Thu
Nov 3 2011 4:00pm
Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

The new series of Doctor Who and loud melodrama are best friends. Since the show began again in 2005, you can count on any season delivering at least one explosion, one moment of universal peril, and/or one tragic character twist. The new show has filled the skies with Daleks, set Gallifrey aflame, torn the Doctor from everyone he loves, killed Rory, and kissed Kylie Minogue. Doctor Who has no qualms about going straight for our panic button and pressing it hard.

And we enjoy it, otherwise we wouldn’t be watching. But lost in all the noise and ditching of Rose with Blue Suit Ten are small, lovely moments that are just as impactful; that portray just as much in only seconds. Below is a collection of our favorite, greatest, smallest moments from Doctor Who.

Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

“I’m not saving it. Time’s up.” - “The End of the World”

What’s the very first trip the Doctor takes his first post-Time War companion? A relaxing trip to planet Barcelona? Sightseeing on Woman Wept? A grand tour of the Medusa Cascade? Not even close. All of time and space at his fingertips and the first thing the Doctor does is show Rose her own world burning to nothing.

The reveal is fascinating when you’re first watching the show. Who is this guy? Who would do that? The choice of locale is even more telling after you know about the Time War and the Doctor’s role in it. Only two episodes in and he’s reaching out to Rose the only way he can think of, by giving her an idea of what he’s just gone through. The rawness of his choice is most telling in this exchange:

Rose: “But what about the people?”

The Doctor: “It’s empty! They’re all gone. All left.”

Rose: “Just me then.”

 

Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

“Rose, I’m trying to resonate concrete.” - “The Doctor Dances”

At this point in the show’s history, the question of the Doctor’s sexual appetite was up in the air. Would he be a bit staid like in the classic series or would he be more... adventurous? The show is still revealing the answer to that particular question, but this was the first moment that directly addressed it, and the first moment the show teased us with the prospect of Rose and the Doctor falling in love. Here, the Doctor’s response to Rose’s overture to dance with her is wonderfully idiosyncratic. His excuse is playfully flimsy and perfectly like him. As soon as you hear the line, you know that’s exactly what the Doctor would say.

 

Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

“The correct form of address is Your Majesty.” - “Tooth & Claw”

Queens have classically made trouble for the Doctor in the new series (and vice versa), as he always seems to underestimate their abilities. So it’s amazing to realize you’re doing the same thing when first watching “Tooth & Claw,” as you’re waiting for the Doctor to save Queen Victoria from the menacing monk chanting across the dinner table. Suddenly, the Queen is taking matters into her own hands, and reminding us that a Queen of England is not to be trifled with.

Seriously, Queen Victoria will pop you. And she’s probably a werewolf.

 

Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

Sarah Jane finds the TARDIS by accident in “School Reunion”

Here’s Sarah Jane Smith, having been abandoned decades ago by the Doctor, and on a random investigation she stumbles into a closet only to find the TARDIS towering over her. The viewer expects her to be happy to see the Doctor and the TARDIS again, but in one instant we realize how wrong that assumption was. Sarah Jane has worked for years to deal with the loss of the Doctor and in one instant that trauma is back, as powerful as ever. And it’s all there on Elisabeth Sladen’s face.

 

Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

“We never saw this coming…” - “The Age of Steel”

Rose and Mickey are a lesson in growing up. They have a relationship that they both are happy with until the Doctor comes in and tears them apart, filling 19-year-old Rose’s head with the universe and great deeds and his own particular brand of madness. But Mickey is a part of Rose, the part that she leaves behind whenever she goes traveling with the Doctor, and she can’t seem to stop coming back to him. She can’t let that part of her life whither away, the part that was Rose Tyler: Dreaming Shop Girl Going Nowhere Special.

But life seldom lets us hold onto the past the way we want to, and as Mickey begins to grow up too, Rose loses him. In an alternate universe he finds a cause to fight for, friends to help, and a piece of his family that he thought he had lost. He and Rose have to say goodbye, and there’s a moment of reflection: remembering their old selves, the ones who dreamed of doing great things. They know they will do great things, the both of them, but this is not quite the future they had imagined as kids. And nothing is more true to life than that.

 

Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

Rose tells Tommy to go after his dad in “The Idiot’s Lantern”

“The Idiot’s Lantern” is a mostly-forgettable episode sandwiched between Cybermen and Satan Pits, but it contains a lot of perfect moments, and says a lot about the growing love between the Tenth Doctor and Rose. When she’s attacked by The Wire, the Doctor gets furious in a way we’ve never yet seen him, and at the end of the episode, when young Tommy is watching his poisonous dad leave the homestead, Rose steps in to curb the cruelty he feels for him. And it’s not too hard to imagine Rose saying this for the Doctor’s benefit, either.

Rose: “Tommy, go after him.”

Tommy: “What for?”

Rose: “He’s your dad.”

Tommy: “He’s an idiot.”

Rose: “Course he is. Like I said, he’s your dad. But you’re clever. Clever enough to save the world so don’t stop there. Go on!”

It’s a small moment, but it illustrates just how much Rose is growing as a person while adventuring with the Doctor; in ways that the Doctor himself isn’t. Here, she takes responsibility for the mess they’ve created and looks ahead to what Tommy needs to do after they leave. Something the Doctor, at that point, was still having a lot of trouble with.

 

Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

The Doctor’s chat with the devil from “The Satan Pit”

Because we’re talking about small Who moments that gestured at larger emotional themes, you might think that bringing up The Devil might be like some kind of “ringer” moment, and about as fair as bringing a live velociraptor to a chicken race. But I’m not referring to the big romantic declaration Tennant belts out when he says he “believes” in Rose. Instead I’m focusing on a less melodramatic, well-acted, well-constructed bit of dialogue before that. This one begins as a fairly innocuous conversation insofar as the Doctor is always trying to figure out the real deal behind a majority of these monsters. The vampires are never just vampires, the ghosts are never just ghosts, and so the Devil can’t be the “real” Devil, right? It’s got to be something zany and sci-fi. So the conversation proceeds the way many of these conversations do, with the Doctor acting smarter than the thing he’s questioning in attempt to get the straight dope. It goes something like this:

The Doctor: “You can’t have come from before the universe. That’s impossible.”

The Devil: “Is that YOUR religion?”

The Doctor: (noticeably embarrassed) “It’s a belief.”

The way Tennant delivers that last word is almost a gulp. The Devil got him on that one, and for an instant we see the Doctor losing a basic ontological debate. How do we talk about the stuff we talk about in the universe? Well, the Doctor always frames everything a certain way, but what if he’s wrong? What if all that philosophizing was just the belief or opinion of one crazy guy? This reveals a lot about the way Tennant played the character of the Doctor. Arrogant and brave, but also aware of his shortcomings to the point of being occasionally embarrassed of his own behavior. In this situation, the Devil is more honest about the notions of plurality in terms of how discourse about basic issues is even framed in the first place. In terms of creating groundwork for how metaphysics is being discussed, the Doctor is sloppy and he knows it. And he’s embarrassed! The line is good, but only Tennant could have done it quite like that.

While we’re at it, though it’s not a small moment per se, elsewhere in the episode, the Devil basically reveals to us YEARS before the airing of “The End of Time” that the Doctor killed all the Time Lords by calling him “the killer of his own kind.” Gotta love that Russell T. Davies for having that planned out even back then!

 

Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

Donna’s mom admits she’s given up on Donna in “Turn Left”

This episode is wall to wall melodrama. The Doctor’s dead, London’s been nuked, America’s been turned into fat, everyone’s being herded into camps, and even the stars are going out. But perhaps the most chilling moment is when Donna comes back into their shantyhouse after looking unsuccessfully for work and tries to cheer her despondent mother up. Donna finally winds down by grief-joking, “Suppose I’ve always been a disappointment, haven’t I?”

Her mother, a woman who’s spent her life watching her daughter amount to nothing, watched her husband die before his time, and now has to live out her days in a dying world, doesn’t even look at Donna. “Yeah,” she mutters, loud enough to make sure Donna hears, and continues staring into the distance.

It’s the kind of knife twist that Russell T. Davies pulls off particularly well. Even in the midst of planetary chaos, nothing hurts like your parents admitting they think you’re a failure.

 

Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

“You could be beautiful. With a mind like that, we could travel the stars. It would be my honor.” - “The End of Time, Part II”

The Doctor and the Master have one of the greatest relationships that the show provides, and not just in the revived series; some of the Doctor’s best moments in classic Who occurred opposite his “best enemy.” The Tenth Doctor’s finale confirmed that the two had started out as friends, and the Master did save the Doctor’s bacon on more than one occasion in the show’s past (because, according to him, he couldn’t imagine a universe without that TARDIS-stealing sanctimonious git). But the Doctor always held him up as the villain, told his companions to fear him and promised to stop him at all costs.

And then the end was near, and the Master had him strapped to a chair, and the Doctor took the time to talk to him (even with Wilf watching the exchange). He praised the Master’s brilliance, equal to his own, and made an offer that he perhaps should have made a long time ago. And in that moment, we can see the Doctor come to a realization — that they have made each other. It’s no wonder they can never escape these confrontations. Owning up to that is easily one of the Doctor’s most beautiful emotional moments on the series to date:

The Doctor: “’Cause you don’t need to own the universe, just see it. Have the privilege of seeing the whole of time and space. That’s ownership enough.”

The Master: “Would it stop, then? The noise in my head?”

The Doctor: “I can help.”

The Master: “I don’t know what I’d be without that noise.”

The Doctor: “Wonder what I’d be… without you.”

 

“Nobody human has anything to say to me today!” — “The Beast Below”

The Doctor gives the human race a lot of leeway because we’re his favorite species. He turns the universe upside down to save us all time and time again, and never asks for a thank you, but that doesn’t mean he’s blind to our flaws. In fact, being such a super genius makes him even more critical of those flaws when we do something truly wrong. So when he sees a star whale being tortured by humanity in order to survive, he makes a horrible decision: to save the beast agony by lobotomizing it. Because he can’t bear to see the creature go on that way, but he can’t be responsible for the death of every human being on Starship UK either.

Still, he isn’t dismissive over how unfair his bias toward humanity can be, and the Eleventh Doctor can’t stop his first moment of proper fury as he demands that every human stop talking to him. Because he’s about to do something horrifying, about to commit genocide again, and it’s humanity’s fault. This moment of raw pain makes Amy’s act of saving the star whale all the more potent: in just a few minutes, we get a glimpse of exactly what it is about humanity that the Doctor loves — and loathes.

 

Rose, I’m Trying to Resonate Concrete: The Greatest, Smallest Moments of Doctor Who

River Song realizes she’s kissed the Doctor for the last time - “Day of the Moon”

This one’s pretty self-explanatory. At least, it is when you’re watching two people head in opposite directions through their entire romance. There was always going to be a day when the Doctor kissed her for the first time, and the for the last time, and River Song has always understood that on an intellectual level. But it’s obvious that, given her carefree, time-tossed ways, she never thought that day would be so soon. Alex Kingston plays this moment to the absolute hilt, and Matt Smith dancing foppishly, nervously away as she experiences one of the saddest moments of her life just twists the knife all the more.

 

We could go on and on with this, but we’ll halt here so you can add your own favorite small moments from Doctor Who. What’s a small moments from this show that resonates with you?


Chris Lough is the production manager for Tor.com and will always remember you, Banakafalatta.

Ryan Britt is the Staff Writer for Tor.com and is the most important person in the whole of creation.

Emily Asher-Perrin is the Tor.com Editorial Assistant and would happily wheel you around an aircraft carrier while she danced to the Scissor Sisters.

21 comments
Shaz
1. Shaz
There was a great small moment in recent Doctor Who episode. During a flashback to Amy, Rory & Melody's childhood we see young Amy giving Melody a row about always getting into trouble, and that she's even worse than the boys. Melody says something along the lines of, 'well you're just as bad', to which Amy replies, 'Yes but I count as a boy'.
I love that line! I think the young actress' delivery is just perfect, and, it does sound just like the sort of thing a kid would say.
Shaz
2. Shaz
(sorry, I should have pointed out that the scene is from 'Let's Kill Hitler!')
Shaz
3. AlBrown
The delight that the Doctor and Donna exhibit in "Partners in Crime," when they find each other in windows across the room during their investigation of Adipose Industries. In fact, the whole episode, with the way Donna and the Doctor keep missing each other, the juxtaposition of the cute fat creatures and the horrible nature of their creation, and the slapstick humor, is just about perfect.
Cait Glasson
4. CaitieCat
From the Shakespeare Code, S3E2 I think it is? When Shakespeare flirts with Ten, and Ten retorts that "fifty-seven academics just punched the air!" - because when the show came back to air back in 2005, I watched the show at the home of a friend in Bedford, said friend who is doing a PhD focused on bisexuality in Shakespeare and his plays. She was definitely one of that 57.

Alternately, from S5E...2?, that same one with the space whale, my favourite moment is Liz Ten's proud declaration: "I'm the bloody Queen, mate. Basically: I rule."

I would watch the hell out of a series about the adventures of Liz Ten.
Shaz
5. politeruin
So many i'm sure but off the top of my head it has to be the bit in Dalek when the newly invigorated pepperpot points its plunger at the tech guy Simmons (thanks IMDB), who is obviously canon fodder, and Simmons says: "What ya gonna do, sucker me to death?". Then it latches onto his face and proceeds to crush his skull. I never thought the new Who would manage to make them scary for a modern audience but that so managed it, after a long time of just pushing them down the stairs or something. Probably not really a small moment but oh well.

Also, i never see any mention of the hymn being sung in Gridlock. I love that bit.
Daniel Goss
6. Beren
Not exactly a 'small' moment, but my absolute favorite is this:
At the end of "The Doctor Dances" when Nine gets this rapturous look on his face while he says (and I'm sorry if I get the quote wrong) " . . . and just this once, Rose, nobody dies." That was the look of a man who has seen so much death in his life witnessing the miraculous survival of everyone.
Shaz
7. Dr. Cox
Hmm . . . Liz Ten's explanation of how she knows who the Doctor is,
Chip telling Cassandra she's beautiful, Amy's explanation of why Rory
is beautiful, Nine and Rose deciding they're hungry for chips . . . I know there are more . . . I just need to rewatch some episodes! :)
Ron Hogan
8. RonHogan
"the Devil basically reveals to us YEARS before the airing of 'The End of Time' that the Doctor killed all the Time Lords by calling him 'the killer of his own kind.'"

I thought Nine admits as much in his first conversation with the Dalek in "Dalek" -- that the Time Lords and the Daleks came to battle in one spot, and he destroyed them all?
Shaz
9. Zenspinner
That "everybody lives" moment in "The Doctor Dances" was one of my very favorite DW moments even before I found out Colin Baker said it was the all-time best dramatic moment in the show's history. I loved Tennant, and I adore Matt Smith, but damn...I wish Christopher Eccleston had stayed on a bit longer.
Odette Mohammed
10. odettem
@ #5 Politeruin
Also, i never see any mention of the hymn being sung in Gridlock. I love that bit.

I loved that scene. It literally made me cry one of those very satisfying sweet-sad cries.

This article makes me want to start my second re-watch of the show.
Shaz
11. a-j
That chilling moment in Nine's last episode with the dalek floating outside the space station. You can't hear it, but it's flashing lights tell us it's saying 'Exterminate!'. I'll forgive RTD a great deal for making daleks frightening again.

More recently, in 'The Doctor's Wife', though I can't remember the lines properly, Eleven's desperate wish to be forgiven by the Time Lords.
alex
12. jerec84
In The Hungry Earth, The Doctor is explaining stuff and the old man accuses him of not making any sense, and he retorts "excuse me, I'm making perfect sense, you're just not keeping up." and Nasreen smirks.
Meghan Deans
13. Meghan
I think "The Idiot's Lantern" is entirely underrated. Possibly because of how annoying the Wire's call of HUN-GRY is. But the plot with the family is perfectly rounded and realized, and that moment at the end is wonderful. Also: Ten's hair is incredible throughout.
Jenny Thrash
14. Sihaya
Beren@#6: It's "Everybody lives!" It was the first moment when I was sure that I really, really loved the new series. But to me that always seemed like part of a big, dramatic moment.

A smaller line from halfway through the episode is when Rose guffaws and calls the Doctor Father Christmas, and he says something about "a red bicycle when you were twelve." It suggests something that we only catch glimpses of - that even when the Doctor stops interacting with his companions, he stays in their lives. It's suggested again when the Tenth Doctor is on his goodbye tour. He barely talks to anybody, but he has a hand in little moments that might turn significant.

On to the article: The moment in "Turn Left" when Donna's mom admits she's disappointed *in* her is so deeply contrasted with the end of Tennant's series, when it is so obvious that Mom is disappointed *for* Donna, a woman who's seen the whole universe but has to limit her full potential in order to keep on living. It's made doubly obvious where her disappointment really lies when Tennant hands Mom the lottery card and tells her where he got it. She was really just disappointed that her family life was always going to be limited by loss. Donna's going to have alot of birthdays and anniversaries without her dad or her memories. Donna's mom will probably take summer vacations and carp to no one in particular about the quality of the salad or the service, as opposed to carping to her lifelong companion about the tapas. It doesn't seem like much of a qualitative difference from the outside; that's simply because it's indescribable. And the Doctor gives Donna and her mother something that shouldn't be available on that wedding day - a gift from Dad. The wedding goes on the same, but the change is *huge* in that little moment, and it does something to meaning of the exchange in "Turn Left."
Shaz
15. Snapdragon
You forgot one of the most important parts of the exchange between the Doctor and the Master in "The End of Time: Part 2"--after the Doctor says "I wonder what I'd be without you," the Master responds "Yeah" with tears in his eyes. It's not just the Doctor who realizes and acknowledges the role they've played in each other's lives.

Personally, I love an exchange that happens between Dr. Constantine and the Ninth Doctor in "The Empty Child."

Dr. Constantine says, "Before this war began, I was a father and a grandfather. Now I am neither, but I'm still a doctor."

The Doctor replies, "Know the feeling."

It feels like such an understated moment, almost a throw-away line, and yet there's such a feeling of loss behind it--Susan and the rest of the Doctor's family probably died with all of the other Time Lords on Gallifrey.

In the same theme, I really like the little scenes in "Fear Her" and "The Doctor's Daughter" where the Doctor says something along the lines of "I was a father, once" to his unexpecting companions.

I guess I just have a fondness for the scenes that remind us that the Doctor has had really signifcant experiences and people in his life that we know almost nothing about.

@5 I love that bit where they sing "The Old Rugged Cross," too! A really subtle touch that I love is that Martha joins in and sings with the rest, but the Doctor doesn't. Little things like that can say a lot about the characters.
Shaz
16. Onambarwen
Donna. So many favorite moments. I think of all the companions I've seen (not that many, really) she's my favorite.

But the one that gets me every time I see it is in the second Library episode (Forests of the Dead?) when everything is starting to fall apart. Her fictitious children admit to her that they feel like they don't exist when she stops looking at them. She promises to never close her eyes again.

And then blinks.

And her children disappear. Her heartbreaking reaction makes me cry every single time.
Chris Lough
17. TorChris
These are such great additions, you guys. (And a lot of these came REALLY close to being in the article, too. Especially "Everybody lives!" But the piece is long enough as it is...)

@8. RonHogan. At that point we only know that he "watched it happen / made it happen" and we assume that he just killed the Daleks, since he's talking about their entire fleet on fire. We suspect there's more to the story, but it's not made overt that he killed evvvverybody until season 2.

@11. a-j. The silent "Exterminate"! Oh, that's a good one.

@13. Meghan. Remember that time you hung the Union flags upside down? So embarrassing.
Ryan Britt
18. ryancbritt
@8 Ron
Good call. The Silence must have erased my memory on that one.
Shaz
19. irny
I do love the bit near the end of 'Turn Left' when they're about to send Donna back in time. She's been told that she's going to die, but she thinks that she gets it, that she's somehow going to snap into her old mind or fade out of existence, and she's so happy and hopeful.
But then there's the slow, creeping realisation that that's not what's going to happen, that she is going to die. The way she stands there and says "But I can't die! I've got a future, with the Doctor! You told me!" gets me every time.
And then, knowing this, she steps out in front of the lorry anyway because she's Donna and she's brilliant.
Shaz
20. ShannonM
One of my favorites is near the end of "The Family of Blood" when Joan Redfern says to John Smith, "If I could do this instead of you then I would." The Doctor has no shortage of people willing to die in his place, but the fact that Joan wants to do that for John Smith but can't creates a nice moment of quiet heroism.
Shaz
21. KestrelHill
The little scene that shatters me is in 'Amy's Choice', when Rory is turned to dust. No screaming, howling, sobbing -- she just whispers, "Come back..."

Subscribe to this thread

Receive notification by email when a new comment is added. You must be a registered user to subscribe to threads.
Post a comment