"The Sarah Jane Adventures" Death of the Doctor: Part One (TV Episode 2010) Poster

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9/10
Remembrance
A_Kind_Of_CineMagic22 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This story is written by the show's creator Russell T. Davies and allows him to write material for the 11th Doctor who was the Doctor in Davies' successor Steven Moffatt's era of the main show. The plot is great as it provides the drama of Sarah Jane being informed of the Doctor's apparent death taking her through denial, anger and grief before she realises there is definitely alien interference and the Doctor is, in fact, alive.

The best thing, as usual, is the wonderful Lis Sladen as Sarah Jane who acts beautifully as always. We get a lovely bonus here too as another old companion Jo Grant (Katy manning) also attends the funeral and teams up with Sarah Jane. Now Jo Jones having got married. Jo is as ditzy and clumsy as ever but also as charming and endearing as ever. As the previous companion to Sarah Jane way back in the early 70s Jo had a father/daughter type relationship with the 3rd Doctor. Now she is a grandmother and meets a young looking 11th Doctor. There is a brutal bit of dialogue about her having aged in the scene as they meet and it feels a bit off. I think Matt Smith delivers it a bit coldly and it seems he has no real affection for Jo but this is a setup for the 2nd part where Jo feels he does not care for her before he reveals he has kept watch on her and felt she had successfully moved on from him. He finally shows his huge care for her and it is a beautiful scene.

There are also fantastic scenes where Sarah Jane and Jo remember their time with the Doctor. It is great for older fans but also a really nice, interesting link for young fans to spark interest in the classic show.

The alien funeral directors are not as convincing as other alien costumes but are fun. There is strong acting from guest roles such as Jo's grandson played by Finn Jones (the young actor who would later go on to fame in Game of Thrones and Marvel's Iron Fist) and the UNIT Colonel as well as Sarah's young friends.

Of course we also get Matt Smith who is as energetic and zany as usual but also has some wonderful scenes of more depth written for him in Part 2.

Russell T. Davies does a great job on this and although it has imperfections there is a magic to it. The emotional scenes are all great and the scene where Sarah Jane reports on the progress of many classic companions is great for fans.

A very enjoyable adventure.

My ratings: Part 1 - 8.5/10, Part 2 - 9/10. Overall - 8.75/10.
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7/10
In Memory Yet Green, In Joy Still Felt
boblipton14 January 2012
Warning: Spoilers
UNIT troops turn up on Bannerman Road to take Sarah Jane and her young friends to the Doctor's funeral at Mount Snowden. There she meets up with another mourner, Josephine Jones, née Grant.

The fourth season of THE SARAH JANE ADVENTURES seems to be the best of the lot. The characters have fallen into place, the humor has evolved from the modified fart jokes and the stories have integrated the details of their symbolic content into the script.

In this nostalgic musing on the power of memory, Russell T. Davies integrates artfully aged clips of old Doctors with rogue UNIT officers and aliens who look like the Graske aliens from earlier seasons -- sometimes things aren't what our memory tells us they are. Sometimes it's a good thing to remember, but that cannot be our only guide.

I won't claim that this is a perfect episode. Anji Mohinda is clearly a young adult, not a teenager and there's something a touch off about Matt Smith's turn as the Eleventh Doctor -- his eccentric movements are too constrained. On the other hand, there are a couple of moments when the cameraman catches him at just the right angle and I thought that he looked remarkably like Jon Pertwee, the actor who played the Third Doctor. It's moments like that which endear a show like this to me. It's those moments that we remember.
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9/10
Super sentimental, I'm a fan of this one.
Sleepin_Dragon9 January 2024
Sarah refuses to believe UNIT agent Colonel Karim, when she arrives with news that The Doctor has died, she, Clyde and Rani travel to The Funeral, Sarah refuses to believe that he's dead.

This show always worked best when there was a bit of added Doctor Who moments, and there are plenty of those here.

For an old fan of the classic run like me, it was gloriously sentimental, but there's a pretty good story behind it too.

The Shansheith were a great design, one of the show's better aliens, expertly voiced too.

I rather liked Laila Rouass in this, Colonel Karim was a great character, she's fierce.

How utterly magical to see Katy Manning back as Jo Grant, how lovely to see two of the show's greatest companions meeting, it happens all the time now, but back in the day, it just didn't happen.

I loved that Jo mentioned a visit to Karfel, that picture of The Doctor and Jo in Timelash made absolutely no sense, this was a nice touch.

That music really is super soothing too.

This one is up there with 'whatever happened to Sarah Jane,' it's a great start.

9/10.
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