Face the Raven - Overnight Viewing FiguresBookmark and Share

Sunday, 22 November 2015 - Reported by Marcus
 4.42 million viewers watched Doctor Who: Face the Raven, according to unofficial overnight viewing figures.

The programme had an overnight share of 19.6% of the total Television audience. 

Top for the day was Strictly Come Dancing with an average of 10.3 million watching and peaking at 11.1 million. On ITV The X Factor had an average of 6.8 million viewers, ITV's biggest audience was for I'm a Celebrity, Get me out of here, which had an average of 7.4 million.

Pointless Celebrities also scored high with 5.1 million watching, making Doctor Who the 5th highest programme for the day.

Final figures will be released next week.







FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35 - UK

Face the Raven: Behind the ScenesBookmark and Share

Saturday, 21 November 2015 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The BBC have released a number of videos going behind the scenes of the latest Doctor Who episode, Face The Raven.
Note: video titles might be considered as spoilers for those who have yet to see the episode.





FILTER: - Series 9/35

Extended Episodes for Season ConclusionBookmark and Share

Tuesday, 17 November 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Heaven Sent: The Doctor, as played by Peter Capaldi (Credit: BBC/Simon Ridgway)The BBC has confirmed that the final two episodes of Series 9, Heaven Sent / Hell Bent will both run in extended timeslots.

The penultimate episode Heaven Sent will run for 55 minutes and has been confirmed for transmission at 8.05pm on BBC One on 28th November.

The series finale Hell Bent will then run in a 65 minute timeslot starting at 8pm on 5th December.

The two episodes will deal with the consequences of Episode Ten, Face the Raven, which can be seen this weekend.




FILTER: - Broadcasting - Series 9/35

Publicity: Face The RavenBookmark and Share

Tuesday, 17 November 2015 - Reported by Chuck Foster
A roundup of publicity for the next episode in the current series of Doctor Who, Face The Raven.

The Doctor and Clara, with their old friend Rigsy, find themselves in a magical alien world, hidden on a street in the heart of London.

Sheltered within are some of the most fearsome creatures of the universe… and Ashildr (Maisie Williams)! With a death sentence hanging over their heads, not all of the intruders will get out alive.

Writer: Sarah Dollard
Director: Justin Molotnikov
Producer: Nikki Wilson
Cast: Peter Capaldi and Jenna Coleman
Guest cast: Maisie Williams, Joivan Wade, Naomi Ackie, Simon Manyonda, Simon Paisley Day, Letitia Wright, Robin Soans, Angela Clerkin, Caroline Boulton, Jenny Lee.

Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)Publicity Images: Face The Raven (BBC/Simon Ridgway)


Face The Raven: Known Broadcast Details
United KingdomBBC OneSat 21 Nov 20158:10pm
United States of AmericaBBC AmericaSat 21 Nov 20159:00pm EDT(2:00am GMT)
CanadaSPACESat 21 Nov 20159:00pm EDT(2:00am GMT)
Asia PacificBBC EntertainmentSun 22 Nov 201510:00am SGT(2:00am GMT)
New ZealandPRIMESun 22 Nov 20157:30pm NZDT(6:30am GMT)
AustraliaABCSun 22 Nov 20157:40pm AEDT(8:40am GMT)
Europe (Benelux)BBC FirstTue 24 Nov 20159:00pm CEST
United KingdomBBC TwoFri 27 Nov 20151:45am(British Signed Language)
South AfricaBBC FirstSat 28 Nov 20156:00pm SAST
IndiaFXSun 6 Dec 201511:00pm IST
FinlandYLE2Mon 7 Dec 20156:05pm EET
DenmarkDR3Fri 25 Dec 2015~8:00pm CET(unconfirmed broadcast)
GermanyFOXJan 20169:00pm CET(dubbed into German)






FILTER: - Publicity - Series 9/35

The Zygon Inversion - Official RatingBookmark and Share

Monday, 16 November 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Series 9 - The Zygon Inversion
Doctor Who: The Zygon Inversion had an official consolidated rating of 6.03 million viewers.

The rating issued by the Broadcasters' Audience Research Board, or BARB, includes all those who watched the programme within one week of transmission. It does not include those watching online via iPlayer

Doctor Who was the 9th most watched programme on BBC Television, and third overall on Saturday. The episode finished at 24th in the chart.

The final episode of the ITV drama Downton Abbey topped the ratings for the week with 10.90 million viewers.




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35 - UK

Sleep No More - AI:78Bookmark and Share

Monday, 16 November 2015 - Reported by Marcus
Sleep No More: Publicity Image (Credit: BBC/Simon Ridgway)
Doctor Who: Sleep No More had an Audience Appreciation or AI score of 78.

The score is the lowest the series has received since the 2006 story Love & Monsters which scored 76. It is only the second time the series AI has dropped below 80 since the introduction of the current AI system in 2005. Both Rose and The End of the World scored 76, but this was under the previous measurement system.

The low score is likely to be a result of the unusual nature of the story, filmed as a series of hidden camera recordings, and very different to the usual style of a Doctor Who episode.

The Appreciation Index or AI is a measure of how much the audience enjoyed the programme. The score, out of a hundred, is compiled by a specially selected panel of around 5,000 people who go online and rate and comment on programmes.

The highest score for Saturday, on the five main channels, was for the BBC Two Newsnight Special, reporting on the terror attacks in Paris which scored 87

With Sunday's overnight viewing figures now available, Doctor Who finished as the 48th most watched programme of the week. Consolidated figures will be published next week.




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35 - UK

Australian overnight ratings for Sleep No More & final ratings for The Zygon InvBookmark and Share

Monday, 16 November 2015 - Reported by Adam Kirk
Sleep No More has debuted in Australia, averaging 506,000 viewers in the five major capital cities. It was the highest rating ABC drama of the day and the thirteenth highest rating program of the day overallThese ratings do not include iview, regional or time-shifted viewers. The program commenced 20 minutes later than scheduled due to extended news coverage of the recent events in Paris.

Meanwhile, including time-shifted viewers, The Zygon Invasion averaged 593,000 consolidated viewers in the five major capital cities. With 163,000 extra viewers it was the highest time-shifted program of the day and the tenth highest rating program of the day overallThese ratings do not include iview or regional viewers.




FILTER: - Australia - Broadcasting - Ratings - Series 9/35

Sleep No More - Press ReactionBookmark and Share

Sunday, 15 November 2015 - Reported by Marcus
This item Contains Plot Spoilers

Press reaction to the latest Doctor Who episode, Sleep No More is varied with The Guardian calling the episode one of the scariest of the series. "There’s a terrifically chilling premise underpinning this political satire. A corporate efficiency drive pushed to disastrous extremes by a mad scientist might have come over heavy-handed, but for all the technical accomplishment (and it is very accomplished), the exquisite beats of Gatiss’s imagination see him deliver Doctor Who at its most Doctor Who-like. Monsters made out of sleep in your eyes? That is good."

The Telegraph enjoyed the performance of Reece Shearsmith as the perfect horror villain. "The part as written was somewhat hammy, with the deranged Rassmussen variously hyperventilating to camera and outlining his plan, evil-genius fashion, to the Doctor. Shearsmith, however, introduced a note of creepy understatement. Rather than portray Rassmussen as a lunatic in a lab-coat , he brought a chilling whiff of true-life psychosis."

In contrast The Express found the episode puzzling with a disappointing monster. "The adventure, penned by seasoned Doctor Who writer and Sherlock co-creator Mark Gatiss, made sure the questions kept coming but without answering any of them. While keeping us in the dark was probably the intention, it grew increasingly infuriating as the episode went on and even more so because of the Doctor's speculative theories about what on earth was going on. He's the Time Lord, he's supposed to know everything. If the Doctor doesn't know what's going on then we're in trouble."

Radio Times called it the spookiest episode yet. "The found footage format works extremely well. I imagine this was incredibly time-consuming to plan, shoot and edit, so full marks to director Justin Molotnikov, making his Doctor Who debut"

Metro also found the episode scary, praising the unusual nature of the story. "Sleep No More may be this year’s second base-under-siege story but it represents a first for Doctor Who. With its first-person point of view and lack of incidental music – and, for the first time in the series’s history, no opening titles – it feels more like The Blair Witch Project than a traditional Who adventure. Combining the characters’ point of view with CCTV footage creates a more intimate and visceral experience, with its jerky movement and tighter field of vision. There are no wide-angle or tracking shots, which only adds to the sense of claustrophobic paranoia".

Digital Spy found much to like in the story, even if it felt the premise didn't quite work. "This outing delivers some effective monsters. The explanation for the rise of the Sandmen may be seriously wonky - even by Doctor Who's flimsy scientific standards. But the found footage conceit makes for a chilling portrayal, only allowing us brief, shadowy glimpses of this week's threat."

Den of Geek was disappointed with the story. "Probably the biggest criticism I have though was that Sleep No More wasn't, for me, that entertaining to watch. It's a brave and bold move to commit to found footage for 45 minutes of Doctor Who, and I love that the show took such a risk. Yet it never gelled, and ultimately felt longer than its 45 minute running time. I found myself warming to some of its moments, but really not to its whole."

TV.com felt the style of the story half worked. "It was all an interesting departure from what we've been seeing from Doctor Who for the last 50-plus years, and in that regard, I applaud the ambition. But I think it could have been done better. Justin Molotnikov, who directed the episode, did a fine enough job framing the shots tightly to lend an air of claustrophobia to the proceedings, but the result of this filming style also meant it was often difficult to see what was going on."

This theme was echoed by Games Radar. "The experimental format comes at the expense of clarity, with the murky lighting and erratic shifts in point of view making the action a struggle to follow. It doesn’t stick to its own rules either, abandoning the desaturated CCTV effect of the “eye in the sky” footage on a whim, while the camera is frequently placed in improbable positions even for the dust – inside the Tardis as it dematerialises, for example. It lacks the necessary rigour that makes The Blair Witch Project and its ilk so effective."

Mashable felt Reece Shearsmith was the best thing in the episode, but disliked the concept of the Sandmen. "Eye booger monsters? We're really scraping the bottom of the mundanity barrel here. What next? Demons composed entirely of snot? It's possible that the monsters were more ethereal and ghost-like in earlier drafts, which would explain why the soldiers never once shoot at them. (If they're composed of mucus, maybe just fire some Kleenex in their direction, guys?) "

TV Fanatic called the episode overambitious and morned the loss of the opening title sequence, missing from the episode for the first time in its history. "While I enjoyed the “found footage” approach, I must confess I missed the Doctor Who theme/intro terribly."

The Register felt the episode was darkly comic. "Much of this ep is a pleasing monster-chasing romp high up above Neptune, but it's a mystery, too: like having something puzzling on your mind that keeps you awake all night."

Finally IGN called the episode a good standalone horror story. "The moment that is sure to give nightmares is in that last shot, as Rassmussen reveals the true nature of his, or rather the Sandmen’s, plan. As he cleans the sand out of his eye and half his face collapses, the Doctor’s suspicion that none of this has made any sense is confirmed. And frankly, I’m still trying to unpack what it all means".

You can read the Doctor Who News review in our reviews section.




FILTER: - Press - Series 9/35

Sleep No More - Overnight Viewing FiguresBookmark and Share

Sunday, 15 November 2015 - Reported by Marcus
4.0 million viewers watched Doctor Who: Sleep No More, according to unofficial overnight viewing figures.

The programme had an overnight share of 18.2% of the total Television audience.

Top for the day was Strictly Come Dancing, which had an average of 10.24 million watching. ITV scored 6.71 million viewers for The X Factor, placed directly against Doctor Who. Casualty dropped just below The Doctor with 3.85 million.

Real life events in Paris drew many to the main national news programmes, resulting in both evening editions of BBC News and the ITV News special pushing Doctor Who down to 6th place for the day, with the 6pm BBC One evening news getting an audience 6.71 million viewers.

Doctor Who currently stands as the 40th highest rated programme for the week. Final consolidated figures will be available in 8 days time.




FILTER: - Ratings - Series 9/35 - UK

New publicity image for Face The RavenBookmark and Share

Sunday, 15 November 2015 - Reported by Chuck Foster
The BBC have released a new promotional image for next week's episode, Face the Raven, due to be broadcast at 8:10pm on BBC One.

Face The Raven: The Doctor and Clara, as played by Peter Capaldi and Jenna Colman (Credit: BBC/Simon Ridgway)




FILTER: - Jenna Coleman - Peter Capaldi - Publicity - Series 9/35