My friends will back me up when I say that I cry at quite a
lot. Being a Leonardo DiCaprio fan, the obvious one is Titanic, which despite the fact that I can recite pretty much the
entire movie due to the amount of times that I’ve seen it, I still weep at
every time. Again, my mum will vouch for me when I tell you that I properly
broke down when Ianto died in Torchwood
(and I mean bawling). However, if you really want to make me cry in front of
the telly of an evening, then play an episode of Doctor Who.
I recently wrote a piece entitled ‘Why Rose Tyler is the
best new Who companion’, so obviously I’m going to be biased towards anything
to do with her. However, I think anyone who’s seen ‘Doomsday’ will agree that it’s
one of the most heart-breaking episodes. From the moment that Rose clings to
her magna-clamp, I sit there struggling to hold my tears in. When she
desperately bangs on the wall in Pete’s world, the Doctor silently shocked on
the other side, it gets even more difficult. But once we’ve reached Bad Wolf
Way, there’s no hiding it, and I think that’s down to a pair of brilliant
actors and their script writer. It’s Billie’s shattering cries as her Doctor
can’t do anything to help, and his unfinished words “Rose Tyler-“
Who writers often send companions off in a very emotional
way. Amy and Rory’s last story, ‘The Angels Take Manhattan’, is one that gives
Rose a run for her money. In that episode (which I am watching as I write this)
it’s the teasing of the audience from Moffat that keeps the tension high: the
Ponds’ throwing themselves off of the roof of Winter Quay in a particularly
Reichenbach fall fashion, then popping back up alive a matter of seconds later.
We think they’re going to be OK, then look what happens… and finally, Amy’s afterword
for the Doctor. Moffat certainly knows how to rip our hearts out, but here, I
put some blame on Murray Gold, too. ‘Together or Not At All – The Song of Amy
and Rory’ is simply stunning.
Another piece of brilliant music is ‘The Long Song’, which
featured heavily in the series 7 episode ‘The Rings of Akhaten’. That episode
brings tears to my eyes not because of character deaths or terrible
separations. It’s that damn song… (Along with Matt’s speech that can’t be
described as anything other than magnificent. That NTA was well deserved.)
Another one not specifically due to a departure that makes
me cry is the brilliant 50th anniversary episode ‘The Day of the
Doctor’. Although I’ve not seen most of the classic Doctors (I’ve started
recently, right at the beginning with Hartnell), the moment when all 13 come
together to save Gallifrey is just spectacular. Then, right at the end, another
of Matt’s speeches as he joins the line of Time Lords looking up to his home
planet… Rassilon, that’s when I properly well up with happy tears. However, my
heart(s) dropped when David left in his TARDIS, because at that moment I realised
that it is unlikely he’ll ever tie up the laces on his Converse or swing his
big brown coat on again. And they just had to do it, didn’t they? “I don’t want
to go…”
Which brings me nicely to ‘The End of Time Part 2’.
Regeneration episodes are commonly emotional, but the most recent ones have
been particularly earth-shatteringly heartbreakingly awful. The last 20 minutes
or so of David’s last episode (where he visits all his old companions) is tough
to watch, especially Donna’s wedding and Rose’s first encounter (on a side not,
a very clever move by Russell T Davies). But then, that Ood appears in the snow
and ‘Vale Decem’ starts and that’s it. One last line. And… result? I’m an utter
mess.
My list of 20 episodes, ranked in order of crying
likeliness:
- The Time of the Doctor
- Doomsday
- The End of Time, Part 2
- The Angels Take Manhattan
- Vincent and the Doctor
- The Day of the Doctor
- The Doctor’s Wife
- The Doctor’s Daughter
- The Girl Who Waited
- Journey’s End
- The Rings of Akhaten
- The Family of Blood
- The Last of the Time Lords
- Father’s Day
- The Big Bang
- The Name of the Doctor
- Forest of the Dead
- The Girl in the Fireplace
- The Parting of the Ways
- The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe
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