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{{Short description|Fictional tool used by the Doctor in Doctor Who}} |
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[[Image:sonicscrewdriver.jpg|thumb|200px|right|The [[Ninth Doctor]]'s redesigned sonic screwdriver from the 2005 series.]]The '''sonic screwdriver''' is a [[fictional]] [[tool]] in the [[United Kingdom|British]] [[science fiction television]] series ''[[Doctor Who]]''. Its most common function is to operate virtually any lock, mechanical or electronic. It has also been used for repairing equipment, and as a weapon. Like the [[TARDIS]], it has become one of the icons of the programme and is closely associated with the [[Doctor (Doctor Who)|Doctor]]. |
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{{Use British English|date=May 2011}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2020}} |
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{{Infobox fictional artifact |
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| name = Sonic screwdriver |
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| image = The Twelfth Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver.jpg |
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| image_size = 200px |
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| caption = The [[Twelfth Doctor]]'s second sonic screwdriver, first seen in 2015, as a toy made by Character Options. |
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| source = [[Doctor Who]] |
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| source_type = TV |
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| company = [[BBC]] |
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| first = [[Fury from the Deep]] |
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| date = 16 March 1968 |
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| creator = {{unbulleted list|[[Sydney Newman]]|[[C. E. Webber]]|[[Donald Wilson (writer and producer)|Donald Wilson]]}} |
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| episode_creator = [[Victor Pemberton]] |
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| genre = [[Science fiction]] |
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| type = Hand tool |
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| uses = Various, see [[#Functions|Functions]] |
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| traits = |
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| affiliation = [[The Doctor]] |
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}} |
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The '''sonic screwdriver''' is a fictional [[multi-tool|multifunctional tool]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://tellmenothing.com/2017/03/28/sonic-screwdriver-uses-device-doctor/|title=Sonic Screwdriver: 50 Uses of This Device From Doctor Who|last=Malankar|first=Nikhil|date=2017-03-28|website=Tell Me Nothing|access-date=2017-08-09|archive-date=9 August 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170809171553/http://tellmenothing.com/2017/03/28/sonic-screwdriver-uses-device-doctor/|url-status=dead}}</ref> in the [[British television science fiction|British]] [[science fiction television]] programme ''[[Doctor Who]]'' and its spin-offs, used by [[the Doctor]]. Like the [[TARDIS]], it has become one of the icons of the programme, and [[Spin-off (media)|spin-off media]] such as ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'' and ''[[Torchwood]]'' have replicated its functions in devices such as the sonic lipstick, sonic blaster, sonic probe, sonic modulator and sonic cane. |
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==History== |
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===1968 – 1982, 1996=== |
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[[Image:Firstsonicscrewdriver.jpg|thumb|200px|right|The first sonic screwdriver from episode 3 of [[The War Games]].]] |
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[[Image:Doctorsonic.jpg|thumb|200px|right|The [[Fourth Doctor]] and his sonic screwdriver.]] |
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The sonic screwdriver made its first appearance in the serial ''[[Fury from the Deep]]'', written by [[Victor Pemberton]]. It was then used by the [[Second Doctor]] as a multi-purpose tool from that point, with occasional variations in appearance over the course of the series. However, ownership of the concept was retained by the BBC, much to the chagrin of Pemberton, who later told an interviewer for ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'', "I'm very cross that the sonic screwdriver — which I invented — has been marketed with no credit to myself. ... It's one thing not to receive any payment, but another not to receive any credit."<ref>{{cite journal |
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| first=Benjamin |
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| last=Cook |
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| title=Friend of the Earth:-) |
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| journal=[[Doctor Who Magazine]] |
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| issue=318 |
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| pages=10–14 |
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| date=[[June 26]], [[2002]] |
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}}</ref> |
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The sonic screwdriver was introduced in 1968 in the story ''[[Fury from the Deep]]'', and used twice more (''[[The Dominators]]'' and ''[[The War Games]]'') during the [[Second Doctor]]'s tenure. It became a popular tool for the [[Third Doctor]] and [[Fourth Doctor]]. It was written out of the series in 1982 due to the limitations it caused when writing for the show. It then featured briefly in the 1996 [[Doctor Who (film)|''Doctor Who'' television movie]], before making a full return in the 2005 continuation of the series. |
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Its abilities varied somewhat from story to story and the way it worked was never explicitly explained. However, the name implies that it operates through the use of sound waves to remotely exert physical forces on objects, such as the mechanisms inside locks. In ''[[The Three Doctors (Doctor Who)|The Three Doctors]]'', it functions as a radiation detector. In ''[[The Sea Devils]]'' the Doctor used it to detonate [[land mine]]s from a distance, which he did again later in ''[[Robot (Doctor Who)|Robot]]''. This particular model had a movable section that bobbed up and down when in use. Also in ''Robot'', the Doctor used the screwdriver as a "miniature sonic lance" to cut out a lock. |
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Throughout the programme, there have been many different versions of the sonic screwdriver, as with subsequent Doctors the design of it was changed. It has also been destroyed on a number of occasions, thus leading to the introduction of the next model. Not all iterations of the Doctor have used the sonic screwdriver on screen; the [[Fifth Doctor]] in fact opted not to replace his after it was destroyed in "[[The Visitation (Doctor Who)|The Visitation]]". |
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The Doctor's [[Time Lord|Time Lady]] companion [[Romana]] constructed a sonic screwdriver of her own, first seen during the [[Fourth Doctor]] serial ''[[City of Death]]''. It was smaller and sleeker than the Doctor's, and he was sufficiently impressed with her design that he attempted (unsuccessfully) to swap screwdrivers with her in ''[[Horns of Nimon]]''. |
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The [[Twelfth Doctor]] loses his sonic screwdriver to the creator of the [[Dalek]]s, [[Davros]], after lending it to him when he was a child. In the last episode of Series 9, the Doctor received a new sonic screwdriver from the [[TARDIS]] in place of the sonic sunglasses he had been using temporarily in the meantime. |
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The sonic screwdriver was written out of the series in 1981 when it was destroyed by a [[List of Doctor Who monsters and aliens#Terileptil|Terileptil]] in the [[Fifth Doctor]] serial ''[[The Visitation (Doctor Who)|The Visitation]]'' in order to prevent the Doctor from escaping captivity. This was done by [[Eric Saward]] on the instructions of producer [[John Nathan-Turner]], who felt that the device had become an easy way out for writers, since the Doctor could use it to get out of just about any situation. |
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Despite the Doctor's claim not to entrust his screwdriver to anyone, he lends one to his own doppelgänger in "[[The Rebel Flesh]]," and again supplies [[Rory Williams]] for its third job in his care in "[[The Girl Who Waited]]," after having given or loaning Rory one in "[[A Good Man Goes to War]]" and slipping him one in "[[The Big Bang (Doctor Who)|The Big Bang]]". He also gifts one to [[River Song (Doctor Who)|River Song]] in "[[The Husbands of River Song]]," which is then used by the [[Tenth Doctor]] to "save" her life in a previous TV story, "[[Forest of the Dead]]." |
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Saward had written out the sonic screwdriver believing that the Doctor would simply get a replacement from the [[TARDIS]]. However, Nathan-Turner did not want such a scene at the end of this story, or any others (although a scene of this nature did eventually occur at the end of "[[Smith and Jones (Doctor Who)|Smith and Jones]]"). The reason given was that the use of a device that could save the day in any way possible was very limiting for the script <ref> Commentary on DVD of Castrovalva</ref>. The series remained sonic screwdriver-free until it ceased production in 1989 (although the [[Sixth Doctor]] was occasionally seen using a "sonic lance") and it was not until the 1996 [[Doctor Who (1996 film)|''Doctor Who'' TV Movie]] that the Doctor was seen to have a sonic screwdriver again, with a design that could be telescoped out for use and collapsed again when finished. The Tenth Doctor joked about the Fifth Doctor's lack of sonic screwdriver in the mini-episode [[Time Crash]], by commenting on how he "went hands-free" and could "save the Universe using a kettle and some string". |
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{{TOC limit|3}} |
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===2005 – present=== |
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[[Image:Toy sonic screwdrivers.png|thumb|150px|right|Toy sonic screwdrivers produced by Character Options.]] |
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A completely redesigned sonic screwdriver, with a glowing blue light in addition to the sound effect, appeared in the 2005 series revival and the subsequent episodes that have followed. In its first incarnation, the prop used in the new series was notoriously fragile and was prone to breaking at the slightest strain. The toy version (made by [http://www.character-online.co.uk Character Options Ltd.]) was slightly larger to accommodate a working pen (with swappable ordinary and [[ultraviolet]] ink nibs), sound effects and batteries. It also includes an ultraviolet torch for viewing messages written in the ultraviolet ink. The ''Doctor Who'' production team at [[BBC Wales]] were so impressed by how much more resilient the toy sonic screwdriver was than the real prop, that they asked for and obtained moulds of the original prototype of the toy to use in the 2006 series.<ref>{{cite news | title=Toys and Games | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/news/cult/news/drwho/2005/07/26/20763.shtml | publisher=[[BBC]] | date=[[2005-07-26]] | accessdate=2006-10-29}}</ref> |
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== Functions == |
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In contrast with Nathan-Turner's attitude that the sonic screwdriver should not be used as a cure-all, the new production team gave it even more functions than previous versions. However, the massive new functionality has only been used as a "fix all" device when they are trying to avoid lags in the plot of an episode. {{Or|date=May 2008}} |
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{{Original research section|date=January 2018}} |
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The functions of a sonic screwdriver are based on its power over sound waves, radiation, wavelengths, frequencies, signals, and electromagnetism. It is shown to hack, disable, activate, and otherwise control technology from almost everything, allowing it to remotely control almost any machinery, mechanisms, and computers it is applied to, allowing it to open locks, detonate explosives, remotely activate electronics, override most systems, activate computers, and cause some energy weapons to burst into flames or sparks. There is technology the sonic is unable to interface with, such as wood, or the isomorphic controls seen in "A Christmas Carol". It also is capable of causing chemical reactions that allow the Doctor to turn eyeglass lenses black like sunglasses and causing cut barbed wire to regenerate (setting 2428B). It is also capable of detecting, amplifying and controlling certain energies, sound, signals, frequencies, and waves, allowing the Doctor to intercept a teleporting individual and send them where he chooses, scan and identify matter, send out communications, enhance sounds, signals, and frequencies, and acting as a catalyst or conduit for energies. Sonics are also capable of calculations, such as ''[[The Day of the Doctor]]'' (2013), when the [[War Doctor]] used calculations to allow the sonic to work on wood, the calculations of which appeared partly done on the Tenth Doctor's sonic and completed in the Eleventh's. The War Doctor also used his sonic in tandem with the Tenth and Eleventh's to create a force field wave to repel a Dalek. |
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These are more specific functions of the sonic screwdriver: |
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Some of the uses in the new TV series include: fixing a decades-broken Vortex Manipulator; deactivating an [[Auton]] arm; detecting and sending signals; intercepting teleportation; remotely activating processes inside the TARDIS; burning, cutting, or igniting substances; fusing metal; scanning and identifying substances; amplifying or augmenting sound, usually to stun or incapacitate an enemy; modifying [[mobile phone]]s to enable "universal roaming"; and, occasionally, driving screws. In the episode "[[World War Three (Doctor Who)|World War Three]]", the Doctor grabs a bottle of port from a side table and threatens to "triplicate the flammability" of the alcohol with the sonic screwdriver, immolating himself and a group of [[Slitheen]] that are menacing him, however one of the Slitheen then claims that he is making it up and the Doctor is forced to rethink his strategy. |
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* Unlocking or locking a door |
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* Burning or cutting certain substances |
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* Remotely detonating specific machines or explosives |
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* Amplifying sound waves and the power of an X-ray machine beyond its normal capacities |
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* Disarming weapons and electronics |
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* [[Flashlight]] |
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* Intercepting and conducting teleportation |
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* Hacking an [[automated teller machine|ATM]] |
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* Regenerating barbed wire on a fence |
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* Darkening eyeglass lenses to transform them into sunglasses |
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* [[Microphone]] (when connected to an audio amplifier) |
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* Detecting and interpreting signals |
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* Conducting medical scans |
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* Fixing |
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* Locking the coordinates of the TARDIS |
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* Tracking alien life |
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* Using red setting or dampers |
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* Controlling the properties of atoms and molecules on a small scale |
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* Operating computers, whether their origin is alien or human |
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* Providing [[geolocation]] |
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* Lighting [[candle]]s |
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* Creating a force field wave with two (or possibly more) other sonics to physically repel a Dalek (it may have to be the same sonic device at different points in its own time stream) |
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* Modifying a mobile phone |
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* Disclosing and deactivating camouflage |
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* Disarming robotics |
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* Scanning and classifying matter |
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* Shattering glass |
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* Creating an "acoustic corridor" for speaking with someone far away |
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* Shocking neural centers of living organisms |
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* Downloading a person's consciousness and transferring it into a computer hard drive (only seen in a special model created by The Doctor as a gift to [[River Song (Doctor Who)|River Song]]) |
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* Triggering particular protocols of the TARDIS |
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* Tightening and loosening screws |
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* Resonating concrete |
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* Creating glass-like walls ("Force Field") |
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* Creating holographic screens |
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* Reconstructing the TARDIS |
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* Hijacking traffic lights |
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* Creating a field that silences all noise |
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Aside from being a tool, the sonic screwdriver can be used and considered as a defensive weapon, which is effective for a few types of assault weapons, but not designed to kill or injure living things as the only way it can really hurt or incapacitate an organism is by emitting painful bursts of sound, or, as of "[[Day of the Moon]]" (2011) by blasting a green wave of energy to incapacitate a target, though only the Eleventh and Twelfth's sonic has been shown to do the latter. |
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The sonic screwdriver has been used as a joke on occasion: Jack Harkness made fun of the concept in "[[The Doctor Dances]]" by asking, "Who looks at a screwdriver and thinks, 'Ooh, this could be a little more sonic'?" Later on, Martha Jones asked if the Doctor also had a "Laser Spanner" in "Smith and Jones" (to which the Doctor replied that he had, until it was stolen by [[Emmeline Pankhurst]].) |
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== History == |
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In "[[Doomsday (Doctor Who)|Doomsday]]", The Doctor states that the sonic screwdriver does not kill, wound or maim. In several episodes, including "[[The Christmas Invasion]]", "[[The Runaway Bride (Doctor Who)|The Runaway Bride]]", "[[The Lazarus Experiment]]" and ''[[The Infinite Quest]]'' and ''[[The Impossible Planet]]'', the Tenth Doctor brandishes or uses it in a threatening manner. He occasionally goes so far as to use it to damage or destroy an enemy; however, in these instances the screwdriver is used to remotely disassemble a robotic enemy or turn an object into a weapon to use against a living enemy, not to kill or harm a living being directly. In "[[Partners in Crime (Doctor Who)|Partners in Crime]]" a beam from it was used to make Miss Foster drop her sonic pen; the pen can be observed to spark briefly just before she drops it, suggesting that she was injured in the process. |
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=== 1968–1982 and 1996 === |
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[[File:1st sonic screwdriver.jpg|thumb|right|The first sonic screwdriver from Season 6, Episode 3 of ''[[The War Games]]'' (1969)]] |
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The sonic screwdriver made its first appearance in the serial ''[[Fury from the Deep]]'' (1968), written by [[Victor Pemberton]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Nicholas |first1=Stephen |last2=Tucker |first2=Mike |title=Doctor Who: Impossible Worlds |date=2015 |publisher=HarperCollins |isbn=978-0-06-240741-2 |page=200}}</ref> It was used thereafter by the [[Second Doctor]] as a [[multi-purpose tool]], with occasional variations in appearance over the course of the series. |
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Its abilities and overall appearance varied greatly during the classic series. The name implies that it operates through the use of sound waves to exert physical forces on objects remotely. During the Second Doctor's tenure, it functioned much as its name implied—using sonic waves to dismantle equipment or to bypass locks. In addition, it was used as a welding torch in Episode Five of ''[[The Dominators]]'' (1968). In the audio commentary for ''[[The Sea Devils]]'' (1972), [[Michael E. Briant|Michael Briant]] claims to have suggested it as a one-off gadget in 1968.<ref>Commentary on DVD of ''The Sea Devils''</ref> |
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In several episodes, it has been shown unable to open objects locked with a "deadlock seal"; this is often used as a recurring [[plot device]] when the writers want the Doctor to be trapped somewhere. Also, in "[[Silence in the Library]]", while trying to open a wooden door, the Doctor told Donna that the sonic screwdriver wouldn't work because the door is made of wood. In the same episode, the Doctor mentions that when Emergency program one was activated, he would get a signal from the TARDIS to the screwdriver. In the following episode, "[[Forest of the Dead]]" he makes the claim that a few hair driers can interfere with his screwdriver, though he states that he is "working on that". In "[[The Long Game]]", "[[The Parting of the Ways]]" and "[[Utopia (Doctor Who)|Utopia]]" it is shown operating and affecting various TARDIS controls from outside the vehicle; when the Doctor attempts to counteract the Master's theft of TARDIS, the bulb portion extends. During "[[Smith and Jones (Doctor Who)|Smith and Jones]]", the sonic screwdriver eventually burns out after the Doctor uses it to amplify the radiation output of a hospital X-ray machine. The Doctor, though initially saddened at the loss of the screwdriver, obtains a new one at the conclusion of the episode. |
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During the [[Third Doctor]]'s tenure, producer [[Barry Letts]] was adamant that the device should not become a cure-all for the series and limited its use to avoid writers becoming over-reliant on it. During this time, the device underwent significant design changes. In ''The Sea Devils'', the Doctor used it to detonate landmines; Michael E. Briant explains that this was feasible, stating that the sonic waves shook the mines. In ''[[The Three Doctors (Doctor Who)|The Three Doctors]]'' (1972–73), the sonic screwdriver is almost unrecognisable, being a unique, one-use prop with a plastic red spherical head. In the DVD commentary, Letts himself remarks on the thickness of the prop and the fact that it belies the idea that it was the regular one, prompting [[Katy Manning]] to question whether it was indeed a sonic screwdriver.<ref>Commentary on DVD of ''The Three Doctors''</ref> This was due to the serial being produced out of transmission order: the original sonic screwdriver prop went missing during the recording of ''[[Carnival of Monsters]]'' (1973), requiring a new prop to be built for the rest of the season;<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://doctorwho.org.nz/archive/tsv31/sonicscrewdriver.html|title = NZDWFC: TSV 31: Is that a Sonic Screwdriver in your Pocket, Doctor?}}</ref> ''The Three Doctors'' was recorded after ''Carnival'', but set before it, so the screwdriver could be seen to revert to its previous appearance for one story after ''The Three Doctors'' before receiving a more permanent redesign thereafter. |
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==Related devices== |
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*The Doctor has used other sonic devices similar to the sonic screwdriver, including the "door handle" of ''[[Inferno (Doctor Who)|Inferno]]'' ([[Liz Shaw]] having one of her own) and a pen-sized [[white noise]] generator in ''[[Four to Doomsday]]''. |
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*In the 1965 episode "[[Galaxy 4|Trap of Steel]]", the Doctor uses an apparently ''ordinary'' screwdriver to examine the metal of the Drahvin spaceship and other tasks. |
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*In the 1979 serial "[[City of Death]]", [[List of Doctor Who villains#Scaroth|Count Scarlioni]]'s henchmen use a "sonic knife" to cut the glass in front of the [[Mona Lisa]]. |
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[[Image:Sonic Blaster.jpg|thumb|150px|Captain Jack Harkness Sonic Blaster from the episod of Doctor Who "The Doctor Dances".]] |
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*In the 2005 episodes "[[The Empty Child]]" and "[[The Doctor Dances]]", [[Jack Harkness]] uses a "[[List of Doctor Who items#Sonic blaster|sonic blaster]]", referred to by Rose Tyler as a "squareness gun", capable of "digitizing" structures by disintegrating them and then reversing the damage done, among other functions. In "[[Silence in the Library]]" and "[[Forest of the Dead]]", we see future companion [[River Song (Doctor Who)|River Song]] wielding a similar device, also referred by the Doctor as a "squareness gun." Steven Moffat stated in an episode of Doctor Who Confidential that he considered the devices to be one and the same. |
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[[Image:SarahJanesonic.jpg|thumb|150px|Sarah Jane Smith and her sonic lipstick.]] |
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*In ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'', [[Sarah Jane Smith]] wields a "sonic lipstick", which is a gift the [[Tenth Doctor]] gave her alongside a new model of [[K-9 (Doctor Who)|K-9]]. In terms of functionality, it is much like the sonic screwdriver, used primarily for opening and closing locked doors.<ref>{{cite web |
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| title = The Sarah Jane Adventures - The Official Site |
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| work = Alien Objects |
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| publisher = [[BBC]] |
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| url = http://www.bbc.co.uk/cbbc/sja/theattic/alienobjects/ |
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| format = HTML |
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| accessdate = 2006-12-21 |
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}} (UK Access Only)</ref> The sonic lipstick was also created and promoted as a children's toy . |
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*In "[[Smith and Jones (Doctor Who)|Smith and Jones]]", the Doctor claims to have once owned a "laser spanner" until it was stolen by [[Emmeline Pankhurst]], described by the Doctor as a "cheeky woman". |
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[[Image:Master with laser screwdriver.png|thumb|150px|The Master and his laser screwdriver.]] |
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*In "[[The Sound of Drums]]", [[Master (Doctor Who)|the Master]] reveals his [[Master (Doctor Who)#Handheld weaponry|laser screwdriver]]. Unlike the sonic screwdriver, it is used as a weapon that can kill as well as artificially age its target, with the aid of built-in technology developed by Lazarus Laboratories originally seen in "[[The Lazarus Experiment]]", and includes [[isomorphic]] controls, disabling the device outside of the Master's use. The design of the prop was meant to imply that the Master constructed it on Earth, and it was deliberately made larger than the Doctor's sonic screwdriver.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/gallery/concept_2007/51.shtml BBC - Doctor Who - Series Three concept Artwork Gallery]</ref> Like the Doctor's screwdriver and Sarah Jane's lipstick, the Master's laser screwdriver was also created as a children's toy with sound effects. |
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This should be moved to a different section. |
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*In the "Series Three concept Artwork Gallery",[http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/gallery/concept_2007/index.shtml] [http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/gallery/concept_2007/2.shtml] when referring to the burnt out sonic screwdriver from "[[Smith and Jones (Doctor Who)|Smith and Jones]]", Peter McKinstry says "the green crystal structure visible under the shattered dome refers back to the TARDIS console crystal. It's the same technology - the TARDIS's little brother."<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/gallery/concept_2007/2.shtml BBC - Doctor Who - Series Three concept Artwork Gallery]</ref> |
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--> |
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*In the ''Doctor Who'' spin-off series ''[[Torchwood]]''{{'}}s series 2 episode "[[Fragments (Torchwood)|Fragments]]", genius [[Toshiko Sato]]'s backstory reveals that she stole faulty designs from the [[Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom)|Ministry of Defence]] and [[UNIT]], which she used to construct a sonic device, referred to as a "sonic modulator", to trade to a terrorist organisation in exchange for her mother. The device is confiscated by UNIT, who imprison Toshiko until she is pardoned and recruited into [[Torchwood Institute|Torchwood]] by Jack Harkness. |
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*In the series 4 episode "[[Partners in Crime (Doctor Who)|Partners in Crime]]", the antagonist Miss Foster is shown using a sonic device identified by her as a "sonic pen", which the Doctor describes as being "identical" to his screwdriver in functionality. After being confiscated and briefly used by the Doctor, he later throws the sonic pen into a bin. |
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* In the episode "Silence in the Library", Professor [[River Song (Doctor Who)|River Song]] also possesses her own sonic screwdriver, which she claims is the Doctor's, and was given to her by him in his own future. Hers is slightly bulkier and appears to be made from more antiquated materials. The Doctor mentioned in this episode that he does not give his screwdriver to anyone. In the following episode, Professor Song mentions it has a "red setting" (which, when set, gives a red glow on the end of the screwdriver instead of the usual blue) and dampers, both of which the Doctor hasn't apparently added yet. Also, it contains a secret compartment which contains a neural relay linked to River Song, saving her at the episode's conclusion, which the future Doctor added and it being the reason the Doctor gave it to her. A toy version is available. |
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* In ''The Sarah Jane Adventures'' story ''[[Enemy of the Bane]]'', Mrs Wormwood ([[Samantha Bond]]) possesses a sonic device disguised as a ring called the "Phonic disruptor". |
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* In the Christmas special ''[[The Next Doctor]]'', the other Doctor also claims to possess a sonic screwdriver. This turns out to be a regular screwdriver. When the Doctor asks "How is it sonic?", the other replies by saying "It makes a noise", which he demonstrates by tapping it against a door frame. |
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During the first three years of the [[Fourth Doctor]]'s tenure, producer [[Philip Hinchcliffe]] further reduced the use of the sonic screwdriver. Exceptions include ''[[Robot (Doctor Who)|Robot]]'' (which was the last story to be produced by Barry Letts), where it was again used to detonate mines, and as a "miniature sonic lance"<ref group="note">The Sixth Doctor uses a hand tool he calls a "sonic lance" in ''[[Attack of the Cybermen]]''</ref> to cut out a lock. Aside from unlocking doors, the device was greatly downplayed during the Fourth Doctor's second and third seasons. It saw a resurgence once [[Graham Williams (television producer)|Graham Williams]] took over as producer in 1977. In the final story of season 15, ''[[The Invasion of Time]]'', the Fourth Doctor conceded, "Not even the sonic screwdriver can get me out of this one." |
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==Other appearances== |
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===''Doctor Who'' and related media=== |
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The sonic screwdriver is mentioned frequently in licensed spin-off media. The [[canon (fiction)|canonicity]] of spin-off fiction is unclear (with the exception of the televised episodes of ''[[Torchwood]]'' referenced below). |
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It featured regularly in season 16 during the Key to Time saga. The Doctor's [[Time Lord|Time Lady]] companion [[Romana (Doctor Who)|Romana]] constructed a sonic screwdriver of her own similar to the Doctor's. It is depicted as being smaller and sleeker than the Doctor's, and he was sufficiently impressed with her design that he attempted to swap screwdrivers with her in ''[[The Horns of Nimon]]'' (1979–80). By season 18, both script editor [[Christopher H Bidmead]] and producer [[John Nathan-Turner]] were eager to downplay the device as much as possible. |
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*In the [[Big Finish Productions|Big Finish]] [[List of Doctor Who audio plays by Big Finish|audio drama]] ''[[Sword of Orion]],'' the Eighth Doctor reveals that his sonic screwdriver has a [[flashlight|torch]] built into the handle. |
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The sonic screwdriver was written out of the series late in season 19, in the [[Fifth Doctor]] serial ''[[The Visitation (Doctor Who)|The Visitation]]'' (1982). It is destroyed by a [[List of Doctor Who monsters and aliens#Terileptil|Terileptil]] to prevent the Doctor from escaping a holding cell; in response, the Doctor sorrowfully remarked, "I feel as if you've just killed an old friend." [[Eric Saward]] later explained in a 2005 DVD interview<ref>Commentary on DVD of ''The Visitation''</ref> that this was done on the instructions of producer John Nathan-Turner. Saward had written out the sonic screwdriver, believing that the Doctor had "a cupboard full of them" in the [[TARDIS]]. On the basis that [[Deus ex machina|a device that could help in any situation]] was very limiting for the script, Nathan-Turner decided that it would not return.<ref>Commentary on DVD of ''Castrovalva''</ref> The Tenth Doctor joked about the Fifth Doctor's lack of sonic screwdriver in the mini-episode "[[Time Crash]]" (2007), commenting that he "went hands-free" and could "save the universe using a kettle and some string." The device did not appear again for the remainder of the original series. |
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*In the Big Finish audio drama ''[[Blood of the Daleks]]'' the Eighth Doctor uses the sonic screwdriver to trace a transmission beam. |
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In the [[Doctor Who (film)|''Doctor Who'' TV Movie]] (1996) and "[[The Night of the Doctor]]" (2013), the Seventh (TVM), Eighth (both), & the [[War Doctor]] ("The Night of the Doctor") were seen to have a new sonic screwdriver with a telescopic mechanism: similar to its predecessors but with subtle differences such as a gold/brass band on the handle, a flat base and a red emitter tip. |
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=== 2005–2010 === |
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*The unlicensed [[fan fiction]] novel [[Time's Champion]] speculates that the Sixth Doctor has re-built the Sonic Screwdriver. He used a similar device in [[The Nightmare Fair]], a script which was never produced for television but has twice been adapted. |
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{{overly detailed|section|date=November 2013}} |
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A redesigned sonic screwdriver appears in the new series, with a blue light in addition to the sound effect. In its first incarnation, the prop used in the new series was fragile and prone to breakage. Over the course of the next two years, the props were continually repaired and modified, with some additions being a new thumb slider design and different colours of wires used in the clear channel when extended. |
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For [[Doctor Who (series 4)|series 4]] (2008), a new design of Screwdriver was commissioned by the BBC. [[Nick Robatto]] was hired to make two new props. These featured the final slider design, and redesigned body ridges, among other smaller changes. This design debuted in 2008's "[[Partners in Crime (Doctor Who)|Partners in Crime]]" and continued to be used until the Screwdriver's ultimate destruction in 2010's "[[The Eleventh Hour (Doctor Who)|The Eleventh Hour]]". This later design has gained the nickname "Series 3–4 Sonic" (relating to the fact that at the start of Series 3, in "Smith and Jones", the first Sonic Screwdriver was supposedly destroyed), even though strictly speaking it first appeared in Series 4.<ref>{{cite news | title=Toys and Games | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/news/cult/news/drwho/2005/07/26/20763.shtml | publisher=BBC | date=26 July 2005 | access-date=29 October 2006 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061216031526/http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/news/cult/news/drwho/2005/07/26/20763.shtml | archive-date=16 December 2006}}</ref> |
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*The Seventh Doctor regained his sonic screwdriver in the [[Virgin New Adventures]] novels, with its first reappearance in ''[[The Pit (Doctor Who)|The Pit]]'', but it tended to be used rarely. The More Short Trips short story Special Weapons, set late in Season 24, indicates that the Seventh Doctor also has the Sonic Screwdriver. This same incarnation also uses the device in the Big Finish audios The Harvest and Dreamtime. His companions Ace and Hex use the device in the Doctorless audio The Veiled Leopard. In ''[[The Dying Days]]'' the Eighth Doctor used the device to reflect the sonic cannon of an [[Ice Warrior]] back at his attacker. The [[Virgin Missing Adventures]] novel ''[[Venusian Lullaby]]'' established that the [[First Doctor]] had one. |
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In contrast with Nathan-Turner's attitude that the sonic screwdriver should not be used as a cure-all, the new production team gave it even more functionality than previous versions. Some of the uses in the new series include: repairing electronic equipment; re-attaching materials such as barbed wire; detecting, intercepting and sending signals; remotely operating the TARDIS; burning, cutting, or igniting substances; fusing metal; scanning and identifying substances; amplifying or augmenting sound; modifying mobile phones to enable "universal roaming"; disabling alien disguises; resonating concrete; reversing teleportation of another entity. It is sometimes used to disassemble robotic enemies or turn other objects into weapons; healing cuts and wounds. In "[[The Parting of the Ways]]" (2005) and "[[Utopia (Doctor Who)|Utopia]]" (2007), it is used to operate the TARDIS controls remotely; when the Doctor attempts to counteract the Master's theft of the TARDIS, it is used to limit the TARDIS' destination. In "[[Doomsday (Doctor Who)|Doomsday]]" (2006), the Doctor states that the sonic screwdriver does not kill, wound or maim; however, it is sometimes brandished in a threatening manner, such as in "[[The Christmas Invasion]]" (2005), "[[The Impossible Planet]]" (2006), "[[The Runaway Bride (Doctor Who)|The Runaway Bride]]" (2006), "[[The Lazarus Experiment]]" (2007), "[[The Day of the Doctor]]" (2013), and ''[[The Infinite Quest]]'' (2007). In "[[World War Three (Doctor Who)|World War Three]]" (2005), when confronted by a group of [[Slitheen]], the Doctor threatens to "triplicate the flammability" of a bottle of [[port wine]] with the sonic screwdriver, though one of the Slitheen realises he is bluffing. In "[[Closing Time (Doctor Who)|Closing Time]]" (2011), ringed energy beams are seen emitted from the device, giving it a more weapon-like appearance, particularly when used to disable a weakened [[Cyberman]] at a distance. |
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*The BBC Past Doctor Adventure Dreams of Empire by Justin Richards, set after The Ice Warriors and pre-dating Fury from the Deep, features the Second Doctor utilizing the device to break through a concrete wall. The novel The Murder Game, set much earlier and after The Power of the Daleks, has this Doctor escape from a locked room with a box-shaped sonic device, and muses on the advantages of building a smaller model. Stories with the device used by the Second Doctor before the screwdriver's first on-screen appearance are plausible as the Doctor in that story indicates that the machine "never fails," implying its successful use before that adventure. |
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In "Smith and Jones", the sonic screwdriver burns out after the Doctor uses it to amplify the radiation output of a hospital [[x-ray generator|X-ray machine]]. In the "Series Three concept Artwork Gallery",[https://web.archive.org/web/20080227031917/http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/gallery/concept_2007/index.shtml] [https://web.archive.org/web/20080227182534/http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/gallery/concept_2007/2.shtml] when referring to the burnt out sonic screwdriver, Peter McKinstry says "the green crystal structure visible under the shattered dome refers back to the TARDIS console crystal. It's the same technology – the TARDIS's little brother."<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/gallery/concept_2007/2.shtml BBC – Doctor Who – Series Three concept Artwork Gallery] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080227182534/http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/gallery/concept_2007/2.shtml |date=27 February 2008 }}</ref> Though initially saddened at the loss of the screwdriver, the Doctor obtains a new one at the conclusion of the episode. |
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*In the [[Eighth Doctor Adventures|Eighth Doctor novel]] ''[[Alien Bodies]]'', the Time Lord Homunculette has a sonic [[monkey wrench]]. |
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The sonic screwdriver is unable to open a "deadlock seal", used as a [[plot device]] to prevent an easy solution. Russell T Davies once mentioned that he would never make the sonic screwdriver the solution to an episode. In "[[Silence in the Library]]" (2008), while trying to open a wooden door, the Doctor tells Donna that the sonic screwdriver will not work because the door is made of wood, a fact later restated in "[[The Hungry Earth]]" (2010); when Rory complains about this, the Doctor counters to not "diss the sonic." The sonic screwdriver's inability to work on wood is clarified in "[[In the Forest of the Night]]" (2014), when the Doctor states that the sonic screwdriver works by manipulating the moving parts in various machinery: since plant tissue lacks said moving parts, it is unaffected by the sonic screwdriver. In "[[The Parting of the Ways]]" (2005), the Doctor mentions that when Emergency Program One was activated, the sonic screwdriver would receive a signal from the TARDIS. In "[[Forest of the Dead]]" (2008), he claims that a few hair-dryers can interfere with the device, though he states that he is "working on that". |
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*A later Eighth Doctor novel, ''[[Father Time (Doctor Who)|Father Time]]'', features an amnesiac Doctor attempting to recreate the sonic screwdriver with 1980s technology, eventually producing a bulky device nicknamed the "sonic suitcase". |
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=== 2010–2015 === |
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*The Sixth Doctor used a hand tool called a [[List of Doctor Who items#S|sonic lance]] in ''[[Attack of the Cybermen]]''. |
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In "[[The Eleventh Hour (Doctor Who)|The Eleventh Hour]]" (2010), the malfunctioning sonic screwdriver is destroyed when the Doctor tries to signal the Atraxi ships. The Doctor later receives a new one, which emerges from the newly regenerated TARDIS console. The [[Eleventh Doctor]]'s sonic screwdriver is larger than its predecessor; it has a green light and metal claws that extend with a flick of the wrist. It is shown to have been created by the TARDIS as part of its automatic regeneration. |
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In "[[A Christmas Carol (Doctor Who)|A Christmas Carol]]" (2010), the Doctor advises a young Kazran Sardick to pursue romance while implying that in a similar situation in his own past he had instead gone to his room to "design a new kind of screwdriver." |
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*In the [[New Series Adventures (Doctor Who)|New Series Adventures]], it was used to cauterise wounds, as a soldering iron and to stop a clockwork mechanism (''[[The Clockwise Man]]''), to tie someone up to a chair by welding wires to the chair (''[[Only Human (Doctor Who)|Only Human]]'') and to examine electronic [[standing stone]]s (''[[The Deviant Strain]]''). However, some [[extraterrestrial life in culture|alien]] locks are impenetrable; in the Ninth Doctor Adventure ''[[Winner Takes All (Doctor Who)|Winner Takes All]]'' the Doctor fails to open a lock with it and concludes that it "hints at alien involvement". In ''[[The Monsters Inside (Doctor Who)|The Monsters Inside]]'' and ''[[The Nightmare of Black Island]]'', it was used simply to provide light, but in The Monsters Inside, it ran out of power in the process. In ''Only Human'', the Doctor informs Quelly that it contains 29 computers. In ''[[The Stone Rose]]'', it was used to sedate animals, and in ''[[The Last Dodo]]'' it was used to distract them. Also in The Last Dodo it was used to liquefy tarmac, and then undo the process. (''[[The Last Dodo]]'') In another book, it is claimed that it has over 8500 different settings. {{Fact|date=August 2007}} In ''[[Peacemaker (Doctor Who)|Peacemaker]]'', it was used to stop bullets and to take apart guns. |
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Also in that episode, the sonic screwdriver gets split into two pieces, one of which ends up inside a flying shark. The remaining piece is said to be signalling its other half in an effort to repair itself. The Doctor uses this to send a signal through the half inside the sky shark to open up the clouds. Afterwards, the half not in the shark is left with Kazran Sardick. The Doctor tells Kazran that he can call him for help using the Sonic; though Kazran declines to do so. The Doctor had duplicates of this screwdriver, which he continued to use throughout his travels. |
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In "[[Let's Kill Hitler]]" (2011), it is explained that instead of having settings, this version operates through a psychic interface, basically doing whatever the user thinks of while pointing and holding down the button. This version of the screwdriver also appears, although never officially announced, to have a flashlight setting, as the Doctor is seen to have it emitting a continuous glow while not uttering the classic sonic noise. Also in the episode, the Doctor uses another modified version of his sonic, which he calls a "Sonic Cane". It is similar to a Tuxedo cane, except the top replaced with the upper portion of his screwdriver, with a metal ball cut in fourths attached to the claws. |
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*In the ''[[Torchwood]]'' episodes "[[Day One (Torchwood)|Day One]]" and "[[End of Days (Torchwood)|End of Days]]", Captain [[Jack Harkness]] is seen to use a green device somewhat similar to a sonic screwdriver. Its origins and function are unknown. |
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Ahead of the 50th anniversary special, a mini-episode entitled "[[The Night of the Doctor]]" (2013) was produced in which the Eighth Doctor uses the sonic screwdriver twice. The Doctor uses his telescopic screwdriver previously seen in the [[Doctor Who (film)|TV movie]], rather than his updated steampunk version which had been used in numerous [[Big Finish Productions|Big Finish]] audio dramas. |
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*In the ''Torchwood'' episode "[[Greeks Bearing Gifts (Torchwood)|Greeks Bearing Gifts]]" a replica of the Doctor's sonic screwdriver can be seen on [[Toshiko Sato]]'s desk. Toshiko also uses a "lockpick" device in a number of episodes which replicates the door-opening function of the screwdriver. |
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For the 50th anniversary special, "[[The Day of the Doctor]]" (2013), another version was seen in the hands of John Hurt's [[War Doctor]]. The design was similar to the one used by Tom Baker's Fourth Doctor. This time the halo and bullet tip had been removed, replaced by a red light as well as a large red dial added to the base. Character Options released a version of this sonic screwdriver on 23 November 2013 at London's ExCel labelling it "The Other Doctor's Sonic".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://merchandise.thedoctorwhosite.co.uk/doctor-who-london-excel-convention-pictures/|title=Doctor Who London Excel Convention Pictures|work=The Doctor Who Site}}</ref> It was established as a plot point in that episode that the sonic screwdrivers employed by various Doctor incarnations all use the same software, something the War Doctor exploited by running a calculation over a course of several centuries with the Tenth and Eleventh Doctors seeing the calculation completed through their models. It is also directly implied after the fact that the sonic screwdriver has actually been a part of every doctor's retinue, despite its disappearance for doctors six & seven; the Tenth Doctor says to the Gallifreyan high command, as all thirteen doctors are about to change history by saving the planet, that the calculations for doing what's about to be done have been "running all my lives." In addition, when combined, the screwdrivers of the War, Tenth, and Eleventh Doctor could create a sonic force field blast to repel and destroy a Dalek. |
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*In the ''[[Daleks (video game)|Daleks]]'' video game (originally published for old operating systems of the early 80's), the sonic screwdriver is the only weapon that The Doctor may use to teleport and defend himself against his robotic enemies, the Daleks. |
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"[[The Magician's Apprentice (Doctor Who)|The Magician's Apprentice]]" (2015) shows that the sonic screwdriver can create "an acoustic corridor" so that the [[Twelfth Doctor]] can communicate with a boy trapped in an extraterrestrial mine field. However, when the Doctor discovers that the boy is actually a young [[Davros]], he abandons the boy, leaving the screwdriver behind, though it is revealed that he did save young Davros after all. Davros is shown to have kept the screwdriver in his possession ever since, and the Doctor tells [[Clara Oswald|Clara]] that he no longer has a screwdriver. By that time, the screwdriver had been withered and damaged by time and was seemingly useless. |
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*In the untitled story by [[Gary Russell]] featured in the first issue of [[IDW Publishing]]'s ''Doctor Who'' comic book (published February 2008), the Tenth Doctor uses his sonic screwdriver to destroy a sword and later sacrifices it in order to defeat a [[Sycorax]] hunter. Later, he indicates that he needs time to "grow" a new sonic screwdriver. |
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==== |
==== Sonic sunglasses ==== |
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In his first appearance at the beginning of [[Doctor Who (series 9)|series nine]] of ''Doctor Who'', the Doctor is seen wearing black [[Ray-Ban]] [[sunglasses]] ("[[The Magician's Apprentice (Doctor Who)|The Magician's Apprentice]]"), and he says that he no longer has his sonic screwdriver. Later, in "[[The Witch's Familiar]]", he unveils that the sunglasses are actually a wearable version of the screwdriver, claiming that he is "over" screwdrivers: "They spoil the line of your jacket." The glasses are used by the Doctor, and Clara on occasion, throughout the ninth series. |
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*''Sonic Screwdriver'' is also the name of a [[fanzine]] published by the Doctor Who Club of [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]]. |
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The sonic sunglasses appears to have the same basic functions as the traditional sonic screwdriver, such as scanning objects, while having features not seen before: |
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===Other media=== |
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{{Trivia|date=February 2008}} |
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*A very similar pen-shaped multipurpose device called a "[[servo]]" was used by the intergalactic superspy [[Gary Seven]] in the 1968 ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series|Star Trek]]'' episode ''[[Assignment: Earth (TOS episode)|Assignment Earth]]''. <ref>[http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/Servo Servo - Memory Alpha, the Star Trek Wiki<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
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* Allowing the Doctor to hear people talking, even if they are several yards away and surrounded by loud noises ("The Magician's Apprentice"). |
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*The ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (computer game)|The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy]]'' [[Interactive fiction|text adventure]] game parodies the sonic screwdriver with tools such as the ultra-plasmic [[awl]]. |
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* Reassembling the TARDIS after it has used its Hostile Action Dispersal System to avoid destruction by the [[Dalek]]s ("The Witch's Familiar"). |
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* Creating and controlling a sophisticated hologram of the Doctor through a [[WiFi]] system ("[[Before the Flood (Doctor Who)|Before the Flood]]"). |
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* Erasing alien encoding inside people's brains by having them don the glasses for a few minutes ("Before the Flood"). |
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* Reading [[Internet]] pages and [[e-mail]] ("[[The Zygon Inversion]]" and "[[Extremis (Doctor Who)|Extremis]]"). |
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* Communicating with [[Gallifrey]]an battle cruisers ("[[Hell Bent (Doctor Who)|Hell Bent]]"). |
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The glasses appear to be more susceptible to damage than the screwdriver; in "[[The Girl Who Died]]", a [[Vikings|Viking]] warrior takes the glasses off the Doctor's face and easily breaks them in half. Nevertheless, the glasses continue to appear via replacement or repair until the end of the season. They return the following season during the Doctor's temporary period of blindness, showing the ability to scan his surroundings and transmit the information to his brain, as well as transmit any data recorded to them. However, while he is able to tell things about a person such as height, weight, gender, age, and even heart rate, he does not get enough detail to know faces, clothing, etc. ("Extremis") He was once able to tell that a person was holding a computer tablet, but not what was written on it, as well as 'see' a combination lock but not the numbers. ("[[The Pyramid at the End of the World]]") In his final adventure, the Doctor uses the glasses briefly to examine the Testimony interface, much to the confusion and irritation of the [[First Doctor]] ("[[Twice Upon a Time (Doctor Who)|Twice Upon a Time]]"). |
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*In the BBC Radio 4 science-fiction comedy ''[[Nebulous]]'', there is a parody of the sonic screwdriver in the sonic crowbar. |
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=== 2015–2017 === |
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*In a ''[[The Catherine Tate Show]]'' [[Red Nose Day]] sketch, [[Catherine Tate]]'s teenage tearaway character [[Lauren Cooper]] accuses her English teacher (played by [[David Tennant]]) of looking suspiciously like "the Doctor". After much provocation, he pulls out a sonic screwdriver and uses it to transform her into a [[Rose Tyler]] action figure. |
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In "[[Hell Bent (Doctor Who)|Hell Bent]]", the TARDIS gives the Doctor a brand new sonic screwdriver. The new screwdriver has a TARDIS-blue shaft with gold and silver highlights. The upper half is a rectangular light grid that, when switched on, has four different functions: green light with low-pitched sound, blue light with high-pitched sound, green lights that pulse with a pulsing sound, and a blue light chasing pattern with a pulsing sound. The new sonic screwdriver is meant to represent the TARDIS. The Doctor first uses it in "The Husbands of River Song" (although he also employs the sonic sunglasses earlier in the episode). The new screwdriver has seen use in the spin-off show ''[[Class (2016 TV series)|Class]]'', where the Doctor increases the voltage of flood lights to expel the Shadow Kin and partially close a rift in space-time. He is shown to have working copies of every version of the Sonic Screwdriver ever seen before in a cup on his desk in "The Pilot." Nardole uses the Fifth Doctor's version when sealing bulkhead doors to keep out Daleks later in the episode. |
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=== 2018-2022 === |
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*A sonic screwdriver briefly appears as an obtainable item (although it is never used for anything in the book) in the 1980s [[Fighting Fantasy]] book ''[[Sky Lord]]''. |
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In "[[The Woman Who Fell to Earth]]", the [[Thirteenth Doctor]] is depicted constructing a new sonic screwdriver out of scrap metal and an orange glowing device from an alien travel capsule. She proudly proclaims that the new screwdriver is forged out of "Sheffield steel". This iteration of the sonic screwdriver glows throughout its body with an orange light when activated. It was destroyed by a Dalek in part seven of the [[Doctor Who Magazine]] comic strip "Liberation of the Daleks" while in the [[Fourteenth Doctor]]'s possession. |
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=== 2023 (60th Anniversary Specials) === |
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*A sonic screwdriver is also the name of an alcoholic drink made from [[Vodka]] and blue [[Gatorade]] or [[Vodka]], orange juice and Blue Curacoa (as seen at the Rose and Crown Pub at [[Epcot]]). |
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A redesigned sonic screwdriver, made of steel and brass with a long metal protrusion made its debut at [[San Diego Comic-Con]] on July 19, 2023. The screwdriver appears to be an amalgamation of different elements from the show such as the TARDIS Roundels, the Daleks' guns and the Master's Laser Screwdriver and was used by the [[Fourteenth Doctor]] in the 60th Anniversary Specials.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Fourteenth Doctor's sonic screwdriver is available now {{!}} Doctor Who |url=https://www.doctorwho.tv/news-and-features/the-fourteenth-doctors-sonic-screwdriver-is-available-now |access-date=2023-08-07 |website=www.doctorwho.tv |language=en}}</ref> |
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In the first of the specials "[[The Star Beast (Doctor Who episode)|The Star Beast]]", this screwdriver is shown to have upgraded functionality, such as being able to draw out maps and graphs, and also being able to create energy shields to block a corridor. |
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*In the online game [[World of Warcraft]], a item named "The Ultrasonic Screwdriver" is used to reprogram robots in a quest. |
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The screwdriver plays no part in the second special "[[Wild Blue Yonder (Doctor Who)|Wild Blue Yonder]]", as the Doctor leaves it plugged into the TARDIS to help the machine repair; the TARDIS takes off by itself, with the screwdriver, shortly into the story. |
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==References== |
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<!--See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Footnotes for an explanation of how to generate footnotes using the <ref(erences/)> tags--> |
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<references/> |
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=== 2023–present === |
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==External links== |
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In December 2023, a reinvention of the sonic screwdriver was introduced for the Fifteenth Doctor.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Doctor Who officially introduces Ncuti Gatwa's Sonic Screwdriver |url=https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/sci-fi/doctor-who-ncuti-gatwa-sonic-newsupdate/ |access-date=2024-05-18 |website=Radio Times |language=en-GB}}</ref> The design is radically different from previous versions, with the shape now resembling a [[remote control]] rather than a screwdriver.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Graham-Lowery |first=Nathan |date=2023-12-10 |title=Doctor Who Reveals Ncuti Gatwa's Sonic Screwdriver (& It Looks Wildly Different From Any Before) |url=https://screenrant.com/doctor-who-sonic-screwdriver-ncuti-gatwa-image-video/ |access-date=2024-05-18 |website=ScreenRant |language=en}}</ref> Gatwa revealed a [[Gallifrey]]an script on the sonic, which translates to "the sharpness of the tongue defeats the sharpness of the warrior", a [[Rwanda]]n proverb.<ref>{{Cite web |author1=Megan Garside |date=2023-12-11 |title=Doctor Who's Ncuti Gatwa's sonic screwdriver has a beautiful, hidden, message |url=https://www.gamesradar.com/doctor-who-ncuti-gatwa-sonic-screwdriver-hidden-message/ |access-date=2024-05-18 |website=gamesradar |language=en}}</ref> The sonic also contains a crystal power source and a "[[USB port|USB]]"-style port which allows it to be connected to other technologies.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2023-12-10 |title=Doctor Who unveils Ncuti Gatwa's Sonic Screwdriver: A closer look at the Gallifreyan gadget |url=https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international/us/doctor-who-unveils-ncuti-gatwas-sonic-screwdriver-a-closer-look-at-the-gallifreyan-gadget/articleshow/105881933.cms?from=mdr |access-date=2024-05-18 |work=The Economic Times |issn=0013-0389}}</ref> |
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*[http://www.paratime.ca/v_and_v/pics/sonicsc.jpg Sonic screwdriver diagram] |
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*[http://nzdwfc.tetrap.com/archive/tsv31/sonicscrewdriver.html List of appearances and functions in the classic series] |
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*[http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/sounds/sonicscrewdriver.mp3 Sonic screwdriver sound effect from the current series] ([[.mp3|MP3]]) |
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According to Phil Sims, production designer, Davies initially expected that the Fifteenth Doctor would continue to use the previous [[Fourteenth Doctor]] sonic screwdriver, "the same way he'd inherit the TARDIS". Davies later changed his mind, believing it was important for "the new Doctor to have a new sonic". Michael van Kesteren, prop art director, said that he struggled to come up with a concept; adding that the team had been "quietly hoping not to have to do another one for a while", as the creation of the previous sonic was "such a complicated, time-consuming process". Sims opened it up as a "competition" to the art department, with the brief asking for it to be "funky", "something different" and not limited to "a stick that we point at people".<ref name="DWM599">{{Cite journal |last=Kirkley |first=Paul |title=Sonic Disruptors |journal=Doctor Who Magazine 599 |publication-date=4 January 2024 |volume=Panini UK |pages=36–37}}</ref> Davies was interested in changing the shape of the sonic as he worried that it looked too much like a gun: |
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{{Doctor Who}} |
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{{Blockquote|text=This new Doctor for 2024, I worry that sometimes the old sonic starts to look like a gun — like a weapon that gets pointed like a weapon. And I wanted to just cool that down and check that out.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Sepinwall |first=Alan |date=2024-05-03 |title=The new Doctor checks in |url=https://alansepinwall.substack.com/p/the-new-doctor-checks-in |access-date=2024-05-18 |website=What's Alan Watching?}}</ref>|author=}} |
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[[Category:Doctor Who devices]] |
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He also wanted it to be "something every kid would want for Christmas".<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kirkley |first=Paul |title=Designated 'Driver |journal=Doctor Who Magazine 594 |publisher=Panini UK |publication-date=17 August 2023 |issue=18}}</ref> Jason Davies-Redgrave, art department co-ordinator, wanted to think "as far out of the box" as he could, and sketched ideas based on a [[flip phone]], a pebble, and an "alien [[croissant]]". The sketches were divisive at first, with Joel Collins, executive producer, elaborating that "if you'd got out of bed on the wrong side, you might have looked at what Jason had drawn, gone 'what is that?', and thrown it in the corner". Davies strongly supported the sketches, specifically the sketch labelled 'Organic Pebble Teddy Bear version'. The art department's challenge was to translate the chosen sketch into a 3D-printed physical prop. The sonic was designed to be "fully-functioning" with [[touch control]]s. Initially, an "all-metal version" was considered, but deemed too expensive. The prop required around 50 component parts, a rechargeable battery, and elastic band technology.<ref name="DWM599" /> |
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== Other appearances == |
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=== Licensed media === |
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==== BBC Books ==== |
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*The [[Past Doctor Adventures]] novel ''The Murder Game'', set after ''The Power of the Daleks'', has the Second Doctor escaping from a locked room with a box-shaped sonic device, in which he muses on the advantages of building a smaller model. The novel ''Dreams of Empire'' by Justin Richards, set after ''The Ice Warriors'' and before ''Fury from the Deep'', features the Second Doctor using the device to break through a concrete wall. Stories with the device used by the Second Doctor before the screwdriver's first on-screen appearance are plausible as the Doctor in that story indicates that the machine "never fails", implying its successful use before that adventure.{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}} |
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*The [[BBC Short Trips|''More Short Trips'']] short story "Special Weapons", set late in season 24, indicates that the Seventh Doctor has a sonic screwdriver. |
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*The [[Eighth Doctor Adventures]] novel, ''[[Father Time (Doctor Who)|Father Time]]'', features an amnesiac Doctor attempting to recreate the sonic screwdriver with 1980s technology, eventually producing a bulky device nicknamed the "sonic suitcase". |
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*In the [[New Series Adventures (Doctor Who)|Ninth Doctor Adventures]] novel ''[[The Clockwise Man]]'' the sonic screwdriver is used to cauterise wounds, as a soldering iron, and to stop a clockwork mechanism. In ''[[The Monsters Inside (Doctor Who)|The Monsters Inside]]'' it is used to provide light, but runs out of power in the process. In ''[[Winner Takes All (Doctor Who)|Winner Takes All]]'' the Doctor fails to open a lock with it and concludes that it "hints at alien involvement". It is used to examine electronic [[standing stone]]s in ''[[The Deviant Strain]]''. In ''[[Only Human (Doctor Who)|Only Human]]'' it is used to restrain someone by welding wires to a chair; in the same novel the Doctor informs Quelly that the device contains 29 computers. |
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*In the Tenth Doctor Adventures novel ''[[The Stone Rose]]'', the sonic screwdriver is used to sedate animals. In ''[[The Nightmare of Black Island]]'' it is used to provide light. In ''[[The Last Dodo]]'' it is used to distract animals, and to liquefy and re-solidify tarmac. In ''[[Peacemaker (Doctor Who)|Peacemaker]]'', it is used to stop bullets and to dismantle guns. |
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====Big Finish audio dramas==== |
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*In the [[Big Finish Productions|Big Finish]] [[List of Doctor Who audio plays by Big Finish|audio drama]] ''[[Pier Pressure (Doctor Who audio)|Pier Pressure]]'', [[Evelyn Smythe]] mentions that although the Sixth Doctor did not possess a sonic screwdriver, he fondly remembered it as his "door key". The Sixth Doctor uses his fingernails as a stand-in for the screwdriver as an escape method in ''[[The Nowhere Place]]''. |
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*The Seventh Doctor uses the device in ''The Harvest'' and ''Dreamtime''. His companions Ace and Hex use the device in the Doctorless audio drama, ''The Veiled Leopard''. |
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*In ''[[Sword of Orion]],'' the Eighth Doctor reveals that his sonic screwdriver has a [[flashlight|torch]] built into the handle. In ''[[The Dying Days]]'' he uses the device to reflect the sonic cannon of an [[Ice Warrior]] back at his attacker. In ''[[Blood of the Daleks]]'' he uses it to trace a transmission beam. |
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====''Doctor Who'' comics==== |
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*In an untitled story by [[Gary Russell]] featured in the first issue of [[IDW Publishing]]'s ''Doctor Who'' comic book (published February 2008), the Tenth Doctor uses his sonic screwdriver to destroy a sword and later sacrifices it in order to defeat a [[Sycorax]] hunter. Later, he indicates that he needs time to "grow" a new sonic screwdriver. |
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====Virgin Adventures==== |
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*The Seventh Doctor regained his sonic screwdriver in the [[Virgin New Adventures]] novels, with its first reappearance in ''[[The Pit (Penswick novel)|The Pit]]''. |
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*The [[Virgin Missing Adventures]] novel ''[[Venusian Lullaby]]'' established that the [[First Doctor]] had a sonic screwdriver. |
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===Red Nose Day=== |
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*In the [[Red Nose Day]] special, ''[[Doctor Who and the Curse of Fatal Death|The Curse of Fatal Death]]'', the final regeneration of the Doctor, played by [[Joanna Lumley]], enthusiastically remarks that the sonic screwdriver "has ''three'' settings" when it starts vibrating. |
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*In a comic ''[[The Catherine Tate Show]]'' sketch, [[Catherine Tate]]'s teenage character [[Lauren Cooper]] accuses her English teacher (played by [[David Tennant]]) of being "the Doctor". After much provocation, the teacher uses the sonic screwdriver to transform Lauren into a [[Rose Tyler]] action figure. |
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===Unlicensed media=== |
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*The unlicensed [[fan fiction]] novel ''[[Time's Champion]]'' speculates that the Sixth Doctor has re-built the sonic screwdriver.{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}} He used a similar device in ''[[The Nightmare Fair]]'', a script which was never produced for television but has been adapted twice. |
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*In the video game ''[[Robots (1984 video game)#Other versions|Daleks]]'' (published for operating systems of the early 1980s), the Doctor can use the sonic screwdriver to teleport and to defend himself against the Daleks. |
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===Public appearances=== |
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*[[Matt Smith (actor)|Matt Smith]] used the Eleventh Doctor's sonic screwdriver to turn on the Christmas Lights in [[Cardiff]] in November 2010. Its appearance was cheered by the crowd. During the Doctor Who panel at San Diego Comic-Con in 2018, Jodie Whittaker produced the new sonic screwdriver, prompting applause from the audience. |
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==Related devices== |
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{{Original research section|date=January 2018}} |
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===''Doctor Who''=== |
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*The Doctor has used other sonic devices similar to the sonic screwdriver, including the "door handle" of ''[[Inferno (Doctor Who)|Inferno]]'' ([[Liz Shaw]] having one of her own) and a pen-sized [[white noise]] generator in ''[[Four to Doomsday]]''. |
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*In the 1965 episode ''[[Galaxy 4|Trap of Steel]]'', the Doctor uses an apparently ''ordinary'' screwdriver to examine the metal of the Drahvin spaceship and other tasks. |
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*In the 1979 serial ''[[City of Death]]'', [[List of Doctor Who villains#Scaroth|Count Scarlioni]]'s henchmen use a "sonic knife" to cut the glass in front of the [[Mona Lisa]]. |
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*In the 1985 serial ''[[Attack of the Cybermen]]'', the Sixth Doctor uses a "sonic lance". |
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*In the 2005 episodes "[[The Empty Child]]" and "[[The Doctor Dances]]", [[Jack Harkness]] uses a "sonic blaster", referred to by Rose Tyler as a "squareness gun", capable of "digitising" structures by disintegrating them and then reversing the process, among other functions. The device resurfaces in "[[Silence in the Library]]" and "[[Forest of the Dead]]", now wielded by [[River Song (Doctor Who)|River Song]]. Steven Moffat confirmed in an episode of ''Doctor Who Confidential'' that the device was the same one. |
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*In "[[Smith and Jones (Doctor Who)|Smith and Jones]]", Martha Jones sarcastically asks if he's got a "laser spanner" as well as a sonic screwdriver, which he apparently did until it was stolen by [[Emmeline Pankhurst]], described by the Doctor as a "cheeky woman". |
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*In "[[The Sound of Drums]]", [[Master (Doctor Who)|the Master]] reveals his [[Master (Doctor Who)#Handheld weaponry|laser screwdriver]]. Unlike the sonic screwdriver, it is used as a weapon that can kill as well as artificially age its target, using technology developed by Lazarus Laboratories originally seen in "[[The Lazarus Experiment]]". It includes [[isomorphic]] controls, allowing only the Master to use the device. The design of the prop was meant to imply that the Master constructed it on Earth, and it was deliberately made larger than the Doctor's sonic screwdriver.<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/gallery/concept_2007/51.shtml BBC – Doctor Who – Series Three concept Artwork Gallery] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071227142654/http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/gallery/concept_2007/51.shtml |date=27 December 2007 }}</ref> Like the Doctor's screwdriver and Sarah Jane's lipstick, the Master's laser screwdriver was also created as a children's toy with sound effects. The laser screwdriver reappears in [[The Doctor Falls]] when the Master encounters his later female incarnation, Missy. Again, his screwdriver acts as a weapon, the Master using it to destroy a Cyberman and to kill Missy, shooting her in the back after she stabbed him in the back. |
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*In the series 4 episode "[[Partners in Crime (Doctor Who)|Partners in Crime]]", the antagonist Miss Foster is shown using a sonic device identified as a sonic pen, which the Doctor describes as having identical functionality to his screwdriver. It could, however, open deadlocked windows and compartments in the Adipose building that the sonic screwdriver could not. After confiscating and briefly using it, the Doctor throws the sonic pen into a bin. The sonic pen took the form of a sleek, black and silver fountain pen with a blue light at the top and was made into a toy version which was paired with the sonic screwdriver. |
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*In "Silence in the Library", Professor [[River Song (Doctor Who)|River Song]] possesses a slightly bulkier sonic screwdriver, which she claims the Doctor gave to her in his future. The Doctor mentioned that he does not give his screwdriver to anyone. In the following episode, Professor Song mentions that her screwdriver is augmented with a "red setting" and "dampers". It also contains a hidden neural relay linked to River Song, saving her at the episode's conclusion—the purpose for which the future Doctor gave Professor Song the device. A toy version is available. It was revealed in "[[The Husbands of River Song]]" that it was the Twelfth Doctor who gave it to River. |
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*In "Journey's End", Sarah Jane Smith is seen using her own sonic screwdriver, or ''sonic lipstick'' to open a door on the Dalek Crucible. |
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*In the Christmas special ''[[The Next Doctor]]'', Jackson Lake, who believes himself to be the Doctor, carries a regular screwdriver which he claims to be sonic. When the Doctor asks "How is it sonic?", Lake replies, "It makes a noise," which he demonstrates by tapping it against a door frame. |
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*In the series 6 episode "[[Let's Kill Hitler]]", the Doctor has a sonic cane which appears to have the same functions as the sonic screwdriver. |
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*In the series 6 episode "[[The Girl Who Waited]]", future [[Amy Pond]] has a "Sonic Probe" that she made herself. She claims she calls it a probe and not a screwdriver because that's what it is, and to signify that she has come to hate the Doctor. Later after she has forgiven him, she calls it a sonic screwdriver. |
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*[[Blue Peter]] announced that there will be three Sonic devices that will feature in Series 8 of Doctor Who, designed by Blue Peter watchers.<ref name="Series 8 Sonics">{{cite web|title=Series 8 Sonic Devices for Paternoster Gang Revealed|url=http://www.doctorwhotv.co.uk/series-8-sonic-devices-for-paternoster-gang-revealed-57049.htm|publisher=doctorwhotv.co.uk|access-date=21 December 2013|date=19 December 2013}}</ref> The first device is a Sonic Gauntlet for Jenny Flint that will feature making locks fall apart, radioactivity counter and receiver dish, that will allow you to watch shows.<ref name="Series 8 Sonics"/> The Second device is a Sonic Lorgnette for Commander Strax that has medical applications, such as X-ray, diagnostic lens (check for illness), and thermal lens.<ref name="Series 8 Sonics"/> The third device is Sonic Hat Pin for Madame Vastra that can be used as a remote control for her carriage and it can also be turned into a Sonic Sword with the flick of a switch.<ref name="Series 8 Sonics"/> |
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===''The Sarah Jane Adventures''=== |
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In the ''Doctor Who'' spin-off series, ''[[The Sarah Jane Adventures]]'', [[Sarah Jane Smith]] uses a "sonic lipstick", which is a gift the [[Tenth Doctor]] gave her alongside a new model of [[K9 (Doctor Who)|K9]] and her scanner watch. It functions much like the sonic screwdriver, used primarily for opening and closing locked doors, and for disabling and re-enabling machines; like the sonic screwdriver, it remains ineffective against deadlock seals and wooden objects.<ref>{{cite web| title = The Sarah Jane Adventures – The Official Site| work = Alien Objects| publisher = BBC| url = https://www.bbc.co.uk/cbbc/sja/theattic/alienobjects/| access-date = 21 December 2006| url-status = dead| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090906074306/http://www.bbc.co.uk/cbbc/sja/theattic/alienobjects/| archive-date = 6 September 2009}} (UK Access Only)</ref> A toy version is available. |
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*In ''[[Enemy of the Bane]]'', Mrs Wormwood ([[Samantha Bond]]) possesses a sonic device disguised as a ring called the "Phonic disruptor". |
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=== ''Torchwood'' === |
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*In the ''Doctor Who'' spin-off series ''[[Torchwood]]'' episode "[[Fragments (Torchwood)|Fragments]]", genius [[Toshiko Sato]]'s backstory reveals that she stole faulty designs from the [[Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom)|Ministry of Defence]] and [[UNIT]], which she used to construct a sonic device, referred to as a "sonic modulator", to trade to a terrorist organisation in exchange for her mother. The device is confiscated by UNIT, which imprisons Sato until she is pardoned and recruited into [[Torchwood Institute|Torchwood]] by Jack Harkness. |
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*In the episodes "[[Day One (Torchwood)|Day One]]" and "[[End of Days (Torchwood)|End of Days]]", Captain [[Jack Harkness]] uses a green device somewhat similar to a sonic screwdriver. Its origins and function are unknown. |
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* Toshiko uses a "lockpick" device in a number of episodes which replicates the door-opening function of the screwdriver. |
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*In ''[[Torchwood: Children of Earth|Children of Earth]]'', [[Gwen Cooper]] uses a similar device, which she refers to as a Gizmo, to deactivate CCTV cameras. |
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=== BBC books === |
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*In the [[Eighth Doctor Adventures]] novel ''Alien Bodies'', the Time Lord Homunculette has a sonic [[monkey wrench]]. |
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== Commercial product == |
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Ownership of the sonic screwdriver was retained by the BBC. [[Victor Pemberton]] told an interviewer for ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'', "I'm very cross that the sonic screwdriver—which I invented—has been marketed with no credit to myself. … It's one thing not to receive any payment, but another not to receive any credit."<ref>{{cite journal| first=Benjamin| last=Cook| title=Friend of the Earth:-)| journal=[[Doctor Who Magazine]]| issue=318| pages=10–14| date=26 June 2002}}</ref> |
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The toy version of the new series design (made by Character Options Ltd.) was slightly larger than the on screen version to accommodate a working sound chip. It also includes an ultraviolet [[Flashlight|light]] and changeable invisible ink nib for viewing messages written in the ultraviolet ink. |
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A metal version of the sonic screwdriver produced by [[Wow Stuff]] mounts a functional set of changeable flat and Phillips heads under a removable cover as well as providing light and sound effects.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://wowstuff.co.uk/product/Sonic-Screwdriver/14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110207065713/http://www.wowstuff.co.uk/product/Sonic-Screwdriver/14|url-status=dead|archive-date=2011-02-07|title=Sonic Screwdriver|work=wowstuff.co.uk}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=January 2018}} |
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QMx were given the licence to produce accurate replicas of this prop. In 2012, QMx released an "Artisan Master Series" replica of this sonic screwdriver, in a strictly limited run of 25, priced at nearly $5,000. These replicas were handmade by original prop-maker [[Nick Robatto]], and have now sold out permanently.<ref>{{cite web|title=Doctor Who – Eleventh Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver – Artisan Master Series|url=http://qmxonline.com/products/11th-doctors-sonic-screwdriver|publisher=[[QMx]]|access-date=12 May 2016|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160422002431/http://qmxonline.com/products/11th-doctors-sonic-screwdriver|archive-date=22 April 2016}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=January 2018}} QMx later released an Artisan Master Series replica of River Song's sonic screwdriver, limited to a run of 15, also made by original prop maker Nick Robatto, which has also sold out.<ref>{{cite web|title=Doctor Who – River Song's Sonic Screwdriver – Artisan Master Series|url=http://qmxonline.com/products/river-songs-sonic-screwdriver-1|publisher=[[QMx]]|access-date=12 May 2016|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160421204901/http://qmxonline.com/products/river-songs-sonic-screwdriver-1|archive-date=21 April 2016}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=January 2018}} |
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The Wand Company released a [[universal remote|universal remote control]] styled on the Eleventh Doctor's sonic screwdriver on 3 August 2012.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/worldwide/110712sonic.html|title=The Wand Company and BBC Worldwide Unveil The Doctor Who Sonic Screwdriver Universal Remote Control|date=11 July 2012|access-date=12 July 2012|archive-date=20 April 2013|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130420192304/http://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/worldwide/110712sonic.html|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Doctor Who: Eleventh Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver Universal Remote Control|url=http://www.bbcshop.com/doctor-who/doctor-who-eleventh-doctors-sonic-screwdriver-universal-remote-control/invt/2644608|publisher=[[BBC]]|access-date=18 August 2013}}</ref> Due to consumer demand, a [[Tenth Doctor]] version was released on 31 October 2013.<ref>{{cite web|title=The Wand Company presents two new Doctor Who Sonic Screwdrivers at San Diego Comic-Con 2013|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/worldwide/270613sonic.html|publisher=[[BBC]]|access-date=18 August 2013|date=27 June 2013|archive-date=12 August 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130812103227/http://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/worldwide/270613sonic.html|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Doctor Who: Tenth Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver|url=http://www.bbcshop.com/doctor-who/doctor-who-tenth-doctors-sonic-screwdriver/invt/wrc10813|publisher=[[BBC]]|access-date=18 August 2013}}</ref> An updated, extending version of the Eleventh Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver, named the Twelfth Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver Universal Remote Control, was released on 8 July 2015, to replace the older version, which is no longer produced.<ref>{{cite web|title=Doctor Who 12th Doctor Sonic Screwdriver Remote To Debut at Comic-Con|url=http://www.gotham-news.com/news/2015/06/29/doctor-who-twelfth-doctor-sonic-screwdriver-remote-control-to-debut-at-comic-con|publisher=Gotham News|access-date=31 October 2016|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161031212118/http://www.gotham-news.com/news/2015/06/29/doctor-who-twelfth-doctor-sonic-screwdriver-remote-control-to-debut-at-comic-con|archive-date=31 October 2016}}</ref> |
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Underground Toys have released the [[War Doctor]]'s sonic screwdriver; titled "The Other Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver", it was released in the UK in November/December 2013<ref>{{cite web|title=Doctor Who – The Other Doctors Sonic Screwdriver|url=http://www.forbiddenplanet.co.uk/doctor-who-the-other-doctors-sonic-screwdriver|publisher=forbiddenplanet.co.uk|access-date=28 November 2013|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131203070416/http://www.forbiddenplanet.co.uk/doctor-who-the-other-doctors-sonic-screwdriver|archive-date=3 December 2013}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=January 2018}} and in the US January 2014.<ref>{{cite web|title=Doctor Who The Day of the Doctor War Doctor Sonic Screwdriver|url=http://www.entertainmentearth.com/prodinfo.asp?number=UT05152#.UpdKN8RdWSo|publisher=entertainmentearth.com|access-date=28 November 2013}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=January 2018}} |
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Character Options have also released toy versions of the [[Third Doctor|Third]], [[Fourth Doctor|Fourth]], [[Fifth Doctor|Fifth]], and [[Eighth Doctor]]s' Sonic Screwdrivers.<ref>{{cite web|title=Doctor Who Electronic Sonic Screwdriver Collection – Third Doctor|url=http://www.character-online.com/products/doctor-who-toys/toys/Sonic-Screwdriver-Collection-Third-Doctor/|publisher=Character Options|access-date=12 May 2016}}{{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Doctor Who Electronic Sonic Screwdriver Collection – Fourth Doctor|url=http://www.character-online.com/products/doctor-who-toys/toys/Sonic-Screwdriver-Collection-Fourth-Doctor/|publisher=Character Options|access-date=12 May 2016}}{{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Doctor Who Electronic Sonic Screwdriver Collection – Eighth Doctor|url=http://www.character-online.com/products/doctor-who-toys/toys/Sonic-Screwdriver-Collection-Eighth-Doctor/|publisher=Character Options|access-date=12 May 2016|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140120041337/http://www.character-online.com/products/doctor-who-toys/toys/Sonic-Screwdriver-Collection-Eighth-Doctor/|archive-date=20 January 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Doctor Who – Sonic Screwdriver Wave 2 – 5th Doctor|url=http://www.forbiddenplanet.co.uk/doctor-who-sonic-screwdriver-wave-2-5th-doctor?|publisher=[[Forbidden Planet (bookstore)|Forbidden Planet International]]|access-date=17 January 2014|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140720011747/http://www.forbiddenplanet.co.uk/doctor-who-sonic-screwdriver-wave-2-5th-doctor|archive-date=20 July 2014}}</ref> |
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== References == |
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=== Notes === |
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{{Reflist|group=note}} |
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=== Citations === |
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{{Reflist}} |
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== External links == |
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* [http://www.paratime.ca/v_and_v/pics/sonicsc.jpg Sonic screwdriver diagram] |
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* [http://nzdwfc.tetrap.com/archive/tsv31/sonicscrewdriver.html List of appearances and functions in the classic series] |
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* [http://www.sfx.co.uk/page/sfx?entry=the_sonic_swiss_army_knife List of appearances and functions in the 2005–2009 series] at SFX |
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* [http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/sounds/sonicscrewdriver.mp3 Sonic screwdriver sound effect from the current series] ([[.mp3|MP3]]) |
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* [https://tardis.wiki/wiki/Sonic_screwdriver Sonic Screwdriver] at the Tardis Wiki |
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{{Doctor Who}} |
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[[Category:Doctor Who]] |
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[[fr:Tournevis sonique]] |
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[[Category:Fictional elements introduced in 1968]] |
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[[ko:소닉 스크류드라이버]] |
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[[Category:Fictional technology]] |
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[[ru:Звуковая отвёртка]] |
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[[Category:Science fiction weapons]] |
Latest revision as of 12:18, 24 December 2024
Sonic screwdriver | |
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Doctor Who television series element | |
Publisher | BBC |
First appearance |
|
Created by | (Series) (Story) Victor Pemberton |
Genre | Science fiction |
In-universe information | |
Type | Hand tool |
Function | Various, see Functions |
Affiliation | The Doctor |
The sonic screwdriver is a fictional multifunctional tool[1] in the British science fiction television programme Doctor Who and its spin-offs, used by the Doctor. Like the TARDIS, it has become one of the icons of the programme, and spin-off media such as The Sarah Jane Adventures and Torchwood have replicated its functions in devices such as the sonic lipstick, sonic blaster, sonic probe, sonic modulator and sonic cane.
The sonic screwdriver was introduced in 1968 in the story Fury from the Deep, and used twice more (The Dominators and The War Games) during the Second Doctor's tenure. It became a popular tool for the Third Doctor and Fourth Doctor. It was written out of the series in 1982 due to the limitations it caused when writing for the show. It then featured briefly in the 1996 Doctor Who television movie, before making a full return in the 2005 continuation of the series.
Throughout the programme, there have been many different versions of the sonic screwdriver, as with subsequent Doctors the design of it was changed. It has also been destroyed on a number of occasions, thus leading to the introduction of the next model. Not all iterations of the Doctor have used the sonic screwdriver on screen; the Fifth Doctor in fact opted not to replace his after it was destroyed in "The Visitation".
The Twelfth Doctor loses his sonic screwdriver to the creator of the Daleks, Davros, after lending it to him when he was a child. In the last episode of Series 9, the Doctor received a new sonic screwdriver from the TARDIS in place of the sonic sunglasses he had been using temporarily in the meantime.
Despite the Doctor's claim not to entrust his screwdriver to anyone, he lends one to his own doppelgänger in "The Rebel Flesh," and again supplies Rory Williams for its third job in his care in "The Girl Who Waited," after having given or loaning Rory one in "A Good Man Goes to War" and slipping him one in "The Big Bang". He also gifts one to River Song in "The Husbands of River Song," which is then used by the Tenth Doctor to "save" her life in a previous TV story, "Forest of the Dead."
Functions
[edit]This section possibly contains original research. (January 2018) |
The functions of a sonic screwdriver are based on its power over sound waves, radiation, wavelengths, frequencies, signals, and electromagnetism. It is shown to hack, disable, activate, and otherwise control technology from almost everything, allowing it to remotely control almost any machinery, mechanisms, and computers it is applied to, allowing it to open locks, detonate explosives, remotely activate electronics, override most systems, activate computers, and cause some energy weapons to burst into flames or sparks. There is technology the sonic is unable to interface with, such as wood, or the isomorphic controls seen in "A Christmas Carol". It also is capable of causing chemical reactions that allow the Doctor to turn eyeglass lenses black like sunglasses and causing cut barbed wire to regenerate (setting 2428B). It is also capable of detecting, amplifying and controlling certain energies, sound, signals, frequencies, and waves, allowing the Doctor to intercept a teleporting individual and send them where he chooses, scan and identify matter, send out communications, enhance sounds, signals, and frequencies, and acting as a catalyst or conduit for energies. Sonics are also capable of calculations, such as The Day of the Doctor (2013), when the War Doctor used calculations to allow the sonic to work on wood, the calculations of which appeared partly done on the Tenth Doctor's sonic and completed in the Eleventh's. The War Doctor also used his sonic in tandem with the Tenth and Eleventh's to create a force field wave to repel a Dalek.
These are more specific functions of the sonic screwdriver:
- Unlocking or locking a door
- Burning or cutting certain substances
- Remotely detonating specific machines or explosives
- Amplifying sound waves and the power of an X-ray machine beyond its normal capacities
- Disarming weapons and electronics
- Flashlight
- Intercepting and conducting teleportation
- Hacking an ATM
- Regenerating barbed wire on a fence
- Darkening eyeglass lenses to transform them into sunglasses
- Microphone (when connected to an audio amplifier)
- Detecting and interpreting signals
- Conducting medical scans
- Fixing
- Locking the coordinates of the TARDIS
- Tracking alien life
- Using red setting or dampers
- Controlling the properties of atoms and molecules on a small scale
- Operating computers, whether their origin is alien or human
- Providing geolocation
- Lighting candles
- Creating a force field wave with two (or possibly more) other sonics to physically repel a Dalek (it may have to be the same sonic device at different points in its own time stream)
- Modifying a mobile phone
- Disclosing and deactivating camouflage
- Disarming robotics
- Scanning and classifying matter
- Shattering glass
- Creating an "acoustic corridor" for speaking with someone far away
- Shocking neural centers of living organisms
- Downloading a person's consciousness and transferring it into a computer hard drive (only seen in a special model created by The Doctor as a gift to River Song)
- Triggering particular protocols of the TARDIS
- Tightening and loosening screws
- Resonating concrete
- Creating glass-like walls ("Force Field")
- Creating holographic screens
- Reconstructing the TARDIS
- Hijacking traffic lights
- Creating a field that silences all noise
Aside from being a tool, the sonic screwdriver can be used and considered as a defensive weapon, which is effective for a few types of assault weapons, but not designed to kill or injure living things as the only way it can really hurt or incapacitate an organism is by emitting painful bursts of sound, or, as of "Day of the Moon" (2011) by blasting a green wave of energy to incapacitate a target, though only the Eleventh and Twelfth's sonic has been shown to do the latter.
History
[edit]1968–1982 and 1996
[edit]The sonic screwdriver made its first appearance in the serial Fury from the Deep (1968), written by Victor Pemberton.[2] It was used thereafter by the Second Doctor as a multi-purpose tool, with occasional variations in appearance over the course of the series.
Its abilities and overall appearance varied greatly during the classic series. The name implies that it operates through the use of sound waves to exert physical forces on objects remotely. During the Second Doctor's tenure, it functioned much as its name implied—using sonic waves to dismantle equipment or to bypass locks. In addition, it was used as a welding torch in Episode Five of The Dominators (1968). In the audio commentary for The Sea Devils (1972), Michael Briant claims to have suggested it as a one-off gadget in 1968.[3]
During the Third Doctor's tenure, producer Barry Letts was adamant that the device should not become a cure-all for the series and limited its use to avoid writers becoming over-reliant on it. During this time, the device underwent significant design changes. In The Sea Devils, the Doctor used it to detonate landmines; Michael E. Briant explains that this was feasible, stating that the sonic waves shook the mines. In The Three Doctors (1972–73), the sonic screwdriver is almost unrecognisable, being a unique, one-use prop with a plastic red spherical head. In the DVD commentary, Letts himself remarks on the thickness of the prop and the fact that it belies the idea that it was the regular one, prompting Katy Manning to question whether it was indeed a sonic screwdriver.[4] This was due to the serial being produced out of transmission order: the original sonic screwdriver prop went missing during the recording of Carnival of Monsters (1973), requiring a new prop to be built for the rest of the season;[5] The Three Doctors was recorded after Carnival, but set before it, so the screwdriver could be seen to revert to its previous appearance for one story after The Three Doctors before receiving a more permanent redesign thereafter.
During the first three years of the Fourth Doctor's tenure, producer Philip Hinchcliffe further reduced the use of the sonic screwdriver. Exceptions include Robot (which was the last story to be produced by Barry Letts), where it was again used to detonate mines, and as a "miniature sonic lance"[note 1] to cut out a lock. Aside from unlocking doors, the device was greatly downplayed during the Fourth Doctor's second and third seasons. It saw a resurgence once Graham Williams took over as producer in 1977. In the final story of season 15, The Invasion of Time, the Fourth Doctor conceded, "Not even the sonic screwdriver can get me out of this one."
It featured regularly in season 16 during the Key to Time saga. The Doctor's Time Lady companion Romana constructed a sonic screwdriver of her own similar to the Doctor's. It is depicted as being smaller and sleeker than the Doctor's, and he was sufficiently impressed with her design that he attempted to swap screwdrivers with her in The Horns of Nimon (1979–80). By season 18, both script editor Christopher H Bidmead and producer John Nathan-Turner were eager to downplay the device as much as possible.
The sonic screwdriver was written out of the series late in season 19, in the Fifth Doctor serial The Visitation (1982). It is destroyed by a Terileptil to prevent the Doctor from escaping a holding cell; in response, the Doctor sorrowfully remarked, "I feel as if you've just killed an old friend." Eric Saward later explained in a 2005 DVD interview[6] that this was done on the instructions of producer John Nathan-Turner. Saward had written out the sonic screwdriver, believing that the Doctor had "a cupboard full of them" in the TARDIS. On the basis that a device that could help in any situation was very limiting for the script, Nathan-Turner decided that it would not return.[7] The Tenth Doctor joked about the Fifth Doctor's lack of sonic screwdriver in the mini-episode "Time Crash" (2007), commenting that he "went hands-free" and could "save the universe using a kettle and some string." The device did not appear again for the remainder of the original series.
In the Doctor Who TV Movie (1996) and "The Night of the Doctor" (2013), the Seventh (TVM), Eighth (both), & the War Doctor ("The Night of the Doctor") were seen to have a new sonic screwdriver with a telescopic mechanism: similar to its predecessors but with subtle differences such as a gold/brass band on the handle, a flat base and a red emitter tip.
2005–2010
[edit]This section may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience.(November 2013) |
A redesigned sonic screwdriver appears in the new series, with a blue light in addition to the sound effect. In its first incarnation, the prop used in the new series was fragile and prone to breakage. Over the course of the next two years, the props were continually repaired and modified, with some additions being a new thumb slider design and different colours of wires used in the clear channel when extended.
For series 4 (2008), a new design of Screwdriver was commissioned by the BBC. Nick Robatto was hired to make two new props. These featured the final slider design, and redesigned body ridges, among other smaller changes. This design debuted in 2008's "Partners in Crime" and continued to be used until the Screwdriver's ultimate destruction in 2010's "The Eleventh Hour". This later design has gained the nickname "Series 3–4 Sonic" (relating to the fact that at the start of Series 3, in "Smith and Jones", the first Sonic Screwdriver was supposedly destroyed), even though strictly speaking it first appeared in Series 4.[8]
In contrast with Nathan-Turner's attitude that the sonic screwdriver should not be used as a cure-all, the new production team gave it even more functionality than previous versions. Some of the uses in the new series include: repairing electronic equipment; re-attaching materials such as barbed wire; detecting, intercepting and sending signals; remotely operating the TARDIS; burning, cutting, or igniting substances; fusing metal; scanning and identifying substances; amplifying or augmenting sound; modifying mobile phones to enable "universal roaming"; disabling alien disguises; resonating concrete; reversing teleportation of another entity. It is sometimes used to disassemble robotic enemies or turn other objects into weapons; healing cuts and wounds. In "The Parting of the Ways" (2005) and "Utopia" (2007), it is used to operate the TARDIS controls remotely; when the Doctor attempts to counteract the Master's theft of the TARDIS, it is used to limit the TARDIS' destination. In "Doomsday" (2006), the Doctor states that the sonic screwdriver does not kill, wound or maim; however, it is sometimes brandished in a threatening manner, such as in "The Christmas Invasion" (2005), "The Impossible Planet" (2006), "The Runaway Bride" (2006), "The Lazarus Experiment" (2007), "The Day of the Doctor" (2013), and The Infinite Quest (2007). In "World War Three" (2005), when confronted by a group of Slitheen, the Doctor threatens to "triplicate the flammability" of a bottle of port wine with the sonic screwdriver, though one of the Slitheen realises he is bluffing. In "Closing Time" (2011), ringed energy beams are seen emitted from the device, giving it a more weapon-like appearance, particularly when used to disable a weakened Cyberman at a distance.
In "Smith and Jones", the sonic screwdriver burns out after the Doctor uses it to amplify the radiation output of a hospital X-ray machine. In the "Series Three concept Artwork Gallery",[1] [2] when referring to the burnt out sonic screwdriver, Peter McKinstry says "the green crystal structure visible under the shattered dome refers back to the TARDIS console crystal. It's the same technology – the TARDIS's little brother."[9] Though initially saddened at the loss of the screwdriver, the Doctor obtains a new one at the conclusion of the episode.
The sonic screwdriver is unable to open a "deadlock seal", used as a plot device to prevent an easy solution. Russell T Davies once mentioned that he would never make the sonic screwdriver the solution to an episode. In "Silence in the Library" (2008), while trying to open a wooden door, the Doctor tells Donna that the sonic screwdriver will not work because the door is made of wood, a fact later restated in "The Hungry Earth" (2010); when Rory complains about this, the Doctor counters to not "diss the sonic." The sonic screwdriver's inability to work on wood is clarified in "In the Forest of the Night" (2014), when the Doctor states that the sonic screwdriver works by manipulating the moving parts in various machinery: since plant tissue lacks said moving parts, it is unaffected by the sonic screwdriver. In "The Parting of the Ways" (2005), the Doctor mentions that when Emergency Program One was activated, the sonic screwdriver would receive a signal from the TARDIS. In "Forest of the Dead" (2008), he claims that a few hair-dryers can interfere with the device, though he states that he is "working on that".
2010–2015
[edit]In "The Eleventh Hour" (2010), the malfunctioning sonic screwdriver is destroyed when the Doctor tries to signal the Atraxi ships. The Doctor later receives a new one, which emerges from the newly regenerated TARDIS console. The Eleventh Doctor's sonic screwdriver is larger than its predecessor; it has a green light and metal claws that extend with a flick of the wrist. It is shown to have been created by the TARDIS as part of its automatic regeneration.
In "A Christmas Carol" (2010), the Doctor advises a young Kazran Sardick to pursue romance while implying that in a similar situation in his own past he had instead gone to his room to "design a new kind of screwdriver." Also in that episode, the sonic screwdriver gets split into two pieces, one of which ends up inside a flying shark. The remaining piece is said to be signalling its other half in an effort to repair itself. The Doctor uses this to send a signal through the half inside the sky shark to open up the clouds. Afterwards, the half not in the shark is left with Kazran Sardick. The Doctor tells Kazran that he can call him for help using the Sonic; though Kazran declines to do so. The Doctor had duplicates of this screwdriver, which he continued to use throughout his travels.
In "Let's Kill Hitler" (2011), it is explained that instead of having settings, this version operates through a psychic interface, basically doing whatever the user thinks of while pointing and holding down the button. This version of the screwdriver also appears, although never officially announced, to have a flashlight setting, as the Doctor is seen to have it emitting a continuous glow while not uttering the classic sonic noise. Also in the episode, the Doctor uses another modified version of his sonic, which he calls a "Sonic Cane". It is similar to a Tuxedo cane, except the top replaced with the upper portion of his screwdriver, with a metal ball cut in fourths attached to the claws.
Ahead of the 50th anniversary special, a mini-episode entitled "The Night of the Doctor" (2013) was produced in which the Eighth Doctor uses the sonic screwdriver twice. The Doctor uses his telescopic screwdriver previously seen in the TV movie, rather than his updated steampunk version which had been used in numerous Big Finish audio dramas.
For the 50th anniversary special, "The Day of the Doctor" (2013), another version was seen in the hands of John Hurt's War Doctor. The design was similar to the one used by Tom Baker's Fourth Doctor. This time the halo and bullet tip had been removed, replaced by a red light as well as a large red dial added to the base. Character Options released a version of this sonic screwdriver on 23 November 2013 at London's ExCel labelling it "The Other Doctor's Sonic".[10] It was established as a plot point in that episode that the sonic screwdrivers employed by various Doctor incarnations all use the same software, something the War Doctor exploited by running a calculation over a course of several centuries with the Tenth and Eleventh Doctors seeing the calculation completed through their models. It is also directly implied after the fact that the sonic screwdriver has actually been a part of every doctor's retinue, despite its disappearance for doctors six & seven; the Tenth Doctor says to the Gallifreyan high command, as all thirteen doctors are about to change history by saving the planet, that the calculations for doing what's about to be done have been "running all my lives." In addition, when combined, the screwdrivers of the War, Tenth, and Eleventh Doctor could create a sonic force field blast to repel and destroy a Dalek.
"The Magician's Apprentice" (2015) shows that the sonic screwdriver can create "an acoustic corridor" so that the Twelfth Doctor can communicate with a boy trapped in an extraterrestrial mine field. However, when the Doctor discovers that the boy is actually a young Davros, he abandons the boy, leaving the screwdriver behind, though it is revealed that he did save young Davros after all. Davros is shown to have kept the screwdriver in his possession ever since, and the Doctor tells Clara that he no longer has a screwdriver. By that time, the screwdriver had been withered and damaged by time and was seemingly useless.
Sonic sunglasses
[edit]In his first appearance at the beginning of series nine of Doctor Who, the Doctor is seen wearing black Ray-Ban sunglasses ("The Magician's Apprentice"), and he says that he no longer has his sonic screwdriver. Later, in "The Witch's Familiar", he unveils that the sunglasses are actually a wearable version of the screwdriver, claiming that he is "over" screwdrivers: "They spoil the line of your jacket." The glasses are used by the Doctor, and Clara on occasion, throughout the ninth series.
The sonic sunglasses appears to have the same basic functions as the traditional sonic screwdriver, such as scanning objects, while having features not seen before:
- Allowing the Doctor to hear people talking, even if they are several yards away and surrounded by loud noises ("The Magician's Apprentice").
- Reassembling the TARDIS after it has used its Hostile Action Dispersal System to avoid destruction by the Daleks ("The Witch's Familiar").
- Creating and controlling a sophisticated hologram of the Doctor through a WiFi system ("Before the Flood").
- Erasing alien encoding inside people's brains by having them don the glasses for a few minutes ("Before the Flood").
- Reading Internet pages and e-mail ("The Zygon Inversion" and "Extremis").
- Communicating with Gallifreyan battle cruisers ("Hell Bent").
The glasses appear to be more susceptible to damage than the screwdriver; in "The Girl Who Died", a Viking warrior takes the glasses off the Doctor's face and easily breaks them in half. Nevertheless, the glasses continue to appear via replacement or repair until the end of the season. They return the following season during the Doctor's temporary period of blindness, showing the ability to scan his surroundings and transmit the information to his brain, as well as transmit any data recorded to them. However, while he is able to tell things about a person such as height, weight, gender, age, and even heart rate, he does not get enough detail to know faces, clothing, etc. ("Extremis") He was once able to tell that a person was holding a computer tablet, but not what was written on it, as well as 'see' a combination lock but not the numbers. ("The Pyramid at the End of the World") In his final adventure, the Doctor uses the glasses briefly to examine the Testimony interface, much to the confusion and irritation of the First Doctor ("Twice Upon a Time").
2015–2017
[edit]In "Hell Bent", the TARDIS gives the Doctor a brand new sonic screwdriver. The new screwdriver has a TARDIS-blue shaft with gold and silver highlights. The upper half is a rectangular light grid that, when switched on, has four different functions: green light with low-pitched sound, blue light with high-pitched sound, green lights that pulse with a pulsing sound, and a blue light chasing pattern with a pulsing sound. The new sonic screwdriver is meant to represent the TARDIS. The Doctor first uses it in "The Husbands of River Song" (although he also employs the sonic sunglasses earlier in the episode). The new screwdriver has seen use in the spin-off show Class, where the Doctor increases the voltage of flood lights to expel the Shadow Kin and partially close a rift in space-time. He is shown to have working copies of every version of the Sonic Screwdriver ever seen before in a cup on his desk in "The Pilot." Nardole uses the Fifth Doctor's version when sealing bulkhead doors to keep out Daleks later in the episode.
2018-2022
[edit]In "The Woman Who Fell to Earth", the Thirteenth Doctor is depicted constructing a new sonic screwdriver out of scrap metal and an orange glowing device from an alien travel capsule. She proudly proclaims that the new screwdriver is forged out of "Sheffield steel". This iteration of the sonic screwdriver glows throughout its body with an orange light when activated. It was destroyed by a Dalek in part seven of the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip "Liberation of the Daleks" while in the Fourteenth Doctor's possession.
2023 (60th Anniversary Specials)
[edit]A redesigned sonic screwdriver, made of steel and brass with a long metal protrusion made its debut at San Diego Comic-Con on July 19, 2023. The screwdriver appears to be an amalgamation of different elements from the show such as the TARDIS Roundels, the Daleks' guns and the Master's Laser Screwdriver and was used by the Fourteenth Doctor in the 60th Anniversary Specials.[11]
In the first of the specials "The Star Beast", this screwdriver is shown to have upgraded functionality, such as being able to draw out maps and graphs, and also being able to create energy shields to block a corridor.
The screwdriver plays no part in the second special "Wild Blue Yonder", as the Doctor leaves it plugged into the TARDIS to help the machine repair; the TARDIS takes off by itself, with the screwdriver, shortly into the story.
2023–present
[edit]In December 2023, a reinvention of the sonic screwdriver was introduced for the Fifteenth Doctor.[12] The design is radically different from previous versions, with the shape now resembling a remote control rather than a screwdriver.[13] Gatwa revealed a Gallifreyan script on the sonic, which translates to "the sharpness of the tongue defeats the sharpness of the warrior", a Rwandan proverb.[14] The sonic also contains a crystal power source and a "USB"-style port which allows it to be connected to other technologies.[15]
According to Phil Sims, production designer, Davies initially expected that the Fifteenth Doctor would continue to use the previous Fourteenth Doctor sonic screwdriver, "the same way he'd inherit the TARDIS". Davies later changed his mind, believing it was important for "the new Doctor to have a new sonic". Michael van Kesteren, prop art director, said that he struggled to come up with a concept; adding that the team had been "quietly hoping not to have to do another one for a while", as the creation of the previous sonic was "such a complicated, time-consuming process". Sims opened it up as a "competition" to the art department, with the brief asking for it to be "funky", "something different" and not limited to "a stick that we point at people".[16] Davies was interested in changing the shape of the sonic as he worried that it looked too much like a gun:
This new Doctor for 2024, I worry that sometimes the old sonic starts to look like a gun — like a weapon that gets pointed like a weapon. And I wanted to just cool that down and check that out.[17]
He also wanted it to be "something every kid would want for Christmas".[18] Jason Davies-Redgrave, art department co-ordinator, wanted to think "as far out of the box" as he could, and sketched ideas based on a flip phone, a pebble, and an "alien croissant". The sketches were divisive at first, with Joel Collins, executive producer, elaborating that "if you'd got out of bed on the wrong side, you might have looked at what Jason had drawn, gone 'what is that?', and thrown it in the corner". Davies strongly supported the sketches, specifically the sketch labelled 'Organic Pebble Teddy Bear version'. The art department's challenge was to translate the chosen sketch into a 3D-printed physical prop. The sonic was designed to be "fully-functioning" with touch controls. Initially, an "all-metal version" was considered, but deemed too expensive. The prop required around 50 component parts, a rechargeable battery, and elastic band technology.[16]
Other appearances
[edit]Licensed media
[edit]BBC Books
[edit]- The Past Doctor Adventures novel The Murder Game, set after The Power of the Daleks, has the Second Doctor escaping from a locked room with a box-shaped sonic device, in which he muses on the advantages of building a smaller model. The novel Dreams of Empire by Justin Richards, set after The Ice Warriors and before Fury from the Deep, features the Second Doctor using the device to break through a concrete wall. Stories with the device used by the Second Doctor before the screwdriver's first on-screen appearance are plausible as the Doctor in that story indicates that the machine "never fails", implying its successful use before that adventure.[citation needed]
- The More Short Trips short story "Special Weapons", set late in season 24, indicates that the Seventh Doctor has a sonic screwdriver.
- The Eighth Doctor Adventures novel, Father Time, features an amnesiac Doctor attempting to recreate the sonic screwdriver with 1980s technology, eventually producing a bulky device nicknamed the "sonic suitcase".
- In the Ninth Doctor Adventures novel The Clockwise Man the sonic screwdriver is used to cauterise wounds, as a soldering iron, and to stop a clockwork mechanism. In The Monsters Inside it is used to provide light, but runs out of power in the process. In Winner Takes All the Doctor fails to open a lock with it and concludes that it "hints at alien involvement". It is used to examine electronic standing stones in The Deviant Strain. In Only Human it is used to restrain someone by welding wires to a chair; in the same novel the Doctor informs Quelly that the device contains 29 computers.
- In the Tenth Doctor Adventures novel The Stone Rose, the sonic screwdriver is used to sedate animals. In The Nightmare of Black Island it is used to provide light. In The Last Dodo it is used to distract animals, and to liquefy and re-solidify tarmac. In Peacemaker, it is used to stop bullets and to dismantle guns.
Big Finish audio dramas
[edit]- In the Big Finish audio drama Pier Pressure, Evelyn Smythe mentions that although the Sixth Doctor did not possess a sonic screwdriver, he fondly remembered it as his "door key". The Sixth Doctor uses his fingernails as a stand-in for the screwdriver as an escape method in The Nowhere Place.
- The Seventh Doctor uses the device in The Harvest and Dreamtime. His companions Ace and Hex use the device in the Doctorless audio drama, The Veiled Leopard.
- In Sword of Orion, the Eighth Doctor reveals that his sonic screwdriver has a torch built into the handle. In The Dying Days he uses the device to reflect the sonic cannon of an Ice Warrior back at his attacker. In Blood of the Daleks he uses it to trace a transmission beam.
Doctor Who comics
[edit]- In an untitled story by Gary Russell featured in the first issue of IDW Publishing's Doctor Who comic book (published February 2008), the Tenth Doctor uses his sonic screwdriver to destroy a sword and later sacrifices it in order to defeat a Sycorax hunter. Later, he indicates that he needs time to "grow" a new sonic screwdriver.
Virgin Adventures
[edit]- The Seventh Doctor regained his sonic screwdriver in the Virgin New Adventures novels, with its first reappearance in The Pit.
- The Virgin Missing Adventures novel Venusian Lullaby established that the First Doctor had a sonic screwdriver.
Red Nose Day
[edit]- In the Red Nose Day special, The Curse of Fatal Death, the final regeneration of the Doctor, played by Joanna Lumley, enthusiastically remarks that the sonic screwdriver "has three settings" when it starts vibrating.
- In a comic The Catherine Tate Show sketch, Catherine Tate's teenage character Lauren Cooper accuses her English teacher (played by David Tennant) of being "the Doctor". After much provocation, the teacher uses the sonic screwdriver to transform Lauren into a Rose Tyler action figure.
Unlicensed media
[edit]- The unlicensed fan fiction novel Time's Champion speculates that the Sixth Doctor has re-built the sonic screwdriver.[citation needed] He used a similar device in The Nightmare Fair, a script which was never produced for television but has been adapted twice.
- In the video game Daleks (published for operating systems of the early 1980s), the Doctor can use the sonic screwdriver to teleport and to defend himself against the Daleks.
Public appearances
[edit]- Matt Smith used the Eleventh Doctor's sonic screwdriver to turn on the Christmas Lights in Cardiff in November 2010. Its appearance was cheered by the crowd. During the Doctor Who panel at San Diego Comic-Con in 2018, Jodie Whittaker produced the new sonic screwdriver, prompting applause from the audience.
Related devices
[edit]This section possibly contains original research. (January 2018) |
Doctor Who
[edit]- The Doctor has used other sonic devices similar to the sonic screwdriver, including the "door handle" of Inferno (Liz Shaw having one of her own) and a pen-sized white noise generator in Four to Doomsday.
- In the 1965 episode Trap of Steel, the Doctor uses an apparently ordinary screwdriver to examine the metal of the Drahvin spaceship and other tasks.
- In the 1979 serial City of Death, Count Scarlioni's henchmen use a "sonic knife" to cut the glass in front of the Mona Lisa.
- In the 1985 serial Attack of the Cybermen, the Sixth Doctor uses a "sonic lance".
- In the 2005 episodes "The Empty Child" and "The Doctor Dances", Jack Harkness uses a "sonic blaster", referred to by Rose Tyler as a "squareness gun", capable of "digitising" structures by disintegrating them and then reversing the process, among other functions. The device resurfaces in "Silence in the Library" and "Forest of the Dead", now wielded by River Song. Steven Moffat confirmed in an episode of Doctor Who Confidential that the device was the same one.
- In "Smith and Jones", Martha Jones sarcastically asks if he's got a "laser spanner" as well as a sonic screwdriver, which he apparently did until it was stolen by Emmeline Pankhurst, described by the Doctor as a "cheeky woman".
- In "The Sound of Drums", the Master reveals his laser screwdriver. Unlike the sonic screwdriver, it is used as a weapon that can kill as well as artificially age its target, using technology developed by Lazarus Laboratories originally seen in "The Lazarus Experiment". It includes isomorphic controls, allowing only the Master to use the device. The design of the prop was meant to imply that the Master constructed it on Earth, and it was deliberately made larger than the Doctor's sonic screwdriver.[19] Like the Doctor's screwdriver and Sarah Jane's lipstick, the Master's laser screwdriver was also created as a children's toy with sound effects. The laser screwdriver reappears in The Doctor Falls when the Master encounters his later female incarnation, Missy. Again, his screwdriver acts as a weapon, the Master using it to destroy a Cyberman and to kill Missy, shooting her in the back after she stabbed him in the back.
- In the series 4 episode "Partners in Crime", the antagonist Miss Foster is shown using a sonic device identified as a sonic pen, which the Doctor describes as having identical functionality to his screwdriver. It could, however, open deadlocked windows and compartments in the Adipose building that the sonic screwdriver could not. After confiscating and briefly using it, the Doctor throws the sonic pen into a bin. The sonic pen took the form of a sleek, black and silver fountain pen with a blue light at the top and was made into a toy version which was paired with the sonic screwdriver.
- In "Silence in the Library", Professor River Song possesses a slightly bulkier sonic screwdriver, which she claims the Doctor gave to her in his future. The Doctor mentioned that he does not give his screwdriver to anyone. In the following episode, Professor Song mentions that her screwdriver is augmented with a "red setting" and "dampers". It also contains a hidden neural relay linked to River Song, saving her at the episode's conclusion—the purpose for which the future Doctor gave Professor Song the device. A toy version is available. It was revealed in "The Husbands of River Song" that it was the Twelfth Doctor who gave it to River.
- In "Journey's End", Sarah Jane Smith is seen using her own sonic screwdriver, or sonic lipstick to open a door on the Dalek Crucible.
- In the Christmas special The Next Doctor, Jackson Lake, who believes himself to be the Doctor, carries a regular screwdriver which he claims to be sonic. When the Doctor asks "How is it sonic?", Lake replies, "It makes a noise," which he demonstrates by tapping it against a door frame.
- In the series 6 episode "Let's Kill Hitler", the Doctor has a sonic cane which appears to have the same functions as the sonic screwdriver.
- In the series 6 episode "The Girl Who Waited", future Amy Pond has a "Sonic Probe" that she made herself. She claims she calls it a probe and not a screwdriver because that's what it is, and to signify that she has come to hate the Doctor. Later after she has forgiven him, she calls it a sonic screwdriver.
- Blue Peter announced that there will be three Sonic devices that will feature in Series 8 of Doctor Who, designed by Blue Peter watchers.[20] The first device is a Sonic Gauntlet for Jenny Flint that will feature making locks fall apart, radioactivity counter and receiver dish, that will allow you to watch shows.[20] The Second device is a Sonic Lorgnette for Commander Strax that has medical applications, such as X-ray, diagnostic lens (check for illness), and thermal lens.[20] The third device is Sonic Hat Pin for Madame Vastra that can be used as a remote control for her carriage and it can also be turned into a Sonic Sword with the flick of a switch.[20]
The Sarah Jane Adventures
[edit]In the Doctor Who spin-off series, The Sarah Jane Adventures, Sarah Jane Smith uses a "sonic lipstick", which is a gift the Tenth Doctor gave her alongside a new model of K9 and her scanner watch. It functions much like the sonic screwdriver, used primarily for opening and closing locked doors, and for disabling and re-enabling machines; like the sonic screwdriver, it remains ineffective against deadlock seals and wooden objects.[21] A toy version is available.
- In Enemy of the Bane, Mrs Wormwood (Samantha Bond) possesses a sonic device disguised as a ring called the "Phonic disruptor".
Torchwood
[edit]- In the Doctor Who spin-off series Torchwood episode "Fragments", genius Toshiko Sato's backstory reveals that she stole faulty designs from the Ministry of Defence and UNIT, which she used to construct a sonic device, referred to as a "sonic modulator", to trade to a terrorist organisation in exchange for her mother. The device is confiscated by UNIT, which imprisons Sato until she is pardoned and recruited into Torchwood by Jack Harkness.
- In the episodes "Day One" and "End of Days", Captain Jack Harkness uses a green device somewhat similar to a sonic screwdriver. Its origins and function are unknown.
- Toshiko uses a "lockpick" device in a number of episodes which replicates the door-opening function of the screwdriver.
- In Children of Earth, Gwen Cooper uses a similar device, which she refers to as a Gizmo, to deactivate CCTV cameras.
BBC books
[edit]- In the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel Alien Bodies, the Time Lord Homunculette has a sonic monkey wrench.
Commercial product
[edit]Ownership of the sonic screwdriver was retained by the BBC. Victor Pemberton told an interviewer for Doctor Who Magazine, "I'm very cross that the sonic screwdriver—which I invented—has been marketed with no credit to myself. … It's one thing not to receive any payment, but another not to receive any credit."[22]
The toy version of the new series design (made by Character Options Ltd.) was slightly larger than the on screen version to accommodate a working sound chip. It also includes an ultraviolet light and changeable invisible ink nib for viewing messages written in the ultraviolet ink.
A metal version of the sonic screwdriver produced by Wow Stuff mounts a functional set of changeable flat and Phillips heads under a removable cover as well as providing light and sound effects.[23][better source needed]
QMx were given the licence to produce accurate replicas of this prop. In 2012, QMx released an "Artisan Master Series" replica of this sonic screwdriver, in a strictly limited run of 25, priced at nearly $5,000. These replicas were handmade by original prop-maker Nick Robatto, and have now sold out permanently.[24][better source needed] QMx later released an Artisan Master Series replica of River Song's sonic screwdriver, limited to a run of 15, also made by original prop maker Nick Robatto, which has also sold out.[25][better source needed]
The Wand Company released a universal remote control styled on the Eleventh Doctor's sonic screwdriver on 3 August 2012.[26][27] Due to consumer demand, a Tenth Doctor version was released on 31 October 2013.[28][29] An updated, extending version of the Eleventh Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver, named the Twelfth Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver Universal Remote Control, was released on 8 July 2015, to replace the older version, which is no longer produced.[30]
Underground Toys have released the War Doctor's sonic screwdriver; titled "The Other Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver", it was released in the UK in November/December 2013[31][better source needed] and in the US January 2014.[32][better source needed]
Character Options have also released toy versions of the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Eighth Doctors' Sonic Screwdrivers.[33][34][35][36]
References
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ The Sixth Doctor uses a hand tool he calls a "sonic lance" in Attack of the Cybermen
Citations
[edit]- ^ Malankar, Nikhil (28 March 2017). "Sonic Screwdriver: 50 Uses of This Device From Doctor Who". Tell Me Nothing. Archived from the original on 9 August 2017. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
- ^ Nicholas, Stephen; Tucker, Mike (2015). Doctor Who: Impossible Worlds. HarperCollins. p. 200. ISBN 978-0-06-240741-2.
- ^ Commentary on DVD of The Sea Devils
- ^ Commentary on DVD of The Three Doctors
- ^ "NZDWFC: TSV 31: Is that a Sonic Screwdriver in your Pocket, Doctor?".
- ^ Commentary on DVD of The Visitation
- ^ Commentary on DVD of Castrovalva
- ^ "Toys and Games". BBC. 26 July 2005. Archived from the original on 16 December 2006. Retrieved 29 October 2006.
- ^ BBC – Doctor Who – Series Three concept Artwork Gallery Archived 27 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Doctor Who London Excel Convention Pictures". The Doctor Who Site.
- ^ "The Fourteenth Doctor's sonic screwdriver is available now | Doctor Who". www.doctorwho.tv. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
- ^ "Doctor Who officially introduces Ncuti Gatwa's Sonic Screwdriver". Radio Times. Retrieved 18 May 2024.
- ^ Graham-Lowery, Nathan (10 December 2023). "Doctor Who Reveals Ncuti Gatwa's Sonic Screwdriver (& It Looks Wildly Different From Any Before)". ScreenRant. Retrieved 18 May 2024.
- ^ Megan Garside (11 December 2023). "Doctor Who's Ncuti Gatwa's sonic screwdriver has a beautiful, hidden, message". gamesradar. Retrieved 18 May 2024.
- ^ "Doctor Who unveils Ncuti Gatwa's Sonic Screwdriver: A closer look at the Gallifreyan gadget". The Economic Times. 10 December 2023. ISSN 0013-0389. Retrieved 18 May 2024.
- ^ a b Kirkley, Paul (4 January 2024). "Sonic Disruptors". Doctor Who Magazine 599. Panini UK: 36–37.
- ^ Sepinwall, Alan (3 May 2024). "The new Doctor checks in". What's Alan Watching?. Retrieved 18 May 2024.
- ^ Kirkley, Paul (17 August 2023). "Designated 'Driver". Doctor Who Magazine 594 (18). Panini UK.
- ^ BBC – Doctor Who – Series Three concept Artwork Gallery Archived 27 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c d "Series 8 Sonic Devices for Paternoster Gang Revealed". doctorwhotv.co.uk. 19 December 2013. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
- ^ "The Sarah Jane Adventures – The Official Site". Alien Objects. BBC. Archived from the original on 6 September 2009. Retrieved 21 December 2006. (UK Access Only)
- ^ Cook, Benjamin (26 June 2002). "Friend of the Earth:-)". Doctor Who Magazine (318): 10–14.
- ^ "Sonic Screwdriver". wowstuff.co.uk. Archived from the original on 7 February 2011.
- ^ "Doctor Who – Eleventh Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver – Artisan Master Series". QMx. Archived from the original on 22 April 2016. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
- ^ "Doctor Who – River Song's Sonic Screwdriver – Artisan Master Series". QMx. Archived from the original on 21 April 2016. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
- ^ "The Wand Company and BBC Worldwide Unveil The Doctor Who Sonic Screwdriver Universal Remote Control". 11 July 2012. Archived from the original on 20 April 2013. Retrieved 12 July 2012.
- ^ "Doctor Who: Eleventh Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver Universal Remote Control". BBC. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
- ^ "The Wand Company presents two new Doctor Who Sonic Screwdrivers at San Diego Comic-Con 2013". BBC. 27 June 2013. Archived from the original on 12 August 2013. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
- ^ "Doctor Who: Tenth Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver". BBC. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
- ^ "Doctor Who 12th Doctor Sonic Screwdriver Remote To Debut at Comic-Con". Gotham News. Archived from the original on 31 October 2016. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
- ^ "Doctor Who – The Other Doctors Sonic Screwdriver". forbiddenplanet.co.uk. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 28 November 2013.
- ^ "Doctor Who The Day of the Doctor War Doctor Sonic Screwdriver". entertainmentearth.com. Retrieved 28 November 2013.
- ^ "Doctor Who Electronic Sonic Screwdriver Collection – Third Doctor". Character Options. Retrieved 12 May 2016.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Doctor Who Electronic Sonic Screwdriver Collection – Fourth Doctor". Character Options. Retrieved 12 May 2016.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Doctor Who Electronic Sonic Screwdriver Collection – Eighth Doctor". Character Options. Archived from the original on 20 January 2014. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
- ^ "Doctor Who – Sonic Screwdriver Wave 2 – 5th Doctor". Forbidden Planet International. Archived from the original on 20 July 2014. Retrieved 17 January 2014.