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"Hell Bent" is the twelfth and final episode of the ninth series of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was written by Steven Moffat , directed by Rachel Talalay and first broadcast on BBC One on 5 December 2015.
[43] [44] Kingston was re-introduced in the fifth series and was revealed as another time traveler who meets with the Doctor out of order. [45] Darvill was then promoted to the main cast beginning with "The Impossible Astronaut", the series six opening episode. [46] Kingston continued to recur throughout the sixth series as well. [47]
The series contains more than one two-part story for the first time since the sixth series in 2011. [7] Episodes such as "The Girl Who Died" / "The Woman Who Lived" and "Face the Raven" / "Heaven Sent" / "Hell Bent" are connected through loose story arcs, but are considered separate when it comes to their respective story numbers.
The Doctor tells himself "Assume you're going to survive. Always assume that." This is what Clara says of the Doctor in "The Witch's Familiar": "he always assumes he's going to win. He always knows there's a way to survive". [3] The Doctor confesses that he ran from Gallifrey because he was scared, and that the pretense of being bored was a lie.
Doctor Who is a British science fiction television programme produced by the BBC.Having ceased broadcasting in 1989, it resumed in 2005.The 2005 revival traded the earlier serial format for a run of self-contained episodes, interspersed with occasional multi-part stories and structured into loose story arcs. [1]
In the ninth series finale "Hell Bent", the Doctor attempts to help Clara cheat death and runs away with her from the planet Gallifrey (set roughly 14 billion years after Ashildr became immortal, [note 2]) to the end of time itself (over 100 trillion years in the future [note 3]).
The Thirteenth Doctor is an incarnation of the Doctor, ... "Hell Bent", in which a white ... Other former cast members Christopher Eccleston, ...
This is a list of television writers for the science fiction television programme Doctor Who. It is sortable by a number of different criteria. [1] The list defaults to ascending alphabetical order by writer's last name. A "writer of Doctor Who" is defined as a person who received onscreen credit for a live action, non-parodic story. E.g.