Blink and You Missed One of the Most Amazing Hours of TV on "Doctor Who"

I've been an ardent supporter of the new incarnation of Doctor Who since it launched back in 2005 with Christopher Eccleston in the lead role of the time-traveling Doctor. Since then, there have been a number of casting changes (goodbye Eccleston and Billie Piper, hello David Tennant and Freema Agyeman) but what has remained consistent is the series' undying creative spark and the scope of its vision and its constant need to take risks with storytelling.

That last element was never more clear than in the most recent episode of Doctor Who ("Blink"), written by frequent Russell T. Davies collaborator Steven Moffat, who has consistently written my favorite episodes of each season so far. (He wrote the fantastic WWII-set two-parter "The Empty Child" and "The Doctor Dances" in Season One and the mind-blowing "Girl in the Fireplace," guest starring Sophia Myles, for Season Two.)

Still, nothing prepared me for how surprised and shocked I would be by Moffat's latest, "Blink," despite numerous Televisionary readers telling me to watch out for this episode. It's one thing to focus on supporting characters in a one-off episode that doesn't advance the season's plot, but it's another thing altogether to introduce a new character and relegate your main protagonists (that would be the Doctor and Martha, natch) to a combined total screen time of under two minutes. But the real piece de resistance is that Moffat managed to create such a foreboding air of doom and such a lush atmosphere for the episode that you didn't need the Doctor or Martha to advance the story. In fact, their disappearance from the plot WAS the story.

But I'm getting ahead of myself. Let's backtrack for a second and take a look at the episode itself. The structure and setup of "Blink" is most analogous to Season Two's "Love and Monsters" episode, in which the focus had shifted from the Doctor and his then companion Rose to a sort of support group for people who have had run-ins with the Doctor. It gave the audience the opportunity to see the chaos the Doctor leaves in his wake from a differing POV.

Still, that doesn't approximate the emotional heft that "Blink" wielded, creating memorable characters that will live on in the viewers' consciousness long after the closing credits have run. With the Doctor and Martha trapped in 1969 thanks to a vicious alien race called the Weeping Angels, their rescue depends on a present-day photographer named Sally Sparrow, played by Bleak House's Carey Mulligan, in a role that makes me wish the Beeb had named her the Doctor's new companion rather than Catherine Tate.

So who has managed to do the impossible and stranded the Doctor? The Weeping Angels are silent assassins, who appear to be statues whenever you gaze directly at them. However, if you look away or, hell, even blink, they can swiftly kill you, depositing you in the past to live out your days while feasting on the energy of the life you might have had. Trippy, yes, but depressing to boot. Sally's friend Kathy is one of the first victims, finding herself stranded in 1902 Hull after she's attacked by the weeping angel.

It's up to Sally to piece together just what's happening but she appears to be helped by messages from the past: words scrawled under wallpaper in deserted mansions, DVD easter eggs, letters handed down through the generations. Behind it all is the Doctor and Martha, or at least that's what you're lead to believe. In a fantastic twist, it's actually Sally who is helping herself and the Doctor from the future and, in a rather fantastic twist, we see the first meeting between our time-travelers and Sally at the end of the episode. What other series would have its protagonists walk off screen knowing less than they did when the episode began? Or display a better understanding of the quirky realities of time travel?

Ultimately, "Blink" provided one of the most creative, terrifying, and ambitious hours in television, throwing off the shackles of linear storytelling with glee yet reveling its in own ability to create new characters that are instantly sympathetic and likeable. Sally may have ended up with Kathy's dopey brother Ben, finally forming that perfect partnership of Sparrow and Nightingale, but I'm not quite ready to see the last of her. With a series as unexpected and unpredictable as Doctor Who, I daresay that we probably haven't seen the last of her. Fingers crossed that she and the Doctor meet up again soon.

Next on Doctor Who ("Utopia"), Captain Jack Harkness (of Torchwood fame) returns when the TARDIS makes a visit to Cardiff; the Doctor encounters a professor at the end of the universe. Is the Doctor really the very last Time Lord? Find out tonight.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: How I Met Your Mother/The New Adventures of Old Christine (CBS); Deal or No Deal (NBC); Everybody Hates Chris/Everybody Hates Chris (CW); Wife Swap (ABC); Prison Break (FOX)

9 pm: Two and a Half Men/Rules of Engagement (CBS); Singing Bee (NBC); Girlfriends/The Game (CW); Wife Swap (ABC); K-Ville (FOX)

10 pm: CSI: Miami (CBS); Heroes (NBC); Supernanny (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

8 pm: Prison Break.

Ehn, I caught up on DVD this summer and I'm curious to see where they are going with this change in direction. In the season premiere ("Orientacion"), Michael, Mahone, T-Bag, and Bellick remain in notorious Panamanian prison Sona. Hmm, how long do you think it will take before Michael starts to plot a way out of there?

10 pm: Weeds on Showtime.

The third season of Showtime's acclaimed comedy, Weeds continues. On tonight's episode ("Grasshopper"), Mary-Kate Olsen joins the cast as the beautiful and very religious Tara Lindman, Nancy throws a cocktail party for the town's leaders, U-Turn pays a visit to Conrad and Heylia, and Celia and Sullivan get closer.

10 pm: Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations on Travel Channel.

The third season of Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations continues as Tony Bourdain travels to South Carolina, where he experiences Southern hospitality, culture, history, and cuisine.