Pity the poor schedulers on the ITV network- for the
last nine weeks their schedules have been trashed by the new series of Doctor
Who. This week they broadcast the first of a succession of Star Wars films
and Doctor Who had been rescheduled because of the Eurovision song contest.
Even so it still pulled in twice as many viewers as the British terrestrial
premier of ‘The Phantom Menace.’ Testimony indeed to the staying power of
the shows popularity.
More personal confirmation of this came to me yesterday as I overheard some
children discussing the show whilst out shopping.
This is interesting because this particular show featured an awful lot of
children in it, one of who was playing the monster this week. The themes and
the horror content of this episode were definitely not childish though, some
of the scariest ideas this season were to be found here, including that familiar
trademark ‘body horror’ that we know so well from Who in the past.
The story begins with the Doctor and Rose in the TARDIS, pursuing a strange
cylindrical object through the vortex. The object comes to land in central
London during the Blitz in 1941. The Doctor believes they will probably land
within a month of its crash, as the object was swaying backwards and forwards
in time as it came into land.
Whilst the Doctor goes off to investigate Rose is distracted by a child
calling out for its mummy. As she gets closer she can see it is a small boy
whose face is obscured by a gas mask. He is standing on a bridge, on a higher
level than Rose, who tries to clamber up to no avail. A rope helpfully appears
and so she grabs hold and starts to climb up; what Rose fails to realise is
that the rope is attached to a barrage balloon, which the child causes to
take her over London in the middle of a German air raid.
Meanwhile the Doctor has discovered what era they are in and has returned
to the TARDIS looking for Rose. Then the phone on the outside of the Police
Box rings, something that puzzles the Doctor, for it is not a working phone.
Before he can answer a strange girl appears and warns him not to answer it.
When he does answer he hears the same voice that Rose heard when the child
distracted her. Mystified the Doctor turns to the strange girl for an explanation,
but she has already left to puzzle it out for himself.
Meanwhile Rose is continuing her dramatic aerial tour of war-torn London,
she has been noticed by another time-traveller calling himself Captain Jack.
Using a tractor beam he is able to rescue Rose and bring her into his cloaked
space ship that is parked near Big Ben.
Rose is grateful to be rescued and bowled over by the charming Captain Jack
Harkness (John Barrowman), who it turns out is a human time-traveller from
the future, masquerading as an American volunteer in the RAF. He has a variety
of gizmos at his disposal, including an invisible space ship with time travel
ability, tractor beams and helpful little robots called nanogenes. These last
appear as a golden shower of sparks that repair Roses hand, which was sore
and bruised from clinging onto the rope. He assumes Rose, who he recognises
instantly as a fellow time-traveller is a Time Agent whom and he tries to
barter a deal with her. He has a ‘Chula Warship’ that he would like to sell
her. Rose says that she will have to consult with her ‘assistant’ i.e. the
Doctor.
The Doctor has been following Nancy (Florence Hoath), the strange girl who
appeared when the phone rang in the TARDIS. She acts as a big sister to a
group of younger children who are homeless as a result of the war. She leads
them into a family home whilst its occupants are taking shelter in a dug out
in the garden, leaving their supper on the table. As the ravenous youngsters
tuck into a roast dinner, Nancy keeps them under tight discipline, making
sure they share the portions out equally. The Doctor suddenly appears at the
head of the table, takes a couple of portions of roast pork for himself and
says ‘it’s good here init, can you pass the vegetables.’
At first the children are terrified that he is a policeman, but the Doctor
is soon able to win them around. He discovers they are children who were mostly
evacuated at the beginning of the war, but who returned to London mostly
because they failed to get on with the farmers they’d been placed with. Now
they roam in gangs in London’s streets, stealing food at the risk of being
hit by a bomb, with Nancy as their self-appointed big sister. The Doctor
asks them about the cylinder, but before he can get an answer there is a
knock at the door. The same little boy in a gas mask from earlier on has
returned and is asking for his mummy. Nancy becomes very afraid at this and
orders the other children to leave quickly out the back way.
The Doctor feels sorry for the child left out in the cold, to which Nancy
tersely responds: “It’s not exactly a child.”
Warning the Doctor that he mustn’t let him touch her because he will ‘make
you like him’ she also tells him that the child is ‘empty.’
The phone rings and just as with the TARDIS phone it turns out to be the
little boy again, Nancy explains that he can do things like that. Moreover
he is able to project his voice over the radio as well and a mechanical toy
monkey. The Doctor is intrigued and we notice that when the child pokes its
right hand into the door that it has a scar along the surface of the skin.
However when he opens the front door the child is nowhere to be seen.
Nancy has likewise disappeared but the Doctor manages to find her again,
stashing food in the boiler of an abandoned steam engine. She asks the Doctor
how he found her, to which he tells her it’s that he has a nose for such things.
Then comes the possible bad wolf reference (or some fans think) with Nancy
chiding the Doctor about the size of his nose. The Doctor persuades her to
take him to where the alien spaceship crashed, she reluctantly agrees. Soldiers
are guarding the spaceship and many patients who’d been affected by the craft
were being cared for at a nearby hospital. The Doctor is curious about why
Nancy has taken it upon herself to care for all the street kids. He guesses
that she must have lost someone; she tells him she lost her brother- Jamie-one
night while they were out foraging for food. She blames herself for his death,
which is why she has become substitute mother to all the other children.
Meanwhile Captain Jack is putting the pressure on Rose to contact her ‘partner’
about the Chula Warship. She agrees but does not know how to contact the Doctor,
Jack does a ‘scan for alien tech’.
The Doctor has arrived at Albion Hospital (which you may remember from ‘The
Aliens of London’). There he meets Doctor Constantine (Richard Wilson), who
is in charge of a ward full of people wearing gas masks. The Doctor is astounded
to find all the bodies have the same wounds on the right hand and the same
‘fusing’ of the gas mask to the skin. Doctor Constantine explains that all
of these people were in contact with one patient who was the first to exhibit
these symptoms and that the injuries seemed to be transmitted like a plague.
Just as the Doctor is taking this in he witness such a transformation himself
as Constantine suddenly asks for his mummy. As he succumbs to the ‘plague’
Constantine asks the Doctor to find Nancy, because she knows more then she
is letting on. Then a gas mask grows out of his face and he slumps into the
chair.
Meanwhile Nancy has returned to the house where she and the other children
were earlier on. Just as she is rummaging around for more stuff to steal a
small child coming into the house- it is the boy with the gasmask from earlier
on, again looking for his mummy interrupts her.
Rose and Captain Jack arrive to find the Doctor pondering over the mysterious
plague. Rose introduces Jack, who realises pretty quickly that the Doctor
and she aren’t time-agents but freelancers like himself. He admits that the
‘Chula Warship’ is in fact an ambulance and was part of a con he was setting
up.
Meanwhile Nancy has been cornered by her ‘brother’ in the house with the
roast dinner, setting up the first part of a double-cliff-hanger.
The Doctor tells Rose and Jack that ‘human DNA is being rewritten by an
idiot’-something is turning people into the gas mask creatures and he doesn’t
know why. Just as this is sinking in the people on the beds wake up and start
to come towards them, chanting ‘are you my mummy.’