation needed ]
Other references are made to previous multi-Doctor anniversary stories, The Three Doctors (1973) and The Five Doctors (1983).[xx] The Eleventh Dr.'s dismissal of the Tenth Doctor and War Doctor as "Sandshoes and Grandad" to mock their respective footwear and age echo the First Dr.'s clarification of his two successors in The Three Doctors equally "a corking and a clown".[20] (The War Physician's initial incredulous reaction upon seeing his time to come selves also reflects this moment.) Besides, a Time Lord says, "I didn't know when I was well-off. All twelve of them." which recalls the Brigadier's line from The Three Doctors: "Three of them, eh? I didn't know when I was well off."[24] More of the Brigadier's dialogue from the latter series is alluded to when Kate asks for an incident written report code-named "Cromer";[25] in the earlier story, upon existence transported to some other universe, the Brigadier initially believes himself to be most the coastal Norfolk town. A line from the First Physician from The Five Doctors is likewise reused almost the end as the Tenth Physician tells the Eleventh, "It'south good to know my hereafter is in rubber hands" (which the Outset told the Fifth in the earlier story).[26] When the War Doctor appears, Clara remarks, "I recollect there's three of them," to which Kate responds, "There'southward a precedent for that," in reference to The 3 Doctors.[xx]
Lines from past serials reappear in the special. The Eleventh Medico resurrects the phrase "reversing the polarity" associated with the Third Doctor, to comical effect. In trying to recoup for the presence of three Doctors who utilise different panel rooms, the Tenth Doctor's TARDIS panel briefly changes to the State of war Medico's console room, seen once again afterward in the episode, before settling on the Eleventh's.[26] The Tenth Physician comments upon the Eleventh Md's TARDIS console, "Oh you've redecorated! I don't like it", a line originally used past the Second Doctor speaking to the Third in The Three Doctors and afterward reused by the 2d and Eleventh Doctors respectively in The Five Doctors and "Endmost Time" (2011).[17] One of the War Doctor's final lines of dialogue prior to regenerating is "....wearing a bit sparse", echoing some of the First Doctor's final words prior to regenerating at the end of The Tenth Planet (1966), "this quondam torso of mine is wearing a chip thin".[17]
The Moment'southward description of the TARDIS's audio as a "wheezing, groaning sound" is a reference to its frequent description in the Target novelisations.[27] [ failed verification ]
Cast [edit]
The Doc [edit]
- Matt Smith as the Eleventh Doctor.
- David Tennant every bit the Tenth Doctor. Archival footage notwithstanding, Tennant had non appeared in Doctor Who since his last regular appearance in "The Finish of Fourth dimension" (2009–ten).
- John Injure as the State of war Doctor, the Doctor'southward forgotten warrior-like incarnation. Within the series' narrative, the War Doctor existed betwixt the 8th and Ninth Doctors, and renounced the title of "The Physician".
- Christopher Eccleston, Paul McGann, Sylvester McCoy, Colin Bakery, Peter Davison, Tom Bakery, Jon Pertwee, Patrick Troughton and William Hartnell as the 9th, 8th, Seventh, 6th, Fifth, Quaternary, Tertiary, 2nd and Outset Doctors respectively. Archive footage of all the actors was used. Collectively credited as "The Md".
- John Guilor provided some voice-over work for the Commencement Medico, imitating William Hartnell'due south vox.[28]
- Peter Capaldi as the Twelfth Doctor is seen in a fleeting and uncredited appearance (optics and forehead only); he took over the lead function from Smith in the 2013 Christmas special, "The Time of the Doctor".[29] [30]
- Tom Baker also makes an uncredited appearance as the Curator, a mysterious graphic symbol who informs the Eleventh Doc of Gallifrey's survival at the end of the episode. His resemblance to the Fourth Doctor is alluded to, but left unexplained.[29] [30]
Other cast members [edit]
- Jenna Coleman as companion Clara Oswald. The special was the showtime time the actress was credited on the show simply as Jenna Coleman, dropping the Louise office of her name seen in previous episodes.[31]
- Billie Piper equally Rose Tyler,[32] whose likeness is used as the interface of The Moment, a sentient Gallifreyan weapon of mass destruction.[12]
- Jemma Redgrave as the Brigadier'due south daughter Kate Stewart, who previously appeared in "The Power of Three", having been originated by actress Beverley Cressman in the direct-to-video spin-offs, Downtime and Dæmos Rise.[13] Redgrave also portrays the Zygon impersonating Stewart.
- Joanna Page as Queen Elizabeth I and her Zygon duplicate.[33] [34] [35] Folio is the tertiary actress to portray Elizabeth I on Doctor Who, following Vivienne Bennet (The Chase) and Angela Pleasence ("The Shakespeare Code").
- Ingrid Oliver every bit Osgood and her Zygon indistinguishable.[36] Throughout the special, Osgood is seen wearing a re-create of the Fourth Doctor'south iconic scarf.[37]
- Peter de Jersey as Androgar, a Time Lord.[38]
- Ken Basic as the General of Gallifrey.[39]
- Jonjo O'Neill as McGilliop.
- Aidan Cook and Paul Kasey equally the Zygons.
- Nicholas Briggs equally the vocalism of the Daleks and the Zygons.
- Barnaby Edwards and Nicholas Pegg as Daleks.
Production [edit]
Casting [edit]
On thirty March 2013, a distribution error occurred, and many subscribers to Physician Who Magazine received the issue five days before the official release date.[12] The result of the magazine included the official announcement that David Tennant and Billie Piper, who previously played the Tenth Doctor and Rose Tyler in Doctor Who respectively, were lined up to appear in the special, forth with player John Injure.[12] Moffat did non want to bring Rose the character back because he felt her story was wrapped up and did not feel comfy adding to his predecessor Russell T Davies' arc. Yet, he liked the concept of bringing back her Bad Wolf persona and felt that Piper needed to exist in the special as she symbolised the rebirth of Md Who.[32]
John Injure did not actually audience for the part, but had been asked by the product squad and "said yes with remarkable speed".[xl] His costume was meant to signify that he was "rougher, tougher", and had been around for a while; the audience had missed a lot. Injure'due south request to keep his beard adds to this upshot.[40]
Christopher Eccleston discussed plans for the ceremony episode with Moffat, but eventually declined to return as the Ninth Doc.[41] Eccleston would later on state that he declined due to a combination of not doing "justice to the Ninth Dr.", likewise every bit still being hurt by BBC's actions during his tenure.[42]
Writing [edit]
"The Solar day of the Doctor" was written by Steven Moffat,[5] the then head writer of Medico Who, and produced by Marcus Wilson with Nick Hurran directing.[44] Moffat was developing ideas for the 50th anniversary episode as early as belatedly 2011, when he stated that the squad "knew what [they] want[ed] to do" and were "revving up" for the episode in an interview discussing his piece of work on the 2011 film The Adventures of Tintin,[45] and began writing the script for "The Mean solar day of the Doctor" in late 2012, announcing that, every bit a security precaution, he had not produced any copies, instead keeping it on his computer "under lock and key" until it was needed.[46] Moffat stated prior to the episode's release, "Most things that have been said near the 50th are not truthful... Normally I am responsible for the disinformation and the rubbish rumors—I ordinarily put them out myself, just I haven't needed to for this ane."[47] On the importance of the episode, Moffat has stated that it volition "alter the narrative" of Doc Who.[43]
Moffat stated in an interview with Medico Who Magazine that he initially began the story procedure with the idea that it would be the Ninth Doctor, played by Christopher Eccleston, that would have been the incarnation that ended the Fourth dimension War, in spite of misgivings in his ain mind regarding information technology:
Yes, but do you know, I was ever nervous of that one, considering it doesn't fit with "Rose" at all. He is a brand new Physician in "Rose", he'due south absolutely, definitely new. Information technology couldn't have been is [sic] who pushed the button in the Time State of war, cos that'southward a new man, very explicitly, in that episode. I also had trouble, I accept to be honest, imagining it being Paul McGann's Doctor[48] [ volume & issue needed ]
Once it became clear that Eccleston would decline to announced, Moffat turned to an alternative concept he had been formulating, featuring a "mayfly Doctor" who appears for a single episode, asking, "Would information technology exist weird in the run of the series to have the 45th Doctor turn upward and be played past Johnny Depp or someone? Would that be a cool thing to practice?".[48] He also indicated that the "classic Doctor" he would well-nigh like to feature in a new story was William Hartnell's Outset Doctor, stating, "You'd desire him to come and say 'What in the proper noun of God have I turned into?' That'south the confrontation that you near want to see, to celebrate fifty years. Going round and round in circles on it I merely idea, 'What about a Physician that he never talks well-nigh?' And what if it is a Doctor who'southward done something terrible, who's much deadlier and more than serious, who represents that thing that is the undertow in both David and Matt. Yous know there's a terrible old man inside them. Well, hither he is, facing the children he becomes, as it were."[49] Due in office to the stress surrounding planning the episode, Moffat has gone on tape as stating that Series 7 was his least favorite to work on.[fifty]
Moffat felt that it was important to bring something different to the return of Billie Piper, as she had returned as Rose Tyler in various cameo appearances throughout series iv, well-nigh prominently in "The Stolen Earth"/"Journey's End", in which she had a central role, and "The End of Time". This led to the development of the Moment, which had previously been referenced in "The End of Fourth dimension". Piper agreed with Moffat's sentiments, despite loving the character of Rose.[51]
Although Smith and Tennant ended up co-starring in the episode, neither role player was under contract for the series at the time, and at one point Moffat devised a plotline featuring Coleman as the sole regular cast member in case either declined.[52] Knowing that Matt Smith was planning to leave, Moffat wrote the special specifically with the brief appearance of the Twelfth Dr. during the sequence of all of the Doctors uniting to save Gallifrey, prior to casting anyone in the role. Moffat later stated that it was his "program from the kickoff" that all the Doctors would fly in to relieve Gallifrey, and he knew in that location would exist a new ane at that time. He wrote it before knowing who would be cast.[53]
Moffat explained his choice of championship to SFX mag, commenting that "... it's very rare in Doc Who that the story happens to the Doctor. Information technology happens to people around him, and he helps out – he's the hero figure who rides in and saves everybody from the story of the week. He is non the story of the week. In this, he is the story of the week. This is the 24-hour interval of the Doctor. This is his most of import day. His virtually important moment. This is the i he'll remember, whereas I often remember the Doctor wanders dorsum to his TARDIS and forgets all nearly it."[54]
Filming [edit]
Because "The 24-hour interval of the Dr." was filmed in 3D, the episode took longer than usual to shoot, and every CGI shot had to exist rendered twice.[55]
"The Twenty-four hours of the Doctor" took approximately v weeks in 2013 to motion picture; regular filming began on 28 March 2013 and ended on 4 May. The starting time three days of shooting—28 March, 29 March, and ane April—took place entirely at the show's Roath Lock studios in Porth Teigr, Cardiff Bay; some of the scenes ready in the National Gallery and the Eleventh Physician's TARDIS were filmed in the period.[location 1]
Filming for the episode's outdoor scenes began on 2 April 2013.[34] The first outdoor scene was filmed at the Ivy Tower in Tonna, Neath.[location 2] The outdoor section of the scene involving Clara driving her motorcycle into the TARDIS, as well every bit the beginning of the sequence in which UNIT airlifts the TARDIS via helicopter, was filmed on Gelligaer Mutual Road in Bedlinog.[location 3] The remaining of the latter scene was afterward filmed on 6 April at Mod St Athan,[location iv] and on 9 April in Trafalgar Square, London.[56] [location 5]
On 17 Apr 2013 Matt Smith, Jenna Coleman, Billie Piper and David Tennant filmed scenes in Chepstow, Monmouthshire, and some scenes were shot in Chepstow Castle.[ citation needed ] On 2 May 2013, scenes in Cardiff were being filmed for scenes that have place at Totter'southward Lane and Coal Hill school, locations which had previously featured in the get-go 1963 series An Unearthly Child, the 1985 serial Attack of the Cybermen, and the 1988 serial Remembrance of the Daleks.[57] Filming for the special was completed on Sunday 5 May 2013, with the concluding 2 days taken with the product of the special mini-episode "The Night of the Md", which saw Paul McGann return as the 8th Doctor on tv set for the first time since 1996.[58] The final piece of filming for the special took place on three Oct, five months later principal photography wrapped, with Peter Capaldi filming his cameo, concurrent with filming his official first appearance for "The Fourth dimension of the Dr." (2013).[59]
Miniatures constructed by Mike Tucker and his company The Model Unit were used in filming for the Time War sequences, including a model of a Time Lord staser cannon and the War Doctor flying his TARDIS into and subsequently destroying several Daleks. The Dalek models used were xviii-inch vocalisation interactive toys produced past Graphic symbol Options. The technique of using Dalek toys equally models for filming was a common method of presenting entire armies in the classic series.[sixty]
Marketing [edit]
Minisode [edit]
"The Night of the Doctor", an additional 7-minute special, was released on fourteen November 2013, and featured the Eighth Doc (Paul McGann)'south regeneration into the War Physician (John Hurt).[61] Another 4-minute special, entitled "The Last Day", was released on 20 November 2013 and saw the showtime of the Autumn of Arcadia.[62]
Trailers [edit]
The first trailer for the special was shown to attendees of San Diego Comic-Con in July 2013.[63] The BBC's conclusion not to release the trailer online to international fans was met with controversy.[64] [65] [66] On 26 July, the BBC responded to criticisms by proverb the trailer was intended to be exclusive to Comic-Con attendees and that content for all other audiences would be forthcoming at a later appointment.[67]
On 28 September, the BBC revealed that the trailer for the special had been shot and was in post-production.[68] On 19 October 2013, a specially fabricated teaser trailer, directed by Matt Losasso, was shown on BBC One, and was and so afterwards posted online. It independent icons from the history of the show and had a monologue by Matt Smith, as well every bit body doubles and CGI to create shots of previous Doctors.[69] [seventy]
A clip from "The 24-hour interval of the Doctor" was shown during the BBC'south Children in Need telethon on Fri 15 November.[71] The official trailer for the episode aired in the United Kingdom at 8 pm GMT on nine November. Due to the leak of a trailer earlier on 9 November on BBC Latin America's Facebook folio, the BBC officially released it alee of schedule. A 2nd official trailer was shortly released later.[72]
Furthermore, before the release of the master trailers, a short prune previewed the Eleventh Physician and Clara examining a seemingly impossible painting. On ten November 2013, a brusk prune of the Eleventh Doctor announcing "The clock is ticking" interrupted a BBC Ane ident.[73] This was followed on Monday xi November by another ident suspension, with the Eleventh Doctor stating "It'south all been leading to this..."[74]
Viral marketing [edit]
On 28 September, the BBC unveiled a Twitter hashtag (#SaveTheDay) and an ident that was used to promote the special.[75] Respectively, the hashtag and the ident were shown before and after the premiere of Atlantis on BBC One. The hashtag was used to reveal all subsequent promotional material. On 7 November 2013, a video starring Smith in graphic symbol as the Doctor was released promoting the hashtag, promising exclusive content. A website was launched to reveal the content.[76]
Broadcast and reception [edit]
The BBC circulate the episode in 94 countries simultaneously,[77] to avoid plot leaks.[8] [78] It earned a Guinness World Record for the world'due south largest ever simulcast of a Television drama.[9] While not a technical simulcast of BBC One, a number of non-English language translations were besides transmitted at the same time as the BBC's broadcast.
The British Board of Moving-picture show Classification rated the episode PG for mild violence and threat.[79] The Australian Classification Board besides rated the episode PG for "mild science fiction themes and violence", noting there was "very mild impact" with regards to sexual themes.[lxxx] The episode broadcast at 7:50pm in the Britain,[81] and was preceded and followed by other Md Who related programmes and broadcasts, including broadcast of an after-party.
Canadian provincial film censors rated "The Day of the Physician" PG in Alberta,[82] G in Manitoba[83] and G in Quebec.[84]
The episode aired in over 100 countries on either 23 or 24 Nov 2013 in cinemas and on television.[85]
Goggle box [edit]
The episode originally aired on BBC Ane, BBC Ane HD, and in 3D on BBC One Hard disk Red Button. It aired on Prime in New Zealand, BBC America in the United States, ABC1 in Australia, and on Space in Canada. In English language speaking Asia and Africa, it was released by BBC Entertainment.
Cinemas [edit]
The episode was originally released in Cineworld, Vue, Odeon, and independent cinemas. Information technology was released in Hoyts, Event, Village and limited independent cinemas in Australia. Information technology aired in Cineplex cinemas in Canada and in Result Cinemas in New Zealand. In the United states of america it was released just at AMC, Century, Cinemark and Regal cinemas. In Mexico, the episode was released exclusively in 20 select Cinemark 3D theatres.[86]
The cinema version played with an introduction featuring Dan Starkey equally Strax and John Injure, David Tennant and Matt Smith as the Doctors, respectively.[87]
Critical reception [edit]
Aggregate scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Rotten Tomatoes (Boilerplate Score) | 9.41[88] |
Rotten Tomatoes (Tomatometer) | 100%[88] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
IGN | ix.3[89] |
New York Magazine | [90] |
PopMatters | [91] |
Radio Times | [92] |
The A.Five. Club | A-[93] |
The Daily Telegraph | [94] |
Television Fanatic | [95] |
"The Day of the Doctor" received critical acclamation. On Rotten Tomatoes, the special has 100% approving rating based on eighteen reviews, and an boilerplate rating of 9.41/ten. The website's disquisitional consensus reads, "Doctor Who: The Twenty-four hours of the Doctor is a joyous marker in the series, uniting two of the most beloved Fourth dimension Lords and setting them together on a rousing adventure total of crowd-pleasing nods and winks."[88] Ben Lawrence of The Daily Telegraph gave the special v stars, calling it "mannerly, eccentric and very, very British."[94] Den of Geek's Simon Mash praised the special, calling information technology "terrific", and stating that information technology was "pulsating with comedy, appetite, and tiptop to bottom entertainment." However, he comments negatively on the treatment of the Zygon subplot, stating their part "but fizzled out a little, later on a stiff build up", and commented that the viewer may take mixed feelings on the revelation that the Doctor saved Gailfrey, rather than destroy it, stating information technology felt "similar years of darkness was sort-of sorted out in 20 minutes (albeit with no piffling gravitas)".[96] Jon Cooper of The Mirror gave the episode five stars, stating that information technology "not only gives hardcore fans a beautiful reinvention of their favourite show merely also gives casual viewers a stonking story and a reminder why we all love this show so much."[97] SFX gave the episode five out of five stars, noting that it was non perfect but those were "churlish niggles". The magazine praised the three Doctors and commented on how it linked the past, present, and future of the evidence.[98]
Mashable's Chris Taylor stated that the episode is "ane designed to please fans and newcomers alike," and that it "shows why the Doctor is finding his way into ever more homes and hearts."[99] The Guardian 's Viv Grospok criticised various elements of the episode, commenting that she was not sure what is intended by the comedic dialogue and the episode's shifting points of view and disliked the revelation Piper wasn't playing her original character Rose Tyler, though concluded that "it was all worth it."[100]
Ratings [edit]
Overnight figures revealed that the episode had a full of x.18 million viewers for the live broadcast in the United Kingdom.[101] When time-shifted viewers were taken into account, the effigy rose to a full of 12.8 million viewers, which makes it the highest rating since "The Next Dr." (2008), which had a total of 13.1 million viewers.[102] For the calendar week, it was the number one most-watched series on British boob tube, a feat only two other Dr. Who episodes had always accomplished.[103] The box part takings for the cinema screenings totalled £1.7m (US$2.2m), which placed it at number iii in the UK film chart for the week, backside The Hunger Games: Catching Fire and Gravity.[104] In add-on, "The Day of the Physician" became the most requested prove inside 24 hours on BBC iPlayer with one.27 million requests, which rose to 2.9 one thousand thousand by 3 December 2013.[105] It was named the most-watched drama of 2013 based on the final viewing figures.[105] It received an Appreciation Alphabetize of 88.[106]
The live simulcast on BBC America had a total audition of 2.four million viewers, briefly becoming the largest audience in the channel's history,[107] until the broadcast of "The Time of the Doc" just over a month afterward.[108]
Worldwide, cinema screenings brought $10.2 one thousand thousand at the box function.[109] The cinema screenings in the USA, on a full of 660 screens nationwide, took a full of US$4.8m (approx £3m) at the box office.[110] The special had a full of 1.95 meg viewers for its two broadcasts in Australia, with 590,000 watching the alive broadcast on ABC1, and another 1.36 million watching the repeat at vii:30pm, while the movie theatre box office takings totalled AU$ane.54m, putting it at number three in the Australian film chart.[111] [112] [113] In addition, the episode received 51,000 plays on the online ABC iview in a unmarried day.[113] [114] A total of 42,000 viewers watched the simultaneous screening in New Zealand, with a total of 177,510 viewers watching the 8.30pm echo, which was Prime's highest rating show for the day. The effigy includes live[115] and timeshifted viewers.[116] This means at that place was a total of 219,510 viewers for all screenings. A total of 1.seven million viewers watched the two broadcasts on Canadian channel Space, making information technology the most watched entertainment plan in Canada on the 24-hour interval, with the ane.1m watching the live circulate at 2.50pm EST being the aqueduct'south largest ever audience.[117]
Social analytics website SecondSync revealed that Doctor Who generated almost 500,000 tweets on Twitter during its circulate, with the peak number of tweets occurring at the starting time of the broadcast, at 12,939 tweets per minute.[118] [119]
Awards and nominations [edit]
"The Mean solar day of the Md" won the publicly voted Radio Times Audience Accolade at the BAFTA Awards in May 2014.[11] "The Day of the Doctor" was also nominated for the 2014 Hugo Award for All-time Dramatic Presentation (Curt Grade).[120]
In a poll conducted by Doctor Who Magazine, "The Day of the Physician" was voted every bit the most pop story in the fifty years of the testify.[121]
Domicile media [edit]
"The Twenty-four hour period of the Doctor" was released on DVD and 3D Blu-ray on 2 December 2013 in the Britain.[122] [123] It was released on 4 December 2013 in Commonwealth of australia, and on x December 2013 in North America.[124] The special was re-released on DVD and Blu-ray on 8 September 2014 as role of a "50th Anniversary Collectors Boxset" aslope "The Name of the Doc", "The Night of the Medico", "The Time of the Doctor", "An Chance in Space and Time" and "The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot". This re-release features new footage of the specials' read-through.[125] The special is streamed on Amazon Prime.
Soundtrack [edit]
Selected pieces of score from "The Solar day of the Doctor", every bit composed by Murray Gilt, were released on 24 Nov 2014 by Silva Screen Records. The anthology includes material non used in the final episode.[126]
In print [edit]
Author | Steven Moffat |
---|---|
Cover artist | Anthony Dry out |
Series | Doctor Who volume: Target novelisations |
Publisher | BBC Books |
Publication date | 5 April 2018 |
Pages | 232 |
ISBN | 978-1-785-94329-4 |
A novelisation of this story written by Steven Moffat including "The Night of the Doctor" storyline was released in paperback and digital formats on 5 April 2018 equally part of the Target Collection.[127] [128]
See also [edit]
- The 5(ish) Doctors Reboot, a parody tie-in to this episode.
References [edit]
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Filming locations [edit]
All filming locations are extracted from Doctor Who Magazine'southward Special Edition Volume 38: The Year of the Medico: The Official Guide to Doctor Who 'south 50th Anniversary.
- ^ BBC Studios, Roath Lock (Eleventh Doctor'south TARDIS, National Gallery, Tower of London dungeon, Black Archive vault, Gallifreyan barn, Gallifrey State of war Room): 51°27′46″N 3°09′23″West / 51.4627°N three.1565°West / 51.4627; -3.1565 (BBC Studios, Roath Lock: Eleventh Doctor's TARDIS, National Gallery, Belfry of London dungeon, Blackness Annal vault, Gallifrey barn, Gallifrey War Room)
- ^ Ivy Belfry, Tonna, Neath (Ivy Tower, castle field): 51°40′35″Due north 3°46′23″West / 51.676389°North three.773056°Due west / 51.676389; -three.773056 (Ivy Belfry, Tonna, Neath: Ivy Tower, castle field)
- ^ Gelligaer Mutual Route, Bedlinog (countryside outside London): 51°39′48″Due north 3°16′32″W / 51.663284°N 3.275693°W / 51.663284; -three.275693 (Gelligaer Mutual Road, Bedlinog: countryside exterior London)
- ^ Modernistic St Athan (airlifting of the TARDIS): 51°24′17″N 3°26′09″Due west / 51.404722°N 3.435833°West / 51.404722; -iii.435833 (Trafalgar Square: Trafalgar Square, National Gallery)
- ^ Trafalgar Square, London (Trafalgar Square, National Gallery): 51°30′29″N 0°07′41″W / 51.508056°Due north 0.128056°W / 51.508056; -0.128056 (Trafalgar Square: Trafalgar Foursquare, National Gallery)
External links [edit]
- "The Day of the Doctor" at the BBC Physician Who homepage
- The Day of the Physician on Tardis Data Core, an external wiki
- "The Day of the Doctor" at IMDb
- The Day of the Doctor at Box Office Mojo
- The Day of the Doctor at Rotten Tomatoes
- Hidden items in the 19 October 2013 trailer
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