
The previous series' finale was, to me, a missed opportunity. Even having gotten over the loss of both the Master and Martha, I still believe making the Utopians the Toclafane was far less interesting than making them resurrected Time Lords the Doctor had to exterminate all over again. This finale too, has a missed opportunity. At the end of The Stolen Earth, as the Doctor runs towards Rose, he is nicked by a Dalek's exterminator beam. They haul him into the TARDIS just in time for his regeneration. Wow, what an ender, and the perfect, tragic, poetic ending to the Doctor-Rose relationship. Face it, the place Rose has taken in the Who mythology prevents her from ever really returning, because she'd immediately hijack the companion relationship and Billie Piper would have to grow old in the role. UNLESS the Doctor is changed into someone who couldn't give a rat's ass about her.

Not to say there are no sacrifices here. There are, and incredibly touching ones. Donna has her own section in the categories below, so I won't spend too many words on her here, except to say she quickly became one of the best companions ever and will be sorely missed. The Stolen Earth, for its part, kills off Harriet Jones, Former Prime Minister (I know you know who she is), an incredible gut-wrencher. She's been comedy relief and an antagonist, but here proves herself a hero. Not only doesn't she regret being at odds with the Doctor in The Christmas Invasion, she also gives the Daleks a piece of her mind. You smile at her running gag, and immediately allow your heart to swell up at her brave demise, head held high, upper lip stiff, like all great Brits are supposed to go. Her reaction to a Dalek execution squad is basically "you're in over your tin-plated heads". Lovely.

Donna's Destiny: There's been a lot of talk in this section about whether or not Fate is a force in the Whoniverse, or if something else was manipulating the events that brought Donna and the Doctor together. One idea put forth by these episodes is that it was Dalek Caan, either trying to help Davros destroy reality or trying to destroy the Daleks themselves, depending on which side of his madness he got up that morning. But can we believe anything he says? He's crazy! Caan says it all would have happened anyway, he just helped it along, so it's not really up to him. He's not an "actor" in the story. He doesn't seem to make things happen except through whispering sweet nothings into Davros' ear. The possibility I've been espousing in these annotations is that it's the TARDIS' doing. It too "sees" the timeline and is connected to the TARDIS. For self-preservation, it closes the door on Donna's face, making sure both she and the Doctor's hand are inside when it is dropped into the heart of the Crucible.


Wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey: Donna hears a heartbeat reverberating back through time, which Doctor Blue claims is his, following the path of the metacrisis through the vortex. I understand why he thinks so, but it could just as well be Donna's own, since she too becomes a Time Lord hybrid. In any case, the heartbeat is used to make Donna hesitate at the TARDIS' door, so one of these hybrids helps create itself. The other temporal issue is the Crucible hidden +1 second in the future, which is possible in the Whoniverse, where time can be perceived as space. Let's also mention Caan breaking into the "locked" Time War to save Davros. Is that how a future story could bring back the Time Lords? Anything's now possible (if at a cost).
They call it foreshadowing: As in a number of episodes this series (Pompeii, Planet of the Ood, Turn Left and in a sense, even Library), we have a soothsayer in the mix - Caan. Unreliable though he may be, his prophecies are worth our attention. When he talks about the end of everything, it turns out he means everything Dalek. When he says the Doctor's soul will be revealed, does he actually mean his shame at what his companions have become capable of? (That's Davros' interpretation, but as we've seen, Caan misleads Davros elsewhere.) Or could it be that the Doctor's soul finds its way into Donna, which is one of the last episode's big reveal? Or is it Doctor Blue's admission that he loves Rose? Or more broadly, that his GOOD influence on his companions (see below) is what is revealed? Davros just puts a self-serving spin on things. Caan also calls the Doctor the threefold man, prefiguring the three "Doctors". There are three other soothsayers in this: Sarah's Verron friend who gave her the warp star, the psychic attendant at the Shadow Proclamation who sees Donna's fate, and Rose who's lived to see the stars blink out in the faster-moving parallel world.

Military matters: The Doctor has never liked weapons or the military mindset. He's had a chance to show it in this series, especially through his interactions with UNIT and his daughter's people. The irony as presented in Journey's End is that he's in fact prepared his companions for the worst. He's turned them into warriors. Jack falls in with Torchwood ("too many guns"). Rose, Micky and Jackie walk around with giant firearms. Martha stands poised to to self-destruct the Earth. And even Sarah supplies the warp star to blow the Daleks to kingdom come. That's Davros' viewpoint regarding the "Children of Time" anyway. But it's not a complete picture. All of these characters, despite fighting an implacable and irredeemable enemy, give the Daleks an ultimatum. They've learned to give the bad guys one last chance. Jack and Sarah don't blow a hole through the Crucible. Martha doesn't use the Osterhagen Key. And the Doctor ends up trying to save Davros. THAT'S the truth of the Doctor. And why Doctor Blue must be rejected as a product and instrument of war.

Are you my mummy?: All series long, we've had images of characters born without procreation. It's a major theme in the finale. On the side of evil, we have Davros' recreation of the Dalek race from his own cells. On the side of good, we have Doctor Blue (so called because of the blue suit, in case you're wondering) grown from the Doctor's hand and wasted regeneration energy, and contact with Donna's physiology.

Where's my planet?: It's all finally explained. Davros has stolen all thoes planets out of time and space to act as a massive geodesic computer/reality bomb lense/blowey-whimey bafflegab.
Back problems: The psychic attendant at the Shadow Proclamation sees the bug on Donna's back echoing frontwards through time.
The bees' knees: It is finally explained that some bees are aliens who use a kind of galactic frequency to travel to other worlds. The same network was used by Davros to transmat the stolen planets, and the Doctor follows it back to the Medusa Cascade.
Dusty Rose: She's back and now it's her turn to be jealous of Martha! Her own final fate is only sentimental kitsch on paper. In reality, it's rather depressing. The Doctor leaves her with his counterpart, giving her what he normally couldn't - a Doctor that can love her and grow old with her. "Same memories, same everything." Except that's not quite true. He has no TARDIS (not in the final edit) and only one heart, no de facto immortality, etc. Plus, she's tasked with mellowing him out, like she did to the real Doctor. Look at that expression:

The reference section: Plenty, bear with me. First of all, I loved seeing Bernard Cribbins vs. the Daleks.



And yes, I just put myself in that camp. Bring on the Torchwood Series 3, I'm ready for more Whoniverse!
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