Saturday, 4 July 2009

one year later journeys end



"Journey's End" is the thirteenth episode of the fourth series of British science fiction television series Doctor Who first broadcast on BBC One on 5 July 2008. It is the second episode of a two-part crossover story, preceded by "The Stolen Earth". At 65 minutes in length, it is the longest regular episode of Doctor Who, approximately 20 minutes longer than a standard revived series episode.[2] This episode also marks the final appearance of Catherine Tate as continuing companion Donna Noble.

wow i cant belive that its one year today since journeys end aired on bbc 1 here is some info on the episode

As Davros and the Daleks threaten the entire universe, the Doctor's companions join forces. But the prophecy declares that one of them will die...

Synopsis
The episode continues from the end of "The Stolen Earth"; the Doctor (David Tennant) is regenerating inside the TARDIS. Once his body has healed, he halts the transformation by transferring the remaining energy into his severed hand. The TARDIS is captured by the Daleks and transported to the Crucible, the Dalek flagship at the heart of the 27 planets. The Doctor and his previous companions Jack Harkness (John Barrowman) and Rose Tyler (Billie Piper) leave the TARDIS, but Donna Noble (Catherine Tate) is locked in. The Supreme Dalek orders the TARDIS to be destroyed; in the process, Donna collapses by the Doctor's severed hand, and activates the energy stored in the hand to form a second Doctor who saves the TARDIS from destruction.

Concurrently, Torchwood employees Gwen Cooper (Eve Myles) and Ianto Jones (Gareth David-Lloyd) find safety from an advancing Dalek in an impenetrable time bubble; Sarah Jane Smith (Elisabeth Sladen) is saved from a Dalek extermination by Rose's ex-boyfriend Mickey Smith (Noel Clarke) and mother Jackie Tyler (Camille Coduri), who surrender with her to get aboard the Crucible; and Martha Jones (Freema Agyeman) teleports to a castle near Nuremberg where the Daleks are heard speaking German.

The Doctor and Rose are taken to Davros (Julian Bleach), creator of the Daleks. The Doctor taunts Davros on account of the fact he is not in charge (Davros having been overthrown, imprisoned and kept alive for his knowledge), but Davros in turn retorts that the Doctor is as much a monster as he. Davros explains that the twenty-seven stolen planets form a compression field which can cancel the electrical energy of atoms. The resulting "reality bomb" has the potential to destroy all matter in every universe; reality itself would be destroyed.

After the device is tested, the Daleks receive two transmissions: Sarah Jane, Mickey, Jack, and Jackie threaten to destroy the Crucible using a "Warpstar" that Sarah Jane had, and Martha threatens to use the Osterhagen Key - a last resort device which would destroy Earth by setting off a chain of nuclear warheads. Their actions cause Davros to challenge the Doctor's reliance on his companions. The companions, however, are transported to the Vault before they can execute their plans, whereupon Davros gloats over his seeming victory and challenges the Doctor over the deaths he has caused and the sheer number of people who have died for him. Davros sneers that the Doctor is "a man who keeps running, never looking back because he dare not...out of shame!" and calls the moment "my final victory; I have shown you yourself, Doctor".

Davros prepares to detonate the reality bomb, before the TARDIS materialises in front of him. The second Doctor and Donna run out but are stunned by Davros' energy blasts. The blast activates Time Lord knowledge imbued within Donna when she helped create the second Doctor, and she disables the reality bomb, Davros and the Daleks. The two Doctors help her relocate the missing planets, but the control panel is destroyed by the Supreme Dalek before Earth can be relocated. In the confusion, Davros asks Dalek Caan why he didn't foresee this, but the Doctor realises that he had. Caan confirms this, citing that having witnessed the atrocities committed by the Daleks throughout time and space, Caan sought to bring an end to it.

Motivated by Dalek Caan's prophecy of the Daleks' extinction, and knowing the Daleks could still take the Universe by force, with or without the Reality Bomb, the new Doctor destroys the Daleks and the Crucible. The original Doctor offers to save Davros who refuses, accusing the Doctor of being responsible for the destruction and naming him as "the Destroyer of Worlds". The companions flee into the TARDIS as the Crucible self-destructs, and "tow" the Earth back into its original orbit with the aid of Sarah Jane's supercomputer Mr Smith, her robotic dog K-9, and the spatio-temporal rift in Cardiff.

In the dénouement of the episode, the Doctor parts ways with his companions: Sarah Jane returns home to her son Luke; Martha and Mickey leave with Jack; and the Doctor returns Rose and Jackie to the parallel universe they were trapped in, in "Doomsday". The Doctor forces the other Doctor to stay in the parallel universe as punishment for committing genocide and to requite Rose's love. After departing, Donna becomes overwhelmed by the Time Lord knowledge. To save her life, the Doctor is forced to wipe her mind, and explains to her mother Sylvia (Jacqueline King) and grandfather Wilfred Mott (Bernard Cribbins) that Donna must never remember him, even for a second, because she will die if she does so. As the Doctor leaves, Wilfred promises that he will never forget the Doctor on his granddaughter's behalf


did you watch journeys end

well they said it was going to make us cry but it didnt make me cry but it was sad
were was you when you watched journeys end (i was in my room sitting on my bed) please comment

at the end of the stolen earth the doctor was regenerating because a dalek hit him but when it came to journeys end he didnt hurray he put all the regeneration into his hand and that made a duplicate doctor which went with rose back to parrael world which was a sad ending for rose going back to parrel world if only it could of been different in some way and also it was a sad ending for donna to of which the doctor removed donnas memories with the doctor to save her life. do you ever wouder if davrose died or not i do i bet hes still hoping to get revenge on the doctor and do you ever wouder what rose and 10.5 are up to now its a shame that we cant get to see them no matter how there lifes would turn out sad or happy

Cast
Doctor David Tennant (Tenth Doctor)
Companions Catherine Tate (Donna Noble)
Billie Piper (Rose Tyler)
Freema Agyeman (Martha Jones)
John Barrowman (Jack Harkness)
Elisabeth Sladen (Sarah Jane Smith)
Noel Clarke (Mickey Smith

Guest stars
Camille Coduri – Jackie Tyler
Gareth David-Lloyd – Ianto Jones
Eve Myles – Gwen Cooper
Thomas Knight – Luke Smith
Bernard Cribbins – Wilfred Mott
Jacqueline King – Sylvia Noble
Adjoa Andoh – Francine Jones
Julian Bleach – Davros
Valda Aviks – German Woman
Shobu Kapoor – Scared Woman
Elizabeth Tan – Anna Zhou
Michael Price – Liberian Man
Nicholas Briggs – Dalek Voice
John Leeson – Voice of K-9
Alexander Armstrong – Mr Smith

Production
Writer Russell T Davies
Director Graeme Harper
Script editor Lindsey Alford
Producer Phil Collinson
Executive producer(s) Russell T Davies
Julie Gardner
Production code 4.13
Series Series 4
Length 2nd of 2-part story, 65 minutes
Originally broadcast 5 July 2008

Writing
Russell T Davies started writing "Journey's End" on 11 January 2008.Davies originally planned to show Davros prior to his crippling accident and to reveal how this happened.Davies wrote in the original script that Doctor-Donna would use a standard QWERTY keyboard when she takes control of the Daleks but Production Designer Edward Thomas pointed out that Daleks have suckers and so would be unable to use a QWERTY keyboard. Instead Thomas designed the controls seen in the episode. Also according to the original script, the Doctor was to give Rose's Doctor a small piece of "coral" from the TARDIS so that he could grow his own TARDIS.This was filmed and survived until the last edit of the episode,but was ultimately cut because the production team felt it made the Bad Wolf Bay scene "too long and complicated". In addition, Davies decided it should not be seen to be so easy to produce another TARDIS. The clip was included on the Series 4 DVD boxset.

In the BBC commentary for this episode, Phil Collinson and Julie Gardner describe a brief additional scene with Donna which was cut from the final episode:

"There was an additional Donna bit after this goodbye from the Doctor, which is when he goes outside into the TARDIS, we cut back into the kitchen, and there's a moment where Donna hears the TARDIS... there's a moment of realisation, and then she turns back round and carries on talking into the phone."

Gardner considered this scene untruthful and too confusing, since Donna remembering would lead to her death, and since she didn't recognise the Doctor it wouldn't make sense to assume she would recognise the noise of the TARDIS.

Locations
Castell Coch, situated minutes away from the Doctor Who studios in Upper Boat, is used as the German castle.The beach at Southerndown,a few miles west of Cardiff, is used once more as Norway's fictional Dårlig Ulv Stranden (Bad Wolf Bay).

Casting
Mickey Smith (Noel Clarke) and Jackie Tyler (Camille Coduri) make their first appearances in Doctor Who since "Doomsday".K-9 Mark IV (voiced by John Leeson) makes his first appearance since The Sarah Jane Adventures story The Lost Boy, and his first in Doctor Who since "School Reunion".

Former Blue Peter presenter Gethin Jones controlled one of the Daleks that escorts the human prisoners aboard the Crucible.He previously played a Cyberman in "Rise of the Cybermen" and has made a cameo appearance as himself in Doctor Who spin-off The Sarah Jane Adventures in the episode "Invasion of the Bane


Another Doctor
One significant feature of this episode is the creation of a second Doctor. Unlike the multiple Doctors of stories such as The Two Doctors, where his previous incarnations were played by actors or depicted in old footage, this Doctor is identical in appearance to the Tenth Doctor.In the accompanying Doctor Who Confidential for this episode, Davies explains "This is so busy and so mental and so epic and universal in scale that of course you need two Doctors to solve it."Phil Collinson, Graeme Harper, and David Tennant discuss the use of the double, a musician called Colum Regan who is a very good physical match for Tennant. Collinson explains that while with an unlimited budget they would use Tennant in every shot, "we only have a certain number of effects shots where you can see the two Doctors together, so we have to pick those carefully."

Harper is then shown directing a scene in which both Regan and Tennant are shown around the TARDIS console. Harper explains that in "two or three wide shots" they were able to use Regan and Tennant together. For the most part the double is used for scenes where one or the other Doctor is only seen from behind, or only an arm or back of the head is seen in a shot. The double has appeared in other episodes throughout the series. Over documentary footage showing the shooting of the scene where the new Doctor emerges from the TARDIS, Tennant describes the procedure for making an effects shot involving Tennant as both Doctors. The camera is locked in place while Tennant goes off and changes clothing, with Regan holding his place. A shot is made for reference with Regan, then another shot is made without Regan. This enables the shots to be merged during editing to create the effect of having David Tennant in two places in the same shot

Broadcast
The episode was screened free in Trafalgar Square in London as part of Pride London 2008; the third series finale was planned to be shown during the 2007 event, but was cancelled as a security measure.A teaser trailer was appended to promote the 2008 Christmas Special.

"Journey's End" was watched by 10.57 million viewers when broadcast on BBC1,giving it a 45.9% share of the total television audience.The episode was the most-viewed programme of the week; "Journey's End" is the first Doctor Who episode to receive this rank. It also received an Appreciation Index score of 91, equalling the record for the programme set by its predecessor "The Stolen Earth".A story on the BBC News website described fan reaction of the serials on the Digital Spy and Ain't It Cool News forums as "mixed

Critical reception
The Telegraph's John Preston states that this episode of Doctor Who " usual...served up a lot more than mere excitement." He credits Doctor Who's success partly to its "richly defined characters behaving in readily identifiable ways."Also of The Telegraph, Sarah Crompton wrote that the episode was "exciting, incomprehensible, satisfying and slightly irritating all at the same time".Although Crompton said "It was inevitable that the start would be an anti-climax",she praised the special effects and also noted that she would miss "the warmth and humour" that Tate brought to the series.Lucy Mangan in a humorous review for The Guardian that rewrites the dialogue between Tennant's and Cribbins' characters at the end as a discussion of the plot, described it as providing "something for everyone".In The Times, Andrew Billen called "Journey's End" "a spectacular finale that...gave the lie to the truism that more always, dramatically speaking, adds up to less."

Mark Wright of The Stage likens "Journey’s End" to "one big house of cards...will come crashing down" if thought about too much. However, he had no problem with the resolution of "The Stolen Earth"'s cliffhanger and is critical of those who complain about feeling cheated by the lack of a regeneration. Though he expresses that he saw little need for Mickey and Jackie in this episode, he asserts that Donna had "the saddest end for a companion ever" and praises Davies for just managing to keep the plot together. He argues that as Davies "writes the emotions and big themes so well...blow logic and rational plot moments if they get in the way!" He compares Davies's writing style to "PT Barnum showmanship" and praises both the dark and light elements of the episode. He concludes that, if not overthought, the episode remains "an audacious, big, silly, often poignant season finale".

Writing for The Mirror, Jim Shelley is highly critical of this episode in his review describing it as "emented rather than dazzling". He was confused by the two Doctors played by David Tennant, saw little development in Donna across the series and was puzzled by the Doctor's attempt to save his arch-enemy, Davros. He claims that "amidst all the shrieking, shouting, and mock operatic bluster,Riddled with scientific mumbo-jumbo, it was too chaotic and long-winded to be the classic farewell Russell T Davies promised." He argues that the plot "went haywire" and that "Rose and the two Tennants acted out a sort of twisted menage a trois." In conclusion he states "Tennant's cheeky chappie mannerisms made the show into an extraterrestrial EastEnders."

In Scotland's Daily Record, Paul English called the episode "yet another fizzing Doctor Who adventure" and said that "Writer and producer Russell T Davies makes TV with the epic feel of the movies. He gets more tension, humour and emotion into an hour of telly than many films manage in twice the time with double the budget." He lamented that "Journey's End" "lacked the goofiness" of the series' 2005 return, but concluded that the finale was "TV gold".

this is all the info i can find
so please comment

if you wish to repost this please get my permission and please says were you got it from that incluldes my name and site url

info from wiki

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