The main event, however, is "The Bells of Saint John": a cheeky title (the "bells" are the TARDIS's phone ringing -- the TARDIS, as you'll recall, having a "St. John Ambulance" sigil on the door) that nevertheless leads to an action-packed whirlwind of a tale. This is our first proper look at the companion version of Clara (other than a brief moment at the end of the previous story), and fortunately she's not quite as perfect as the last two versions had been -- fortunately because that gives "our" Clara a chance to grow and develop and not be completely boring. The Doctor finally finds her, after both trying the "random chance" and the "sit in a room and think" approaches (albeit in a room in a monastery in 1207 Cumbria), by pure chance -- Clara calls the TARDIS's phone after being given the number by "the woman in the shop"245, trying to get help with the internet on her laptop. (Although Clara seems really helpless here -- is it really likely that a woman in her mid-20s in 2013 would be quite so hopeless with connecting to the Wi-Fi?)
That's the (deliberately contrived) setup, but what follows is really quite wonderful. "There's something in the Wi-Fi," the Doctor tells us, and while it does seem somewhat fanciful, everyone treats it with sufficient seriousness to make you believe in the idea of a company out there stealing people's minds/souls via Wi-Fi, all for a sinister client: the Great Intelligence (we learn at the end) has been feeding off these minds to sustain itself. (It's a link that's hinted at earlier in the episode, as the walking base stations -- the "Spoonheads" -- repeat back what's said to them, much as the Intelligence did with young Walter Simeon.) This means that it has a lot of "agents" out in London, and it's not happy that the Doctor has pulled Clara out of their network before she can be fully downloaded.
(Incidentally, we get a slightly different outfit for the Doctor: the basic feel is the same (coat, bow tie, braces, etc.), but we get a longer purple coat and a darker bow tie. Nevertheless, it still feels like a natural fit for Matt Smith's Doctor.)
The Doctor rides a motorcycle out of the TARDIS, ready to take Clara to breakfast. ("The Bells of Saint John") ©BBC |
In some ways, "The Bells of Saint John" has two jobs: introduce the companion version of Clara, and provide the equivalent of a spectacular series opener. At both jobs it succeeds admirably. This is Doctor Who as pure fun, with little angst and a lot of entertainment. "The Bells of Saint John" is a great, highly enjoyable episode, getting the 2013 run off to a fabulous start.
245 The mention of this convenient arranged meeting is largely thrown away here, but they'll finally explain it in the series 8 finale.