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Image Alt: | David Tennant and Billie Piper back to back in front of a blue background with a police box in a corner and text reading, "Doctor Who, the complete second season" |
Showrunner: | Russell T Davies |
Num Stories: | 10 |
Num Episodes: | 13 |
Network: | BBC One |
Episode List: | List of Doctor Who episodes (2005–present) |
The second series of British science fiction programme Doctor Who began on 25 December 2005 with the Christmas special "The Christmas Invasion". A regular series of thirteen episodes was broadcast weekly in 2006, starting with "New Earth" on 15 April and concluding with "Doomsday" on 8 July. In addition, two short special episodes were produced; a Children in Need special and an interactive episode, as well as thirteen minisodes titled Tardisodes. It is the second series of the revival of the show, and the twenty-eighth season overall.
This is the first series to feature David Tennant as the tenth incarnation of the Doctor, an alien Time Lord who travels through time and space in his TARDIS, which appears to be a British police box on the outside. The Doctor continues to travel with his companion Rose Tyler (Billie Piper), with whom he has grown increasingly attached. They also briefly travel with Rose's boyfriend Mickey Smith (Noel Clarke), and Rose's mother Jackie (Camille Coduri). The series is connected by a loose story arc consisting of the recurring word "Torchwood". This is also the first series to be preceded by a Christmas special, the success of "The Christmas Invasion" led to the Christmas special becoming an annual tradition.
Russell T Davies returned as head writer of the series. Phil Collinson produced all episodes, with Julie Gardner serving as executive producer. Music for the series was composed by Murray Gold. A majority of filming took place in Cardiff, Wales. The series was acclaimed by critics and won multiple awards, including five at the BAFTA Cymru Awards.
See also: List of Doctor Who episodes (2005–present).
Two mini-episodes were also recorded: "Doctor Who: Children in Need" was produced for the 2005 Children in Need appeal,[1] and interactive episode "Attack of the Graske" was recorded for digital television following the broadcast of "The Christmas Invasion".
Thirteen Tardisodes were produced to serve as prequels to each episode. All episodes were filmed as part of the second series' production cycle.
See also: List of Doctor Who cast members.
Series 2 was Tennant's first in the role of the Doctor; his casting was announced on 16 April 2005.[2] [3] [4] Following his brief appearance in the closing moments of "The Parting of the Ways" he was next seen in the Children in Need special, broadcast on 18 November 2005. "The Christmas Invasion", broadcast one month later, marked his first episode. In 2005, Tennant had starred in Casanova, written by Russell T Davies and produced by Julie Gardner, when he was offered an audition as the Doctor, which surprised him as it had not yet been publicly announced that Christopher Eccleston would not be returning to the role. He was offered the role at Davies's home, and was initially concerned that if the series was not recommissioned he would become known as "the person who played the Doctor for 35 seconds".[5]
Billie Piper continued her role as companion Rose Tyler, for her second and final series.[6] Piper departed as a regular following "Doomsday".[7] She would return as a regular in the 2008 series,[8] [9] and in a cameo in "The End of Time".[10] She later explained that her decision was due to the unexpected success of the revival. Piper said that she "didn’t like the responsibility of being a role model".[11] [12]
Camille Coduri continued to guest in the series as recurring character Jackie Tyler.[13] [14] [15] Shaun Dingwall returned for several episodes as Pete Tyler and Penelope Wilton reprised her role as Harriet Jones for the Christmas special. Noel Clarke's character Mickey Smith, a recurring guest character during the first series, featured in several episodes as a companion of the Doctor.
Elisabeth Sladen featured in the episode "School Reunion", returning to the character of Sarah Jane Smith, companion of the Third and Fourth Doctors.[16] [17] Following this episode, Sladen was asked to reprise her role in a spin-off series titled The Sarah Jane Adventures.[18] John Leeson also featured in this episode as the voice of K9.
Other guest stars included Adam Garcia and Daniel Evans in "The Christmas Invasion",[19] Anna Hope and Adjoa Andoh in "New Earth",[20] [21] Anthony Head in "School Reunion", Roger Lloyd-Pack in "Rise of the Cybermen" / "The Age of Steel",[22] Rory Jennings, Margaret John, and Maureen Lipman in "The Idiot's Lantern",[23] [24] [25] Claire Rushbrook in "The Impossible Planet" / "The Satan Pit",[26] Nina Sosanya in "Fear Her",[27] and Raji James and Barbara Windsor in "Army of Ghosts" / "Doomsday".[28] [29] Freema Agyeman, who appeared briefly in "Doomsday", would later return to co-star as Martha Jones in the following series.[30] Andoh returned for Series 3 but was recast as Martha's mother. Pauline Collins, who appeared in "Tooth and Claw" as Queen Victoria, had previously appeared in The Faceless Ones (1967) as Samantha Briggs.[31] [32] Nicholas Hoult was considered for the role that went to Jennings.
Following the success of the opening episode of the first series, the BBC announced that Doctor Who had been recommissioned for both a second series and a Christmas special on 30 March 2005.[33] The series was the first series of Doctor Who to be preceded by a Christmas special.[34] The success of the Christmas special led to it becoming an annual tradition.[35] Production on the series began on 1 August 2005 and concluding on 31 March 2006.
Phil Collinson produced all episodes, with Julie Gardner acting as executive producer.[36] [37]
Russell T Davies continued to act as head writer and executive producer, contributing several episodes of the series. New writers for the show included Toby Whithouse, Tom MacRae, Matt Jones, and Matthew Graham. Returning writers Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat also contributed episodes to the series. Stephen Fry was due to write the eleventh episode, but was forced to withdraw as he could not complete the script in time.[38] [39] Davies consequently hired Graham to write "Fear Her". The villain of the episode "Love & Monsters", the Abzorbaloff, was designed by the winner of a Blue Peter contest.
The series is primarily set on Earth (though not as much as the first series was), due to the cost involved in creating another planet, according to Davies. Only two stories are set on another planet.[40]
Just like the first series, the second series saw the return of another classic enemy, the Cybermen, this time in a parallel universe.[41] Presented with the opportunity to re-introduce Cybermen to a whole new generation, Russell T Davies’ prime objective for this new kind of cybermen was to erase the word “silver” and to instead choose to stress the terms “metal” and “steel”, emphasising the loss of their humanity as a source of their monstrosity.
The second series encompassed a loose story arc based around the word "Torchwood", an anagram of "Doctor Who",[42] which first appeared in the 2005 episode "Bad Wolf". The mythology of Torchwood is built across the series; in "The Christmas Invasion" it is revealed to be a secret organisation which possesses alien technology,[43] and its establishment is shown in "Tooth and Claw".[44] Contemporary Torchwood is finally visited by the Doctor and Rose in "Army of Ghosts" / "Doomsday", at which point it is situated within London's Canary Wharf and accidentally allows the invasion of the Cybermen and, subsequently, the Daleks. The Doctor and Rose are forcibly separated by these events, which lead to Rose's entrapment within a parallel universe.
The series was directed by James Hawes, Euros Lyn,[45] [46] James Strong,[47] [48] Dan Zeff[49] and Graeme Harper. Harper had previously directed The Caves of Androzani (1984) and Revelation of the Daleks (1985) in the show's original run.[50]
Recording for the Christmas special began on 23 July 2005.[51] The Clearwell Caves were used twice: the first time as the interior of the Sycorax ship; and the second time as the Beast's Pit in "The Satan Pit".[52] Production blocks were scheduled around the directors. The majority of the filming took place in Wales, particularly in Cardiff. Parts of "New Earth" were shot at the Wales Millennium Centre; the centre was used during promotion of the series.
"Tooth and Claw" was originally part of block one, but due to production issues was pushed to block two. The episode was shot in Llansannor Court. The building was later reused for "The Unicorn and the Wasp". "The Girl in the Fireplace" used the Dyffryn Gardens for both the gardens and palace of Louis XV. The gardens were used for various other episodes, including "Deep Breath" and "The Wedding of River Song".
A Stella Artois brewery was used for the upgrading chamber in "Army of Ghosts". The Coedarhydyglyn House was used for Jackie and Pete's mansion in the episode. The house was later used in "The Angels Take Manhattan". Southerndown Beach was used for the beach that the Doctor and Rose say goodbye in "Doomsday". The beach was later reused in "Dinosaurs on a Spaceship".
The first two weeks of filming on block four were spent entirely on "Fear Her". Maureen Lipman appeared in "The Idiot's Lantern", but due to scheduling conflicts, recorded her scenes remotely in London. Lipman finished her recording in under a day. Block six, the final block, contained only one episode, "Love & Monsters", which was directed by Zeff.
Production blocks were arranged as follows:
Block | Episode(s) | Director | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Christmas special: "The Christmas Invasion" | James Hawes | Russell T Davies | Phil Collinson | 2X |
Episode 3: "School Reunion" | Toby Whithouse | 2.3 | |||
Episode 1: "New Earth" | Russell T Davies | 2.1 | |||
2 | Episode 2: "Tooth and Claw" | Euros Lyn | 2.2 | ||
Episode 4: "The Girl in the Fireplace" | Steven Moffat | 2.4 | |||
3 | Episode 5: "Rise of the Cybermen" | Graeme Harper | Tom MacRae | 2.5 | |
Episode 6: "The Age of Steel" | 2.6 | ||||
Episode 12: "Army of Ghosts" | Russell T Davies | 2.12 | |||
Episode 13: "Doomsday" | 2.13 | ||||
Minisode: "Attack of the Graske" | Ashley Way | Gareth Roberts | Jo Pearce, Sophie Fante & Andrew Whithouse | ||
Minisode: "" | Euros Lyn | Russell T Davies | Phil Collinson | CIN | |
4 | Episode 11: "Fear Her" | Matthew Graham | 2.11 | ||
Episode 7: "The Idiot's Lantern" | Mark Gatiss | 2.7 | |||
5 | Episode 8: "The Impossible Planet" | James Strong | Matt Jones | 2.8 | |
Episode 9: "The Satan Pit" | 2.9 | ||||
6 | Episode 10: "Love & Monsters" | Dan Zeff | Russell T Davies | 2.10 |
Murray Gold returned to compose the music for the second series.[53] Parts of the soundtrack were performed by the BBC National Orchestra of Wales and orchestrated by Ben Foster, unlike in the first series, which was purely reliant on orchestral samples.[54] [55]
The second series premiered on 15 April 2006 with "New Earth", and concluded after thirteen episodes on 8 July 2006 with "Doomsday".[56] Doctor Who Confidential also aired alongside each episode of the series, continuing on from the previous series.[57]
A Children in Need special and an interactive episode, entitled "Attack of the Graske", were both released alongside the series. A series of thirteen Tardisodes were also produced.[58] These mini-episodes (approximately 60 seconds in length) served as prequels to each forthcoming episode, and were available for download to mobile phones and viewable at the official Doctor Who website. The Tardisodes were recorded intermittently from 31 January to 8 April 2006.
Downloads of the Tardisodes to mobile telephones were less popular than expected: around 40,000 downloads, averaging 3,000 per episode.[59] Downloads to personal computers were much more common, with 2.6 million downloads.[60] Iain Tweedale, new media editor for BBC Wales, suggested two reasons for the low number of telephone downloads: although the BBC provided the episodes free, most users had to pay a fee to their mobile network, and many telephones were not compatible with the broadcasts.
In the United States, the second series aired on The Sci Fi Channel (now known as SyFy).[61] [62] In Canada, the series aired through the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. The corporation won a Constellation Award for their assistance and contributions to the series. In France, the series aired on France 4.
The press launch for the series began on 27 March at the Wales Millennium Centre.[63] A special trailer for the series was produced by Red Bee Media. The trailer included both clips from the series and special footage shot for it. Various episodes received screening prior to their official release, including a Glasgow-based screening for "Tooth and Claw" and a Cardiff-based one for "The Christmas Invasion".
See also: List of Doctor Who home video releases. The second series of Doctor Who was first released on DVD in five volumes, with the first volume being released in Region 2 on 1 May 2006 and the final volume on 25 September 2006. The five volumes were also released in Region 4, invariably two months after the Region 2 release. The entire series was subsequently released in a boxset on 20 November 2006 in Region 2.
See also: List of Doctor Who novelisations. "The Christmas Invasion" was adapted into a novel by Jenny Colgan. The novel was subsequently produced as an audio book, narrated by Camille Coduri.[64]
The second series of Doctor Who was watched by an average of 7.5 million viewers, which was slightly down from the previous series, which was watched by 7.9 million viewers.[65] Doctor Who first Christmas special, "The Christmas Invasion", was watched by 9.84 million viewers upon its premiere on 25 December 2005, and, as of 2010, was the ninth-highest figure for an episode of Doctor Who since its 2005 revival.[66] The series' finale "Doomsday" was watched by 8.2 million total viewers, beating a World Cup match between Portugal and Germany by over a million viewers.[67] The series high was "Tooth and Claw" with 9.24 million viewers, while the series low was "The Satan Pit" with 6.08 million viewers.
The series finale, "Doomsday", garnered the highest AI rating of 89%, while the tenth episode in the series, "Love & Monsters", garnered the lowest AI rating, at 76%, seven percent lower than the second-lowest AI rating. The US release of the series averaged a household rating of 1.05 million viewers.
Doctor Whos second series received positive reviews from critics. Series 2 holds a 100% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes with an average score of 9/10, based on seven critic reviews.[68] Many praising the finale "Doomsday" as one of the best episodes,[69] [70] and "Fear Her" as one of the worst.[71] [72] [73] Critics praised the performance of David Tennant and Billie Piper,[74] praising the romantic tension between them.[75] [76] [77] The series' CGI and use of cliff hangers also received praise.[78] [79]
Writing for Slant Magazine, Ross Reudiger praised the dynamic nature of the series and the various settings and characterised the series as a string of entertaining highs and lows, in terms of both quality and intensity; and a season of returns, renewals and reinventions.
Writing about the series' finale, he found Army of Ghost a fairly intense 45 minutes of intrigue and a cliffhanger to put all others to shame; however he found “Doomsday”, to have an awful lot of fanboy silliness but with dramatic, soulful parts which work splendidly ("the story makes no attempt to play by any other rules than its own) and which adds to the re-watchability of the series.
Writing for The A.V. Club, Alasdair Wilkins writes that the finale and the series does engage with some larger thematic questions: Harriett Jones suggested that the Doctor was fundamentally an interloper in the affairs of humanity, and Queen Victoria’s rejection of the Doctor and Rose’s blasé attitude toward the chaos and destruction unfolding around them; but these issues are overshadowed by the arrival of the two evil alien armies. The modern-day Torchwood as a realization of Victoria’s plan to fight the alien horde gave a prosaic and logical means for the Torchwood reveal, in contrast to last season.[80]
Though Torchwood is allowed to occasionally question the Doctor and his traditional role as the heroic defender of the Earth, he finds Davies’ heart isn’t in these criticisms with the situation being such that there’s never much question that humans are messing about with forces they do not understand and with enemies they cannot hope to defeat, because in a Doctor Who story, they are mere supporting characters in narrative that requires the Doctor to be the hero. However, he concluded that whatever these episodes’ failings, they still represent a supremely entertaining 90 minutes of television.
Writing for IGN, Ashan Haque writes that in an episode featuring an epic confrontation and a crossover between parallel universes, Russel T. Davies finds a way to make this action packed episode one led by character driven drama, and one of the most emotionally moving and poignant stories about loss and refusing to let go with the massive excitement surrounding Doctor and Rose's last adventure surpassed by the beautifully acted and extremely well written final chapter of the duo's adventures.
He also adds that while the denouement in this episode is clearly the emotional highlight, the main story is riveting and even on its own makes for some extremely funny and witty dialogue, making the episode that much more memorable. He concluded that it was a very satisfying finale, providing more entertainment than one would get in a full season of lesser shows, calling it sci-fi television at its finest.
Writing for Radio Times, Mark Braxton writes that the two-part finale ends Season 2 with a breathtaking epic that is nevertheless intensely personal and it’s that juxtaposition of the cosmic with the parochial, that makes this story so successful with the immediacy of the domestic setting, and not the weight of numbers of the programme's most popular foes ensnaring the imagination. He adds that he finds Murray Gold to be on playful form, spinning between Bondy trumpet blares and subtle emoti-motifs, while the FX team throws everything at the screen, and the script throws lots of humour at every turn.
He also emphasised the emotional aspects calling the respective sadnesses utterly in character, the demonstrative Rose inconsolable and slapping the dividing wall; the Doctor, quiet with despair, shedding a single tear, demonstrated in a sentence replete with run-of-the-mill richness: “I can’t of think what to say”.
Praising not just the series, but the show itself, he writes that Doctor Who has always found ways to think big and has always delivered on this scale, always with devastating intimacy.
Edward Cleary of Screen Rant ranked the series sixth of thirteen, noting that, while the series "stumbles slightly" following the relaunch of the show, the chemistry between Billie Piper and David Tennant overshadowed these problems. Cleary described Piper and Tennant as one of the best duos in Doctor Who history. He described the episodes "The Impossible Planet" / "The Satan Pit" as being one of the "best two-parters ever".[81]
CBRs Gabriela Delgado noted that the series was the second highest rated on IMDb of Doctor Whos modern run, only behind the fourth series. Delgado praised "Doomsday", calling the episode "heart wrenching" and "tragic".[82] In a ranking for Digital Spy, Morgan Jeffery and Rebecca Cook ranked the series as the fourth best, praising the performance of Tennant. They believed that the second series brought the show new levels of success, by increasing the popularity of the show and securing its future.[83] In a ranking of Doctor Who
See also: List of awards and nominations received by Doctor Who.
Year | Award | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | BAFTA Cymru Awards | Best Actor | data-sort-value="Tennant, David" | David Tennant for "Doomsday" | ||
Best Screenplay | data-sort-value="Davies, Russell T" | Russell T Davies for "Doomsday" | ||||
Best Actress | data-sort-value="Piper, Billie" | Billie Piper for "Doomsday" | ||||
Best Costume | data-sort-value="Page, Louise" | Louise Page | ||||
Best Make-up | data-sort-value="Gorton, Neill" | Neill Gorton and Sheelagh Wells for "The Girl in the Fireplace" | ||||
Best Editor | data-sort-value="Green, Crispin" | Crispin Green for "Tooth and Claw" | [85] [86] | |||
Nebula Awards | Nebula Award for Best Script | data-sort-value="Moffat Steven" | Steven Moffat for "The Girl in the Fireplace" | [87] | ||
Royal Television Society Programme Awards | Best Drama Series | Doctor Who | ||||
Best Production Design | data-sort-value="Thomas, Edward" | Edward Thomas | ||||
Best Costume Design – Drama | data-sort-value="Page, Louise" | Louise Page | ||||
Best Make Up Design – Drama | data-sort-value="Gorton, Neill" | Neill Gorton and Sheelagh Wells | ||||
Best Visual Effects – Digital Effects | Doctor Who | [88] [89] | ||||
Scream Award | Best TV Show | Doctor Who | [90] | |||
TV Quick | Best Loved Drama | Doctor Who | ||||
Best Actor | data-sort-value="Tennant, David" | David Tennant | ||||
Best Actress | data-sort-value="Piper Billie" | Billie Piper | [91] | |||
2007 | British Academy Television Awards | Best Editing Fiction/Entertainment | data-sort-value="Green, Crispin" | Crispin Green | ||
Best Visual Effects | data-sort-value="Mill, The" | The Mill | [92] | |||
Constellation Awards | Best Science Fiction Television Series | Doctor Who | ||||
Best Male Performance in a 2006 Science Fiction Television Episode | data-sort-value="Tennant, David" | David Tennant for "The Girl in the Fireplace" | ||||
Outstanding Canadian Contribution to Science Fiction Film or Television in 2006 | Canadian Broadcasting Corporation | [93] | ||||
Hugo Awards | Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation | data-sort-value="Girl in the Fireplace, The" | "The Girl in the Fireplace" | |||
"School Reunion" | ||||||
"Army of Ghosts" / "Doomsday | [94] | |||||
National Television Awards | Most Popular Drama | Doctor Who | ||||
Most Popular Actor | data-sort-value="Tennant, David" | David Tennant | ||||
Most Popular Actress | data-sort-value="Piper, Billie" | Billie Piper | [95] | |||
Saturn Awards | Best Syndicated/Cable Television Series | Doctor Who | [96] | |||
Best Television DVD Release | Doctor Who | [97] | ||||
Visual Effects Society Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Animated Character in a Live Action Broadcast Program, Commercial, or Music Video | data-sort-value="Hernandez, Nicholas" | Nicholas Hernandez, Jean-Claude Deguara, Neil Roche and Jean-Yves Audouard for "Tooth and Claw" | [98] |