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Doctor Who fans watch 50th anniversary special | Doctor Who fans watch 50th anniversary special |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Doctor Who fans have praised the show's 50th anniversary episode as "epic" and "phenomenal". | |
The Day of the Doctor was broadcast in 94 countries at the same time as it aired on BBC One on Saturday night. | |
Featuring three Doctors - Matt Smith, David Tennant and John Hurt - it delved deep into the character's psyche over 75 minutes. | |
There were also cameos from former star Tom Baker, and Peter Capaldi, who replaces Smith later this year. | |
"It's the most ambitious episode we've ever done," said the show's boss, Steven Moffat, ahead of the premiere. | |
Opening with the show's original credit sequence from 1963, the special featured the Daleks and the return of shape-shifting aliens the Zygons, who first appeared in 1975. | |
But the principal villain was potentially the Doctor himself. | |
Moffat's story played with the idea, introduced when the science-fiction show re-launched in 2005, that the Doctor was the "last of the Time Lords". | |
It transpired that Hurt's version of the Doctor had taken the decision to commit mass genocide in order to halt a "Great Time War" - and the 75-minute episode saw him fighting to come to terms with that decision, aided by two future versions of himself. | |
"The last few minutes affected me quite deeply," wrote Neil Perryman on the Guardian's website. | |
He conceded that some of the details "didn't make a lot of sense on first viewing" but added: "I don't care - I'll be watching it again this evening". | |
Speaking immediately after the show ended, star Matt Smith said: "I think what's really clever about it is that what he [Moffat] has managed to do is change the mythology of the character - which, after 50 years, is an achievement." | |
Aside from the emotional drama, the episode was filled with comedic moments - including a proposal, a marriage and "a machine that goes ding". | |
When Hurt's Doctor met his frenetic, childlike future selves, he asked: "Am I having a mid-life crisis?" | |
The show was also crammed with special effects, leaping from modern London to the planet of Gallifrey and Elizabethan England. | |
"I don't think it bears any resemblance to what we were doing," said Carole Ann Ford, who starred in the very first episode 50 years ago. | |
'Conned' | |
Screened in 3D in more than 1,500 cinemas in 94 countries - from Russia to Ecuador - the episode attracted hundreds of fans in fancy dress, from bow ties to Dalek outfits. | |
A gala screening at the BFI in London was attended by Smith, Hurt, Moffat and their co-star Jenna Coleman. | |
A huge cheer echoed around the cinema as the end credits rolled, while Tom Baker's surprise cameo also received a large round of applause. | |
The reaction on Twitter was similarly ecstatic. | |
Karl Purdon wrote: "That was simply phenomenal", while Freema Agyeman, who once played Martha Jones in the series, called it both "epic" and "compelling". | |
Moffat said the special episode had been partly conceived as a way to explain the gap in the series' history - from its cancellation in 1989, until the re-launch, under Russell T Davies, in 2005. | |
"I knew I wanted to make it about the Time War, and I wanted that 16-year gap to mean something," he said. | |
"There was a whole other Doctor we got conned out of". | |
'Emotional wallop' | |
Speaking before the broadcast, Moffat - the show's lead writer and executive producer - admitted he was "nervous" about the scale of the special. | |
"I'm glad we don't do it every time, but it's very exciting to do it once," he told the BBC News website. | |
He said he hoped fans would be "very happy", adding: "It's got a big emotional wallop at the end". | |
Moffat described the first ever Doctor Who episode, An Unearthly Child, broadcast on 23 November 1963, as "one of the very best episodes of Doctor Who ever made". | |
"All the ideas come from there," he said. | |
"The music, the name, the Tardis, the police box bigger on the inside... in terms of brand new ideas that's a rollercoaster of 25 minutes." | |
Moffat, along with Matt Smith and Jenna Colman, attended the official Doctor Who anniversary celebration at London's ExCel on Friday. | |
The three-day event, which is being attended by 8,000 fans a day, features appearances from Doctor Who stars from all eras of the series. | |
American Richard LeCour said he made a special trip from his home in California because Doctor Who had been "part of my life for 40 years". | |
Adam Highway, from Brighton, predicted that Doctor Who still had a long future ahead of it. | |
"It'll go on as long as it keeps that balance of appealing to people who don't know the history, but respects the history for those who give a damn about it," he said. | |
"I think Steven Moffat's got it spot on." | |
The anniversary story was Matt Smith's penultimate outing, before he regenerates at Christmas into a new Doctor, played by Peter Capaldi. |