The Long Game
162 – "The Long Game" | |||
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Doctor Who episode | |||
Cast | |||
Others
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Production | |||
Directed by | Brian Grant | ||
Written by | Russell T Davies | ||
Script editor | Elwen Rowlands | ||
Produced by | Phil Collinson | ||
Executive producer(s) | Russell T Davies Julie Gardner Mal Young | ||
Music by | Murray Gold | ||
Production code | 1.7 | ||
Series | Series 1 | ||
Running time | 45 minutes | ||
First broadcast | 7 May 2005 | ||
Chronology | |||
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"The Long Game" is the seventh episode of the first series of the British science fiction television programme Doctor Who that was first broadcast on 7 May 2005 on BBC One. It was written by executive producer Russell T Davies and directed by Brian Grant.
In the episode, alien time traveller the Doctor (Christopher Eccleston) and his companion Rose Tyler (Billie Piper), having been joined by near-future genius Adam Mitchell (Bruno Langley), land on Satellite 5 in the far future. Satellite 5 is a space station that broadcasts news across the entire human empire. However, the Doctor notices that the station is suspicious: there are no aliens, and those who are promoted to Floor 500 seem to disappear. The Doctor and Rose discover that the Editor (Simon Pegg) and an alien are controlling the rest of humanity by way of the press. Meanwhile, Adam makes a mistake that forces the Doctor and Rose to take him home.
The concept of "The Long Game" was originally submitted by Davies to the Doctor Who script office in the 1980s. Davies had also been interested in doing a storyline about a failed companion. In addition, critics have pointed out that the story is a satire on the media. Production for the episode took place in November and December 2004, with some location filming in Coryton, Cardiff. "The Long Game" was watched by 8.01 million viewers in the UK and received generally mixed reviews from critics.
Plot
The Doctor, Rose, and Adam arrive on Floor 139 of Satellite 5, a space station orbiting Earth in the year 200,000. The Doctor uses his sonic screwdriver to get Adam and Rose some credits to buy food while he looks around the station. The Doctor meets a woman named Cathica, a reporter who tells him that the station is a giant broadcast tower transmitting news across Earth. They are led to a room where she sits down in a chair located in the center of a round table. The reporters are connected to the computer via a special port installed directly into the brain. The Doctor believes there is a malevolent purpose to the station that is holding back human development. He learns from Cathica that a select few are invited to Floor 500, which is believed to be the highest promotion that can be earned on the station.
The Doctor, with Rose, hacks into the computer systems of the station and is detected by the Editor. The Editor allows the Doctor and Rose to travel to Floor 500, with Cathica following soon after. On Floor 500 the Doctor and Rose find the Editor directing control over the station through a number of dead humans. On the ceiling resides the Editor-in-Chief, the Mighty Jagrafess of the Holy Hadrojassic Maxarodenfoe, to whom the Editor answers. The Doctor learns that the Jagrafess has controlled the humans aboard Satellite 5 to control the lives of the people on the planet below, by manipulating the news.
Meanwhile, Adam discovers that he can gain access to information about Earth's future. He has an information port installed in his brain and uses Rose's phone to call his answering machine at home and transfer data to it. The port also allows the Jagrafess into Adam's mind, who discovers the true nature of the Doctor and makes plans to kill him. The Doctor, aware of Cathica's presence outside the room, loudly comments on how altering the environmental systems will likely kill the Jagrafess. Cathica takes the hint and reverses the cooling system, causing Floor 500 to overheat and killing the Jagrafess and the Editor. As the humans on board the station and on Earth come to wake from the stupor they've been in, the Doctor congratulates Cathica and gives her hope for the future. The Doctor discovers Adam's duplicity and takes him to his home on Earth. The Doctor destroys the answering machine with the data from the future on it and tells Adam he is no longer welcome in the TARDIS.
Continuity
The related update the tie-in website "Who is Doctor Who?" was an essay from a 14-year-old Adam Mitchell.[1] "The Long Game" takes place in the time period of the "Fourth Great and Bountiful Human Empire". The first Earth Empire was featured in several Third Doctor stories in the 1970s.[2] Following the "bad wolf" theme begun in earlier episodes of the season, one of the broadcast channels featuring the Face of Boe (from "The End of the World") is named "BAD WOLFTV".[3][4] In the two-part finale of the 2005 series, "Bad Wolf" and "The Parting of the Ways", those behind the Jagrafess are revealed to be the Daleks.[5] The finale is set on Satellite 5 a hundred years after "The Long Game".[2] The Doctor claims in "Bad Wolf" that "someone has been playing a long game", referring to the manipulation of humanity both before and after "The Long Game" took place.[5]
Production
In the book The Shooting Scripts, Russell T Davies claims that he had originally set out to write this episode from Adam's perspective, watching the adventure unfolding from his point of view (exactly as Rose did in "Rose") and seeing both the Doctor and Rose as enigmatic, frightening characters. He even gave this outline a working title: "Adam".[6] Another working title for this story was "The Companion Who Couldn't".[2] According to Davies, the concept of "The Long Game" was originally written in the early 1980s and submitted to the Doctor Who production office. Whether it was ever read by the production team of the time is unclear, as Davies received a rejection from the BBC Script Unit, who advised him to write more realistic television about "a man and his mortgage" instead.[7] Davies reworked the story for the new series.[7]
In the DVD commentary for this episode, director Brian Grant and actor Bruno Langley refer to an additional motivation for Adam's actions. Apparently, in earlier drafts of the script, Adam's father suffered from a disease that was incurable in his time (2012) and he hoped to learn about a cure which had been discovered between that year and 200,000.[8] In the shooting script, the condition is arthritis.[6] No trace of this motivation remains in the finished programme, although Grant discusses it as if it were still present.[8] Langley and Grant also reveal that the "frozen vomit" that Adam spits out in one scene was in fact a "kiwi and orange ice cube".[8]
Simon Pegg had grown up with Doctor Who and considered it a "great honour" to guest star.[9] He was pleased at being cast as a bad guy.[9] Pegg had previously played Don Chaney in the Eighth Doctor audio play Invaders from Mars.[9][10] When the Editor announces the Jagrafess's name to the Doctor and Rose, he pronounces it as "The Mighty Jagrafress of the Holy Hadrajassic Maxaraddenfoe." Pegg has stated during interviews that he found this an extremely difficult line to say.[9] Voice artist Nicholas Briggs had recorded voice work for the Jagrafess, but his contribution was not used because it sounded too similar to the Nestene Consciousness (which Briggs had voiced in "Rose").[11] "The Long Game" was produced singularly in the series' fourth production block.[12] Filming in the studio took place in November and December 2004.[13] Some location filming was done in the former BT building in Coryton, Cardiff for five days in December.[13][14] The Jagrafress was entirely made of computer-generated imagery (CGI), animated by The Mill. It was given a shark-like design, with the intention that it would "snap out" like a shark.[15] The initial design was also described as a "lump of meat on the ceiling".[15]
Broadcast and reception
"The Long Game" was first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 7 May 2005.[16] Overnight ratings showed that the episode had been watched by 7.51 million viewers live, a 38.9% audience share.[17] It received a final rating of 8.01 million viewers in the UK, the sixth highest-rated broadcast on BBC One for the week.[18][19] The episode also received an Appreciation Index of 81.[20] "The Long Game" was released on DVD in Region 2 alongside the following episodes "Father's Day", "The Empty Child", and "The Doctor Dances" on 1 August 2005.[21] It was then re-released as part of the first series boxset on 21 November 2005.[22]
The episode received generally mixed reviews. SFX described it as an "okay" episode that was reminiscent of the earlier episode "The End of the World." Despite praising Pegg, the theme of "media control," and the Jagrafess, they criticised it for "[failing] to capture the imagination" because there was "no real palpable sense of threat" and that human culture looked identical to modern day.[23] Rupert Smith of The Guardian wrote, "Anything that satirises the profession of journalism is all right with me, but this did it with style."[24] Arnold T Blumburg of Now Playing gave "The Long Game" a grade of B-, describing it as "entertaining" and a welcome throwback to the classic series. However, he questioned the developing tradition of the Doctor not being the hero of the episode and noted that there were some dangling threads.[25] Reviewing the episode in 2013, Patrick Mulkern of Radio Times was more positive, writing that it "acts brilliantly as a satire of the media." He also praised the guest cast and characters and Adam's departure.[13] In 2011, Den of Geek's Mark Harrison wrote that "In retrospect, 'The Long Game' is an underrated and perfectly enjoyable mid-series episode," praising Adam's demise.[26]
In Who Is the Doctor, a guide to the revived series, Graeme Burk described the episode as "entertaining, if unspectacular."[27] He called Pegg the best guest star so far, and stated that Langley did a "superb job" at conveying Adam, but he felt that the episode did not have much else beside the failed companion storyline. Burk criticised the satire for not being subtle enough and borrowing from other stories such as Nineteen Eighty-Four. He also remarked that it was a shame Adam's motives were cut, as well as development between Rose and Adam.[27] Burk's coauthor Robert Smith? was more positive, opining that a satire did not have to be subtle to be effective, and that viewers could still relate it to the news media today.[28] He also praised the way "The Long Game" showed the Ninth Doctor as an "inspirational figure."[28] The two also questioned the decision to leave Adam in the 21st century with future technology.[4]
References
- ^ "Competition winner". BBC Who is Doctor Who? website. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ a b c "The Fourth Dimension: The Long Game". BBC. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
- ^ "Bad Wolf: Clues". BBC. Archived from the original on 5 February 2012. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
- ^ a b Burk and Smith? p. 32
- ^ a b Writer Russell T Davies, Director Joe Ahearne, Producer Phil Collinson (11 June 2005). "Bad Wolf". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b Davies, Russell T (2005). Doctor Who: The Shooting Scripts. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-48641-4.
- ^ a b Davies, Russell T (8 December 2004). "Production Notes". Doctor Who Magazine (350). Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent: Panini Comics.
- ^ a b c Christine Adams, Brian Grant, Bruno Langley (2005). Commentary for Doctor Who episode "The Long Game" (DVD (Region 2)). United Kingdom: BBC.
- ^ a b c d "Simon Pegg plays The Editor" (Press release). BBC. 4 May 2005. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
- ^ "28. Doctor Who — Invaders from Mars". Big Finish. Retrieved 20 February 2012.
- ^ Nicholas Briggs (2005). Commentary for Doctor Who episode "Dalek" (DVD (Region 2)). United Kingdom: BBC.
- ^ Russell, p. 81
- ^ a b c Mulkern, Patrick (11 March 2013). "Doctor Who: The Long Game". Radio Times. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
- ^ Flynn, Jessica (16 April 2005). "Homes to be built on cult TV location". WalesOnline. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
- ^ a b "The Mill – Designing" (Video). BBC. 28 June 2011. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
- ^ "The Long Game: Broadcasts". BBC. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
- ^ "Weekend Series Roudup". Outpost Gallifrey. 8 May 2005. Archived from the original on 29 May 2005. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
{{cite web}}
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/|archive-url=
timestamp mismatch; 19 May 2005 suggested (help) - ^ "Top 30 Programmes". Broadcasters' Audience Research Board. Retrieved 19 March 2013. Note: Information is in the section titled "w/e May 02–08, 2005", listed under BBC1
- ^ Russell, p. 139
- ^ Sullivan, Shannon (17 October 2009). "The Long Game". A Brief History of Time (Travel). Retrieved 13 July 2013.
- ^ "Doctor Who — The New Series: Volume 3 (DVD)". BBC Shop. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
- ^ "Doctor Who: The Complete First Series Boxset (DVD)". BBC Shop. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
- ^ "Doctor Who: The Long Game". SFX. 7 May 2005. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
- ^ Smith, Rupert (9 May 2005). "Music to my ears". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 10 January 2006. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
- ^ Blumburg, Arnold T (11 May 2005). "Doctor Who – "The Long Game"". Now Playing. Archived from the original on 18 June 2005. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
- ^ Harrison, Mark (20 September 2011). "Doctor Who: 10 great companion farewell scenes". Den of Geek. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
- ^ a b Burk and Smith? pp. 33–34
- ^ a b Burk and Smith? pp. 34–35
Bibliography
- Burk, Graeme; Smith?, Robert (6 March 2012). "Series 1". Who Is the Doctor: The Unofficial Guide to Doctor Who-The New Series (1st ed.). ECW Press. pp. 3–62. ISBN 1-55022-984-2.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Russell, Gary (2006). Doctor Who: The Inside Story. London: BBC Books. ISBN 978-0-563-48649-7.
External links
- The Long Game on Tardis Wiki, the Doctor Who Wiki
- "The Long Game" at the BBC Doctor Who homepage
- Template:Brief
- Template:Doctor Who RG
- Template:OG
- Template:Tv.com episode
- Doctor Who Confidential — Episode 7: The Dark Side
- "I'm the Editor." — Episode trailer for "The Long Game"
- "The Long Game" at IMDb
Reviews