The Power of the Daleks (TV story): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Line 122: Line 122:


===Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors===
===Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors===
*Not only does the Doctor regenerate, but his clothes do as well. ""a side effect of a first regeneration?""
*Not only does the Doctor regenerate, but his clothes do as well. ''A side effect of a first regeneration?''
*There are quite obviously only 4 actual daleks - the others are clearly cardboard.
*There are quite obviously only 4 actual Daleks - the others are clearly cardboard.
*A Dalek crashes into a camera in one of the few surviving scenes.
*A Dalek crashes into a camera in one of the few surviving scenes.
*How do the colonists not recognise the Daleks after the events of ''[[Doomsday]]'' and ''[[Journey's End]]''? ''Perhaps for the same reason that [[Henry van Statten]] did not recognise a Dalek three years after the events of ''Journey's End'', whatever that reason is. [[Retcon]] in the water?''


==Continuity==
==Continuity==

Revision as of 09:36, 22 March 2009


The Power of the Daleks was the third story of Season 4 of Doctor Who. It was the first full story to feature the Second Doctor, played by Patrick Troughton. All six episodes are currently lost.

Synopsis

Following the Doctor's regeneration in to a new, younger body, the TARDIS lands at an Earth colony on the planet Vulcan in the far future. Mistaken as an official Earth Examiner, the Doctor discovers that a scientist called Lesterson is attempting to reactivate two inanimate Daleks found in a crashed space rocket. The colonists refuse to take heed of the Doctor's dire warnings that the Daleks are dangerous until it is too late. Once reactivated, the Daleks secretly begin to reproduce themselves in a bid to take control of the colony.

Plot

Ben and Polly regard the newly regenerated Doctor with suspicion.

Ben and Polly are bewildered after watching the Doctor transform into a completely different, younger man. The TARDIS lands on planet Vulcan, and as they cross the mercury swamps, the Doctor meets an Examiner from Earth who is then murdered by an unseen assassin. The Doctor indulges his curiosity; posing as the Examiner and with Ben and Polly as his assistants, they encounter a colony of humans, led by Governor Hensell. The colonists are unsure why an Examiner has been summoned; some believe it is due to the activities of an underground rebel movement, others believe it is because of a mysterious space capsule that had crashed in the swamps 200 years earlier. The Doctor admits nothing, even playing the fool (much to Ben's annoyance), hoping to expose the murderer of the real Examiner, and uses the badge he took from the Examiner's body to freely explore and observe.

He enters the laboratory where scientists Lesterson and Janley are studying the capsule. With the Doctor's subtle help, they are able to open a hatch where they find nothing but an empty entryway. Suspecting Lesterson has already been inside, the Doctor, Ben and Polly return later that night and re-enter the capsule. Finding his way into an inner chamber, the Doctor discovers two dormant Daleks, and a space where a missing third one must have been.

A power struggle becomes evident as Security Chief Bragen frames the Deputy Governor Quinn for rebel activity and sabotage of the colony's communication system (cutting them off from contact with Earth). The Doctor is reasonably certain that Quinn is innocent, but cannot confront Bragen without revealing his cover.

Lesterson admits that he has previously entered the capsule, but denies the Doctor's charge that he has hidden the missing Dalek. However, this turns out to be a lie, as he and Janley have secretly been experimenting on ways to revive it, unaware of its lethal nature. To the Doctor's horror, Lesterson interrupts an enquiry into the charges against Quinn, revealing that they have succeeded in reviving the Dalek (having removed its gunstick, after it blasted a lab assistant named Resno). The Doctor's dire warnings go unheeded as the Dalek drones repeatedly, "I AM YOUR SERVANT!"

Janley and Bragen are leaders of the rebel group, and kidnap Polly to ensure the Doctor's silence. Janley believes that the Dalek's destructive capabilities could be the clinching factor in their plans to take control of the colony, but has kept the knowledge of Resno's death from Lesterson (she told him he was injured) to avoid distracting him from his work. Meanwhile, the Dalek delights Lesterson with the breadth of its knowledge. In exchange for increased power and equipment, it promises to manufacture beneficial equipment for the colony.

Bragen and the Doctor close in on each other. Bragen knows the Doctor is an impostor, and the Doctor knows Bragen is the murderer, but neither can reveal the other without revealing themselves as well.

The Doctor discovers that the Dalek has revived its two companions. Lesterson feigns indifference, claiming he was about to do so anyway, but his trust in the Daleks starts to crack when he sees the trio chant conspiratorially, "WE WILL GET OUR POWER!"

While Governor Hensell is away on a tour of the outer colony, Bragen seizes the opportunity to solidify his power, and imprisons the Doctor with Quinn.

Lesterson's doubts are confirmed when he discovers that the Daleks are reproducing themselves en masse. When he notifies Janley, she cooly informs him about Resno's death, and how he's at fault for providing the Daleks with the necessary power and equipment to reproduce. Lesterson, already on edge, has a nervous breakdown. The Daleks, meanwhile are laying a network of static electricity conduits along the corridors that, once active, will give them free range of motion throughout the colony, and once they switch over to their own energy supply from the colony's, they'll be unstoppable.

Hensell returns to find Bragen seated at his desk. When he protests, Bragen kills him with a blast from a Dalek gunstick. The revolution has begun. Bragen is confident that with the Daleks on his side, success will be swift. Janley, however, is horror-stricken when Bragen gives her a list of rebel leaders to be killed, deeming them untrustworthy.

In the midst of the battle between the rebels and the loyal guards, the Daleks begin indiscriminately massacring both sides (including Janley). The Doctor, Ben & Polly seek shelter in the lab, where they find a deranged Lesterson. Lesterson distracts the Daleks at the cost of his life, while the Doctor manages to overload the Daleks' power supply, causing them all to spin wildly and explode. Bragen is killed by one of his own men (Janley's lover Valmar). Quinn, now in charge, is appalled at the aftermath: not only are casualties enormous, but the Doctor's fiddling has destroyed the colony's power supply and will take months to repair. The Doctor suggests to Ben and Polly that they'd better leave "before they send us the bill," and they sneak away in the TARDIS.

Cast

Crew

References

Story Notes

  • This story had a working title of; The Destiny of Doctor Who.
  • Dennis Spooner wrote the final version of the scripts, but received no on screen credit.
  • A photo of William Hartnell is used to achieve the Doctor's 'mirror trick'.
  • Polly is absent from Episode Four and Ben from Episode Five as Anneke Wills and Michael Craze were on holiday during the respective weeks in which they were recorded.
  • This is the first story to show the Dalek mutants from inside the Dalek machine.
  • Less than five minutes of footage survives of this story, but there are full telesnaps and audio recordings of the story.
  • One of the more notable clips shows the Daleks going round in a circle crying in a mad-like chorus:
  • Dalek#1: Exterminate all humans!
  • Dalek#2: Exterminate all humans!
  • Dalek#1: Exterminate! Annihilate! Destroy! Daleks conquer and destroy!
  • Daleks: Daleks conquer and destroy! Daleks conquer and destroy! Daleks conquer and destroy!
  • First Dalek story not to be written (or co-written) by Terry Nation.
  • First Dalek story to use the title format "...of the Daleks", the most commonly used title format for serials featuring the creatures, most recently used in the 2007 episode Evolution of the Daleks.

Archive Status

All six episodes are missing. The original broadcast video was wiped, and no film telerecordings exists in the BBC Archives. The audio for all six episodes, however, does exist, thanks to a fan's home recording. Telesnaps for all six episodes exist. Short segments of 8mm film footage from off-air recordings exist. Some footage copied for use in promotional material exists.

Ratings

  • Episode 1 - 7.9 million viewers
  • Episode 2 - 7.8 million viewers
  • Episode 3 - 7.5 million viewers
  • Episode 4 - 7.8 million viewers
  • Episode 5 - 8.0 million viewers
  • Episode 6 - 7.8 million viewers

Myths

  • Doctor Who's planet Vulcan predated Star Trek's. (Star Trek made its on-air debut in the US on 8 September 1966, pre-dating transmission of The Power of the Daleks by almost two months; and although Spock's home planet was referred to initially as 'Vulcanis' it became 'Vulcan' just a few episodes later.)
  • Tristram Cary's incidental music used in this story was taken entirely from the first Dalek story, The Daleks. (Some of it was taken from season three's The Daleks' Master Plan.)

Filming Locations

Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors

  • Not only does the Doctor regenerate, but his clothes do as well. A side effect of a first regeneration?
  • There are quite obviously only 4 actual Daleks - the others are clearly cardboard.
  • A Dalek crashes into a camera in one of the few surviving scenes.
  • How do the colonists not recognise the Daleks after the events of Doomsday and Journey's End? Perhaps for the same reason that Henry van Statten did not recognise a Dalek three years after the events of Journey's End, whatever that reason is. Retcon in the water?

Continuity

  • EDA: War of the Daleks offers an explanation of where the Dalek ship comes from.
  • The Dalek's reliance on static electricity is first referenced in The Daleks. In that story, as in this one, they draw it from the metal floor. In the second Dalek story, The Dalek Invasion of Earth, the Daleks draw electricity by means of dishes on the back of their casings. In The Chase they no longer have these dishes and can move freely with neither the need for metal floors or dishes. In Power the Daleks have apparently reverted to their dependence on metal floors. Or perhaps these are a group of the more 'primitive' city-bound Daleks that somehow reached Vulcan from Skaro.The Daleks do indeed chant that they are a 'new race of Daleks'. This suggests that they may indeed represent the more primitive Daleks which have elsewhere been superseded and destroyed. Or that the Dalek race, as a whole, had been destroyed. In the latter case, the events of Power could be placed after The Evil of the Daleks.
  • The Doctor regenerates for the first time, though the term "regenerate" is not used. The transformation of the Doctor's persona is not referred to as "regeneration" until Planet of the Spiders (Third Doctor/Fourth Doctor). In Power, the Troughton figure refers to the Doctor in the Third Person, and assumes the identity of another person, the Examiner, as if to make his true identity ambiguous. Polly is sure that he is Doctor. Ben less so, though he is sure by the end of the story.
  • First mention of the Doctor's Five Hundred Year Diary.

Timeline

DVD, Video and Other Releases

  • The surviving footage was released as part of the Lost in Time DVD in 2004.

Novelisation

Power of the Daleks novel.jpg
Main article: The Power of the Daleks (novelisation)

See also

to be added

External Links

Template:Season 4

TVStub.png

Template:Wikipedia