The Doctor Who Series 6, Part 2 opener was full of surprises but none more so eyebrow-raising as newly-introduced character Mels regenerating. And not only that, she only went and regenerated into River flippin' Song! This, of course, led to more shocks and questions (like how did she get to be Mel in the first place and hang out with the Ponds and how come her clothes changed size, etc...) but as a Whaaa??, it was a doozy.
How did they manage to keep this quiet?? The Whaaa?? here isn't so much the character Oswin, but who was playing her, Jenna-Louise Coleman. We all knew, sorry thought, that The J-LC was making her debut in the Christmas Special (which, in a way, she did - but, in another more accurate way, she didn't) and yet here she was, prettying up the screen as a deranged soufflé-loving Dalek. The joy at the reveal was proof that secrets are best kept to oneself.
The sadness! The feels!! Yup. That moment we had been preparing for since Easter the previous year came but no-one saw the heartbreak that it would cause. Most assumed the four knocks would originate from The Master (even The Doctor did in Part One), and he would bring everyone's favourite Time Lord's demise - not lovable old Wilf! The sound of his pathetic knocks still ring in the mind as Davey T suddenly realises his recent survival at the hands of his friendly Gallifreyans was about to come to an end. A powerful blow to the stomach.
It's amazing to think that Doctor Who was all over the media in 2008 during the week between this episode and the Series 4 finale, Journey's End. It even made the news as secrecy was so hot - was The Doctor about to regenerate??? Of course, those paying attention had seen the filming pics from that year's Christmas Special but still, even I had to wonder what audacious trick Russell T Davies had pulled. Was he actually going to regenerate? We know he didn't but, with all that was going in in the final moments of the episode, it was a helluva cliffhanger.
Even though I had read some time before that the intergalactic pepper~pots would be back (and even the previous week's "Next Time" trail had actually shown a Dalek lazer-death - nice one Beeb), I was still completely blindsided as The Cult of Skaro came flying out of the void ship in the Series 2 finale. I'd completely forgotten, so engaged in the return of the Cybermen and the introduction of Torchwood was I. It's only brief Whaaa?? as the episode closed pretty damn quickly but the surprise reveal of Skaro's finest lives long. A treat and a half from the production team.
If I was banging the floor for Rose's return in Partners In Crime, I was positively digging through to Australia in sheer brain~scratching astonishment. Like a few stories here, we get the main thrust of the episode and seemingly everything is over (and I should say Turn Left is one of my very favourite Doctor Who stories ever) and then creeps in that moment. When Donna says, "Bad Wolf" it still makes my body shake with paroxysms of bewilderment; just thinking about it makes me quiver. And then we get the end of the universe! Blimey!
The fob-watch reveal of The Master is so well and thoughtfully constructed (building on the magnificent Human Nature two-parter) and so exquisitely played-out that one sweats in excitement simply from memory. But it's not just one moment, it's about fifteen minutes of palpable adrenalin as we discover who he is, watch him hiss with sublime evil, "I am the Master!" as he kills his buddy off whilst Team TARDIS are helping the remnants of the human race reach the stars as a bunch of Duran Duran video extras (along with Annie Lennox) attack the base that houses them.
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