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TARDIS Guide

Overview

First aired

Saturday, July 1, 2017

Written by

Steven Moffat

Directed by

Rachel Talalay

Runtime

60 minutes

Time Travel

Unclear

Inventory (Potential Spoilers!)

Jelly Babies, Sonic Screwdriver

Location (Potential Spoilers!)

Mondasian colony ship

UK Viewers

5.3 million

Appreciation Index

83

Synopsis

As he struggles to resist regenerating, the Twelfth Doctor prepares to make a last stand against the ever-growing army of Cybermen. However, with Bill still a Cyberman, and Missy gradually turning to her old wicked ways as the Saxon Master reminds her of who she used to be, can the Doctor convince his old friend to finally be good before he falls?

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7 reviews

This review contains spoilers!

The Doctor Falls is considered the weaker of the two episodes and while I agree, it still has its fair share of incredible moments and that barn scene with Bill realising what’s happened to her is just pure gold.

……………. Oh yeah and the Master’s in this.

Now this might be seen as a hot take, but I don’t think this story really needed the Master, specifically the John Simm incarnation, Missy fits well with the story. But yes, it is entertaining having two different incarnations of the Master interact, the first time the show had done this idea and even for Big Finish they’d only got there first by about a year. Their scenes are a lot of fun, and it has a perfect ending for both incarnations.

I’ve never considered myself a fan of John Simm as the Master, admittedly most of that is down to spite as I was absolutely in love with Derek Jacobi’s performance in Utopia and three minutes later John Simm suddenly hijacks the role and gives us something significantly weaker. His Master felt like a villain role you’d give to Jim Carey, it just never sat well with me. Also, the drums idea was so stupid, particularly having it be the reason for him being evil when it never once came up in Classic Who, the audios or novels. Even today it’s never come up outside of musical scores, it’s like brining back Davros, giving him a clown afro and then have everyone act like it’s always been there!!!! And that’s just how he was in The Sound of Drums, he was so much worse in The End of Time! But with that said, he is actually really good in his return story. I love how he spends part one disguised as an odd caretaker who befriends Bill during her time at the hospital before pulling off the mask and revealing his true identity, that’s old school Master at his best. On top of that, his performance is significantly toned down which was one of the issues I had with him previously. He still has his zany moments, but they feel more natural, and he gets some really cold lines in this episode. So, it was a welcome return of a Master I was never a fan of, I just think you could’ve had the episode without him.

For actual issues I had with the story, the climax is literally the Doctor blowing Cybermen up with his sonic screwdriver shouting “Tomb of the Cybermen! Earthshock! Army of Ghosts!” at them, which sounds like the sort of thing a child would play out with their toys. Also, while the retcon of Bill’s “death” isn’t nearly as bad as Clara’s from Hell Bent, there is one line towards the end that utterly kills it, where her space girlfriend says she can restore Bill to her normal body and put her back home. I would’ve cut that line, I’m perfectly fine with Bill existing as a non-corporeal entity, free to travel the universe with her girlfriend (it’s a long story), especially considering how brutal and unforgiving the story was to her, I think she deserved some levity at the very end. But yeah, having that line about going back to living her normal life in her normal body just ruined the moment! I guess some things can’t be helped with Modern Who’s approach to companion exits.

My one other issue is the fact that this wasn’t the Twelfth Doctor’s regeneration story, it was originally planned to be, but when Moffat got wind that Chibnall was going to ditch the Christmas specials entirely (a move I frankly support), Moffat decided to step in and quickly write one more Christmas special to bow out his era and the Twelfth Doctor and boy did it show! This last one we had certainly felt like a story written at last minute, and it seemed to end the Twelfth Doctor’s era on a very cold note. Not to mention the abysmal inclusion of the First Doctor which made very clear that Moffat wasn’t a fan of the Hartnell years.

Popping my tin foil hat on, I do wonder if that reveal trailer we got for the Thirteenth Doctor back in 2017 was supposed to be her original first scene and how The Doctor Falls would’ve ended as it bears a lot of resemblance to where this story is set. I’m probably wrong but it did feel like that was how the story was going to end. If this had been Capaldi’s last story we would’ve had one of Doctor Who’s best regeneration stories, as is it ends up being probably the best penultimate story.


DanDunn

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This review contains spoilers!

A more apt title would be - "The Doctor f**king explodes"


GodofRealEstate

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Phenomenal stuff, obviously. Deeply moving storytelling.

Also the scariest the Cybermen will feasibly ever be. Of course, for a lot of Doctor Who fans that isn't enough, because they've built up such an intense gorefest in their head when they imagine their idealised "Cyberman body horror episode" that nothing will ever satisfy their bloodlust. The tragedy is that Cyberwoman is right there, but they get scared because you can see a woman's belly button in it.


ClydeLangerRules

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This review contains spoilers!

This is probably one of the best looking, greatly directed episodes this show has ever had (the final facedown with the army of Cybermen is so cool, the beginning with Bill holding the Doctor...).

The story is excellent, the sci fi stuff with the time dilation is so good, such a great concept and execution.

What else? Bill turning into a Cyberman and the whole scene when she realises the truth, Missy and the Master killing each other off when she is about to side with the Doctor, the Doctor himself having grown so much as a person since series 8... He is definitely a good man, he always was, he is The Doctor. This is the best finale for any Modern Doctor (the next one is more an epilogue in my mind, so this still counts). It would be the best but Androzani exists, they are both tied in my opinion.

This era is my favourite of the whole show, this rewatch has been amazing. I'm looking forward to rewatching 13's run, as I didn't enjoy it that much the first time. I'm going in with a positive attitude, I hope I change my mind a bit. Will post reviews of that in the future (at least with episodes that warrant one)


MarkOfGilead19

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The Doctor Falls, while not as good as its predecessor in my opnion, is a great conclusion to the story, wrapping up the threads from the previous episode well. Its exploration and development of Bill is great and genuinely sad, and the directing does an absolutely excellent job in conveying this. I cannot emphaise enough now much I like the directing in this story. It's really good.


Bongo50

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Quotes

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DOCTOR: Who I am is where I stand. Where I stand is where I fall.

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Transcript + Script

[Dormitory]

(Amidst idyllic rolling hills, a pair of ponies draws a wagon with children seated in the back through a field of crucified Cyber-patients to a farmhouse inside a low stone wall. Some of the Cyber-patients lift their heads as they go past. The excited children are greeted by a woman at the door. The number on the sky say 507. Upstairs in the farmhouse, a pillow fight is going on until a bell starts ringing. The woman comes in holding a rifle.)

HAZRAN: Everyone under their beds, now!
ALIT: (a little girl) Again?
HAZRAN: Alit, get under your bed and stay there!

(Outside, the adults shoot at the approaching Cyber-patients. Alit watches from the window while the others hide under their beds as ordered.)

ALIT: It's the scarecrows. New ones.
GAZRON: (another girl) It's okay. We'll be okay.
REXHILL [OC]: Save your ammo! Wait for it! Fire!


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