Good Night (home video)

Good Night was the second of five Night and the Doctor shorts produced exclusively for the Doctor Who: The Complete Sixth Series DVD and Bluray box sets. It was written by showrunner Steven Moffat.

Synopsis
When Amy wakes to find the Doctor carrying a euphonium guiltily, she uses the opportunity to ask a question that has been bothering her for a long time.

Plot
The Doctor returns from another night out with River Song with an euphonium. Amy, wide awake and sitting in her nightie on the stairs, catches him. She convinces him to tell her what he does while he's out at night. Amy proceeds tells him why she was finding it hard to sleep lately: her life didn't make any sense. She is particularly confused as to how she could remember two versions of her life, one without her parents and one with. The Doctor comforts her and takes her to the saddest moment of her life. It's a fair where she dropped an icecream. While recalling the event, she suddenly remembers a woman with red hair, dressed in a nightie, come to give her a new ice cream. When she finishes the anecdote, the Doctor is by the doors, ready to go with her to the fair.

Cast

 * Eleventh Doctor - Matt Smith
 * Amy Pond - Karen Gillan

Crew
* Writer - Steven Moffat

The Doctor

 * The Doctor "gets a bit scared" on carnival Ghost Trains.

The Doctor's TARDIS

 * The TARDIS' telepathic circuits is capable of pinpointing a person's "saddest ever memory" and may also be capable of piloting the TARDIS to that point in time.

Story notes

 * At 4 minutes and 51 seconds, this is the longest of the Night and the Doctor shorts.

Myths and rumours
To be added

Filming locations
To be added

Production errors

 * The sound made by the euphonium as the Sonic Screwdriver is activated into the end is clearly a blowing sound.

Continuity

 * The Doctor returns from a night out with River Song. (DW: Bad Night, DW: The Wedding of River Song)
 * The Doctor calls a farewell to an unseen River Song from the TARDIS doorway. He also asks her to "tell Marilyn she'll have to use the bi-plane". Marilyn Monroe married the Doctor in DW: A Christmas Carol, and the Doctor remarked that he may have been late to a bi-plane flying lesson in DW: The Impossible Astronaut.
 * Amy is once again seen in her sleeping attire. DW: The Eleventh Hour, DW: The Beast Below, DW: Bad Night)
 * Amy notes that her life "doesn't make any sense." The Doctor makes the same observation in DW: The Pandorica Opens and DW: The Big Bang.
 * Amy remembers both versions of her life - the "original" version, where her parents never existed (DW: The Eleventh Hour) and the post-Big Bang Two version where she does. (DW: The Big Bang)
 * Amy will later remember two versions of the events at Lake Silencio during the collapsing timeline in DW: The Wedding of River Song.
 * This raises the question of whether or not Amy can remember the "starless" version of reality presented in DW: The Big Bang.
 * The Doctor mentions that Rory was an Auton duplicate (DW: The Big Bang). Rory has told Amy he does not remember his time as an Auton, but the Doctor confirms that "sometimes you catch him just staring." The Doctor and Rory had previously discussed his time as an Auton in DW: The Impossible Astronaut.
 * Amy realises that she interacted with her younger self in 1994 when she bought her past self an ice-cream at a carnival to replace the one she'd dropped. She previously interacted with a younger version of herself (albeit in an aborted, collapsing timeline) in DW: The Big Bang.
 * This would seem to contradict the Blinovitch Limitation Effect. The effect was similarly ignored in DW: A Christmas Carol.

For the Doctor

 * This story occurs after: DW: Bad Night

For River Song

 * This story occurs at some indeterminate point after: DW: Last Night

Home video releases
To be added