Companion programme Torchwood Declassified is a "making-of" programme similar to
Doctor Who Confidential. Each
Declassified episode runs under ten minutes, in contrast to
Confidential's 45 (formerly 30).
Torchwood Declassified aired on BBC Three (series 1) and BBC Two (series 2), and was also available online through the BBC's
iPlayer and dedicated
Torchwood site. Installments were produced for each episode of the first two series, with a single installment produced for the
Children of Earth DVD release.
Episodes Companion magazine In 2007,
Titan Magazines launched
Torchwood Magazine, which was released on 24 January 2008 in the United Kingdom. The United States version was launched in February 2008. The Australia/New Zealand version was launched in April 2008. The magazine emulated
Doctor Who Magazine in combining behind-the-scenes features with original story content in the form of a serialised comic strip and short stories; as the magazine's run progressed, the original fiction became more predominant. The magazine was discontinued in early 2011, after two-dozen issues. Titan published six issues of a monthly
Torchwood comic book in 2009 for North American markets; the comic consisted of reprints of the magazine's comic strips and short stories and was cancelled in the wake of the parent publication folding.
Electronic literature, webcasts, web series Torchwood has "a heavy online presence". At the
Edinburgh International Television Festival, BBC Director of Television
Jana Bennett originally promised that the series' online tie-ins were to include the ability to explore the Hub, an imaginary desktop, weekly 10-minute behind-the-scenes
vodcasts. "You can join the corporation of Torchwood and be one of its employees," said Bennett. The Adobe Flash-based interactive website, including the Hub Tour, debuted on 12 October 2006. Due to digital media rights restrictions most video content on the BBC Three websites is only
accessible to users within the UK.
Torchwood many tie-in websites amount to an
alternate reality game; the show's online presence was an example of
electronic literature. On the first website (for series 1), the alternate reality game was mostly composed of weekly updates to the site in the form of fictional intercepted blogs, newspaper cutouts and confidential letters and IM conversations between members of the Torchwood Three crew.
Convergence: the International Journal of Research into New Media commented on
Doctor Who and
Torchwood foray into "convergence culture" as an achievement "on an unprecedented scale, with the BBC currently using the series to trial a plethora of new technologies, including: mini-episodes on mobile phones, podcast commentaries, interactive red-button adventures, video blogs, companion programming, and 'fake' metatextual websites." For the second series in 2008, a second interactive
Torchwood online game was devised, scripted by series writer
Phil Ford; this more heavily featured the actors of the series, particularly Gareth David-Lloyd, and
Siwan Morris was cast as a
pirate radio jockey investigating
Torchwood. During the fourth series of the revival of
Doctor Who, a crossover webcast production called ''Captain Jack's Monster Files
was launched, featuring Barrowman, in character as Jack, hosting a series of shorts profiling various monsters and aliens featured on Doctor Who''. These segments, posted to the BBC's official
Doctor Who website, included specially shot footage of Jack in the Hub. After Series 4, the segments were produced less frequently, with the last featuring Jack, released in December 2009, taking the form of Jack narrating a mini-episode featuring the
Weeping Angels entitled "A Ghost Story for Christmas". Subsequent
Monster Files webcasts released since 2010 have been hosted by
Doctor Who co-star
Alex Kingston as her character,
River Song. As with most other online video content from the BBC, ''Captain Jack's Monster Files
are not viewable outside the UK and to date (2011) have never been included on a DVD or Blu-ray release of either Doctor Who
or Torchwood
. The Torchwood Archives'' by Gary Russell collects much of this online literature for the first two series in hardback form, including the Captain's Blog section of the BBC America
Torchwood website. To promote its rebroadcasts of
Torchwood, the British digital channel
Watch has twice commissioned the creative team of the
Torchwood Magazine comic strip to produce brief online-exclusive comic strip stories for the Watch website. The first of these,
The Return of the Vostok, was uploaded in February 2009, with a follow-up,
Ma and Par, appearing in February 2010. Tying in with the launch of
Torchwood: Miracle Day, Starz produced a 2011
Torchwood webseries entitled
Torchwood: Web of Lies, which starred American actress
Eliza Dushku.
Radio plays Set between the end of Series Two and the beginning of Series Three, the BBC aired four Torchwood radio dramas featuring the cast of the series. As a tie in with
Radio 4's
CERN-themed day on 10 September 2008, a CERN-themed radio episode of Torchwood written by
Joseph Lidster, entitled "
Lost Souls", aired as the day's
Afternoon Play. This was the first Torchwood drama not to feature Burn Gorman and Naoko Mori. Three further episodes were broadcast on 1–3 July 2009: "
Asylum", "
Golden Age" and "
The Dead Line". In May 2011, the BBC Radio Drama newsletter announced that a further three
Torchwood radio plays had entered production. The new plays, titled "
Torchwood: The Lost Files", Part 1: "The Devil and Miss Carew", Part 2: "Submission" & Part 3: "The House of the Dead" were broadcast on 11, 12 & 13 July 2011 in the Afternoon Play slot at 14.15 BST and were available to listen to in the
iPlayer for one week after the broadcast. (By 2019 the BBC made radio dramas available on demand for one month to one year; about 25 radio plays were usually available, including 29 Nov. 2019 these three Torchwood episodes.) While "The Devil and Miss Carew" & "Submission" were set before "Children of Earth" with Gareth David-Lloyd reprising the role of Ianto, "The House of the Dead" on the other hand was set an unspecified time after "Children of Earth" and saw the return of Ianto this time as a ghost. In January 2015, Barrowman stated that
Torchwood would return, for the first time since
Miracle Day, in the form of several BBC radio plays.
Novels and audiobooks Accompanying the main series of
Torchwood are a series of novels. The books are published in paperback-sized hardcover format, the same format BBC Books uses for its
New Series Adventures line for
Doctor Who. The first three novels were later released, abridged, as audiobooks, along with other audiobook that have not been novels. To date all of the core cast members from the first two series have narrated at least one abridged or audio-exclusive reading.
Big Finish On 3 May 2015, it was announced that
Big Finish Productions would produce a series of six
Torchwood audio adventures starring John Barrowman as Jack. The new series of audio dramas will each focus on different members of the Torchwood team, exploring the impact that a mysterious event has on them, taking place at various times in and around the TV episodes. Starting off the range was John Barrowman, who stars in
The Conspiracy by
David Llewellyn, which was released September 2015. Big Finish later released shows billed as a continuation of
Torchwood, or "series five", featuring a regular cast of nine. Barrowman, Myles, Owen, and Price returned to voice their characters. New to the series were civil servant St John Colchester (
Paul Clayton), Ng (Alexandria Riley), news reporter Tyler Steele (Jonny Green), shapeshifting alien Orr (Samantha Béart), and a parallel universe version of
Yvonne Hartman (
Tracy-Ann Oberman).
Original soundtrack The soundtrack album which was released on 22 September 2008, containing 32 tracks of incidental music composed by
Ben Foster and
Murray Gold and used in the
first and
second series. Ahead of the CD release, the album became available for
download on the American
iTunes Store on 5 August 2008, and on the Silva Screen website on 8 August 2008.
Track listing ==Reception==