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Doctor Season Story Serial Lost Episodes Details First: 1 002 The Daleks: 1 Episode remounted. The reprise at the beginning of Episode 2 contains footage from the original version, which is otherwise missing. 2 009 Planet of Giants: 3, 4 Edited together into a single episode before the original broadcast, airing as Episode 3.
"Doomsday" is the thirteenth and final episode in the second series of the revival of the British science fiction television programme Doctor Who. It was first broadcast on 8 July 2006 and is the conclusion of a two-part story; the first part, "Army of Ghosts", was broadcast on 1 July 2006.
Several episodes were erased by the BBC between 1967 and 1969, though most were eventually discovered and recovered; of a total of 39 episodes, only two episodes of The Crusade remain missing. The serials received several VHS and DVD releases as well as tie-in novels, and a Blu-ray set for the season was released in 2022.
IN FOCUS: As the long-running sci-fi series celebrates 60 years on the BBC, Isobel Lewis explores the quest to locate the 97 ‘missing’ episodes seemingly lost to the past
Read our previous Doctor Who recap here. If you experienced happy tears during Jodie Whittaker’s debut as the Doctor, you likely welled up again watching the end of Season 11’s second episode ...
David Tennant and Catherine Tate one again got lost in space-time in Wild Blue Yonder, an hour of television brimming with all the mystery and humor we’ve come to expect from Russell T Davies ...
2.3 Episode 1: "New Earth" Russell T Davies 2.1 2 Episode 2: "Tooth and Claw" Euros Lyn 2.2 Episode 4: "The Girl in the Fireplace" Steven Moffat 2.4 3 Episode 5: "Rise of the Cybermen" Graeme Harper Tom MacRae 2.5 Episode 6: "The Age of Steel" 2.6 Episode 12: "Army of Ghosts" Russell T Davies 2.12 Episode 13: "Doomsday" 2.13
The Doctor sets the record straight in this episode (albeit inadvertently in his babbling when reunited with Clara after over four billion years), claiming that it was his daughter, not his wife, and that he did not steal the moon, he 'lost' it. [2] The Doctor claims he rescued Clara because he has "a duty of care", a phrase mentioned before. [4]