Doctor Who/Recap/S27/E13 The Parting of the Ways

"Emperor Dalek: You cannot hurt me. I am immortal. Bad Wolf: You are tiny. I can see the whole of time and space, every single atom of your existence. And I divide them."

When we left our heroes, they were staring down an absolutely ridiculous number of Daleks. Who turn out to be mutated humans, trapped in their pepperpot cans forever.

The Doctor and Jack rig a force field out of Margaret the Slitheen's surfboard, and go fetch Rose. Jack tenderly kisses Rose and the Doctor goodbye on their lips, and goes off the stall the Daleks, knowing that he probably won't survive. The Doctor tricks Rose into going back into the TARDIS and sends her back to her own time to keep her safe. He activates a hologram recording that tells Rose to live a normal life, let the TARDIS die, and experience all she can as a regular human girl.

Rose won't have any of it and, looking for a way back, notices the words "Bad Wolf" everywhere around her in cloudy grey London. For the first time, she realizes that it may not be a warning at all... it may be an inspiration. She talks Mickey and Jackie into ripping apart the TARDIS to expose the ship's living telepathic core to her.

The Daleks approach the comms centre of the satellite as the Doctor is still preparing his wave attack, and they EX-TER-MI-NATE anyone they encounter—including Lynda and Jack. The Dalek Emperor tells the Doctor to make his choice. Will he be a killer like he was in the Time War, murdering every last human on Earth to destroy the Daleks? Or will he be a coward and let nature take its course? The Doctor realizes that he can't bear to repeat the actions he took during the Time War, and says that he'd be a coward, any day. Even if it means letting those mutated humans live on as Daleks forever. Even if it means he'll have to sacrifice himself.

Just as he's about to be murdered, Rose steps in, with time itself pulsing through her from the TARDIS core. As a catalyst for the Time Stream, she's become a literal Goddess from the machine, and she promptly kills every last Dalek she can find with a single word. On top of that, she scatters the words "Bad Wolf"—the name of the TV station—throughout time, space, and parallel dimensions, as a sign to herself. Oh, and she revives Jack. Remember the last time she saved someone who was supposed to be dead? What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

With all that, she collapses, and the Doctor, grinning, tells her... "I think you need a Doctor". He absorbs the full force of the Time Stream from her body by kissing her. It's a beautiful moment until it kills him.

Jack is left behind on the satellite so he can go star in Torchwood. The Doctor regenerates into David Tennant. Rose doesn't remember a thing, and is terrified when a strange man is suddenly bouncing around the TARDIS. From there, the ending segues into Doctor Who.

Tropes
""EXTERMINATE!" "I kind of figured that.""
 * Arc Words: The meaning of "Bad Wolf" is finally explained..
 * Alternative Character Interpretation: Is the Bad Wolf Rose reacting to the Vortex being inside her body...or, in light of the Doctor's Wife, the TARDIS suffering from being inside a physical body?
 * Big Damn Kiss
 * Big "Shut Up!": " I think you're forgetting something. I'm the Doctor, and if there's one thing I can do it's talk. I've got five billion languages and you haven't got one way of stopping me, so if anybody's going to shut up... IT'S *YOU*!!"
 * Chekhov's Resurrection: Captain Jack's resurrection by an unbelievably powerful but inexperienced omnipotence will have a huge effect on his future story lines.
 * Continuity Nod: Turning dead humans into Daleks is another idea repurposed from the period after everyone stopped watching the first time.
 * Deus Ex Machina: A literal example with Rose, a mere human companion, opening the heart of the TARDIS (although with help from her mother and Mickey), to telepathically pilot it to the 2001st cenutury to save the Doctor, absorbing the vast energies of the time vortex, emerging out of from the TARDIS as the "Bad Wolf" to save the Doctor from the Daleks. "The god out of the machine".
 * There's also the Dalek Emperor, who has come to think of himself as a god, due to having recreated the Dalek race as he saw fit.
 * Decoy Protagonist: First-time viewers who haven't been spoiled could be forgiven for seeing the title, seeing Lynda's role in the story and thinking it means that she's going to replace Rose.
 * Facing the Bullets One-Liner:

"The Doctor: It's not right! You can't control life and death! Bad Wolf: But I can."
 * Foiler Footage: An alternate ending where Rose dies was filmed with the intention of screening it for critics, but Davies decided it was too inferior to use.
 * Go Out with a Smile: Nine
 * A God Am I: Bad Wolf has shades of this.

"Bad Wolf: The sun, and the moon. The day, and the night. But why do they hurt? ... I can see everything. All that is. All that was. All that ever could be. ...My head... It's killing me."
 * Also the Dalek Emperor: "I reached into the Dark and made new life. I am the God of all Daleks!"
 * Heartwarming in Hindsight: Rose speaks to the Doctor while she is possessed by the power of the TARDIS, and she calls him "My Doctor".
 * Heroic Sacrifice: Several.
 * I Will Fight Some More Forever: Jack continues firing his pistol at the Daleks as he's backed into a corner. "Last man standing!" Finally, they've got him, and he spreads his arms in a "bring it" posture.
 * If We Get Through This
 * Kill'Em All: Virtually everyone on the station is slaughtered by the Daleks (who seem to sustain exactly one casualty before Bad Wolf unmakes them), and Captain Jack is the only one who seems to be restored to life. Only one person on the station doesn't die, and that's Rose. Granted, the Doctor and Jack get better, but they still die. And that's not even mentioning the offscreen deaths of potentially billions of humans on Earth, which the Daleks are bombing (we see entire continents distort from the blasts).
 * Lip-Lock Sun-Block: The Big Damn Kiss between the Doctor and Rose.
 * Love Triangle: The Doctor, Jack and Rose all kiss in this episode.
 * Morton's Fork: The Doctor doesn't have the time to refine the delta ray—either he lets the Daleks live and puts the whole universe at risk, or he commits another act of double genocide and takes out the human and Dalek races at once.
 * My Skull Runneth Over: Almost happens to Rose, so the Doctor absorbs the energy and blocks her memory.


 * Physical God: Rose, practically.
 * Reality Ensues: Lynda with a Y. The Doctor thinks she'd be a great companion and even likes the idea of her travelling with him, but when you have a Dalek Empire descending on the station... what do you think will happen to her.
 * San Dimas Time: Pointed out by Mickey when Rose is desperate to get back to the confrontation that's happening right now...198,000 years in the future.
 * Scary Dogmatic Aliens: "DO NOT BLASPHEME!"
 * Shaggy Dog Story: The elaborate battle plans and heroic resistance that most of the episode focuses on hardly even slow the Daleks down. Earth's bombed enough to reshape entire continents, everyone on the station apart from the Doctor dies in a one-sided massacre and the Doctor can't go through with destroying the rest of humanity to stop the Daleks. Only Rose's return saves the shaggy dog from getting shot.
 * The So-Called Coward: When faced with destroying all life in the system, he'll choose coward over killer any day.
 * Space Is Noisy: Chillingly averted. When the Dalek rises up to the window of Lynda-with-a-Y's hiding place, while you don't hear it, its dome-lights flash in what is clearly it shouting "EX-TER-MIN-ATE", before it blasts the window apart, opening the room to the vacuum of space (evidently, the Daleks say it more for themselves than anyone else at this stage).
 * Stable Time Loop:
 * Techno Babble: Try saying that while drunk.
 * You Shall Not Pass: Cap'n Jack!