The Memory Cheats (audio story): Difference between revisions

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|writer = [[Simon Guerrier]]
|writer = [[Simon Guerrier]]
|director = [[Lisa Bowerman]]
|director = [[Lisa Bowerman]]
|release date = [[September]] [[2011]]
|release date = [[September (releases)|September]] [[2011 (releases)|2011]]
|format = 1 disc
|format = 1 disc
|production code =  
|production code =  

Revision as of 02:32, 18 January 2014

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audio stub

The Memory Cheats was the forty-seventh release in the Companion Chronicles audio range. It was the third story of season 6. It was written by Simon Guerrier and featured Zoe Heriot.

Publisher's summary

Zoe Heriot remembers everything. But she remembers nothing.

A genius with instant recall, Zoe’s mind has been purged of her memories of travelling with the Doctor and Jamie in the TARDIS. And years later she is in deep trouble — prosecuted by the mysterious company that has evidence that she has travelled in Space and Time.

Except Zoe knows they’re wrong.

Aren’t they?

But if that’s the case, why is there proof that Zoe was in Uzbekistan in 1919.

Can the memory cheat?

Plot

to be added

Cast

References

  • The Bolsheviks have recently seized power in Uzbekistan.
  • Richard Lansing, a bureaucrat from the British Foreign Office, was born in Romsey in 1876 and was injured in the Second Boer War. His wife was named Elizabeth.
  • The Doctor poses as a Soviet official sent from Moscow to investigate the disappearance of several Uzbek children. He is consequently referred to as "the Comrade Doctor" throughout Lansing's report to the British government.
  • Jamie plays football for the first time in his life, with several Uzbek children.

Notes

  • This story's title is a quote commonly attributed to John Nathan-Turner, who was describing what he saw as fans' tendency to improve memories of older Doctor Who episodes which they hadn't rewatched for some time or which had been lost.
  • The story has an ending similar to that of the 1995 film The Usual Suspects.
  • This audio drama was recorded on 13 October 2010.

Continuity

External links