Battlefield (novelisation): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
mNo edit summary
m (Bot: Cosmetic changes)
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 6: Line 6:
</gallery>
</gallery>
|novelisation of = Battlefield (TV story)
|novelisation of = Battlefield (TV story)
|series          = Publication Order
|series          = [[Target novelisation]]s
|number          = 152  
|number          = 152  
|doctor          = Seventh Doctor  
|doctor          = Seventh Doctor  

Latest revision as of 18:10, 3 November 2024

RealWorld.png

Battlefield was a novelisation based on the 1989 television serial Battlefield [+]Loading...["Battlefield (TV story)"].

Publisher's summary[[edit] | [edit source]]

1991 Target Books edition[[edit] | [edit source]]

Only a few years from now, a squad of UNIT troops is escorting a nuclear missile through the English countryside. At the nearby archaeological dig, knights in armour are fighting battles with broadswords – and guns and grenades.

The Doctor arrives on the scene and meets two old friends: Brigadier Lethbridge Stewart, called out of retirement to help in an emergency, and Bessie the souped-up roadster.

Ace escapes from death by drowning in a submerged spaceship, only to find herself at the mercy of a demon known as the Destroyer.

The action is fast and furious, as expected in a script by Ben Aaronovitch, who wrote the classic Remembrance of the Daleks. And why do the knights address the Doctor as 'Merlin'? What is the power of the sword that Ace retrieves from the bottom of the lake? Will Morgaine carry out her threat to destroy the world?

This novelization is by Marc Platt, who both scripted and novelized Ghost Light, the story that immediately followed Battlefield in the 1989 season.

2016 BBC Books edition[[edit] | [edit source]]

'How do you do?' the Doctor said. 'This is Ace, and I am...' 'Merlin!' cried the Black Knight. His smile broadened in wonder and recognition. 'Merlin, against all hope!'

A UNIT nuclear convoy, stranded on the shores of Lake Vortigern, becomes the focus of an incursion by knights from a parallel reality. In this other world, technology and magic exist side by side, and the legends of King Arthur are fact. Close to the lake, the sinister Mordred battles against his enemy Ancelyn and summons his mother, the powerful witch Morgaine.

Is the Doctor really Merlin? And will he discover what actually happened to King Arthur? But time is running out for everyone as Morgaine takes control of the nuclear weapons and summons the Destroyer - Lord of Darkness and Eater of Worlds...

THIS NOVEL IS BASED ON A DOCTOR WHO STORY WHICH WAS ORIGINALLY BROADCAST FROM 6-27 SEPTEMBER 1989.

Featuring the Seventh Doctor as played by Sylvester McCoy with his companion Ace

Deviations from televised story[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • The opening sequence of the Brigadier and Doris at the garden centre is excised.
  • A flashback sequence includes an unknown future incarnation of the Doctor, who has red hair and wears a camel-hair coat. This incarnation would later reappear in a cameo sequence in Ben Aaronovitch's PROSE: Transit.
  • There is an extra opening sequence of Bambera being summoned to Geneva to be briefed on the nuclear missile transport. Excalibur's signal causes a storm, which is what grounds the convoy.
  • Walmsley is given an Irish wolfhound, Cerebrus. The dog is summoned by the Doctor with K9's old dog whistle to join the evacuation.
  • Ace is buried under rubbish when the TARDIS is thrown about by the signal.
  • The novelisation is explicitly set in the late 1990s and mentions dates not given on screen:
    • Walmsley's car tax disc reads 30.6.99 while Liz Shaw's old UNIT pass has the expiry date 31.12.75.
    • The Doctor pays for drinks with a 1998 five pound ecucoin.
    • Great storms happened in 1987 and 1995.
  • The Doctor carries currencies that include Pallistratum Gromits, seven-and-three eighth Rlarix Sovereigns, a mechanoid crab, and a five pound ecucoin.
  • The book is divided into four "parts": However, the first part ends prior to the cliffhanger to the broadcast part one, on Ancelyn recognising the Doctor as Merlin.
  • The novelisation contains material filmed but cut from the finished version such as Ace's jealousy of the Brigadier, her quoting of Clarke's Law, and a reference to European UNIT handling the Azanian ceasefire. (This material is included in the extended VHS and DVD versions.)
  • It also includes material from earlier drafts that was never filmed such as Rowlinson going to help Lavel after the helicopter crash, the Brigadier taking charge of Lavel's remains and Doris attempting to get information on casualties. It also uses the idea of the Destroyer initially appearing as an aristocratic man in a 20th century business suit, with his shadow being that of his demon self.
  • The Destroyer kills a group of soldiers who try to help Ace and Shou Yuing at the hotel.
  • There is extra background material of Morgaine and Mordred receiving Excalibur's signal, including Mordred being summoned from a tavern with his drinking partner.
  • Mordred's initial companions are named as Sir Comus and Sir Madlamor.
  • Ancelyn's back story is given: he was a Knight General in Morgaine's army who deserted because of an ancient family pledge to answer Arthur's call. He refuses to give UNIT information on Morgaine's army because of his old oaths.
  • Shou Yuing is given the family name Li.
  • Ace knocks Mordred down with Ancelyn's sword during their first meeting.
  • Ancelyn is specified as the one who killed the Knight Commander.
  • Rowlinson reveals he is a retired police officer.
  • Zbrigniev is killed when Morgaine and Mordred capture the missile.
  • It is Bambera, rather than the Doctor, who knocks Mordred unconscious as he is about to kill Ancelyn.
  • At the close, the Doctor ruminates on how the Earth authorities are negotiating Morgaine and Mordred's fate with their own dimension and how the mechanism for replacing Morgaine as ruler has broken down, before the Brigadier announces that he has had a job offer that will be hard to turn down.

Writing and publishing notes[[edit] | [edit source]]

  • Dedication: “For Ben the perfect gentle Knight who let his humble squire take over the reins”
  • This was the last novelisation of a televised story to be published in the short-form paperback format introduced in 1973; after one non-televised story adaptation, the format would switch to the longer, Virgin Missing Adventures format for the final releases.
  • The novel completed the Seventh Doctor story adaptations, with the exception of the 1996 TV movie which would be adapted by BBC Books five years later.
  • This was also the only Seventh Doctor novelisation not written by the same writer that had penned the televised story it was based on. It was also the final example of this for the classic series; John Peel and James Goss's adaptations of David Whitaker and Douglas Adams episodes would be published in other formats.

Additional cover images[[edit] | [edit source]]

British publication history[[edit] | [edit source]]

One single paperback edition, priced £2.50 (UK), estimated print run: 22,000 copies.

Audiobook[[edit] | [edit source]]

This Target Book was released as an audiobook on 5 May 2022 complete and unabridged by BBC Audio and read by Toby Longworth.

The cover blurb and thumbnail illustrations were retained in the accompanying booklet with sleeve notes by David J. Howe. Music and sound effects by Simon Power.