30 reviews
On Satellite 5 you can mind-read all about it: but In the Earth year of 200,000 the truth and the news is not what it seems, and a 90-year old regression is quite normal and the means. Searching for the answers, the Doctor and Rose (eventually) make their way to floor 500 where others have previously blundered (albeit out of ignorance) and are imaginatively confronted by a slimy mucous media mogul and his pundit - but that doesn't peg them back. When the temperature starts to rise, there is not a great deal of surprise, and the baddies are quite justly chastised, and some. Meanwhile Adam, who we met in the previous instalment consumes viewing minutes to ensure this episode fits the delegated TV time slot.
Cameos a plenty in the seventh episode of the Doctor Who reboot, which I felt was the most enjoyable episode of the run so far.
Arriving in the year 200,000 with Adam (Bruno Langley) still on board, The Doctor (Christopher Eccleston) and Rose (Billie Piper) are on a news broadcasting space station at the heart of the fourth great Human Empire. But things are wrong. The Empire is not progressing as The Doctor knows it should have, it has been stunted. Two workers on the platform, ambitious Cathica (Christine Adams) and her friend Suki (Anna Maxwell Martin) explain how the station works, and Rose and The Doctor investigate just what is happening on the 500th floor. But Adam has a plan of his own.
So, yes. Plot wise I think this was the best episode I've seen so far. I only have the one question, in that I didn't really understand what the endgame was for the Mighty Jagrafess of the Holy Hadrojassic Maxarodenfoe. But beyond that, everything else rang true. I like that rather than fixing the problem himself, the Doctor inspired Cathica to investigate properly and save the day. I also liked that we got rid of Adam as there wasn't much in Bruno Langley's performance to get attached to. I actually thought he died, but actually being dumped home and needing to keep quiet was much more fitting. One funny aspect is that the theme of the show, bias within news media, is probably is more relevant now that it was in 2005
What's most striking about this episode is the number of recognisable actors in it. Simon Pegg and Tamsin Grieg would have been notable cameos at the time, with "Spaced", "Black Books" and "Shaun Of The Dead" all having been made by this point. Christine Adams has worked consistently on both sides of the Atlantic for years now most recently (at time of review) in "Black Lightning". Anna Maxwell Martin is probably the biggest star though, looking particularly young here, she's gone on to star in virtually every Dickins adaptation made since.
I enjoyed this one, it's was an amusing knockabout adventure elevated by its guest stars.
Arriving in the year 200,000 with Adam (Bruno Langley) still on board, The Doctor (Christopher Eccleston) and Rose (Billie Piper) are on a news broadcasting space station at the heart of the fourth great Human Empire. But things are wrong. The Empire is not progressing as The Doctor knows it should have, it has been stunted. Two workers on the platform, ambitious Cathica (Christine Adams) and her friend Suki (Anna Maxwell Martin) explain how the station works, and Rose and The Doctor investigate just what is happening on the 500th floor. But Adam has a plan of his own.
So, yes. Plot wise I think this was the best episode I've seen so far. I only have the one question, in that I didn't really understand what the endgame was for the Mighty Jagrafess of the Holy Hadrojassic Maxarodenfoe. But beyond that, everything else rang true. I like that rather than fixing the problem himself, the Doctor inspired Cathica to investigate properly and save the day. I also liked that we got rid of Adam as there wasn't much in Bruno Langley's performance to get attached to. I actually thought he died, but actually being dumped home and needing to keep quiet was much more fitting. One funny aspect is that the theme of the show, bias within news media, is probably is more relevant now that it was in 2005
What's most striking about this episode is the number of recognisable actors in it. Simon Pegg and Tamsin Grieg would have been notable cameos at the time, with "Spaced", "Black Books" and "Shaun Of The Dead" all having been made by this point. Christine Adams has worked consistently on both sides of the Atlantic for years now most recently (at time of review) in "Black Lightning". Anna Maxwell Martin is probably the biggest star though, looking particularly young here, she's gone on to star in virtually every Dickins adaptation made since.
I enjoyed this one, it's was an amusing knockabout adventure elevated by its guest stars.
- southdavid
- Mar 31, 2020
- Permalink
In an ironic twist of fate, the best episode of Doctor Who's first season, Dalek, is followed by the weakest, The Long Game. Adding to the crushing sense of disappointment is the fact that the incriminated 45 minutes are written by none other than Russell T. Davies, the man responsible for bringing back the Doctor in the first place.
This time, it all takes place in the year 200,000. The specific location is Satellite Five, the heart of the Fourth and Bountiful Human Empire, an ideal place for Rose's first "date" with new companion Adam (Bruno Langley), who joined our time travelers in the TARDIS after the Van Statten incident. It all looks perfect, which means it obviously isn't: something or someone is blocking every kind of human evolution, effectively enslaving and entire race. The prime suspect is the malevolent Editor (Simon Pegg), but the increasingly deteriorating situation indicates something more serious than one man's machinations have to be behind this. And it's up to the Doctor to save the day. Again.
Normally, Davies' stories are among the best of each season because they're (usually) part of a more complex mythology arc, similar to what Chris Carter conjured on The X-Files. But whereas Carter never wrote an X-Files episode that couldn't be enjoyed without considering the bigger picture, Davies has managed to come up with a story that makes little sense on its own and seems to exist solely to set up a more important story later on in the season. The consequence is that most of The Long Game passes by without leaving anything memorable behind. Only Eccleston, always a gas no matter how silly things get, and Pegg (a huge fan of the show), reversing his slacker image with an OTT but utterly enjoyable villainous turn, save the episode from being a throwaway experience.
6,5/10
This time, it all takes place in the year 200,000. The specific location is Satellite Five, the heart of the Fourth and Bountiful Human Empire, an ideal place for Rose's first "date" with new companion Adam (Bruno Langley), who joined our time travelers in the TARDIS after the Van Statten incident. It all looks perfect, which means it obviously isn't: something or someone is blocking every kind of human evolution, effectively enslaving and entire race. The prime suspect is the malevolent Editor (Simon Pegg), but the increasingly deteriorating situation indicates something more serious than one man's machinations have to be behind this. And it's up to the Doctor to save the day. Again.
Normally, Davies' stories are among the best of each season because they're (usually) part of a more complex mythology arc, similar to what Chris Carter conjured on The X-Files. But whereas Carter never wrote an X-Files episode that couldn't be enjoyed without considering the bigger picture, Davies has managed to come up with a story that makes little sense on its own and seems to exist solely to set up a more important story later on in the season. The consequence is that most of The Long Game passes by without leaving anything memorable behind. Only Eccleston, always a gas no matter how silly things get, and Pegg (a huge fan of the show), reversing his slacker image with an OTT but utterly enjoyable villainous turn, save the episode from being a throwaway experience.
6,5/10
- liamdonovan2010
- Oct 3, 2011
- Permalink
Exploration of the manipulation of media in the modern world through 'fake news' controlled by Aliens on a gigantic space station in the year 200,000? Brilliant. Execution is filled with pointless characters. Was Adam wrote for the sake of having his life ruined? Bright moments steady the episode into a decent outing at the mid-point of the season.
- bendtnerfc
- Dec 3, 2021
- Permalink
- MrFilmAndTelevisionShow
- Mar 16, 2021
- Permalink
A pretty unexciting filler episode which mainly serves as a set up for the story arc which culminates in the final two episodes of series 1.
The plot is that The Doctor, Rose and new companion Adam arrive on Satellite 5 in the year 200,000 where there turns out to be a sinister alien influencing the brainwashed masses. It has similar themes to The Macra Terror and its descendant Gridlock as well as other Doctor Who stories. So there is nothing feeling very original or clever about it and while nothing about it is really bad, it is not brilliantly done either.
The main interesting element is the idea of new companion Adam failing to follow the instructions The Doctor gave him and causing problems which result in him being thrown out and losing his chance to travel with The Doctor any further. I find that idea great and fresh but the rest of the episode is a little bit cheesy in design, not quite convincing enough in plot or dialogue and lacks enough fun or entertainment to lift it above an unremarkable filler.
Simon Pegg who is now a big Hollywood star and who is a fan of the show is good as you might expect but is not used to his full potential in his role as the Editor, I hope he returns to the show in a better role in the future.
This is not awful in any way but it looks rather dull and feels rather dull. It actually feels a little bit too cold like the top floor of the satellite!
An acceptable filler but nothing more than that in my opinion. My least favourite of Series 1.
6.5/10.
The plot is that The Doctor, Rose and new companion Adam arrive on Satellite 5 in the year 200,000 where there turns out to be a sinister alien influencing the brainwashed masses. It has similar themes to The Macra Terror and its descendant Gridlock as well as other Doctor Who stories. So there is nothing feeling very original or clever about it and while nothing about it is really bad, it is not brilliantly done either.
The main interesting element is the idea of new companion Adam failing to follow the instructions The Doctor gave him and causing problems which result in him being thrown out and losing his chance to travel with The Doctor any further. I find that idea great and fresh but the rest of the episode is a little bit cheesy in design, not quite convincing enough in plot or dialogue and lacks enough fun or entertainment to lift it above an unremarkable filler.
Simon Pegg who is now a big Hollywood star and who is a fan of the show is good as you might expect but is not used to his full potential in his role as the Editor, I hope he returns to the show in a better role in the future.
This is not awful in any way but it looks rather dull and feels rather dull. It actually feels a little bit too cold like the top floor of the satellite!
An acceptable filler but nothing more than that in my opinion. My least favourite of Series 1.
6.5/10.
- A_Kind_Of_CineMagic
- Dec 5, 2018
- Permalink
Two very good episodes in a row. A difficult one to follow after last episodes performance but they managed to do so with flying colours. An unexpected villain and also the darkness of human nature. The plot in this one will keep you on the edge of your seat, very good use of suspense.
I loved it _ 8-8.5
I loved it _ 8-8.5
- warlordartos
- Apr 4, 2020
- Permalink
Although this episode has an interesting premise and Simon Pegg steals the show, it is ruined for me by the sheer stupidity and annoying nature of Adam Mitchell. I'm glad they got rid of him. It's a good episode that's could have been better.
- robertmooring-13902
- Apr 4, 2018
- Permalink
- The_Rider2004
- Jul 25, 2022
- Permalink
- hwiltshire-06889
- Apr 2, 2024
- Permalink
- stevenjlowe82
- Oct 1, 2023
- Permalink
- therussells-23255
- Jul 3, 2024
- Permalink
- MadokaTomoyo
- Nov 17, 2021
- Permalink
As a Follow up it isn't the best, or superb. But the action and the story to set up the Finale works wonders. The new human race was an Entertaining introduction and it was amazing to see how it had advanced and progressed in a creative way. The story was progression for Series 4's Finale too in my mind as they used the Daleks, but also the time so they had gotten out of time, this was the episodes biggest strength. And it's a good one.
The characters feel better as side kicks as they atleast have more to do, and work with. They aren't great, but their still interesting and have a decent dynamic.
However the episode is mostly just okay, the pacing was good, but the story did just feel like set up and filler. But it was good at it, and the time elements being taken out and taking it to the future is the exact same as Series 4'S Finale.
The characters feel better as side kicks as they atleast have more to do, and work with. They aren't great, but their still interesting and have a decent dynamic.
However the episode is mostly just okay, the pacing was good, but the story did just feel like set up and filler. But it was good at it, and the time elements being taken out and taking it to the future is the exact same as Series 4'S Finale.
- Simple_Reviewer
- Jul 22, 2025
- Permalink
This is by far my favourite episode of Season 1 of Dr Who for several reasons.
First of all, it steers clear of clichés, something that the creative teams behind "World War Three" and similar atrocities could learn from. Rose Tyler isn't her usual helpless self either and, sparingly, she isn't a big part of this episode.
I also loved the casting in this one too, Simon Pegg does a great job as the villain "The Editor", and the rest of the cast are impressive too.
With a few quips and a fast-paced and entertaining story, for me this is the stand-out episode of Season 1
First of all, it steers clear of clichés, something that the creative teams behind "World War Three" and similar atrocities could learn from. Rose Tyler isn't her usual helpless self either and, sparingly, she isn't a big part of this episode.
I also loved the casting in this one too, Simon Pegg does a great job as the villain "The Editor", and the rest of the cast are impressive too.
With a few quips and a fast-paced and entertaining story, for me this is the stand-out episode of Season 1
- jordan-allan84
- Nov 19, 2013
- Permalink
We had the wonderful 'Dalek' previously, so expectations were very high.
The Doctor and Rose have picked up pretty boy Adam, after saving him from Van Statten's museum, and landed on Satellite 5 Space Station in the year 200,000. Something is wrong and halting human progression, the technology the Doctor witnesses is somehow wrong, but what's at the heart of it? Seemingly a frost bitten Simon Pegg is the Spider at the heart of a web causing the problems. He and his also icy crew view everything that goes on at Satellite 5. Suki is quickly unveiled by Pegg as a traitor, and gets promotion to floor 500, we learn that only the chosen few get there, but never return. Not all is golden on floor 500 as it's littered with corpses and snow. Not the dream promotion Suki was hoping for. We learn Satellite 5 is lying to the people with its transmissions, and the real boss is the Mighty Jagrafess.
I mentioned expectations were high, but this is sadly a pretty below average episode, it just doesn't really work, it feels so disjointed and it's actually quite boring. Simon Pegg is totally wasted, he does his best with a really weak script, but somehow manages to bring the character to life. Poor Bruno Langley didn't gel at all well, he did have one good scene with the delightful Tamsin Greig. Bruno could have improved with a bit more time possibly and Greig could have had a much bigger role. Christine Adams puts in a good day's work as Cathica, and is one of the highlights of the episode. Not a fan.... 4.5/10
The Doctor and Rose have picked up pretty boy Adam, after saving him from Van Statten's museum, and landed on Satellite 5 Space Station in the year 200,000. Something is wrong and halting human progression, the technology the Doctor witnesses is somehow wrong, but what's at the heart of it? Seemingly a frost bitten Simon Pegg is the Spider at the heart of a web causing the problems. He and his also icy crew view everything that goes on at Satellite 5. Suki is quickly unveiled by Pegg as a traitor, and gets promotion to floor 500, we learn that only the chosen few get there, but never return. Not all is golden on floor 500 as it's littered with corpses and snow. Not the dream promotion Suki was hoping for. We learn Satellite 5 is lying to the people with its transmissions, and the real boss is the Mighty Jagrafess.
I mentioned expectations were high, but this is sadly a pretty below average episode, it just doesn't really work, it feels so disjointed and it's actually quite boring. Simon Pegg is totally wasted, he does his best with a really weak script, but somehow manages to bring the character to life. Poor Bruno Langley didn't gel at all well, he did have one good scene with the delightful Tamsin Greig. Bruno could have improved with a bit more time possibly and Greig could have had a much bigger role. Christine Adams puts in a good day's work as Cathica, and is one of the highlights of the episode. Not a fan.... 4.5/10
- Sleepin_Dragon
- Aug 10, 2015
- Permalink
Without doubt this is the weakest story of the first season of the DOCTOR WHO relaunch and it's all down to writer/executive producer . Like most episodes written by RTD it has a very good opening hook and a very good closing sequence but in between we have a fairly bad structured and paced story where nothing much happens
The opening revolves around new companion Adam experiencing his first trip into space with humorous results and it's at this point the audience are left rubbing their chins thinking hey this guy might be a really good addition to the Tardis crew but unfortunately as the story progresses it becomes obvious that he's only included to take up some running time and to set up a joke at the end . Likewise the inclusion of both Simon Pegg and Tamsin Grieg seems more like gimmick casting in order to make the episode more memorable than it really is and there's no way you'll believe this story was part of the Bad Wolf running theme . As always Ecclestone's performance as possibly the most callous incarnation of The Doctor is fantastic
The opening revolves around new companion Adam experiencing his first trip into space with humorous results and it's at this point the audience are left rubbing their chins thinking hey this guy might be a really good addition to the Tardis crew but unfortunately as the story progresses it becomes obvious that he's only included to take up some running time and to set up a joke at the end . Likewise the inclusion of both Simon Pegg and Tamsin Grieg seems more like gimmick casting in order to make the episode more memorable than it really is and there's no way you'll believe this story was part of the Bad Wolf running theme . As always Ecclestone's performance as possibly the most callous incarnation of The Doctor is fantastic
- Theo Robertson
- May 8, 2007
- Permalink
With a couple of good guests (Simon Pegg, Tamsin Grieg) this should have been better, but sadly I have to concur with fellow reviewers that this isn't the best episode, despite another great performance from Christopher Eccleston.
It's a good lesson in how to NOT be a companion, with Adam going against the Doctor's orders, while Rose again shows why she is a perfect one.
Bruno Langley is wooden from start to finish, and Pegg sadly underused, playing second fiddle to a not very scary villain.
Not the best episode overall.
It's a good lesson in how to NOT be a companion, with Adam going against the Doctor's orders, while Rose again shows why she is a perfect one.
Bruno Langley is wooden from start to finish, and Pegg sadly underused, playing second fiddle to a not very scary villain.
Not the best episode overall.