Sunday, 12 April 2009

The Waters Of Mars

After the showing of Planet Of The Dead, there was a special teaser trailer for The Waters Of Mars starring David Tennant as The Doctor. It was 28 seconds long and you can see the trailer on the right hand side of the website. Screenshots will be added to this post soon.

Planet Of The Dead - Ratings

The overnight ratings for Planet Of The Dead have been concluded. The BBC1 showing brought 8.4million viewers. 184,000 viewers watched it on BBCHD. Doctor Who was the number one most watched programm last night over the course of the night. The inal BARB ratings will be announced next week.

Saturday, 11 April 2009

Planet Of The Dead - Your Thoughts

Well, you have all seen Planet Of The Dead, but what are your thoughts on it? Here at Total Doctor Who we loved it, it really brought the Doctor Who spirit back into us, we waited a long time and finally we here at Total Doctor Who were very pleased. The Waters Of Mars, the next special, was previewed at the end of the credits, video and screenshots up tonight.

Planet Of The Dead - Tonight

Well, the wait is over and Planet Of The Dead will air tonight, on BBC1 and BBCHD at 6:45pm. When a London bus takes a detour to an alien world, the Doctor must join forces with the extraordinary Lady Christina, in this one-off seasonal special. But the mysterious planet holds terrifying secrets, hidden in the sand. And time is running out, as the deadly Swarm gets closer...

The episode will last for 60 minutes, and rumoured to have a special trailer at the end of it promoting the next special, rumoured to be title The Waters Of Mars. After the episode, stick around here for a overview, and a updated version of it's sypnopsis over at the Specials Guide on the right.

Undercover










Filming Photo's - David Tennant's final episode.

Spin - Off's

Torchwood: Torchwood is a Doctor Who Spon-Off, that includes a old companion of the Doctors, Captain Jack Harkness. Ex- Time Agent and part-time con-man Jack Harkness heads up the Cardiff branch of the Torchwood group in this, the first full spinoff from Doctor Who. Joined by genius medic Owen Harper, technical expert Toshiko Sato, assistant Ianto Jones and outsider Gwen Cooper, Harkness investigates strange phenomena in the Welsh capital. 

The Sarah Jane Adventures: The Sarah Jane Adventures includes Sarah Jane Smith, a old time companion of The Doctor's. Saving the world … with a little help from her friends

"I saw amazing things out there in space. But there is strangeness to be found wherever you turn. Life on Earth can be an adventure too … you just need to know where to look!" — Sarah Jane Smith

The Sarah Jane Adventures features Sarah Jane Smith, a companion of the Third and Fouth incarnations of Doctor Who from the Doctor's original series. Elisabeth Sladen reprises her role and is back in action, discovering alien plots to take over the world, or simply helping lost extraterrestrials get home. Aided by her new young friend, Maria Jackson (Yasmin Paige), and her newly (and genetically engineered) adopted son Luke Smith (Tommy Knight), Sarah Jane has no problem taking on any challenge! The Sarah Jane Adventures was created by Russell T. Davies, executive producer of the new Doctor Who series. He also serves as an executive producer on The Sarah Jane Adventures, along with Phil Collinson and Julie Gardner.

Doctor Who: Series 5 Guide

Series Five Guide

Series five will air in early 2010, with a new Doctor, Companion and even interior Tardis. Matt Smith will play the eleventh Doctor.

Special Episodes

Special Episode Guide

The Attack Of The Graske: Viewers have the chance to help the Doctor fight off the threat of the Graske in this special interactive episode.

Children In Need Special: The newly-regenerated Doctor explains to a disbelieving Rose that he has regenerated.

The Christmas Invasion: 
Location: London, England, Earth Date: December 2006 Enemy: The Sycorax
Rose and the newly-regenerated Doctor continue their adventures together in this Christmas Special episode. Christmas becomes a time of terror for Planet Earth, as the whole of mankind falls under the shadow of the alien Sycorax. Rose needs the Doctor's help, but can she trust a man with a new face?


The Runaway Bride: 
Location: Earth Date: Christmas 2007 Enemy: Empress of the Racnoss, Roboforms 
As Donna is about to marry her boyfriend Lance on Christmas Eve, she suddenly finds herself on board the TARDIS. As the Doctor tries to get Donna to the church on time, the alien Empress of the Racnoss watches closely from the throne in her spaceship above. How is Donna the key to an ancient plot to destroy the Earth? With time running out, can the Doctor solve the puzzle, defeat the Empress and stop her army of robot Santas? 

Time Crash: 
Location: TARDIS Date: None Enemies: None
After Martha says goodbye to the Doctor and leaves, he is surprised to find a problem with the TARDIS. Suddenly, a man materialises - the Fifth Doctor. But why's he here, and what's happened to the TARDIS?

Voyage Of The Damned: 
Location: The Titanic Cruise Liner; Earth Date: Christmas 2008 Enemies: The Hosts; Max Capricorn 
At the end of Last of the Time Lords, a ship crashes through the side of the TARDIS, mid flight, and a life ring bearing the name 'Titanic' is thrown towards the Doctor - what on Earth is going on? 

The Next Doctor: 
Location: Victorian England Date: Christmas 1851 Enemies: Miss Hartigan, Cybermen 
Christmas, 1851, and the Doctor meets a strange man in Victorian England - a man called The Doctor. But can either one of them protect the Earth from the approaching army of metal men? 

Planet Of The Dead: 
Location: Earth, Unknown Planet Date: Unknown Enemies: Tritovores 
In the first of four specials to mark the departure of David Tennant, The Doctor finds himself taking a bus ride that leads him and everyone else into serious danger. Along with the mysterious Lady Christina de Souza, can The Doctor stop the Tritovores?

The Waters Of Mars:  
Location: Unknown Date: Unknown Enemies: Unknown 
Episode sypnopsis coming soon. Episode to air in November 2009.

Doctor Who: Series 4 Guide

Series Four Guide

Partners In Crime: Donna Noble is investigating some strange goings on with the mysterious and powerful businesswoman Miss Foster and her diet pill company. The Doctor and Donna are investigating the same thing but continually miss each other. But why does Miss Foster have her own sonic pen? A comedy episode. And who is that strangely familiar blonde person who appears for a few seconds at the end of the episode then fades away? 

The Fires Of Pompeii: What has ancient Rome got to do with anything? A quick trip to Pompei with only hours before Mount Vesuvius is about to explode. Donna wants to save a family but the Doctor doesn't. And how did Donna end up as a sacrifice? Rock monsters everywhere. Russell says that the monsters in this episode are the most ambitious to date. A dark depressing episode. 

Planet Of The Ood: A trip to the 42nd century to the Ood's home planet. We find they're really slaves. The Doctor has to find a way to free them, but the Ood have had their own plans for 200 years. We find out what really happened to them to have caused them want to serve.

The Sontaran Experiment PT1&2: Martha contacts the Doctor on her mobile phone while working at UNIT. (Bring back the Brigadier!) and asks him to help fight a Sontaran invasion, before being captured by the Sontarans. (Bring Back The Brigadier!) The Sontarans activate their atmosphere changing device and increase global warming dramatically. UNIT can't do anything about it and the Doctor has to make a sacrifice. 

The Doctor's Daughter: The Doctor, Donna and Martha are dragged to a planet and within seconds of arriving the Doctor's DNA is sampled and a genetically modified, bred for war, 25 year old woman is instantly created from it. Donna promptly names her Jenny and helps the Doctor come to terms with the fact that he has a new daughter. Jenny is needed to help the Humans fight the Hath, a fight that has been going on for generations. 
Martha is separated from the group and help the Hath in her own way. 

The Unicorn And The Wasp: The Doctor, with his plucky young gal Donna, visit an estate where several high class personages have been invited for tea. They meet Agatha Christie, played by Fenella Woolgar, and the Doctor quickly learns that this is the date that Agatha went missing for 10 days and no one knows what happened. Suddenly Mr Peach is found dead in the library with a piece of lead piping. As the body count mounts the Doctor and Agatha must find the clues to lead them to the killer. And what has a giant wasp got to do with it? 

Silence In The Libary PT1&2: The Doctor and Donna land on a library planet in the 51st century that had been abandoned 100 years ago. The library contains trillions of books. The Doctor and Donna encounter dead bodies, data ghosts, the Suit Creature, Vashta Nerada (piranhas of the air – shadows that melt the flesh) and archaeologist Professor River Song played by Alex Kingston. At the end of part 1 Donna is separated from the Doctor and finds herself in a mysterious hospital administered by Doctor Moon.  

Midnight: The Doctor is trapped, alone, powerless and terrified, on the planet Midnight. Soon, the knocking on the wall begins. Only a woman called Sky seems to know the truth – but as paranoia turns into a witch-hunt, Sky turns the Doctor's greatest strengths against him, and a sacrifice must be made! 

Turn Left: Turn Left is the Doctor-lite episode as Midnight was the Donna-lite episode. 
With a time bug on Donna's back, she gets to see an alternate reality where the Doctor has died and worlds fall apart. Donna and Rose work together to bring back the Doctor's universe, but Rose has a message for the Doctor. 

The Stolen Earth & Journey's End: The Doctor and Donna go to the TARDIS doors to see that the entire Earth has been ripped from underneath them. Someone's stolen the Earth! (Again? Didn't this happen in Trial of a Timelord Episodes 1 to 4 when the Timelords moved the Earth?) Davros and his new Daleks have stolen planets from space and time and put them in their own alternative space (D-Space?) in the Medusa Cascade to create an engine capable of dissolving all matter in all universes. The Doctor's Army must band together to save reality. Penelope Wilton returns as Harriet Jones Ex Prime Minister and helps Torchwood, Sarah Jane Smith and Martha band together to contact the Doctor and Donna. Features Rose, Mickey, Jackie, Sarah Jane, Captain Jack, Martha Jones as well as Donna and the Doctor. Gwen and Ianto from Torchwood and K9 from the Sarah Jane Adventures also make a brief appearance. It also features the Judoon and the Shadow Proclamation as well as Davros played by Julian Bleach, and millions of Daleks! Caan timeshifted into the Time Locked Time War and rescued Davros just before he was destroyed. The journey sent Caan insane so he has remain chained up. He can see the future and predicts the arrival of the Doctor and the death of a companion. Davros used his own Kaled cells to create a race of new Daleks. Millions of them.In Part 2 the Doctor regenerates retaining his current incarnation while sending his regeneration energy into his severed hand. With the help of Donna the hand regenerates into a half human Doctor and they, and the children of time, help to defeat the Daleks. 

Friday, 10 April 2009

Enemies

The Daleks:
The Daleks originate from Skaro, but they never used to look like this. They used to be human shaped, and they raged war with another faction on Skaro, and of course started the great time war. Their creator, Davros made them into mutated creatures, and protected them in metal shells. The shell is equipted with a sonic eye, exterminator gun, plunger, air vents, hovering system, manover clips and claws and mcuh more. The Dalek's casing is fully bullet proof, but aiming for the blue sonic eye will blind the Dalek.

The Cybermen:
The Cybermen are just like the Daleks, but are prevously converted humans, with extra bits added on and a re-conditioned skull and brain. They are proteced by full metal armor (steel) and in their early days they only used to have original ray guns. They have changed alot though for the new series, with built in electricity bold mech's, and a laser gun fitted to their rist and a fast pace of marching.

The Master:
The Master is a Timelord just like The Doctor. He originates from Gallifrey and turned against the timelords in the battle and commanded a fleet of Daleks. He looked into the time vortex at a early age when he was a child, and turned evil. He ha sused up 13 lives, but gained new body's.

Gadgets

The TARDIS: The TARDIS (Time and relative dimensions in space) is The Doctor's travelling machine. It is a type 40 capsule, and The Doctor used it to escape the great time war, and has kept it ever since. It is in the shape of a old police box for a "disguise". It is much bigger on the inside that the outside, and has had many versions inside and out. Appantly it has over "4000" rooms, and some we have already seen. We have saw a giant wardrobe, swimming pool, libary and of course the centre control room, although their is a secondary.

The Sonic Screwdriver: This is The Doctor's right hand man, it can unlock any door seal and can hypnotise. It works via sound waves, and has been used since the second doctor.

Galifrey

Gallifrey is The Doctor's home planet. All the other Timelord's originated their, including The Master and The Rani. It was located in the constellation of Kasterborous, 250 million light-years away from Earth. Gallifrey is described as a "buetiful place" by The Doctor, and has 2 suns. Apparntly Gallifrey is a bright orange will colourful sands and lush grass. But, this wonderful homeworld was destroyed by The Daleks, during the great time war between The Daleks and The Timelords. It was a great battle for the planet itself, but The Doctor escaped in his TARDIS. No one won the battle and the planet, along with The Daleks homeworld Skaro, was destroyed. It is reported that the great time war was during The Doctor's eight carnation, but no one actually knows. The Doctor has never went back in time to see it, as crossing time lines is against the universal law. No one knows if he will ever visit.

Characters

The Doctor: The Doctor is a timelord from the planet Gallifrey. He usually goes by the name John Smith. He is 903 years old and travels in time and space in his TARDIS. It is in the shape of a old police box, but used to be able to take any shape or form using the chamelion circuit. That broke. The Doctor has 13 lives, and has been noted that all timelords have 13 unless taken over by a human body. He usually travels with a companion but is sometimes without and gets really lonely.  


Rose: Rose was the first companion of the reboot in the series in 2005. Before she met The Doctor, she worked in a normal store in the ehart of London, but was attacked by Autons in the basement of the store, and that's when she met The Doctor! Ever since Rose met The Doctor she has always been there for him, and when they split up, she always found a way to be with him again!    

Martha:  Martha is a 23 year old popular companion of the tenth Doctor's. Before she met him, she was working in The Royal Hope Hospital in the heart of London before it got transported to the moon by the Judoon. She is a confident companion and hard working, and has always been there for The Doctor when he has needed her most.

Donna: We first met Donna in a one off Christmas Special, when she was about to get married but was transported inside the TARDIS while in mid-flight. She then met The Doctor once again, in a sky-scraper facing the evil Adipose. She travelled far and wide with The Doctor, facing menacing Daleks and Adipose, but eventually lost the Doctor when she mixed his DNA with herself. She now has no memory of The Doctor or her adventures with him.

Captain Jack Harkness: We first met Captain Jack in The Empty Child. He is also a time traveller, and has a very big spaceship, that was parked on the side of BIG Ben during the blitz. He has made many re-appearances and bow works for Torchwood.

Avatar Gallery










Welcome to the new Avatar gallery, which is updated EVERY WEEK with avatars. You don't need to ask, just take them!

Caption Competition

Can you think up a caption to go with this picture? Have anything you want! Please enter before the last day of April, and if you win, you get a mystery prize! So make it good. After the closing date, we will upload a new caption, and remember to visit this section every month via the right pannel. Good luck!

Exclusive Filming Images



Within the past couple of days, we have found many differant filming images  revealing filming photo's for Planet Of The Dead and the final episode starring David Tennant as the time lord. Above you can see the photo's in all their exclusive sleek glory! More when it arrives! Thanks to Scooty for the images!

Doctor Who: Series 3 Guide


Smith And Jones: Martha Jones is a medical student with an internship at a seemingly ordinary hospital called Royal Hope somewhere in London (Cardiff!) when suddenly all the doctors, nurses and the entire hospital are transported to the moon. She has to contend with the Judoon and a blood sucking plasmavore and some strange patient known as Dr John Smith.

The Shakespear Code: Martha doesn't believe the Doctor when he tells her it's a time machine so he proves it by going back in time to meet Shakespeare, the showoff! The witch-like Carrionites in Tudor, London, in 1599 have more than theatre on their minds though.

Gridlock: Space saga in 5,000,000,046 featuring flying cars stuck in a 26 year traffic jam, strange creatures hiding under the roadway and the Face of Boe is in trouble...

Daleks In Manhattan P1&2: The Doctor and Martha go to New York in the 1930s and discover a plot by the Daleks to take over the city via the Empire State Building. But the Daleks are holding a deadly secret, a deadly plan and a deadly enemie!

The Lazarus Experiment: Mark Gatiss plays a man of 76 that finds a way to become young again.Unfortunately his DNA transmogrification causes ancient genes to activate with fatal consequences.

42: A ship is being dragged into the sun and the Doctor and Martha are trapped on board with possessed crew killing each other, and only 42 minutes to go.

Human Nature PT1&2: The Doctor takes Martha to an English village just before the beginning of World War 1 (1913).  They have to The Family by hiding so the Doctor has to become human and disguises himself as a teacher named Doctor John Smith. The Doctor gave Martha a list so that she could protect him but there's nothing on it about Smith falling in love.

Blink: Quantum locked alien weeping angels are trying to kill Sally Sparrow but can a DVD Extra featuring someone known as the Doctor save her?

Utopia: 00 trillion years in the future, at the end of humanity, the Doctor, Captain Jack and Martha encounter a stranger known only as The Professor. The Professor regenerates at the end of the episode into someone we know. Can you guess who. The Doctor has an encounter with Captain Jack which probably includes a fight. The Doctor is upset that Jack is alive, he has trouble dealing with someone who should be dead.

The Sound Of Drums PT1&2: Harry Saxon becomes Prime Minister, and his reign of terror begins, in the penultimate episode of Russell T Davies's Doctor Who. This is only the start of his ambitions, however, as he announces mankind's first contact with an alien race, the Toclafane. An audacious plan, spanning the whole of time and space, begins to close around the Earth. Earth has been conquered and the Master rules supreme, with the Doctor a helpless prisoner, in the final episode of Russell T Davies's Doctor Who.The entire human race has been reduced to slavery, as the mighty warships of a new Time Lord Empire rise from the ashes. Only Martha Jones can save the world...

Doctor Who: Series 2 Guide

Series 2 Guide

New Earth: Let's face it: if you had a TARDIS, you'd want to show off, wouldn't you? And that's precisely what the Tenth Doctor does in this story, when he takes Rose all the way to the year five billion and twenty-three. Now that's what we call some serious time travel. Unfortunately, their little visit to "New Earth" is rather ruined by the appearance of their old foe Lady Cassandra, a woman who's had so much plastic surgery she's just a sheet of taut skin (or, as Rose once described her, a "bitchy trampoline"). The Ninth Doctor defeated her the first time round, but can the Tenth follow suit? 

Tooth And Claw: It's easy to forget that David Tennant actually has a strong Scottish accent in real life. But he gets to use it to great effect in this episode, which sees the Doctor going undercover in 19th Century Scotland. Posing as "James McCrimmon" – which was actually the name of one of the Second Doctor's companions – the Time Lord comes to the aid of none other than Queen Victoria, played with aplomb by Pauline Collins (who previously starred in Doctor Who back in 1967). They're up against a rampaging werewolf and a host of other bad guys, and the events here lead to the foundation of the Torchwood Institute. It's a pretty important episode all in all, so make sure you take your usual place at the edge of your seat. 

School Reunion: Younger fans of the series will enjoy this story for what it is: a quintessential goodies versus baddies tale set at a sinister high school. But old school fans will lap up the nostalgia, because it also features some old friends from the classic series: former companion Sarah Jane Smith (who was originally paired with the Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker Doctors) and the iconic robot dog K9. Naturally they're only too happy to help the Tenth Doctor defeat the villains of the piece, but there could be some handbags at the ready when Sarah Jane and Rose meet. Ladies, behave! 

The Girl In The Fireplace: When Doctor Who first started out, back in the Stone Age (we mean that literally – the very first story was about cave men), it was intended to be an educational drama that would teach kids about history. Thankfully, that idea didn't last long – but some episodes still act as veritable bluffer's guides to different historical epochs. Take this episode for example. You'll come away knowing all about Madame de Pompadour – the lover of King Louis XV and "uncrowned Queen of France". But don't worry, in amongst all the learnin' there are clockwork robot killers, portals to the 51st Century, and – whisper it – even a bit of a romance for the Doctor. Shocking! 

Rise Of The Cybermen: No celebration of the Tenth Doctor would be complete without this – the story that first brought the Cybermen back to our screens. But, to clumsily paraphrase Star Trek, "It's the Cybermen, Doc – but not as we know them." Unlike the original Cybermen, which as we all know come from the planet Mondas, these newer models originate on Earth – albeit a parallel universe Earth where even the Doctor feels a little creeped out. These Cybermen are also a heck of a lot scarier than their old school counterparts, perhaps because they don't look as much like extras wrapped in tinfoil. Ah, the wonders of a big BBC budget. 

The Age Of Steel: The second part of the story which began with Rise of the Cybermen, this is undoubtedly one of the most exhilarating episodes in the show's history. Brimming with breathless pursuits and explosive set pieces, it also packs an emotional punch (look out for the tearjerking bit when some of the Cybermen begin to remember their former, human lives). It also features another masterclass in overacting from Roger Lloyd-Pack, who reprises his role as the maddened creator of the Cybermen. Snarling and hissing through every scene, he'll soon make you forget he ever played Trigger in Only Fools. (He also happened to play Barty Crouch Sr in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire – alongside a certain Mr David Tennant as his son Barty Jr.) 

The Idiot's Lantern: It may be a super-advanced spacecraft capable of travelling in time and between dimensions, but the Tardis is seriously in need of a Sat-Nav. It's forever winding up in the wrong place, as we see yet again in The Idiot's Lantern. Intending to land in 50s New York (just in tine for an Elvis concert), the Doctor instead materialises in 50s London – where a malevolent energy creature called the Wire has taken control of the TV sets. A dark satire on the popular notion that too much TV rots the mind, the story is wonderfully warped at times – but then it is written by the League of Gentlemen's Mark Gatiss. There's also a whopping big TV in-joke which you won't notice, so we'll tell you now: Florizel Street, where much of the episode is set, was the original working title for Coronation Street. Yes - we do say. 

The Impossible Planet: The Tardis has landed in a wide variety of flabbergasting places over the centuries, but even the Doctor can't quite believe where he's landed in this story. That's because their location shouldn't exist – not according to the laws of physics anyway. The Doctor and Rose are on a planet that is somehow orbiting a black hole – an impossible phenomenon that the Time Lord has never seen before. A sinister and mysterious force is keeping the planet in this inexplicable configuration, and even the Doctor underestimates the nature of the evil at work. It's a sort of gothic horror in space with added entertaining trivia bits – like when the Doctor reveals that Tardises are grown, rather than built. (OK, so this contradicts a Tom Baker story which referred to Tardises being built, but we're sure there's a satisfyingly garbled explanation for this...) 

The Satan Pit: In terms of sheer, unadulterated evil, every baddy ever encountered by the Doctor pales in comparison to the one in this episode. Because this time our plucky, pin-striped Time Lord is up against the Devil himself. Well, that's how things certainly appear in The Satan Pit, which completes the story begun in The Impossible Planet. But is the monster at the heart of the planet really the Devil, or is there a more complex explanation? The Doctor and Rose must draw on all their reserves of courage to see off this terrible foe, and the result is one of the Tenth Doctor's darkest adventures. Old school fans will also enjoy a number of allusions to Third Doctor stories – listen out for references to Draconia (from The Frontier in Space) and Daemos (from The Daemons). 

Love And Monsters: In July 2005, Blue Peter ran a competition inviting kids to design their very own Doctor Who monsters. The judges included David Tennant and series bigwig Russell T Davies, and first prize was to have the winning design "brought to life" as an actual character in the series. Nine-year-old William Grantham won with his "Abzorbaloff", which is the marvellously grotesque star of Love and Monsters – a peculiar episode which hardly features The Doctor at all. It focuses instead on a group of hapless humans who are obsessed with the Time Lord and meet up regularly to exchange stories about him (think of them as a Doctor Who fan club, of sorts). The icing on the cake is the presence of Peter Kay, who delivers the best celebrity guest performance in the series so far. (But will Kylie steal his crown in this year's Christmas special?) 
 
Fear Her: The London Olympics may feel like an age away, but you can get a sneak preview courtesy of the Doctor. Showing off to Rose as usual, he takes her to 2012 to lap up the great spectacle, but naturally enough they get sidetracked – this time by an eerie child who can seemingly transform other kids into colourful, frightening drawings. Co-starring Edna Dore, who once played Frank Butcher's mum on EastEnders, this episode features some of cleverest special effects in the series so far. And we're not just talking about the drawings that come to life. There's also the London Olympic Stadium, which – not having been built yet – was created for the episode by digitally altering footage of the City of Manchester Stadium from the 2002 Commonwealth Games. Clever eh? 

Army Of Ghosts: Freema Agyeman is currently playing the Doctor's assistant Martha Jones. But did you know she originally featured in the series as a completely different character? Here she is in her pre-Martha days, in a titanic story that also introduces us to the Torchwood Institute, set up to keep tabs on alien activity on Earth. But how will they cope when an army of murderous Cybermen arrive to cause havoc? And is time almost up for the Tenth Doctor and Rose? 

Doomsday: It’s bad enough when you've got Cybermen marching all over the place, killing everything. But it's just that little bit worse when you've got a bunch of Daleks to deal with too, as the Tenth Doctor discovers in this concluding part to Army of Ghosts. This is one of the most action-packed stories in the history of the series, but it's also one of the most poignant – as it heralds the end of the relationship between the Doctor and Rose. Still, at least they get to say goodbye while saving the Earth.