The Fires of Pompeii (TV story)

"We're in Pompeii, and it's Volcano day!"

- The Doctor

Synopsis
The Doctor and Donna travel to Pompeii, the night before Mount Vesuvius erupts. The Doctor and Donna travel back into ancient history, in this episode of Russell T Davies’s BAFTA Award-winning time-travelling drama. When they arrive in 79AD, however, they discover psychic powers and beasts of stone running riot in the streets of old Pompeii. The time-travellers face their greatest challenge yet – can established history be changed, or must the Doctor let everyone die?

Plot
The episode begins with the Doctor and Donna leaving the TARDIS and entering what the Doctor takes to be Rome in the 1st century AD. Donna notes that the writing is in English and is skeptical about the authenticity of them being in the past, until the Doctor explains to her the TARDIS's translation circuit. However, he feels that they should have been able to see the Colosseum by now, and Donna points out there is only one hill and not Rome's famous seven, and that it is smoking. Thus - as an earth tremor rocks the streets - the Doctor realises they have arrived not in Rome, but in Pompeii, on the 23rd August - the day before Vesuvius' eruption.

Returning to the TARDIS, Donna tries to convince the Doctor that he should help evacuate the city, but he tells her he cannot interfere in established events. On arriving where they left the TARDIS, they find a nearby stallholder has sold it to Caecilius as a piece of "modern art". Meanwhile, a member of the Sibylline sisterhood reports back on the "blue box"'s arrival, which they find is a fulfillment of a Sibylline prophecy. At Caecilius's house, his prophetically-gifted but sickly daughter Evelina is being prepared for the arrival of the town's augur Lucius Dextrus by inhaling volcanic fumes from their house's hypocaust. The Doctor and Donna arrive before him and, when Lucius arrives, the Doctor engages in an exchange of cryptic sayings with Dextrus. He and Donna are about to leave in the TARDIS when Caecilius unveils a stone-circuit board he has produced to Dextrus' designs. Intrigued, they stay, but after the Doctor accidentally insults Roman religion as "official superstition" Dextrus and Evelina "prophesise" truths about the Doctor and Donna, seeing their real names, naming Gallifrey and London as their true homes, mentioning the Doctor's presence at the Medusa Cascade, his status as a "Lord of Time", and Gallifrey's destruction. Evelina also states that his true name is not Doctor but is in fact "hidden" and that "she" is returning (this is possibly a reference to Rose Tyler's return or the rumoured but not confimed Rani's return), and Dextrus warns Donna that "there is something on your back".

When Dextrus has gone, Donna finds that Evelina's skin is turning into stone whilst the Doctor is shown a hypocaust system powered by hot springs from Vesuvius itself and from which come monstrous sounds from "the gods of the underworld". This system, he is told, was installed after the 62 AD earthquake on Dextrus and the other soothsayers' instructions. From that time onwards, the soothsayers have been inhaling rock dust from these hypocausts and all their predictions have been entirely accurate (though they have not predicted that Vesuvius will erupt the next day). The Doctor and Quintus break into Dextrus' house, finding a stone circuit board of components like those gifted him by Caecilius. Meanwhile, Evelina gives Donna a stola, and while talking to her about a teenager's life in Pompeii, Donna finds out Evelina cannot prophesy the eruption. She tells Evelina about the eruption, which Evelina psychically passes onto the sisterhood. They and their High Priestess decide it is false prophecy and that Donna must be killed.

The Doctor and Quintus have meanwhile been apprehended by Dextrus. The Doctor helps him assemble the circuit board correctly and, when Dextrus then threatens to have his guards kill them, breaks off Dextrus's right arm, which has turned to stone. He and Quintus then escape, but hearing underground footsteps going towards Caecilius's house, return there to find a giant humanoid stone and magma creature (summoned by Dextrus) emerging from the hypocaust. The Doctor tells Donna to go and get water while he attempts to reason with the creature, but (unknown to him) she is kidnapped by the sisterhood. Quintus throws water on it as requested, which causes it to die and collapse, and the Doctor then goes to rescue Donna, who is about to be murdered by the sisterhood. Conversing with their high priestess, he finds she has completely turned to stone. She reveals that she is being used as a host to one of the Pyroviles, stone aliens who crashed to earth, shattered into dust, and were re-awakened by the 62 earthquake, psychically linking to the humans of the town (one of their adult forms is the creature they saw at the villa). The Doctor is, however, unable to find how they are psychically seeing through time.

Holding off the high priestess with a water pistol, Donna and the Doctor escape down the hypocaust. Dextrus and the high priestess both declare that the prophecy of Pompeii's future empire must now advance. As they run, Donna attempts to convince the Doctor to stop the Pyrovile causing Pompeii's eruption, but he again refuses, telling her of the eruption's fixed point in history and the Time Lord ability to see the past, present and all possible futures at once (something he classes as a "burden"). Dextrus and the cult of Vulcan takes the circuit boards to the mountain and he summons forth the adult Pyrovile to hunt Donna and the Doctor down. Dextrus, Donna and the Doctor reach the centre of the mountain, and Dextrus informs him that the Pyroviles intend not to launch a rocket back home via the eruption (their home planet of Pyrovilia having been "taken"), but to remain on and conquer Earth. The Doctor and Donna then lock themselves in part of the Pyrovilian ship they have found, where they find the Pyrovilians are using Vesvuius's power to set up a fusion matrix to convert millions of humans into Pyroviles - thus the eruption is not going to happen, which is why the soothsayers have been unable to see it. The Doctor will be able to switch off the Pyrovilian circuitry and thus save the world from Pyrovilian conquest, but in so doing he will cause the eruption and the deaths of himself, Donna and 24,000 people. They choose the latter as the lesser of two evils. Mount Venusia erupts, and people in Pompeii watch in terror as ash falls upon them. Meanwhile the part of the ship the Doctor and Donna are hiding in is launched into the sky and lands a way off, between Venusia and Pompeii. The Doctor clambers out and states it is a Escape Pod, before he and Donna start to run to Pompeii.

The Doctor ignores the family's plea for help and de-materialises the TARDIS with himself and Donna on board, but is confronted by Donna, who tearfully tries to convince him to go back and save the town. The Doctor refuses, replying that history is back on track and everyone will die, but explains to her that if he could he would, just as he would if he could go back and prevent the destruction of Gallifrey. He is eventually convinced by Donna to go back and, even if he cannot save the whole town, just save the Caecilius family. They and the family watch the eruption from the surrounding hills - the Doctor explains why Evelina's visions (caused by a rift in time, akin to the Cardiff Rift, as a result of the explosion) have now stopped and promises that Caecilius and Pompeii will be remembered, and Caecilius coins the word volcano for the first time. The Doctor and Donna leave, with him acknowledging that she was right in that "sometimes I need someone" to stop and humanise him. Six months later, we find the family in Rome, with Caecilius back up in business, Evelina a healthy and happy teenager once again, Quintus having given up his dissolute ways to train as a doctor, and Donna and the Doctor worshipped as the family's household gods, with the TARDIS as their temple.

Cast

 * Tenth Doctor - David Tennant
 * Donna Noble - Catherine Tate
 * Lucius Caecilius Iucundus - Peter Capaldi
 * Lucius Petrus Dextrus - Phil Davis
 * Metella Caecilius Iucundus - Tracey Childs
 * Spurrina - Sasha Behar
 * Evelina Caecilius Iucundus - Francesca Fowler
 * Thalina - Lorraine Burroughs
 * High Priestess - Victoria Wicks
 * Quintus Caecilius Iucundus - Francois Pandolfo
 * Soothsayer - Karen Gillan
 * Stallholder - Phil Cornwell

Production crew
to be added

Story notes

 * One of James Moran's favourite stories is City of Death, so there's a deliberate reference to that Caecilius buys the TARDIS, thinking it's a piece of modern art. In City of Death, the TARDIS is parked in an art gallery, causing a pair of critics (John Cleese and Eleanor Bron) to discuss its artistic merits.
 * The Pyrovile were originally called Pyrovillaxians. Then this was shortened to Pyrovellians. Then Pyrovile...
 * In the corresponding edition of Doctor Who Confidential (The Italian Job) Russell T. Davies states - or confirms, for those of us who suspected - that Caecilius and his family are based on characters from a series of Latin text books used in secondary schools.
 * Phil Cornwell (Stallholder) parodied the Ninth Doctor in a sketch for the Christmas 2005 edition of Dead Ringers (Christmas Day at Doctor Who's).
 * BBC4 broadcast three related programmes on the same evening as the original broadcast; "Earth: the Power of the Planet" (an episode about volcanoes) at 2010BST, "Pompeii: the Last Day" at 2110BST, and "10 Things You Didn't Know About Volcanoes" (actually broadcast at 0155BST the following morning). The Radio Times listing for The Fires of Pompeii made reference to "Pompeii: the Last Day".
 * The Fountain in this story is in fact the Cloning vat from The Sontaran Strategem.

Ratings
to be added

Myths

 * Many believed that this episode would feature Jack Harkness. (This was proven false.)

Filming Locations

 * Rome's Cinecittà Studios. Discounting Doctor Who: The TV Movie (1996), which was filmed in Canada, and Daleks in Manhattan, which featured some second-unit photography in New York City but nothing involving the cast, this is the first regular-series episode to be filmed outside the UK since the three-part serial The Two Doctors (1985), which was filmed in Spain in 1984.

Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors

 * The Doctor does not seem to recall (or at least does not mention) the events of The Stone Rose.
 * Donna says that the Doctor saved her in 2008 when Partners in Crime was set in 2009. (Donna could likely be referencing the events of The Runaway Bride, which occurred in late 2007.)
 * After the Doctor and Donna go into the TARDIS, their hair is full of dust and Donna is crying but when they go back, they are both immaculate. (there could have been more than enough time for them to have cleaned themselves before returning to just a few seconds after they left Caecilius' house)
 * The Chameleon circuit, although broken, allows the TARDIS to remain hidden to the untrained eye so how did Caecilius spot it to offer to buy it? (It's a perception filter, that is it is visible, but you don't want to see it, whereas Caecilius wanted to see the modern art, so the perception filter didn't work. As for the others, once attention is drawn to it, it can easily be seen.)
 * The Seventh Doctor and Melanie Bush go to Pompeii at the same time and also get involved in time changing decisions. It is impossible at some point they Don't find each other. (BFA: The Fires of Vulcan)

Continuity

 * The Doctor refers to having visited Rome a long time ago (DW: The Romans).
 * The Doctor says he was in Pompeii a long time ago (BFA: The Fires of Vulcan).
 * Dextrus says that Donna has something on her back, this will be picked up on in DW: Turn Left.
 * The Doctor's discussion of time and not interfering harkens back to DW: The Aztecs in which the issue of history and non-interference was covered.

DVD and other releases

 * It will be released on the Series 4 boxset DVD in November 2008.


 * It will be released as part of Series 4 volume 1 on June 2nd 2008 along with 'Partners in Crime' and 'Planet of the Ood'.