0:00:21 > 0:00:22Tell me you're not an archaeologist.
0:00:22 > 0:00:24Got a problem with archaeologists?
0:00:24 > 0:00:27I'm a time-traveller. I point and laugh at archaeologists.
0:00:27 > 0:00:30- The Doctor. The hero... - Hold on, hold on!
0:00:30 > 0:00:32- ..who's humorous...- Who are you?
0:00:32 > 0:00:35I am...Spartacus.
0:00:35 > 0:00:37- ..humble... - Bit of a legend, if I say so myself.
0:00:37 > 0:00:43He's a maverick time-traveller, who has selflessly saved the universe for over 900 years.
0:00:43 > 0:00:49- Join Doctor Who's Greatest Moments as we find out what makes this Time Lord tick.- Isn't that brilliant?
0:00:49 > 0:00:55So hold on to your seats as we journey through time and space to take a closer look at the Doctor.
0:00:55 > 0:00:58- The one, the only, the best. - Are we sitting comfortably?
0:01:05 > 0:01:11The Doctor is a character that anyone would adore being around.
0:01:11 > 0:01:13I'm the Doctor. I'm a Time Lord.
0:01:13 > 0:01:18I'm from the planet Gallifrey in the constellation of Kasterborous.
0:01:18 > 0:01:21I'm 903 years old.
0:01:21 > 0:01:26I'm the man who'll save your lives and all 6 billion people on the planet below. Come with me!
0:01:26 > 0:01:28Got a problem with that? Allons-y.
0:01:28 > 0:01:30- Aghhhh!- Hold on!
0:01:30 > 0:01:33It's the end of the universe. Get out!
0:01:35 > 0:01:37Don't I know you?
0:01:37 > 0:01:42He has many human qualities for someone who's not a human, and that's interesting.
0:01:43 > 0:01:45He makes life fun.
0:01:45 > 0:01:47He certainly does.
0:01:47 > 0:01:50And being with the Doctor is never dull.
0:01:50 > 0:01:52It's a rollercoaster of emotion.
0:01:52 > 0:01:54Let me in!
0:01:54 > 0:01:56Oh! I'm thick!
0:01:56 > 0:02:01Look at me! I'm old and thick! Head's too full of stuff. I need a bigger head!
0:02:07 > 0:02:08Run!
0:02:17 > 0:02:20This country has been sick.
0:02:20 > 0:02:22This country needs healing.
0:02:22 > 0:02:25This country needs medicine.
0:02:25 > 0:02:31In fact, I'd go so far as to say that what this country really needs...right now...
0:02:31 > 0:02:32is a doctor.
0:02:34 > 0:02:37Come with me.
0:02:37 > 0:02:40The Doctor, whatever he looks like, is not one of us,
0:02:40 > 0:02:42and I find that
0:02:42 > 0:02:43a fascinating area.
0:02:43 > 0:02:47He has very human qualities, and they're very conflicting qualities,
0:02:47 > 0:02:50exactly because he isn't human.
0:02:50 > 0:02:52My planet's gone.
0:02:52 > 0:02:54It's dead.
0:02:56 > 0:02:58It burnt, like the Earth.
0:02:58 > 0:03:01There was a sense with the ninth Doctor that he was
0:03:01 > 0:03:05still feeling the after-effects of war,
0:03:05 > 0:03:10and he found life quite hard work, and things cost him quite a lot.
0:03:10 > 0:03:12I know where you're from.
0:03:12 > 0:03:15It's remarkable that you even exist.
0:03:15 > 0:03:18I just wanted to say how sorry I am.
0:03:18 > 0:03:23There was a sense that with the regeneration, he was reborn and he could leave some of that behind.
0:03:23 > 0:03:26It's a bit dodgy, this process.
0:03:27 > 0:03:30You never know what you're gonna end up with.
0:03:30 > 0:03:32Possibly more than we expected.
0:03:32 > 0:03:36The regeneration from the ninth Doctor to the tenth Doctor,
0:03:36 > 0:03:37was a huge risk...
0:03:37 > 0:03:42- What's going on?- I absorbed all the energy of the time vortex, and no-one's meant to do that.
0:03:46 > 0:03:48Every cell in my body's dying.
0:03:48 > 0:03:54..because, although we, as more adults, know what regeneration is,
0:03:54 > 0:03:58you had a whole generation who knew nothing about regeneration.
0:03:58 > 0:04:00That was a weird sentence.
0:04:00 > 0:04:05Time Lords have this little trick. It's sort of a way of cheating death.
0:04:05 > 0:04:07It means I'm going to change.
0:04:09 > 0:04:12And I'm not going to see you again.
0:04:12 > 0:04:16Not like this, not with this daft old face.
0:04:16 > 0:04:21It's interesting, cos people say there's no room for development in the character, but clearly there is.
0:04:21 > 0:04:25Before I go, I just want to tell you, you were fantastic.
0:04:26 > 0:04:29Absolutely fantastic.
0:04:31 > 0:04:33And you know what?
0:04:36 > 0:04:38So was I.
0:04:38 > 0:04:43It's not just between incarnations, where each Doctor has a different personality,
0:04:43 > 0:04:47but the idea that the sort of wounded ninth Doctor
0:04:47 > 0:04:51has absolutely recovered by the next regeneration.
0:04:53 > 0:04:57Talk about making an entrance.
0:04:57 > 0:05:01The freshly regenerated Doctor is quite literally a new man.
0:05:01 > 0:05:04He was reborn, and he could leave some of that behind,
0:05:04 > 0:05:06and he could enjoy being with Rose.
0:05:10 > 0:05:13He could enjoy running through the universe and having a laugh.
0:05:13 > 0:05:16Travelling with you, I love it.
0:05:16 > 0:05:19Me too. Come on!
0:05:21 > 0:05:25It was a cacophony of colour, a cacophony of sound.
0:05:25 > 0:05:32Oh! They're thick! They're so completely thick, they wiped the records! Oh, that's clever(!)
0:05:32 > 0:05:34- There is a great humour to him. - Kill him!
0:05:34 > 0:05:36Wait! You can't, not now.
0:05:36 > 0:05:38Come on, Max.
0:05:38 > 0:05:43You're giving me so much good material, like... how to get AHEAD in business.
0:05:43 > 0:05:46Oh, the office joker!
0:05:46 > 0:05:50He always needs to question what it is he has to do, and why.
0:05:50 > 0:05:53I don't understand. I was expected down here.
0:05:53 > 0:05:55You need me for something. What for?
0:05:55 > 0:06:00His wonder at the world and wonder at people's stupidity, in a way.
0:06:01 > 0:06:07Human beings. You are amazing! Ha!
0:06:07 > 0:06:13- Thank you.- Not at all. - Apart from that, you're completely mad.
0:06:13 > 0:06:16He's smart, that's the thing.
0:06:16 > 0:06:21He's hyper-intelligent, hyper-smart, but never smug, and that's what I like about him.
0:06:24 > 0:06:28Preferring to use his brains over brawn...
0:06:28 > 0:06:32Sontaran! Hey, fascinating, isn't it? Isn't that worth keeping me alive?
0:06:32 > 0:06:35..our time-travelling hero never carries a gun.
0:06:35 > 0:06:37I warn you, I'm armed!
0:06:37 > 0:06:42- Well, almost never. - Drop your weapons.- We're unarmed. Look, no weapons, never any weapons.
0:06:42 > 0:06:45The Doctor avoids violence with wit and charm.
0:06:45 > 0:06:48We stare into the face of death.
0:06:48 > 0:06:50Yeah? Well, stare at this.
0:06:50 > 0:06:54So just like the TARDIS, his brain must be bigger on the inside.
0:06:59 > 0:07:03- No, wait!- Oi! Hands!
0:07:03 > 0:07:06- Shadow. Look.- What about it? - What's casting it?
0:07:06 > 0:07:14The whole of London's been sealed off and the population's been taken inside that place, to be converted.
0:07:14 > 0:07:16- We've got to get in and shut it down.- How do we do that?
0:07:16 > 0:07:18I'll think of something.
0:07:18 > 0:07:21After all these years, you knew who you were.
0:07:21 > 0:07:24And then it all kicks off, because this isn't just a duel.
0:07:24 > 0:07:27It's a Vespiform telepathic recorder.
0:07:27 > 0:07:30I still don't understand where that thing came from.
0:07:30 > 0:07:35From dormant genes in Lazarus's DNA. The energy field reactivated them. Nice shoes, by the way.
0:07:35 > 0:07:40The Skasis Paradigm. Crack that, you've got control of the building blocks of the universe.
0:07:40 > 0:07:44The Wire's got big plans. It's going to harvest half the population.
0:07:44 > 0:07:49- Millions and millions of people. Where are we?- Muswell Hill. - Muswell Hill... Muswell Hill!
0:07:49 > 0:07:54Which means...Alexandra Palace! Biggest TV transmitter in north London. Oh!
0:07:54 > 0:07:59That's why it chose this place. All these things, they're not separate, they're connected! My head!
0:07:59 > 0:08:03- What if this house is a trap for you? Is that right, ma'am?- Obviously.
0:08:03 > 0:08:07- That's what the wolf intended. What if there's a trap inside the trap?- Enlighten me.
0:08:07 > 0:08:12- What, the soothsayer doesn't know? - A seed may float on the breeze in any direction.
0:08:12 > 0:08:14- I knew you'd say that. - Explain yourself.
0:08:14 > 0:08:18What if his father and your husband weren't telling each other stories?
0:08:18 > 0:08:23They dared to imagine all this was true, and they planned against it, laying the real trap not for you,
0:08:23 > 0:08:26but for the wolf.
0:08:29 > 0:08:33- It's an energy converter. - An energy converter of what? - I don't know.
0:08:33 > 0:08:36I love not knowing. Keeps me on my toes.
0:08:36 > 0:08:43- Hold on. There are three important, brilliant, complicated reasons why you should listen to me. One.- Doctor!
0:08:43 > 0:08:48He's not a soldier, and yet in his own...almost passive way,
0:08:48 > 0:08:52he is constantly trying to rid the universe of evil.
0:08:52 > 0:08:54Next ghost shift's in two minutes.
0:08:54 > 0:08:58- Cancel it.- I don't think so. - I'm warning you, cancel it!
0:08:58 > 0:09:01Exactly as the legends would have it - the Doctor lording it over us!
0:09:01 > 0:09:05I thought there was a lovely moment there. Dave and I both said it.
0:09:05 > 0:09:08It was a moment of... There was an intellectual face-off.
0:09:08 > 0:09:10Positions. Ghost shift in one minute.
0:09:10 > 0:09:14- Miss Hartman, please don't do it. - We have done this a thousand times.
0:09:14 > 0:09:17- Then stop at a thousand! - We're in control of the ghosts.
0:09:17 > 0:09:20"You will not order me." "You will not order me."
0:09:20 > 0:09:24The levers can open the bridge, but equally, they can close it.
0:09:26 > 0:09:32- OK.- Is that it?- No. Fair enough. Don't mind me. Any chance of a cup of tea?
0:09:32 > 0:09:36- He almost bends her down with his will...- Can't wait to see it.
0:09:36 > 0:09:40- ..but she's not going to give in easily. You can't stop us, Doctor. - Watch the fireworks.
0:09:40 > 0:09:46- Five, four, three, two... - Stop the shift.
0:09:46 > 0:09:48I said, stop.
0:09:48 > 0:09:53I thought that was quite a nice little frisson moment of two minds
0:09:53 > 0:09:57- really battling it out for supremacy.- Thank you.
0:09:57 > 0:10:01Is it PE? Wouldn't mind a kick-around. I've got me daps on.
0:10:01 > 0:10:04- I suppose you're the Doctor.- Hello.
0:10:04 > 0:10:06What I like about the writing of the first meeting
0:10:06 > 0:10:08between the Doctor and Luke
0:10:08 > 0:10:12is that Luke doesn't clock on for quite a while
0:10:12 > 0:10:17that this guy's equal, of equal intelligence, to him.
0:10:17 > 0:10:19Your commanding officer phoned ahead.
0:10:19 > 0:10:21I haven't got a commanding officer.
0:10:21 > 0:10:24- Have you?- He realises there's something going on here.
0:10:24 > 0:10:27Ooh! Gravity simulators.
0:10:27 > 0:10:30And this man's quite an intellect.
0:10:30 > 0:10:35Terraforming, biospheres, nanotech steel construction.
0:10:35 > 0:10:37This is brilliant!
0:10:37 > 0:10:42I also quite like the idea that they have this sort of quite catty, queeny fight between them.
0:10:42 > 0:10:48Do you know, with equipment like this, you could...ooh, I don't know, move to another planet, or something.
0:10:48 > 0:10:52This sort of intellectual... A genius-off between them.
0:10:52 > 0:10:54If only that was possible.
0:10:54 > 0:10:56I love the conditional clause line.
0:10:56 > 0:10:59If only that WERE possible. Conditional clause.
0:10:59 > 0:11:03That's brilliant, because it's that sort of pernickety pedantry.
0:11:03 > 0:11:07That's who Luke always was at school. The grammar pedant, maybe.
0:11:07 > 0:11:09I do that myself!
0:11:09 > 0:11:12I was thinking, what a responsible 18-year-old.
0:11:12 > 0:11:17Inventing zero-carbon cars... saving the world.
0:11:18 > 0:11:21- Takes a man with vision. - Mmm. Blinkered vision.
0:11:21 > 0:11:27ATMOS means more people driving. More cars, more petrol. The oil's going to run out faster than ever.
0:11:27 > 0:11:32- The ATMOS system could make things worse.- That's a tautology. You can't say "ATMOS system".
0:11:32 > 0:11:35Atmospheric Omissions System - so "Atmospheric omissions system system."
0:11:35 > 0:11:36Do you see, Mr Conditional Clause?
0:11:36 > 0:11:43What a brilliant putdown. I like that, because it shows him reduced to this quite pathetic individual...
0:11:43 > 0:11:46It's been a long time since anyone said no to you, isn't it?
0:11:46 > 0:11:50..who'll quibble over these tiny, trivial details.
0:11:50 > 0:11:55- I'm still right, though.- Not easy, is it, being clever?
0:12:00 > 0:12:04But you know, the Doctor doesn't always talk his way out of danger.
0:12:04 > 0:12:07There are times when he has no choice but to stand and fight,
0:12:07 > 0:12:11and then there are other times when it's best to just run.
0:12:16 > 0:12:18SCREAMING
0:12:18 > 0:12:24There is a lot of running and jumping and diving around. Run! Run!
0:12:24 > 0:12:26There's sword fights...
0:12:26 > 0:12:30things exploding... diving down shafts.
0:12:30 > 0:12:31Going down.
0:12:31 > 0:12:34BOTH SCREAM
0:12:38 > 0:12:39I quite enjoy all that.
0:12:42 > 0:12:44I'd done quite a lot of sword fighting before.
0:12:44 > 0:12:49Classical theatre tends to have a sword fight in it somewhere, so I'd done a few of them.
0:12:49 > 0:12:51I challenge you!
0:12:51 > 0:12:53LAUGHS
0:12:53 > 0:12:58I had endless sword fight rehearsals for those first few weeks, for this huge sword fight,
0:12:58 > 0:13:02which in the end was cut down to a couple of minutes on screen.
0:13:02 > 0:13:03Look out!
0:13:03 > 0:13:10You often fight with little fencing foils, but those big broadswords, that's a different thing.
0:13:13 > 0:13:16There was a lot more in that sword fight.
0:13:19 > 0:13:24It's good fun. It's part of being in the playground, isn't it? Diving around.
0:13:31 > 0:13:32I win.
0:13:32 > 0:13:38I've been delighted that the Doctor's got to be as physical as he has been.
0:13:38 > 0:13:41As a doctor, I recommend a vigorous jog. Good for the health.
0:13:41 > 0:13:43Get inside!
0:13:43 > 0:13:47Doctor Who is all about running. And I sort of knew that
0:13:47 > 0:13:52before I even read the episode, and thought, "I'm going to have to get fit for this."
0:13:57 > 0:14:01- Who is she?- She's my daughter. - Hello, Dad.
0:14:01 > 0:14:04But I never anticipated how much running there would be in it.
0:14:04 > 0:14:09- What were we saying about running? - It is quite absurd, how every single scene,
0:14:09 > 0:14:13they're running to somewhere or from someone or away from something.
0:14:17 > 0:14:21But it's brilliant, and that's what Doctor Who should be.
0:14:26 > 0:14:29Brilliant! You were brilliant!
0:14:29 > 0:14:32Doctor!
0:14:32 > 0:14:34HE CHUCKLES
0:14:34 > 0:14:37David and I have these coats to deal with.
0:14:37 > 0:14:41They're extra long, because they're what we call hero coats.
0:14:41 > 0:14:44So when you're running, they flow behind you,
0:14:44 > 0:14:49Or when you're standing in the wind, they blow in a certain way. They're made specially for us.
0:14:49 > 0:14:52David and I have this little competition
0:14:52 > 0:14:55to see who can run the fastest, because I'm older than David.
0:14:55 > 0:14:59Is it me, or does that look like a hunt?
0:14:59 > 0:15:04So I have this thing that I'm not going to let the young 'un beat me.
0:15:04 > 0:15:06Oh, I miss this!
0:15:06 > 0:15:07But there's a hierarchy.
0:15:07 > 0:15:09Doctor must be in front.
0:15:09 > 0:15:13The next in line would be Jack, and then you have the female assistant,
0:15:13 > 0:15:18and that is partially because the female can't keep up with David and I.
0:15:18 > 0:15:22Dave and I are like, "Come on, we're gonna compete!"
0:15:22 > 0:15:28And I've got the canister that has the Doctor's hand in a rucksack on my back.
0:15:28 > 0:15:29David's just got the coat.
0:15:29 > 0:15:35I've got my coat and the rucksack and the hand, and I'm legging it.
0:15:35 > 0:15:39- I'm legging it and finally we get to the end and I'm... - HE GASPS
0:15:41 > 0:15:46And David turns to me and goes, "Having a bit of trouble, old man?"
0:15:46 > 0:15:51And Freema's running behind going, "Can you guys wait up, please?"
0:15:51 > 0:15:53So yeah, running is a big thing.
0:16:04 > 0:16:09Have pity! Moisturise me! Oh, Doctor!
0:16:09 > 0:16:15- Help her.- Everything has its time, and everything dies.
0:16:15 > 0:16:19I'm...too...young!
0:16:21 > 0:16:28He's a Time Lord with limits, but he'll always give his foes one final chance to quit.
0:16:28 > 0:16:30Fascinating.
0:16:30 > 0:16:35Your people were peaceful to the point of indolence.
0:16:35 > 0:16:38You seem to be something new.
0:16:38 > 0:16:41Would you declare war on us, Doctor?
0:16:41 > 0:16:43I'm so old now.
0:16:44 > 0:16:47I used to have so much mercy.
0:16:49 > 0:16:52You get one warning.
0:16:52 > 0:16:53That was it.
0:16:58 > 0:17:03"No second chances" is one of his earliest lines. "No second chances. I'm that sort of man."
0:17:03 > 0:17:07Aaagh!
0:17:07 > 0:17:09No second chances.
0:17:09 > 0:17:11- I'm that sort of a man. - And what a man.
0:17:11 > 0:17:14He single-handedly defeats the savage Sycorax,
0:17:14 > 0:17:18and brings the Prime Minister back down to Earth with a bump.
0:17:18 > 0:17:23By the ancient rites of combat, I forbid you to scavenge here for the rest of time.
0:17:23 > 0:17:26When you talk of the Earth,
0:17:26 > 0:17:30it is defended.
0:17:31 > 0:17:35The first thing I shot was the scene at the end.
0:17:35 > 0:17:41"Don't you think she looks tired?" That scene, where I condemn Harriet Jones to a life on the backbenches.
0:17:41 > 0:17:43Harriet Jones, Prime Minister.
0:17:43 > 0:17:45HE SPEAKS SYCORAXIC
0:17:45 > 0:17:49- Yes, we know who you are.- '90% of the time, we do see this quirky,'
0:17:49 > 0:17:54full of energy, happy guy...
0:17:54 > 0:17:56Did you miss me?
0:17:56 > 0:17:59..who's just up for everything, and it's all perfectly positive.
0:17:59 > 0:18:03You left me! I had all the food!
0:18:05 > 0:18:06Tell them to fire.
0:18:17 > 0:18:20- That was murder.- We forget, sometimes, that he is an alien.
0:18:20 > 0:18:22- That was defence. - But they were leaving.
0:18:22 > 0:18:24We have to defend ourselves.
0:18:24 > 0:18:27I should have told them to run as fast as they can.
0:18:27 > 0:18:31Run and hide, because the monsters are coming. The human race.
0:18:31 > 0:18:34Those are the people I represent. I did it on their behalf.
0:18:34 > 0:18:36- I should've stopped you.- What you see isn't just what you get.
0:18:36 > 0:18:41- I could bring down your government with a single word.- I don't think you're capable of that.
0:18:41 > 0:18:43You're right. Not a single word.
0:18:46 > 0:18:49- Just six.- I don't think so.
0:18:56 > 0:18:58Don't you think she looks tired?
0:18:58 > 0:19:02When suddenly confronted with a different moral code,
0:19:02 > 0:19:07or the sacrifice of someone like Harriet Jones in The Christmas Invasion,
0:19:07 > 0:19:10who we have completely loved as an ally,
0:19:10 > 0:19:16and suddenly she makes a very human...political, pragmatic decision,
0:19:16 > 0:19:18and the Doctor just cuts her dead.
0:19:18 > 0:19:23- What did he say?- Nothing, really. - What did he say! - Nothing. I don't know...- Doctor!
0:19:23 > 0:19:26Doctor, what did you... What did he say?
0:19:26 > 0:19:30I thought that was fantastic, and rather chilling, especially at Christmas!
0:19:41 > 0:19:44But how do you travel in time? What makes it go?
0:19:44 > 0:19:50Oh, let's take the fun and mystery out of everything. You don't want to know, it just does. Hold on tight!
0:19:50 > 0:19:53The TARDIS is a somewhat temperamental time machine,
0:19:53 > 0:19:58so the Doctor often has terrible trouble knowing when, or where, he'll end up.
0:19:58 > 0:20:00Martha, have you met my friend?
0:20:00 > 0:20:02I wonder what year it is.
0:20:02 > 0:20:08- The Empire State Building's not finished yet.- Work in progress. Still got a couple of floors to go.
0:20:08 > 0:20:12- If I know my history, that makes the date...- November 1st, 1930.
0:20:12 > 0:20:14You're good at this.
0:20:16 > 0:20:19- I got the flight wrong.- I don't care.
0:20:19 > 0:20:22It's not 1860, it's 1869.
0:20:22 > 0:20:25- I don't care.- And it's not Naples. - I don't care.
0:20:25 > 0:20:30One of the great things about this show is that it can be anywhere and any when.
0:20:31 > 0:20:37You don't know what's coming, cos there's time travel, which is this wonderful storytelling device.
0:20:42 > 0:20:45Travels in the TARDIS very rarely go smoothly,
0:20:45 > 0:20:51and this voyage to Victorian London was no different, except that here the trouble is a double.
0:20:51 > 0:20:54- You there, boy, what day is this? - 1851, sir.
0:20:54 > 0:20:57Right. Nice year. Bit dull.
0:20:57 > 0:20:58- Doctor!- >
0:20:59 > 0:21:01- Doctor!- >
0:21:01 > 0:21:04Who, me?
0:21:04 > 0:21:07Don't worry! Stand back. What have we got here?
0:21:07 > 0:21:11- Ooh.- Don't worry, stand back! What have we got here?
0:21:11 > 0:21:13- Hold on, who are you?- I'm the Doctor.
0:21:13 > 0:21:17He arrives in London and meets another Doctor who's lost his partner
0:21:17 > 0:21:20in a tragic way. So there's a kindred there.
0:21:20 > 0:21:24If you could stand back, sir, this is a job for a Time Lord.
0:21:24 > 0:21:25For a what Lord?
0:21:25 > 0:21:29There's lots of reasons why it would be quite comforting
0:21:29 > 0:21:34to meet someone who can empathise with his experience.
0:21:34 > 0:21:38I've heard all about you, Doctor. Bit of a legend, if I say so myself.
0:21:38 > 0:21:43Modesty forbids me to agree with you, sir, but yes, I am.
0:21:43 > 0:21:47A legend with...certain memories missing, am I right?
0:21:47 > 0:21:50- How do you know that? - You've forgotten me.
0:21:59 > 0:22:02JL. The watch is Jackson Lake's.
0:22:02 > 0:22:05- But I'm the Doctor. - You became the Doctor,
0:22:05 > 0:22:12because the infostamp you picked up was a book about one particular man.
0:22:12 > 0:22:14That's you.
0:22:14 > 0:22:18Time Lord, TARDIS, enemy of the Cybermen.
0:22:18 > 0:22:20The one and the only.
0:22:20 > 0:22:24'He was a man who'd gone through terrible trauma,'
0:22:24 > 0:22:29who'd lost his wife and lost his child, lost his memory.
0:22:29 > 0:22:37See, the infostamp streamed all that information about me right inside your head.
0:22:47 > 0:22:52He was living in a fusion of pain, really,
0:22:52 > 0:22:56that Doctor Who was able to sort of ease him out of.
0:22:56 > 0:22:59What you suffered is called a fugue.
0:23:00 > 0:23:02A fugue state -
0:23:02 > 0:23:06where the mind just runs away because it can't bear to look back.
0:23:09 > 0:23:13You wanted to become someone else...
0:23:13 > 0:23:16because Jackson Lake had lost so much.
0:23:16 > 0:23:20He's slightly a broken person within that episode,
0:23:20 > 0:23:24'so it's about them both dealing with their past and their loss.'
0:23:24 > 0:23:26I killed her!
0:23:26 > 0:23:29'The Doctor's interference with him'
0:23:29 > 0:23:32means that he's able to move on and grow and be a father
0:23:32 > 0:23:36and possibly have a relationship with his companion.
0:23:36 > 0:23:40All those facts and figures I saw of the Doctor's life, you were never alone.
0:23:40 > 0:23:43All those bright and shining companions...
0:23:43 > 0:23:45But not any more?
0:23:45 > 0:23:47No.
0:23:47 > 0:23:48Might I ask why not?
0:23:48 > 0:23:50They leave.
0:23:52 > 0:23:54Because they should, or they find someone else.
0:23:56 > 0:24:01And some of them, some of them...forget me.
0:24:02 > 0:24:04I suppose in the end...
0:24:10 > 0:24:13..they break my heart.
0:24:17 > 0:24:20Jackson Lake catches the Doctor,
0:24:20 > 0:24:25and he can see that he's slightly bluffing, he's full of bravado, and he has to go.
0:24:25 > 0:24:27I take it this is goodbye?
0:24:27 > 0:24:29Onwards and upwards.
0:24:29 > 0:24:33He sees something in this man that he needs to have, particularly on Christmas Day,
0:24:33 > 0:24:35he needs companionship.
0:24:35 > 0:24:37That offer of Christmas dinner.
0:24:37 > 0:24:39It's no longer a request, it's a demand.
0:24:41 > 0:24:43In memory of those we've lost.
0:24:46 > 0:24:48Oh, go on, then.
0:24:48 > 0:24:53- Really?- Just this once, you've actually gone and changed my mind.
0:24:53 > 0:24:54Not many people can do that.
0:24:54 > 0:24:59Jackson, if anyone had to be the Doctor, I'm glad it was you.
0:24:59 > 0:25:01For me, it's the scene of the show.
0:25:01 > 0:25:04The feast awaits. Come with me.
0:25:04 > 0:25:06- Walk this way.- I certainly will.
0:25:06 > 0:25:09It's a scene about the whole series.
0:25:09 > 0:25:12So it was very, very moving, I thought.
0:25:20 > 0:25:22People don't understand time.
0:25:22 > 0:25:26- It's not what you think it is. - Then what is it?- Complicated.
0:25:26 > 0:25:28Now and again, it's interesting to look
0:25:28 > 0:25:31more objectively at what being a traveller in time means...
0:25:31 > 0:25:36People assume that time is a strict progression of cause to effect, but actually, from a non-linear,
0:25:36 > 0:25:43non-subjective viewpoint, it's more like a big ball of wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey...stuff.
0:25:43 > 0:25:46..and why that would make your life very complicated
0:25:46 > 0:25:51and why that would give you some very difficult moral decisions.
0:25:54 > 0:26:00There's always a problem with any story involving time travel as to establishing what the rules are.
0:26:00 > 0:26:03Because if the Doctor can travel back and forth in time,
0:26:03 > 0:26:05you know, at will,
0:26:05 > 0:26:10then if he does something in 1942, how does that affect things in 2006?
0:26:10 > 0:26:15You know, you have to establish some ground rules.
0:26:15 > 0:26:22But on a time trip to meet her father, the temptation to save his life proves too much for Rose.
0:26:22 > 0:26:25- God, this is it. - This is the last time we can be here.
0:26:27 > 0:26:28Rose, no!
0:26:28 > 0:26:30ENGINE REVS
0:26:36 > 0:26:41- I saved your life! - The Doctor's always said you mustn't interfere with history.
0:26:41 > 0:26:46So it's OK when YOU go to other times and you save people's lives, but not me saving my dad?
0:26:46 > 0:26:48I know what I'm doing, you don't.
0:26:48 > 0:26:51- But he's alive!- My entire planet died. My whole family.
0:26:51 > 0:26:56- Do you think it never occurred to me to go back and save them? - It's not like I've changed history.
0:26:56 > 0:27:01There's a man alive in the world who wasn't alive before. That's the most important thing in creation.
0:27:01 > 0:27:05The whole world's different because he is alive.
0:27:05 > 0:27:09As rule-breaking Rose realises, meddling with time has its consequences.
0:27:10 > 0:27:17Time's been damaged, and they've come to sterilise the wound... by consuming everything inside.
0:27:17 > 0:27:20But going by the book doesn't have to be boring.
0:27:20 > 0:27:22There's still time and space for a bit of fun.
0:27:22 > 0:27:26- I can travel in time. - Get out of here.- I'll prove it.
0:27:31 > 0:27:38I quite like the slight nuancing of that role we've done in recent years
0:27:38 > 0:27:41by saying that there are fixed points in time, and there are fluid moments in time.
0:27:41 > 0:27:44Like so.
0:27:44 > 0:27:46See?
0:27:46 > 0:27:52A Time Lord or a time-sensitive is aware of when you can fiddle and when you can't.
0:27:53 > 0:27:56- Told you.- That was this morning.
0:27:56 > 0:28:00But...did you...oh, my God! You can travel in time!
0:28:00 > 0:28:05But if you could see me this morning, why didn't you tell me not to go into work?
0:28:05 > 0:28:09Crossing into established events is strictly forbidden,
0:28:09 > 0:28:10except for cheap tricks.
0:28:10 > 0:28:15There are strict guidelines in terms of what you can and can't do,
0:28:15 > 0:28:19and I think the Doctor's always aware of that, so he can guide the companion.
0:28:19 > 0:28:22Are we safe? I mean, can we move around and stuff?
0:28:22 > 0:28:23Course we can. Why do you ask?
0:28:23 > 0:28:27It's like in the films. You step on a butterfly, you change the future of the human race.
0:28:27 > 0:28:32Don't...step on any butterflies. What have butterflies ever done to you?
0:28:32 > 0:28:36You kind of think, OK, maybe you don't have to tiptoe so much around things.
0:28:36 > 0:28:41You can go and talk to people and touch people, and you won't spread the flu or whatever.
0:28:41 > 0:28:44What if...I don't know, what if I kill my grandfather?
0:28:44 > 0:28:47- Are you planning to?- No!- Well, then.
0:28:47 > 0:28:51And of course, part of the role of the Doctor's travelling companions
0:28:51 > 0:28:54has always been to challenge that.
0:28:54 > 0:28:56Where is everything?
0:28:56 > 0:28:58Try this way.
0:28:58 > 0:29:04'If you can set a story within something that's part of all our cultural historical knowledge,'
0:29:04 > 0:29:07something like the Pompeii story... We're in Pompeii.
0:29:07 > 0:29:09And it's volcano day.
0:29:09 > 0:29:13It's a wonderful, extraordinary story anyway.
0:29:13 > 0:29:14The TARDIS has gone.
0:29:14 > 0:29:16Excuse me.
0:29:16 > 0:29:20There was a box. Big blue wooden box just over there. Where's it gone?
0:29:20 > 0:29:21Sold it, didn't I?
0:29:21 > 0:29:25It lends itself to the extraordinary world of the Doctor.
0:29:25 > 0:29:27Positions!
0:29:27 > 0:29:33And it's up Pompeii where the question of time-travelling ethics really erupts.
0:29:33 > 0:29:35There you go.
0:29:35 > 0:29:37Thank you, kind sir.
0:29:37 > 0:29:42- I'm a marble inspector.- By the gods of commerce, an inspection! - Nothing to worry about.
0:29:42 > 0:29:45I'm sure you've got nothing to hide although, frankly,
0:29:45 > 0:29:51- that object looks like wood to me. - I told you to get rid of it. - I only bought it today.
0:29:51 > 0:29:56What do you do in old Pompeii, then, girls your age? You got mates?
0:29:56 > 0:29:58Do you hang around the shops?
0:29:58 > 0:30:00TK Maxx-imus?
0:30:00 > 0:30:03The destruction of Pompeii was a fixed point in time...
0:30:10 > 0:30:14..and that allows this wonderful scene where Donna
0:30:14 > 0:30:18insists that they save somebody, and the Doctor insists that they can't.
0:30:20 > 0:30:22God save us, Doctor!
0:30:26 > 0:30:28No!
0:30:30 > 0:30:32Doctor, you can't!
0:30:36 > 0:30:38You can't just leave them!
0:30:38 > 0:30:41History's back in place, and everyone dies.
0:30:41 > 0:30:46You've got to go back. Doctor, I'm telling you, take this thing back!
0:30:50 > 0:30:53- It's not fair.- No, it's not.
0:30:53 > 0:30:56To be fair, the Doctor always warned Donna off.
0:30:56 > 0:31:03He always said, "It's not gonna be a barrel of laughs," and she chose to come anyway.
0:31:03 > 0:31:07But at the same time, our humanity acts as a check for the Doctor.
0:31:07 > 0:31:10But your own planet...
0:31:10 > 0:31:11It burnt.
0:31:13 > 0:31:16That's just it. Don't you see, Donna? Can't you understand?
0:31:16 > 0:31:20If I could go back and save them, I would, but I can't.
0:31:22 > 0:31:24I can never go back.
0:31:24 > 0:31:26I can't. I just can't. I can't.
0:31:26 > 0:31:29Just someone.
0:31:29 > 0:31:31Please.
0:31:33 > 0:31:38Not the whole town. Just save someone.
0:31:51 > 0:31:53Come with me.
0:32:10 > 0:32:14That breaks the rules. That's not what a Time Lord's allowed to do, or anyone is allowed to do.
0:32:14 > 0:32:16Who are you, Doctor,
0:32:16 > 0:32:21with your words, and your temple containing such size within?
0:32:21 > 0:32:23Oh, I was never here.
0:32:23 > 0:32:25Don't tell anyone.
0:32:35 > 0:32:39Of course, you can never accuse the Doctor of being stuck in the past.
0:32:39 > 0:32:44Some of his amazing adventures actually mean he's way ahead of his time.
0:32:51 > 0:32:55It's the year 5,000,000,023. This is New Earth.
0:32:55 > 0:33:01One of the wonderful things about Who is the fact
0:33:01 > 0:33:02that you time-travel,
0:33:02 > 0:33:09the fact that you have the TARDIS, and you can go to any time period, any planet, any galaxy.
0:33:09 > 0:33:12'Shuttles five and six, now docking'.
0:33:14 > 0:33:16- Any spaceship.- '51st century.'
0:33:16 > 0:33:20Dagmar Cluster - you're a long way from home, Mickey.
0:33:20 > 0:33:2450,000 light years from your old world, and we're in NEW New York.
0:33:24 > 0:33:27Sapphire waterfall. A waterfall made of sapphires.
0:33:27 > 0:33:29This enormous jewel the size of a glacier
0:33:29 > 0:33:35reaches the Cliffs of Oblivion and shatters into sapphires. They fall 100,000 feet into a crystal ravine.
0:33:35 > 0:33:39- Bet you say that to all the girls. - Come on! They're boarding now.
0:33:39 > 0:33:42It's no fun if I see it on my own.
0:33:42 > 0:33:46- I'll let the Doctor describe it. - The fourth great and bountiful human empire.
0:33:46 > 0:33:49And there it is, Planet Earth at its height.
0:33:51 > 0:33:53He's your boyfriend.
0:33:53 > 0:33:55Not any more.
0:34:00 > 0:34:07'..and the driving should be clear and easy, with 15 extra lanes open for the New New Jersey Expressway'.
0:34:07 > 0:34:08That's more like it.
0:34:08 > 0:34:11That's the view we had last time. This is the lower levels.
0:34:11 > 0:34:15Because it can be anywhere and because of the scope
0:34:15 > 0:34:21for storytelling that we're afforded by the show, it's so exciting to come across each new story each time.
0:34:28 > 0:34:32But it's by going back in time that gives The Doctor
0:34:32 > 0:34:34a chance to meet some of his heroes.
0:34:34 > 0:34:37There would be many perks of time travel, but I
0:34:37 > 0:34:42dare say that one of them would be, um, meeting people from the past.
0:34:47 > 0:34:51It's funny, because when I've been asked "If you had a time machine,
0:34:51 > 0:34:53"where would you go?",
0:34:53 > 0:34:57I and a lot of people that I've asked tend to say backwards.
0:34:57 > 0:35:00Charles II? Henry VIII? I know, what about Agatha Christie?
0:35:00 > 0:35:03I'd love to meet Agatha Christie. I bet she's brilliant.
0:35:03 > 0:35:06To put the Doctor alongside some of these extraordinary
0:35:06 > 0:35:11characters from Earth's own history, it's too good an opportunity to miss.
0:35:11 > 0:35:13- Agatha Christie.- Agatha Christie!
0:35:13 > 0:35:18Talking about you the other day. I said "I bet she's brilliant". I'm the Doctor. This is Donna.
0:35:18 > 0:35:20I love your stuff. What a mind!
0:35:20 > 0:35:23You fool me every time. Well, almost every time.
0:35:23 > 0:35:25Well, once or twice.
0:35:25 > 0:35:28Well, once. But it was a good one.
0:35:28 > 0:35:31If you could go anywhere, not so many people say "I'd go forwards".
0:35:31 > 0:35:37You want to go back, cos you kind of want to experience things that you know about,
0:35:37 > 0:35:38but first hand.
0:35:38 > 0:35:44Might I introduce Her Majesty, Queen Victoria, Empress of India and Defender of the Faith.
0:35:44 > 0:35:49It makes sense somehow to put the Doctor into those worlds, and see how he reacts.
0:35:49 > 0:35:52I dub thee Sir Doctor of TARDIS.
0:35:52 > 0:35:58And because the Doctor's, you might say, an arrogant fellow at times,
0:35:58 > 0:36:02there's something thrilling about seeing him meet one of his heroes.
0:36:02 > 0:36:04Oi, you! Follow that hearse!
0:36:04 > 0:36:07- You can't do that, sir!- Why not?
0:36:07 > 0:36:10I'll give you a very good reason why not - because this is my coach!
0:36:10 > 0:36:12Get in, then!
0:36:12 > 0:36:14Move!
0:36:16 > 0:36:19- You're losing them! - Everything in order, Mr Dickens?
0:36:19 > 0:36:21- No, it is not.- What did he say?
0:36:21 > 0:36:24Let me say, I'm not without a sense of humour...
0:36:24 > 0:36:28- Dickens?- Yes.- Charles Dickens? - Yes.- The Charles Dickens?
0:36:28 > 0:36:31- Should I remove the gentleman? - Charles Dickens!
0:36:31 > 0:36:34You're brilliant, you are! 100% brilliant. I've read 'em all.
0:36:34 > 0:36:39- Great Expectations, Oliver Twist, and what's the one with the ghost? - Christmas Carol?
0:36:39 > 0:36:41No, the one with the trains.
0:36:41 > 0:36:44The Signalman. Terrifying. The best short story ever written.
0:36:44 > 0:36:46- You're a genius! - You want me to get rid of him?
0:36:46 > 0:36:49No, I think he can stay.
0:36:49 > 0:36:52Oh, yes! The Globe Theatre.
0:36:52 > 0:36:55- Is Shakespeare in there?- Oh, yes.
0:36:55 > 0:36:57Ms Jones, will you accompany me to the theatre?
0:36:57 > 0:36:59Mr Smith, I will!
0:36:59 > 0:37:03In Elizabethan England, the globe-trotting Doctor
0:37:03 > 0:37:06finds out first-hand just how difficult Shakespeare can be.
0:37:06 > 0:37:08Hello. Excuse me.
0:37:08 > 0:37:11- Not interrupting, am I? Mr Shakespeare, isn't it?- Oh, no.
0:37:11 > 0:37:14No, no, who let you in? No autographs.
0:37:14 > 0:37:19No, you can't have yourself sketched with me, and please don't ask where I get my ideas from.
0:37:19 > 0:37:23Thanks for the interest. Now be a good boy and shove...
0:37:23 > 0:37:25Hey, nonny, nonny!
0:37:25 > 0:37:27To be or not to be.
0:37:27 > 0:37:29Oh. That's quite good.
0:37:29 > 0:37:31You should write that down.
0:37:31 > 0:37:32I must work.
0:37:32 > 0:37:34I have a play to complete.
0:37:34 > 0:37:36All the world's a stage.
0:37:36 > 0:37:39Hmm. I might use that.
0:37:39 > 0:37:43- Rage, rage, against the dying of the light.- I might use that.
0:37:43 > 0:37:45You can't, it's someone else's.
0:37:45 > 0:37:48- Good luck, Doctor. - Good luck, Shakespeare.
0:37:48 > 0:37:50- Once more unto the breach! - I like that!
0:37:50 > 0:37:52Wait a minute, that's one of mine.
0:37:52 > 0:37:59If you're going to tell a story about a playwright's words being hijacked by an alien species...
0:37:59 > 0:38:05Speed the words...to writer's hand.
0:38:05 > 0:38:10Then you might as well make that playwright the most famous playwright that's ever lived.
0:38:12 > 0:38:18The witches have had their wicked way, and our wordsmith Will is completely under their spell.
0:38:18 > 0:38:22Love's Labour's Won. I don't think much of sequels, never as good as the original.
0:38:22 > 0:38:27Have you seen this last bit? Must have been dozing off when he wrote that. Dunno what it means.
0:38:27 > 0:38:28Love's Labour's Won.
0:38:28 > 0:38:32There's evidence to suggest there's a play by Shakespeare called that.
0:38:32 > 0:38:33I'm sorry, but stop.
0:38:33 > 0:38:37This performance must end immediately.
0:38:37 > 0:38:41- Oh, everyone's a critic. - The wordsmith!- Fear not.
0:38:41 > 0:38:42I have the doll.
0:38:42 > 0:38:45This play must not be performed.
0:38:48 > 0:38:53You could argue that that's really Much Ado About Nothing, or it
0:38:53 > 0:38:58never really existed or...but you know...you could also argue
0:38:58 > 0:39:04that there was a play called Love's Labour's Won, and it got sucked up into the heavens by the Carrionites
0:39:04 > 0:39:07- being trapped between dimensions. - They come.
0:39:07 > 0:39:09They come!
0:39:09 > 0:39:13And here's proof, if needed, that the pen really is mightier.
0:39:13 > 0:39:17The shape of the Globe gives words power, but you're the wordsmith,
0:39:17 > 0:39:22- the one true genius, the only man clever enough to do it!- What words? I have none ready.- You're Shakespeare!
0:39:24 > 0:39:26I think it's more fun to believe that, isn't it?
0:39:26 > 0:39:28Words of power!
0:39:28 > 0:39:31Foul Carrionite spectres, cease your show!
0:39:31 > 0:39:34Between the points...
0:39:34 > 0:39:36761390!
0:39:36 > 0:39:38761390!
0:39:38 > 0:39:44Vanish like a tinker's cuss, I say to thee...
0:39:44 > 0:39:47- Expelliarmus!- Expelliarmus! - Expelliarmus!
0:39:47 > 0:39:49Good old JK!
0:39:55 > 0:39:59Love's Labour's Won. There it goes.
0:40:09 > 0:40:11I mean, Shakespeare.
0:40:11 > 0:40:16To get to meet him...I would have loved to have done that!
0:40:16 > 0:40:18Look sharp, we have guests.
0:40:20 > 0:40:22Next, another novel idea.
0:40:22 > 0:40:30The Doctor and Donna find themselves at a 1930s dinner party, where they encounter a mystery author.
0:40:30 > 0:40:34I say, what are you doing with that lead piping?
0:40:34 > 0:40:37But that's impossible. No!
0:40:37 > 0:40:39Murder, murder!
0:40:43 > 0:40:45Oh, my goodness!
0:40:45 > 0:40:48Bashed on the head. Blunt instrument.
0:40:48 > 0:40:50Somebody is picking off
0:40:50 > 0:40:55all the friends and staff in the mansion, and we don't know who.
0:40:55 > 0:40:58Agatha and I will question the suspects. You search the bedrooms.
0:40:58 > 0:41:02- Look for clues (any more residue). You'll need this.- Is that for real?
0:41:02 > 0:41:04Go on. You're ever so plucky.
0:41:06 > 0:41:10Right, then. Solving a murder mystery with Agatha Christie, brilliant!
0:41:11 > 0:41:14Aaagh! I've been poisoned.
0:41:14 > 0:41:16What do we do?
0:41:16 > 0:41:19- What do we do?- Bitter almonds.
0:41:19 > 0:41:21It's cyanide. Sparkling cyanide!
0:41:23 > 0:41:28My overriding memory is that David had to
0:41:28 > 0:41:32eat an awful lot of nuts, and drink an awful lot of flat ginger ale.
0:41:32 > 0:41:34Ginger beer.
0:41:34 > 0:41:38- I beg your pardon? I need ginger beer!- The gentleman's gone mad!
0:41:38 > 0:41:40I'm an expert in poisons, Doctor!
0:41:40 > 0:41:42There's no cure. It's fatal!
0:41:42 > 0:41:46Not for me! I can stimulate the inhibited enzymes into reverse.
0:41:46 > 0:41:48I need protein!
0:41:48 > 0:41:51- Walnuts?- Brilliant.
0:41:53 > 0:41:55I can't understand! How many words?
0:41:55 > 0:41:56One word.
0:41:56 > 0:41:59Shake, milk, shake, milk!
0:41:59 > 0:42:02No, not milk. Shake, shake, cocktail shaker!
0:42:02 > 0:42:05- You want a Harvey Wallbanger? - Harvey Wallbanger!
0:42:05 > 0:42:08- Well, I don't know! - How is Harvey Wallbanger one word?
0:42:08 > 0:42:10- What do need, Doctor?- Salt!
0:42:10 > 0:42:12I was miming salt! I need something salty!
0:42:12 > 0:42:14What about this?
0:42:14 > 0:42:16- What is it?- Salt.- That's too salty.
0:42:16 > 0:42:18- Oh, that's too salty. - What about this?
0:42:18 > 0:42:22- What's that?- Anchovies.
0:42:22 > 0:42:23What else?
0:42:23 > 0:42:26It's a song. Mammy!
0:42:26 > 0:42:28I don't know, Camptown Races?
0:42:28 > 0:42:30Camptown Races?!
0:42:30 > 0:42:33All right, then, Towering Inferno!
0:42:33 > 0:42:35It's a shock! I need a shock.
0:42:35 > 0:42:37Right, then, big shock,
0:42:37 > 0:42:39coming up.
0:42:51 > 0:42:53Detox.
0:42:55 > 0:42:59I must do that more often...I mean, the detox.
0:43:02 > 0:43:05As you'd expect, saving the world is a bit tricky,
0:43:05 > 0:43:09and that means that the Doctor often puts himself on the line.
0:43:09 > 0:43:11You will die, Doctor.
0:43:11 > 0:43:17Yeah, the Doctor is often willing to put his own life before that of others.
0:43:22 > 0:43:24All right, so it's my turn!
0:43:24 > 0:43:26He offers himself up to the Daleks.
0:43:26 > 0:43:29Kill me if it'll stop you attacking these people!
0:43:29 > 0:43:31He does the same with the Sontarans.
0:43:31 > 0:43:34Sontarans are never defeated.
0:43:34 > 0:43:36They'll be getting ready for war.
0:43:36 > 0:43:40And well, you know, I've recalibrated this for Sontaran air, so...
0:43:40 > 0:43:42You'll kill yourself.
0:43:42 > 0:43:46Disappears into the Satan Pit without really knowing what he's off to face.
0:43:46 > 0:43:50If they get back in touch, if you talk to Rose, just tell her...
0:43:52 > 0:43:57Tell her...oh, she knows.
0:44:00 > 0:44:04He's always been willing to put himself first.
0:44:04 > 0:44:08Please, I'm begging you, I'll do anything!
0:44:08 > 0:44:09Put me in her place.
0:44:09 > 0:44:12You can do anything to me, just get her out!
0:44:12 > 0:44:16And to allow his own life, er,
0:44:16 > 0:44:20for the lives of his companions, or even sometimes for the lives
0:44:20 > 0:44:21of people he doesn't know well.
0:44:21 > 0:44:24He's got that selflessness.
0:44:24 > 0:44:26Go on. Baptise them.
0:44:26 > 0:44:29Dalek-humans, take aim.
0:44:34 > 0:44:40Which...at times, borders on a recklessness, which I think is perhaps indicative of
0:44:40 > 0:44:42where he's been and what he's been through.
0:44:42 > 0:44:44I've got my little straw.
0:44:44 > 0:44:46- That's nice.- Steady him.
0:44:48 > 0:44:53I will be the destroyer of our greatest enemy.
0:44:53 > 0:44:56Then do it. Do it! Just do it!
0:44:56 > 0:44:58Do it!
0:45:02 > 0:45:03What are you waiting for?
0:45:03 > 0:45:05Give the command.
0:45:05 > 0:45:07Exterminate!
0:45:10 > 0:45:12I don't think he has a death wish.
0:45:12 > 0:45:15Obey. Dalek-humans will obey.
0:45:15 > 0:45:18He's certainly not afraid to...
0:45:18 > 0:45:23to confront his own mortality, and look death fairly squarely in the eye.
0:45:23 > 0:45:24They're not firing.
0:45:24 > 0:45:26What have you done?
0:45:26 > 0:45:28You will obey.
0:45:28 > 0:45:31- Exterminate!- Why?
0:45:31 > 0:45:33Daleks do not question orders.
0:45:33 > 0:45:36- But why?- He has a very,
0:45:36 > 0:45:39very well-defined sense of morality,
0:45:39 > 0:45:43which is immovable for him.
0:45:43 > 0:45:47And if that means sacrificing himself to pursue that, then he will
0:45:47 > 0:45:49quite readily do that.
0:45:49 > 0:45:52You drank his blood, the Doctor's blood?
0:45:52 > 0:45:56- Oh, I don't mind. Scan all you like. - Non-human.- What?
0:45:56 > 0:46:00- He gave his life so they would find you.- Confirmed. Plasmavore.
0:46:07 > 0:46:10No!
0:46:10 > 0:46:14He has a habit of getting into hazardous situations, so being
0:46:14 > 0:46:17anywhere near The Doctor can be dangerous.
0:46:23 > 0:46:25Mickey, Captain, what are you doing?
0:46:25 > 0:46:30I've got a warp star wired into the mainframe. I break the shell, the entire Crucible goes up.
0:46:30 > 0:46:33- You can't! Where did you get a warp star?- I'll do it.
0:46:33 > 0:46:35Don't imagine I wouldn't.
0:46:35 > 0:46:39His world seems to be steeped in death and destruction,
0:46:39 > 0:46:45and it's an intriguing paradox that the Doctor himself struggles to come to terms with at times.
0:46:45 > 0:46:48And the prophecy unfolds.
0:46:48 > 0:46:52The Doctor's soul is revealed.
0:46:52 > 0:46:53Hee hee! See him.
0:46:53 > 0:46:56See the heart of him.
0:46:56 > 0:47:01The man who abhors violence, never carrying a gun.
0:47:01 > 0:47:03But this is the truth, Doctor.
0:47:03 > 0:47:08You take ordinary people and you fashion them into weapons.
0:47:08 > 0:47:14Behold your children of time, transformed into murderers.
0:47:14 > 0:47:16I made the Daleks, Doctor.
0:47:16 > 0:47:19- You made this. - They're trying to help.
0:47:19 > 0:47:25Already, I have seen them sacrificed today for their beloved Doctor.
0:47:25 > 0:47:30The Earth woman who fell opening the subwave network.
0:47:30 > 0:47:31- Who was that?- Harriet Jones.
0:47:33 > 0:47:35She gave her life to get you here.
0:47:39 > 0:47:45How many more? Just think, how many have died in your name?
0:47:45 > 0:47:48It's an interesting area for the character as to quite
0:47:48 > 0:47:53what his responsibility for all that is, and it's one that is never really resolved.
0:47:53 > 0:48:01The Doctor, the man who keeps running, never looking back because he dare not, out of shame.
0:48:01 > 0:48:04This is my final victory, Doctor.
0:48:04 > 0:48:08I have shown you...yourself.
0:48:08 > 0:48:12Undoubtedly, he carries destruction in his wake.
0:48:12 > 0:48:16But it's when the Doctor meets his daughter that everything really hits home.
0:48:16 > 0:48:18She's a generated anomaly.
0:48:18 > 0:48:22Gen-er-ated. What about that?
0:48:22 > 0:48:24Jenny?
0:48:24 > 0:48:26Jenny. Yeah, I like that.
0:48:26 > 0:48:29What do you think...Dad?
0:48:29 > 0:48:30Good as anything, I suppose.
0:48:30 > 0:48:34- Not a natural parent. - They stole a tissue sample at gunpoint and processed it.
0:48:34 > 0:48:39- It's not natural parenting.- Rubbish. My friend fathered twins with a turkey baster.
0:48:39 > 0:48:43- Can't extrapolate a relationship from a biological accident. - Child Support Agency can.
0:48:43 > 0:48:48Just cos I share physiological traits with simian primates, doesn't make me a monkey's uncle.
0:48:48 > 0:48:49I'm not a monkey!
0:48:49 > 0:48:51Right at the beginning, he's so
0:48:51 > 0:48:55reluctant and puts up massive barriers and will not accept
0:48:55 > 0:48:57that she is in any way his child.
0:48:57 > 0:48:59Hold your fire!
0:48:59 > 0:49:03Eventually, this surprising daughter does win the affections of her Doctor daddy.
0:49:03 > 0:49:07But just as Jenny gets to both of his hearts, they are broken by one single bullet.
0:49:09 > 0:49:14I'm the Doctor, and I declare this war is over.
0:49:20 > 0:49:24- What's happening? - The gases will escape and trigger the terraforming process.
0:49:24 > 0:49:26What does that mean?
0:49:26 > 0:49:27It means a new world.
0:49:30 > 0:49:31No!
0:49:31 > 0:49:34'He's not about killing, and the fact that people have'
0:49:34 > 0:49:38chosen to die for him is something he's really uncomfortable with.
0:49:38 > 0:49:40Jenny, be strong.
0:49:40 > 0:49:42You need to hold on, you hear me?
0:49:42 > 0:49:45We've got things to do, you and me, eh?
0:49:46 > 0:49:48Eh?
0:49:48 > 0:49:50We can go anywhere.
0:49:52 > 0:49:54Everywhere. You choose.
0:49:54 > 0:49:57That sounds good.
0:49:58 > 0:50:01You're my daughter,
0:50:01 > 0:50:04and we've only just got started.
0:50:13 > 0:50:20Sadly, many people have had their lives destroyed because of him, and I think that's one of the
0:50:20 > 0:50:26major things, if he starts to think about that it might destroy him, cos he's not about death and violence.
0:50:26 > 0:50:30But it's not only the Doctor's friends who lay their lives on the line.
0:50:30 > 0:50:33I'm sorry to report,
0:50:33 > 0:50:36- Sir, I failed.- A pity.
0:50:37 > 0:50:39We've lost our target practice.
0:50:41 > 0:50:45- What do you mean? - We only needed you for installation of the ATMOS system.
0:50:45 > 0:50:48No, but...I'm on your side.
0:50:48 > 0:50:51I did everything you wanted.
0:50:51 > 0:50:55And it's not ATMOS system, that's a tautology, it's just ATMOS.
0:50:55 > 0:50:57Execute him!
0:50:57 > 0:51:00By being betrayed and let down by the people that he thought
0:51:00 > 0:51:05he was in league with, his world's crumbled to pieces.
0:51:05 > 0:51:10And then this man comes through with this brilliant line, "Do something clever".
0:51:10 > 0:51:13Right, so, Donna, thank you.
0:51:13 > 0:51:14For everything.
0:51:15 > 0:51:17Martha, you too.
0:51:17 > 0:51:21Oh...so many times.
0:51:23 > 0:51:26Luke, do something clever with your life.
0:51:26 > 0:51:29The Doctor says "Yes, I will absolutely step in
0:51:29 > 0:51:33"and essentially destroy myself in order to save the world".
0:51:35 > 0:51:37And he knows exactly what he has to do.
0:51:37 > 0:51:39- What are you doing? - Something clever.
0:51:39 > 0:51:41What a classic line. And then he does.
0:51:46 > 0:51:49In Luke's final moment, he finds a sense of purpose.
0:51:49 > 0:51:50Sontar, ha!
0:51:50 > 0:51:57He sees very clearly that he has to stop the Sontarans, and he knows exactly how he can do it.
0:51:57 > 0:51:59He's the only person who should do it.
0:52:12 > 0:52:17So after over 900 years and nine regenerations, armed
0:52:17 > 0:52:22with nothing more than a cheeky grin and his trusty screwdriver, the Doctor is still out there,
0:52:22 > 0:52:25saving the universe.
0:52:27 > 0:52:29We interrupting you?
0:52:29 > 0:52:32He really is the greatest hero of all time.
0:52:32 > 0:52:37It's fun travelling with the Doctor, and working on the TARDIS.
0:52:43 > 0:52:47He's a man of many worlds, and many words.
0:52:47 > 0:52:52Sco po tro no flo jo co fo toto.
0:52:52 > 0:52:55No bo ho sho co ro to so.
0:52:55 > 0:52:57Bo-ko-do-so-ko-po-fo-po-jo.
0:53:01 > 0:53:03Mo ho.
0:53:03 > 0:53:06Allons-y! Allons-y!
0:53:08 > 0:53:09One, two, three.
0:53:10 > 0:53:12Mmm.
0:53:12 > 0:53:16Sorry, there's a bit of gravy. No, just there.
0:53:19 > 0:53:22- We have an intruder!- How did he get in? "Intruder" window?
0:53:24 > 0:53:30With nerves of steel, the Doctor just has a knack of getting out of trouble.
0:53:30 > 0:53:32Wait, security protocol one.
0:53:32 > 0:53:35You hear me, one! One! That gives me three questions.
0:53:35 > 0:53:38Three questions to save my life, am I right?
0:53:38 > 0:53:40Information. Correct.
0:53:40 > 0:53:41No, that wasn't one of them.
0:53:41 > 0:53:44That's not fair! Can I start again?
0:53:44 > 0:53:47Here, I got you this. Neck brace.
0:53:47 > 0:53:52Wear that for a few days until it's better, although...you might want to keep it.
0:53:52 > 0:53:53Suits you.
0:53:53 > 0:53:54Take me to your leader.
0:53:56 > 0:53:58I've always wanted to say that.
0:53:58 > 0:54:00Oh, come here! LIFT BELL RINGS
0:54:00 > 0:54:01No, no, no!
0:54:01 > 0:54:04See? Never waste time with a hug.
0:54:04 > 0:54:08Friend or foe, the Doctor is frankly unforgettable.
0:54:08 > 0:54:09Queen Elizabeth I!
0:54:09 > 0:54:11Off with his head!
0:54:11 > 0:54:13What?
0:54:13 > 0:54:17- 'Titanic falling'. - What's your first name?- Alonso.
0:54:19 > 0:54:22- You're kidding me.- What?
0:54:22 > 0:54:24Allons-y, Alonso!
0:54:24 > 0:54:26Whoa!
0:54:28 > 0:54:30- That was close.- No fun otherwise.
0:54:30 > 0:54:35"We are not amused". I bet you five quid I can make her say it.
0:54:35 > 0:54:39If I gambled, it'd be an abuse of my privilege as a traveller in time.
0:54:39 > 0:54:40- Ten quid?- Done.
0:54:40 > 0:54:42Aargh!
0:54:43 > 0:54:45He's stone.
0:54:45 > 0:54:47"Armless" enough, though. Quintus!
0:54:51 > 0:54:53I'm Sir Doctor of TARDIS.
0:54:53 > 0:54:57Interesting. That bit of paper is blank.
0:54:57 > 0:55:00- I am not amused.- Yes!
0:55:00 > 0:55:03If you die here, it'll mean I never met you.
0:55:03 > 0:55:06- Time can be rewritten. - Not those times.
0:55:06 > 0:55:08Not one line. Don't you dare.
0:55:09 > 0:55:11It's OK.
0:55:11 > 0:55:12It's OK, it's not over for you.
0:55:12 > 0:55:15You'll see me again.
0:55:15 > 0:55:17You've got all of that to come.
0:55:23 > 0:55:29# And in my dreams it feels like we are 40 storeys tall
0:55:30 > 0:55:34# When you're around, ooh, we don't touch the floor
0:55:38 > 0:55:44# And in my dreams it feels like we aren't ever gonna fall
0:55:45 > 0:55:49# We're safe and sound, and we're untouchable... #
0:56:00 > 0:56:03Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd
0:56:03 > 0:56:06E-mail subtitling@bbc.co.uk