Time Crash (TV story)

"Cause you know what, Doctor? You were my Doctor."

- The Tenth Doctor to the Fifth Doctor

Time Crash was a special "mini-episode" produced for the 2007 Children in Need appeal. It featured a brief encounter between the Fifth and Tenth Doctors and was penned by Steven Moffat. It also served as the explanation of how the Doctor's TARDIS was breached by the Titanic at the end of Last of the Time Lords. As such, it was very much a part of the overall continuity of the BBC Wales series of Doctor Who.

Synopsis
The Tenth Doctor accidentally pilots his TARDIS into the path of the Fifth Doctor's TARDIS--which threatens to annhilate an area of space the size of Belgium!

Plot
This story follows on from Last of the Time Lords: the Tenth Doctor has just said goodbye to Martha, and is attempting to take off when the TARDIS suddenly goes haywire.

Suddenly, someone else is in the TARDIS: the Fifth Doctor. The Tenth Doctor realises straight away this is his past incarnation and is soon reminiscing about his adventures as the Fifth Doctor, much to the latter's confusion. The Fifth Doctor decides that the strange skinny bloke in his TARDIS is an obsessive fan of his--possibly affiliated with LINDA--and the Tenth, to his own bewilderment, can't convince his past self otherwise. Meanwhile, the collision of the TARDIS with its past self threatens to tear a hole in the universe; one the exact size of Belgium. The Fifth Doctor despairs of finding a solution in time, but the Tenth purposefully--if maniacally--manipulates the TARDIS controls and averts the disaster.

Stunned by the unexpected solution, the Fifth Doctor realizes that the other man is in fact his future self. The Tenth Doctor bids a warm farewell to his past self; and, with a final warning to his future self to restore the TARDIS shields, the Fifth Doctor rejoins his own timeline.

But suddenly, it's too late to put up the shields... the Titanic has plowed through the wall of the TARDIS.

Cast

 * Tenth Doctor - David Tennant
 * Fifth Doctor - Peter Davison
 * Martha Jones - Freema Agyeman (uncredited)

Production crew

 * Written by - Steven Moffat
 * Produced by - Phil Collinson
 * Directed by - Graeme Harper
 * 1st Assistant Director - Dan Mumford
 * 3rd Assistant Director - Andy Newbery
 * Additional Assistant Director - Kevin Myers
 * Driver - Kevin Kearns
 * Continuity - Non Eleri Hughes
 * Script Editor - Brian Minchin
 * Focus Puller - Ant Hugill
 * Grip - John Robinson
 * Camera Assistant - Tom Hartley
 * Jimmy Jib - Arun Taylor
 * Boom Operator - Ramon Pyndiah
 * Electricians - Ben Griffiths, Clive Johnson
 * Supervising Art Director - Arwel Wyn Jones
 * Associate Designer - James North
 * Senior Props Maker - Penny Howarth
 * Assistant Costume Designer - Rose Goodhart
 * Costume Supervisor - Lindsay Bonaccorsi
 * Costume Assistant - Barbara Harrington
 * Make-Up Artist - Morag Smith
 * Assistant Editor - Carmen Roberts
 * Post Production Supervisors - Samantha Hall, Chris Blatchford
 * Post Production Co-ordinator - Marie Brown
 * 3D Artist - Mark Wallman
 * 2D Artist - Simon C Holden
 * On Line Editors - Matthew Clarke, Mark Bright
 * Colourist - Mick Vincent
 * Dubbing Mixer - Tim Ricketts
 * Sound Editor - Paul McFadden
 * Sound FX Editor - Paul Jefferies
 * Original Theme Music - Ron Grainer
 * Casting Director - Andy Pryor Cdg
 * Production Executive - Julie Scott
 * Production Accountant - Oliver Ager
 * Sound Recordist - Ray Parker
 * Costume Designer - Louise Page
 * Make Up Designer - Barbara Southcott
 * Music - Murray Gold
 * Visual Effects - The Mill
 * Visual Fx Producers - Will Cohen, Marie Jones
 * Visual Fx Supervisor - Dave Houghton
 * Editor - Ceres Doyle
 * Production Designer - Edward Thomas
 * Director of Photography - Rory Taylor
 * Production Manager - Jennie Fava
 * Executive Producers - Russell T Davies, Julie Gardner

Story notes
This is the first official episode of Doctor Who written by Steven Moffat that doesn't use his theme of highlighting childhood fears.
 * This is the third filmed contribution by the new series production team to Children in Need. In 2005, they had offered the Children in Need Special (aka 'Pudsey Cutaway'). In 2006 they provided a live concert of music during the traditional Children in Need charity time period, and subsequently offered it to home viewers prior to the original broadcast of The Runaway Bride.
 * After it was cancelled, the original series was briefly revived by the inaugural Doctor Who filmed entertainment made especially for Children in Need, entitled Dimensions in Time. In 1993, The Five Doctors was also broadcast as a part of, though not made especially for, the Children in Need charity drive.
 * This story marks the first appearance of a Doctor from the original series appearing in the new series, although recognizable drawings of original series Doctors can be seen in Human Nature.
 * This story is directed by Graeme Harper who also directed Peter Davison's last story (DW: The Caves of Androzani).
 * Steven Moffat (writer) also wrote the Comic Relief story, The Curse of Fatal Death.
 * The special was introduced by Terry Wogan and John Barrowman.
 * Peter Davison's name appears in the credits, the first time (discounting the 1996 TV movie) that an original series Doctor has had his name at the start of an episode.
 * The Fifth Doctor remembers how to save the TARDIS when he is the Tenth Doctor because, as the Fifth, he saw what the Tenth did. This is a reference to time going in a straight line, which makes sense, but was not discussed in The Three Doctors or The Five Doctors.
 * This episode marked the final use of the 2005 arrangement of the "Doctor Who theme" by Murray Gold; a new arrangement by Gold would be introduced in the next proper episode, Voyage of the Damned.

Ratings
to be added

Filming Locations

 * Upper Boat Studios, Cardiff

Myths and rumours

 * When the Fifth Doctor asks if the Master "still has that rubbish beard," the Tenth replies, "No ... well, a wife." This was interpreted by some fans as being a gay culture reference; a "beard" is a slang term for a member of the opposite sex who joins a homosexual individual in a marriage or other relationship in order to mask the fact that one or both partners is gay.

Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors

 * If the Tenth Doctor recalls this meeting from when he was the Fifth Doctor, then why was the Fifth Doctor so worried about his regeneration in The Caves of Androzani? (Perhaps in the heat of his impending "death" the Fifth Doctor simply forgot about his future encounter or perhaps time was in flux.)


 * If the Tenth Doctor tells the Fifth Doctor about meeting the Master in that incarnation then he would have known that he wasn't the last of the Time Lords (although this may partially explain the Doctor's extreme reaction to the news that Professor Yana has a Chameleon Arch fobwatch). Possibly, because The Doctor met the Master several times after his Fifth incarnation, he assumed that the Tenth meant one of those other encounters (such as the TV movie, in which the Master has a wife, no beard, and acts in a rather camp manner; see the above reference to the double meaning of "beard").


 * The Tenth Doctor was at least as much confused meeting himself as the Fifth Doctor and he did not expect the Fifth Doctor thinking he is a fan (Although he should have remembered it). It might be that the Fifth Doctor, being aware of the problems that paradox may cause, locked these memories in the back of his mind, and remembered at the moment he heard the Cloister Bell.


 * How did the fifth doctor know about LINDA when they where from 2007? The Doctor could easily have visited 2007 at anypoint in his lives. See, for example, the Big Finish audio drama Cuddlesome which takes place in the same era. It's also possible that LINDA survives in some form into the future.


 * Throughout the story, the Doctor's hand-in-a-jar is located to the right of the console (as seen by viewers), but with the glass turned away from the camera (the illuminated interior can barely be glimpsed. It is in this position as Ten says goodbye to Five. Immediately after, the crash into Titanic occurs, and the hand-in-a-jar is suddenly positioned at the same spot on the floor, but with the glass facing the camera.


 * Two episodes previously, in The Sound of Drums, the Doctor claims that Time Lords can always recognise one another, and in that episode and the preceding Utopia, he recognises the Master on sight (even after having spent a considerable amount of time knowing the Master only as his human form, Yana). However, in Time Crash, the Fifth Doctor does not recognise the Tenth. Perhaps Time Lords, for whatever reason, cannot identify their own future incarnations. In The Five Doctors, the First Doctor does not realise who the Fifth is, although it doesn't take that much to convince him.


 * Why doesn't the Doctors' physical contact (like when the Tenth rubs the Fifth's face, commenting on the latter's hair) end the universe via the Blinovitch Limitation Effect, or at least summon Reapers as in DW: Father's Day? The TARDIS probaley protect the two Doctors from the Blinovitch Limitation Effect, and as for the Reapers, they appeared because Rose changed history. This meeting is part of established history, because the Fith Doctor has to meet the Tenth Doctor, in order to fix the impending Belguim sized rip in the space time contimum. In other words, wibbely wobbly, timey wimey. In addition, there has been similar physical contact between Doctors in The Three Doctors, The Five Doctors and The Two Doctors; clearly the BLE doesn't appear to apply to different incarnations of a time lord (perhaps because they are technically different people?).

Continuity

 * This is the first on screen TV appearance of the Fifth Doctor since Dimensions in Time (and the first 'official' on screen appearance since DW: The Caves of Androzani).
 * The Fifth Doctor previously met the first three Doctors (First Doctor, Second Doctor, Third Doctor) in The Five Doctors.
 * The Fifth Doctor has also met the Sixth and Seventh Doctors in BFA: The Sirens of Time.
 * The Fifth Doctor has also encountered the Seventh Doctor in MA: Cold Fusion which (implicitly) involves the later Doctor remembering having experienced the events as his earlier self, as in this story.
 * The Fifth Doctor also encountered the Eighth Doctor in EDA: The Eight Doctors.
 * The Titanic was seen crashing into the TARDIS at the end of Last of the Time Lords. This story occurs inbetween those final scenes.
 * LINDA last appeared in Love & Monsters.
 * The reference to "Time Lords in funny hats" is to DW: Arc of Infinity and possibly The Five Doctors, although it could just as easily also refer to earlier Time Lord adventures such as The Invasion of Time and The Deadly Assassin. Considering they're reminiscing about the old home town, it's not exactly a timeline-altering issue.
 * Fifth Doctor identified new series' TARDIS console room's as a desktop theme named "Coral". Also says it to be worse than "leopard skin". His criticism of the TARDIS' redecoration is similar to that made by the Second Doctor to the Third Doctor in The Three Doctors.
 * This is the first multi Doctor story to account for the aging of the actor returning to play a previous Doctor, by explaining it as a byproduct of meeting himself; this covers off the aging of the Doctors in The Five Doctors but not The Two Doctors as the Second Doctor (not to mention Jamie McCrimmon) appear considerably older long before they encounter the Doctor.
 * According to writer (later executive producer-designate) Steven Moffat, in an interview with Doctor Who Magazine #389, the events of Time Crash are considered canonical.

DVD and other releases

 * It was released alongside Voyage of the Damned.
 * It will be released on the Series 4 boxset DVD in November 2008.