The Krikkitmen (unproduced TV story): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
(Info already mentioned. Undo revision 2713935 by 193.116.94.146 (talk))
m (Bot: Automated text replacement (-{{Unprod}} +{{unprod}}))
Line 1: Line 1:
{{title dab away}}
{{title dab away}}
{{Unprod}}
{{unprod}}
{{you may|Doctor Who and the Krikkitmen (novelisation)}}
{{you may|Doctor Who and the Krikkitmen (novelisation)}}
'''''The Krikkitmen''''' was an unproduced serial written by [[Douglas Adams]] and featuring the [[Fourth Doctor]] and [[Sarah Jane Smith]]. It was to feature a race of [[android]]s called the Krikkitmen, heralding from the planet Krikkit and aiming to destroy all life in the universe. The [[Time Lord]]s used a temporal prison to lock Krikkit away, but the Fourth Doctor stumbled across a group of Krikkitmen trying to free Krikkit using a key built from parts from the Earth game of [[cricket]].
'''''The Krikkitmen''''' was an unproduced serial written by [[Douglas Adams]] and featuring the [[Fourth Doctor]] and [[Sarah Jane Smith]]. It was to feature a race of [[android]]s called the Krikkitmen, heralding from the planet Krikkit and aiming to destroy all life in the universe. The [[Time Lord]]s used a temporal prison to lock Krikkit away, but the Fourth Doctor stumbled across a group of Krikkitmen trying to free Krikkit using a key built from parts from the Earth game of [[cricket]].

Revision as of 08:36, 19 November 2019

Unproduced Tag.jpg

The Krikkitmen was an unproduced serial written by Douglas Adams and featuring the Fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith. It was to feature a race of androids called the Krikkitmen, heralding from the planet Krikkit and aiming to destroy all life in the universe. The Time Lords used a temporal prison to lock Krikkit away, but the Fourth Doctor stumbled across a group of Krikkitmen trying to free Krikkit using a key built from parts from the Earth game of cricket.

This script was rejected by editor Robert Holmes in 1976. In 1980, Adams retooled the script as a feature film called Doctor Who and the Krikkitmen and submitted it to Paramount Pictures; after nothing came of this plan, he put many of the ideas from the story into his book Life, the Universe, and Everything.[1]

On 18 January 2018, this story was released as an official full-length novelisation, adapted by James Goss.

Footnotes