Doctor Who S9.05 "The Girl Who Died" review

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“The Girl Who Died” is a deeply peculiar episode in this most eccentric of seasons. On the surface it recalls last year's divisive “Robot Of Sherwood” – a daft historical “romp” (oh how loaded that word has become for Who fans) with little regard for historical accuracy. On the other, it’s clearly meant as a major turning point in the life of the Twelfth Doctor.

Before all that, however, we’re treated to a gently funny adventure with shades of Monty Python and Horrible Histories. The Vikings here are a broadly-sketched lot – Maisie Williams' Ashildr aside – but it doesn't matter. This is no more a serious Norse saga than Who's original comedy historical, “The Romans”, was an accurate portrait of life in the Empire. Crucially, it is genuinely funny and packed with sharp lines and neat ideas.

Where the episode really works, however, is in the scenes between the Doctor and Ashildr (Maisie Williams).

Capaldi’s performance has been funnier and more obviously “Doctory” this season, but it’s also been increasingly clear that his is a selfish hero. As his testing of the theory that ambiguously led to O’Donnell's death in “Before The Flood” showed, this Doctor is concerned primarily with protecting the lives of the people he knows. “I lost someone who matters to me,” he says at one point here, and he later predicts Clara's potential demise and it’s all about how he will feel when it happens.

But then he meets Ashildr, and there’s a connection and her death shakes him to his core. It sparks the memory of saving Caecilius at Pompeii and reminds him that he can do pretty much anything he likes. There will be consequences (more on that next week...) but it gives him a purpose again. “I'm the Doctor, and I save people” feels like a moment of real triumph and realisation. Shame that it was plastered all over the trailers.

Also, how lovely that the reason he “chose” his current face wasn't a convoluted sci-fi explanation. The “Fires Of Pompeii” callback could have been another fannish indulgence (in a season that's brimming with them), but instead it’s given a moral purpose. The angry, detached Doctor we saw last season is all but gone now, which will annoy some, but this episode does a good job of smoothing over the transition and making it credible.

Maisie Williams is, of course, terrific. If her character hadn't worked, the episode would have fallen apart, but Ashildr is hugely likeable. She's fierce, but not one-dimensionally angry, brave but not unafraid. She rather steals the episode from Clara (who is relegated to a slightly thankless supporting role here) and that final scene, with the world spinning around her as she embraces her new life is utterly gorgeous and affecting. We’ll see her again, and soon. But how will immortality have changed her?

Doctor Who airs on Saturday evenings on BBC One in the UK and BBC America in the US.

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WritersJamies Mathieson and Steven Moffat
DirectorEd Bazalgette
The One WhereThe Doctor and Clara try to save a Viking village from an alien army.
Will Salmon
Streaming Editor

Will Salmon is the Streaming Editor for GamesRadar+. He has been writing about film, TV, comics, and music for more than 15 years, which is quite a long time if you stop and think about it. At Future he launched the scary movie magazine Horrorville, relaunched Comic Heroes, and has written for every issue of SFX magazine for well over a decade. His music writing has appeared in The Quietus, MOJO, Electronic Sound, Clash, and loads of other places too.