Asylum of the Daleks: UK Overnight Viewing Figures

Sunday, 2 September 2012 - Reported by Marcus
Asylum of the Daleks had an overnight audience of 6.4 million viewers, a share of 29.3% of the total TV audience.

The audience was steady throughout the show after inheriting 2.5 million viewers from Total Wipeout. The show following Doctor Who, The National Lottery, had 3.1 million watching.

Doctor Who won the time-slot, beating Ant and Dec's game show, Red or Black?, which got a rating of 3.5 million and was 6th for the day. Winner of the day was The X Factor, which had an audience of 8.6 million and a 36.8% share of the audience, making Doctor Who second in the charts for the day.

Casualty was third with 4.2 million watching. Channel 4 achieved 9th place with their coverage of Paralympic Games 2012, while BBC Two peaked in 17th place with Dad's Army. Channel Five achieved 23rd place with Celebrity Big Brother.

Last year's Autumn season opener, Let's Kill Hitler, achieved 6.2m viewers (28.7% share) on overnight figures, later revised to 8.1 million on final figures. Night Terrors, shown the first weekend in September, had an overnight figure of 5.5m (25.9% share) and a final of 7.07m.

The only other episode to be transmitted on 1st September was the first episode of the 1979 story Destiny of the Daleks which had 13.00 million viewers, albeit in an environment where there were only three Television channels available, and one of those, ITV, was locked into a bitter strike which had blacked out screens since 10th August.

Overnight figures are an estimate of those who watched the programme live, or before 2am the following day. Final figures will include all those who watch the porgramme within a week and will be available early next week.

With one day to come, Doctor Who is currently 10th for the week.




FILTER: - Ratings - UK - Series 7/33

Asylum of the Daleks: Press reaction

Sunday, 2 September 2012 - Reported by Chuck Foster
A roundup of selected quotes from the media for the premiere of Asylum of the Daleks last night - links to the full review can be found via the author's name. You can also read our own review here.

Please note that as these are reviews, spoilers may be present within the text!


The Guardian

Truth is I'd been a little nervous of all this talk of movie posters and "compressed storytelling". But it looks as if the Doctor Who team knew what they were doing. In fact, more happened in the opening episode than has been covered in most recent two-parters – and events were also dealt with in a lot more depth.

Finally given the chance to write an episode with the Daleks in, Steven Moffat seems to have had a whale of a time, taking a break from the fear-of-the-normal tropes that have defined most of his scripts. In Asylum of the Daleks he delivered his most old-school Doctor Who story to date, a script packed with ace curveballs and zappy dialogue. Director Nick Hurran carried us along with a madcap visual flair and a sense of scale we don't often dare expect.

(Dan Martin)

The Telegraph

The seventh series of the rebooted series sees Steven Moffat hark back to Seventies-era Doctor Who by opening the season with an impact episode, as the Doctor’s greatest foes make a return. After the creation of the new Dalek paradigm in 2010’s Victory of the Daleks it was curious to see the Parliament of the Daleks (an oddly democratic concept for such a race) mainly populated with the supposedly inferior older model, even if it was an arresting sight.

The scenes on the unnamed asylum planet were deftly and creepily done, with an effective but not-too-gratuitous sense of horror; the thought of having a Dalek eyestalk growing out of one’s forehead being very unpleasant indeed.

In all Asylum of the Daleks was a confident opener, a move away from the complexities of last year's series, and launching this year’s run in fine style.

(Gavin Fuller)

Radio Times

That was absolutely stunning. I’ve got to tell you this: when I'm watching Doctor Who, I forget I've ever been in it. It doesn't even cross my mind. Because it's a very different show, so grown-up now. I think Steven Moffat is exactly right with what he's done. It's progressed exactly the way it should.

It has a quirky Alice in Wonderland quality – going from the Daleks up there in this huge sort of Albert Hall of Daleks, spiralling down, down into the hole where Rory sees all the old Daleks... What's glorious for me is to see so many Daleks that aren't tiny little cardboard things superimposed on the screen.

(Katy Manning)

Independent

In recent times the Daleks have been given more depth and this week really exposed the vulnerability of these creatures encased in metal. The tragedy of Oswin becoming a Dalek without realising it really tapped into this fragility as viewers witnessed a Dalek crying. The sound was childlike and so unfamiliar coming from a creature hell-bent on extermination of other life forms. It is all part of the inversion of how the Daleks are seen, just like Victory of the Daleks where one asks the Doctor if he would ‘care for some tea’. It is an important progression in the overall story of the Daleks, added to this Oswin has erased the Doctor from the Daleks’ records which gives him the opportunity to start from scratch with them.

Matt Smith gives a searing performance, presenting a different, darker side to the eleventh Doctor. He gives a more mature turn and perhaps this is because he is now fully settled into the role. Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill too have developed their portrayals of Amy and Rory respectively and everyone is on form in the build-up to the Ponds’ departure.

(Neela Debnath)

Los Angeles Times

I am repeatedly on record as being a fan of Smith's Doctor and, at the beginning of his third year, still am: He has humor and depth and the quality of being both colt-new and mountain-old; there is slapstick in his swashbuckling, but authority as well. Moffat has been accused of being too cold or clever, and it's true that his elaborate origami folding of time, like a sentence out of Henry James, can be confusing even while it is grammatically correct. I find his sense and his sensibility rather poetic myself -- as were Davies', but maybe that's true of most good science fiction -- and, in its less demonstrative way, just as romantic as his predecessor's. I don't worry much about the loose ends and inconsistencies.

(Robert Lloyd)

SFX

Sleight of hand aside, this is a strong, cinematically-minded series opener, one with a declared mission to bring a serious dose of scary back to the Skaro tyrants. Director Nick Hurran summons a real sense of unease in the rusted, cobweb-swathed environs of the asylum and trades in some effectively hardcore horror imagery as the corpses of the Alaska’s crew are reanimated as Dalek zombies (the sight of eyestalks erupting from the brows of seemingly innocent humans is another brilliant touch – kids, to the sink plungers!). Elsewhere the icy peaks and huge blue skies of Spain bring a widescreen sense of scale to this adventure. Good to see Amy and Rory earn some emotional beats, too, showing that the events of Demon’s Run had real, ongoing consequences for the Ponds. In the end, this is an episode that’s ridiculously, contagiously high on the ancient thrill of playing Doctor Who Vs The Daleks – as the Doctor spins around the TARDIS, embracing his true name like his own biggest fanboy, it’s easy to find yourself with a smile the size of a small galaxy.

(Nick Setchfield)

Digital Spy

The episode's opening sequence as a whole is brilliantly moody and affords Matt Smith the opportunity to explore the darker side of his Time Lord role - this sullen, almost bitter Doctor perhaps providing us with a glimpse of how the character might be were he permanently bereft of companions.

Despite essentially being a standalone episode, in its closing moments 'Asylum of the Daleks' reminds us of Moffat's overall arc for the show with a reinforcement of themes introduced in last year's finale 'The Wedding of River Song' - not only does the entire universe believe that the Doctor is dead, now even his greatest enemies have no clue who he is...

(Morgan Jeffery)

Huffington Post

It was a well-paced, exciting, scary and funny hour. Truthfully I've thought for a while now that the Daleks were a little played out. They're not my favorite villains, and Season 5's "Victory of the Daleks" is one of the weakest entries in the Moffat era, in my opinion. But I liked how the episode breathed some new life into the old pepper-pots: It was fun to see the Doctor abducted by a new style of human Dalek, and it was a kick to see the "Encounter at Farpoint" scene with the Dalek parliament go in a different direction. I can't say I wasn't expecting that twist, but I love when my favorite sci-fi shows take the old chestnuts and execute them with style, wit and flair, which is what happened here.

This episode didn't just have the Doctor once again confronting his reputation as an intergalactic predator, it had him essentially rebooting himself with the entire Dalek race, which is a pretty neat trick (but doesn't erase his own knowledge of what he's done). The creepy Island of Lost Toys vibe in the scenes set on the planet were terrifically directed (all in all, the production values on this episode were top-notch), and it was both a fine sole-survivor-gone-half-mad story and a solid haunted-planet mystery.

(Maureen Ryan)

io9

It all gets back to the theme of remembering, which is one of Moffat's go-to themes on the show. Early on, the Doctor tells Amy and Rory the only thing they can do is "make them remember you." And then, instead, they make the Daleks forget them. The people who've been Dalek-ized have fake memories, or have repressed their real memories except when they need them for "deep cover." And Amy has to hold on to her memories of Rory, to stay Amy. And Oswin's memories, along with her sense of reality, are completely borked and fake.

(Charlie Jane Anders)

WhatCulture

As a season-opener, it worked very, very well. It doesn’t have the scope or ambition of A Good Man Goes To War or Doomsday, but neither is it groaning under the weight of a year or more’s worth of ferociously complicated plot. The opening, complete with portentous voice-over and atmospherically shadowy figures, tells even the newest viewer everything they need to know about these tinplated gravel-voiced foes and then we’re plunged into the story proper.

If not scaling the very heights of what the series can achieve, then this was certainly an effective relaunch of the show for 2012, thoroughly entertaining and exciting, more-or-less making sense most of the time and neatly avoiding the worst excesses of the previous series. I’m still not quite sure why the Doctor keeps feeling the need to return the Ponds to their suburban home at the end of each adventure though. Does he want them as travelling companions or not?

(Tom Salinsky)


Media thoughts on Oswin

Guardian: The surprise introduction of Jenna-Louise Coleman served to swerve your perceptions even further; her tearaway chatter about chins, bisexual phases and souffles going some way to justify Moffat's claims that Coleman can actually out-manic Matt Smith.

Telegraph: The star of the episode, though, was Jenna-Louise Coleman’s Oswin, a confident yet charming young woman; it seemed for so long as if we were getting a new companion to launch the series as well, and it was a genuine surprise to discover she was in fact a human converted into a Dalek. Her fate was the saddest part of the episode, although you can't be too sure how things will turn out when Oswin returns in 2013.

SFX: Wait! What? Rewind! Choke! Splutter! Yes, she’s here, and it’s not even Christmas yet – say a somewhat surprised hello to Jenna-Louise Coleman, alias new companion Oswin Oswald, smuggled past the chronic spoiler-flingers of the world in one of the great storytelling coups of Doctor Who. Nicely played, you sly dogs. It’s a winning debut, too – Coleman brings sauce and sparkiness, and while she initially seems a familiar Moffat archetype, all snarky cracks about the Doctor’s chin and throwaway lines about sexual experimentation (“Actually it was Nina – I was going through a phase…”) there’s a deeper vulnerability there too, which makes her eventual fate in this episode genuinely heart-skewering. It’ll be fascinating to see what mind-scrambling narrative physics Moffat employs to bring her back as a full-time TARDISnaut.

Digital Spy: But back to the episode's opening and specifically that shocking post-titles sequence. Hats off to all involved in producing and promoting Doctor Who - they did a remarkable job in concealing Jenna-Louise Coleman's appearance in 'Asylum of the Daleks'. We imagine fan jaws dropped across the country as the companion-to-be appeared on screen almost four months before her expected Christmas debut. Regardless of who she's playing, it's clear from her first scene that the 26-year-old Titanic actress is a fine addition to the Doctor Who cast - her debut performance runs the gamut from funny to incredibly moving to - cool it, fanboys - sexy. We love her already.

National Post: Her character was great. What’s not to like about a gorgeous science nerd in a tight, red mini-dress? And her dialogue in particular was enjoyable, lots of “quick as you likes” and other Britishisms.

Huffington Post: Coleman seemed like a cross between Billie Piper and Martine McCutcheon in her cheeky, chirpy reposts to the Doctor and her blatant flirting with Mr Pond. While no one has quite the charms of soon-to-exit Amy, Oswin has already shown she enjoys talents that potentially match the Doctor's own, and plenty of quirky mystery on which to build.


Other reviews

Other reviews of the episode can be found from The Examiner, The Examiner (second review), Entertainment Weekly, Forbes, Wall Street Journal, East Valley Tribune, Entertainmentwise, MTV, Huffington Post, National Post, TV Fanatic, Hitfix, Seenit, Mashable, Contact Music, AssignmentX.

Monday Press: Mirror, Metro, Guardian, Daily Mail, The Sun, This Is Cornwall.





FILTER: - Press - Series 7/33

New Jenna-Louise Coleman photos

Sunday, 2 September 2012 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The BBC have released some new photos of Jenna-Louise Coleman, plus some details by Steven Moffat - please note that these may constitute a spoiler!















Asylum of the Daleks presented viewers with a surprise as Jenna-Louise Coleman popped up playing the major role of Oswin during the episode! Preview attendees were asked to keep her appearance secret, and she sent a special message via the BBC: "Boo! Hello! Hope we gave you a good surprise! Thanks to all the fans who kept it quiet and made it so! More to come... watch this space!"

Steven Moffat also thanked everyone for maintaining the surprise: "I hope you all got a nice surprise when Jenna popped up in Doctor Who several months early. If so, that surprise came to you courtesy of the frankly magnificent ladies and gentlemen of the press, and of the many Doctor Who forums and blogs too. This show has been seen at four separate screenings, across four different countries and yet not one person gave one spoiler. From all of us on Doctor Who, a heartfelt thank you for helping us tell our story."

The photos are also available to download as wallpaper from the BBC website.




FILTER: - Steven Moffat - People - Jenna-Louise Coleman - Series 7/33

Next Time: Dinosaurs on a Spaceship

Saturday, 1 September 2012 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The BBC have now released the trailer for next week's episode, Dinosaurs on a Spaceship, plus an introduction to the episode by Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill.





FILTER: - Online - Series 7/33

Life Cycle of a Dalek

Saturday, 1 September 2012 - Reported by Chuck Foster
With no Doctor Who Confidential to look forward to after each episode of Doctor Who on BBC3, we can at least "tune in" to BBC's online services instead, where they have published Life Cycle of a Dalek, a behind-the-scenes feature taking viewer through the process from building the Daleks to blowing them up!. There is also a gallery depicting production designs from the story.



If for some reason you are in the UK and managed to miss Asylum of the Daleks, it is now available to watch via the BBC iPlayer (SD/HD) until the 6th October.




FILTER: - Online - Series 7/33

Asylum of the Daleks: BBC Online Clips Roundup

Saturday, 1 September 2012 - Reported by Chuck Foster
It's less than an hour to go before Asylum of the Daleks premieres on BBC1; in the meantime here is a roundup of the videos released online to promote the return over the course of the last week:
 




FILTER: - Online - Series 7/33

Mirror Image

Saturday, 1 September 2012 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The Daily Mirror has this morning announced that Matt Smith has quit Doctor Who! However, the eye-catching front-page proclamation introduces an article that actually reports that he is under contract under November 2013, which would still cover any filming undertaken next year in the lead-up to the 50th Anniversary.

The paper is instead suggesting that the actor will bow out next Christmas, with "a source" saying: "Next year is the 50th anniversary so it seems right to have a ­regeneration. Matt is a ­brilliant Doctor so we will keep him for the run but a Christmas regeneration would be incredible and guarantee huge ratings."

Last night, the BBC's Head of Communications Simon Hodges commented via Twitter on the article: "Matt Smith hasn't quit - just an over excitable headline. It's taken from comments saying he won't be doing it forever. He'll be around for a good while yet."

Smith himself commented in this week's Radio Times: "We want to make it (the 50th Anniversary) as big and bold and as brilliant as we can because, we hope, it can be one of the monumental bits of TV history. But I doubt there'll be a regeneration.". The actor also told Richard Arnold on Daybreak this week: "I've always said that I'll be around for the 50th Anniversary and that's what we go into next year, so absolutely I'll be around next year - it's the most exciting year for the show and I wouldn't want to miss it."

Stories such as this by the Mirror regularly appear in the press, who love to speculate on how long main stars will remain with long-running shows such as Doctor Who. Whether Matt Smith is to really to leave post-50th Anniversary is unlikely to be officially revealed until much nearer the time.




FILTER: - Matt Smith - Press

Dalek Bingo!

Saturday, 1 September 2012 - Reported by Chuck Foster
Tonight's episode, Asylum of the Daleks, is to feature a variety of the Doctor's greatest enemy on screen, as Steven Moffat explained earlier in the year:
We’re going to have the most Daleks we’ve had on screen ever – but they will be from every era, quite deliberately. We’re calling them in from everywhere! All of them! Even the Special Weapons Dalek. They'll all be there...

The Radio Times is inviting viewers to keep their eyes peeled for the different Dalek designs with the release of their "Dalek Bingo!" card, where some nine versions can be ticked off - if you spot them!

The full image can be downloaded from the Radio Times site to print out and play along with the episode.


As well as its own Facebook page, the magazine has also launched one dedicated to Doctor Who news and archive content.




FILTER: - Radio Times - Series 7/33

Merchandise roundup

Saturday, 1 September 2012 - Reported by Harry Ward
The first ever action figure of Rory Williams and an officially licensed fourth Doctor replica scarf are to be released in October.

Rory Williams Action Figure

Recreate scenes from Doctor Who with this incredibly detailed and fully articulated 5-inch Rory Williams action figure.


Available to pre-order now from BBC Shop (exclusive) and Forbidden Planet

Fourth Doctor's Scarf

One of the most iconic items in Doctor Who history is the 4th Doctor's ridiculously long scarf, The Doctor claimed that it had been knitted by Madame Nostradamus, but besides from keeping him warm, it also helped him trip up enemies, climb down a mine shaft, even measure a puzzle!
  • Official BBC Doctor Who Scarf
  • Length: 12 Feet excluding tassels, 13 Feet including tassels Width: 10 inches
  • Made from premium quality material
  • Great gift for every devotee of Doctor Who

Available to pre-order now from Forbidden Planet

Victory Of The Daleks Collectors Set

  • Winston Churchill action figure
  • 1 x Ironside Dalek action figure with Tea Tray plus extra accessories!
Available to order now from Forbidden Planet

Ripple Junction, the official licensee of Doctor Who apparel are looking for fan feedback on their latest set of Doctor Who t-shirt designs. The survey can be filled out here. Three random entrants who take part in the survey will be picked by Ripple Junction to win a Doctor Who t-shirt. Current designs on sale can be viewed here.




FILTER: - Merchandise