Torchwood: Difference between revisions

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== Episodes ==
== Episodes ==
;Episodes in bold were written and/or directed by women.
=== Season 1 ===
=== Season 1 ===
# Everything Changes
# Everything Changes
# Day One
# Day One
# Ghost Machine
# '''Ghost Machine'''
# Cyberwoman
# Cyberwoman
# Small Worlds
# '''Small Worlds'''
# Countrycide
# Countrycide
# Greeks Bearing Gifts
# Greeks Bearing Gifts
# They Keep Killing Suzie
# They Keep Killing Suzie
# Random Shoes
# '''Random Shoes'''
# Out of Time
# '''Out of Time'''
# Combat
# Combat
# Captain Jack Harkness
# '''Captain Jack Harkness'''
# End of Days  
# End of Days
 


== External Links ==
== External Links ==

Revision as of 09:19, 19 April 2007

2006-ongoing British television series, made in Wales, created by Russell T. Davies.

Spin-off of Doctor Who, named after the anagram used as Doctor Who's fake working title, which became the name of a fictional institute within the series, and thereafter the subject of the spin-off.

Characters

Toshiko Sato, Suzie Costello and Gwen Cooper in "Everything Changes".

Captain Jack Harkness is the main cross-over character between Doctor Who and Torchwood, although the Torchwood character Toshiko Sato may or may not be the same as the Toshiko Sato (played by the same actress) who appeared in a 2005 episode of Doctor Who. An alien species which first appeared on Torchwood also showed up in the pilot for The Sarah Jane Adventures.

Series Overview

Torchwood follows the misadventures of the Cardiff division of the Torchwood Institute, whose nominal job is to protect the Earth (and the United Kingdom, specifically) from alien influences. However, several episodes focused on problems largely caused by the team's own corruption and/or incompetence, and other threats indigenous to Earth, which rather went against this purpose, and the series as a whole suffered from a very inconsistent tone and approach to genre throughout its first season.

The series is notable for giving every one of its regular characters bisexual traits or kisses with both male and female characters, although this sexual fluidity often came across as the result of exploitative or poorly thought-out narrative choices, such as the use of a non-consensual aphrodisiac, played off as a joke in the very first episode.

Torchwood has two regular female characters: Gwen Cooper, a former Cardiff police officer, who was recruited into the team in the first episode for no obvious reason, except that she'd discovered their existence, and Toshiko Sato, a computer specialist.




The third female member of Torchwood Cardiff was the second in command, named Suzie Costello, but she had killed herself by the time the first episode was over, having been exposed by Gwen Cooper as the serial killer the team had been tracking. She had been murdering random people in an attempt to learn how to resurrect them with a piece of alien technology. The character had been advertised in the media as a regular, and so her death was meant to be a shocker.

She returned in episode 8, "They Keep Killing Suzie", in which it was revealed that she had masterminded a complex plan (involving brainwashing and multiple murders) to bring about her own resurrection with the same alien technology. The mechanism that revived Suzie began draining the life from Gwen Cooper, and to save Gwen's life the rest of the team had to find a way to kill Suzie all over again.


Episodes

Episodes in bold were written and/or directed by women.

Season 1

  1. Everything Changes
  2. Day One
  3. Ghost Machine
  4. Cyberwoman
  5. Small Worlds
  6. Countrycide
  7. Greeks Bearing Gifts
  8. They Keep Killing Suzie
  9. Random Shoes
  10. Out of Time
  11. Combat
  12. Captain Jack Harkness
  13. End of Days

External Links