The War Games in Colour (TV story): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Line 97: Line 97:
* Perhaps the most notable deviation, one which was teased in promotional material prior to broadcast, was the complete [[Second Doctor's regeneration]] into the [[Third Doctor]], adapted from a [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e7hO8Zx4ATs fan video] originally uploaded to [[YouTube]] by [[Jacob Booth]], using archive footage of [[Patrick Troughton]] and [[Jon Pertwee]]. The [[The Disciplinary|original sequence]] in which the Second Doctor appears to spin and fade away is seemingly [[retcon]]ned as merely the process of transporting him from the [[Courtroom (The War Games)|courtroom]] to the [[TARDIS control room (An Unearthly Child)|TARDIS control room]] where he is seated. [[Flashback (narrative)|Flashback]]s going back to {{cs|The Power of the Daleks (TV story)}} appear as the Doctor begins to regenerate, evoking the [[Fourth Doctor's regeneration]] in [[TV]]: {{Cs|Logopolis (TV story)}}. The Doctor is sitting in a chair as he completes his [[The Explosion|fiery regeneration]]. The Third Doctor quickly finds that the TARDIS is on course to [[Oxley Woods]] on [[Earth]] in [[UNIT dating controversy|either 1970 or 1980]]. Finally, archive footage from {{cs|Spearhead from Space (TV story)}} sees the Doctor stumble out of the TARDIS before passing out, leading directly into that serial. Whilst numerous stories had taken advantage of Pertwee's absence from ''The War Games'' to establish a [[season 6B|timeframe]] in which the regeneration was delayed for some considerable time, the indication here is that the regeneration follows the trial with no interruption.
* Perhaps the most notable deviation, one which was teased in promotional material prior to broadcast, was the complete [[Second Doctor's regeneration]] into the [[Third Doctor]], adapted from a [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e7hO8Zx4ATs fan video] originally uploaded to [[YouTube]] by [[Jacob Booth]], using archive footage of [[Patrick Troughton]] and [[Jon Pertwee]]. The [[The Disciplinary|original sequence]] in which the Second Doctor appears to spin and fade away is seemingly [[retcon]]ned as merely the process of transporting him from the [[Courtroom (The War Games)|courtroom]] to the [[TARDIS control room (An Unearthly Child)|TARDIS control room]] where he is seated. [[Flashback (narrative)|Flashback]]s going back to {{cs|The Power of the Daleks (TV story)}} appear as the Doctor begins to regenerate, evoking the [[Fourth Doctor's regeneration]] in [[TV]]: {{Cs|Logopolis (TV story)}}. The Doctor is sitting in a chair as he completes his [[The Explosion|fiery regeneration]]. The Third Doctor quickly finds that the TARDIS is on course to [[Oxley Woods]] on [[Earth]] in [[UNIT dating controversy|either 1970 or 1980]]. Finally, archive footage from {{cs|Spearhead from Space (TV story)}} sees the Doctor stumble out of the TARDIS before passing out, leading directly into that serial. Whilst numerous stories had taken advantage of Pertwee's absence from ''The War Games'' to establish a [[season 6B|timeframe]] in which the regeneration was delayed for some considerable time, the indication here is that the regeneration follows the trial with no interruption.
** The Second Doctor completing his regeneration whilst seated notably defies the norm of both the classic series, in which the Doctor would regenerate whilst lying down, and the new series, in which the Doctor has regenerated whilst standing up. In this regard, it matches the sequence in the fanfilm {{cs|Devious (home video)}}, in which [[Tony Garner]]'s "Second-and-a-Half Doctor" completes the regeneration into the Third Doctor played by Jon Pertwee, who filmed the sequence in [[1995 (releases)|1995]].
** The Second Doctor completing his regeneration whilst seated notably defies the norm of both the classic series, in which the Doctor would regenerate whilst lying down, and the new series, in which the Doctor has regenerated whilst standing up. In this regard, it matches the sequence in the fanfilm {{cs|Devious (home video)}}, in which [[Tony Garner]]'s "Second-and-a-Half Doctor" completes the regeneration into the Third Doctor played by Jon Pertwee, who filmed the sequence in [[1995 (releases)|1995]].
** Several of the labels created for [[TV]]: {{Cs|An Adventure in Space and Time (TV story)}} appear on the [[TARDIS console (An Unearthly Child)|TARDIS console]], including "[[Gamma]]", the [[Fault Locator]], and the [[Temporal Regulator]].
** Several of the labels created for [[TV]]: {{Cs|An Adventure in Space and Time (TV story)}} appear on the [[TARDIS console (An Unearthly Child)|TARDIS console]], including "[[Gamma]]" and the [[Fault Locator]]. The label which was a tribute to [[Bernard Wilkie]], seen in [[TV]]: {{cs|Twice Upon a Time (TV story)}} as the [[Bernard Wilkie function]], is replaced with a new label denoting the controls as the [[Temporal Regulator]].
** The [[Yearometer]] shows the TARDIS moving through several years as it falls to Earth. In order, these years are [[2143]], [[2207]], [[2272]], [[2337]], [[2402]], [[2467]], [[2424]], [[2381]], [[2337]], [[2294]], [[2251]], [[2208]], [[2165]], [[2121]], [[2078]], [[2035]], [[1992]], [[1949]], [[1906]], [[1862]], [[1819]], [[1776]], [[1733]], [[1690]], [[1646]], [[1603]], [[1560]], [[1586]], [[1612]], [[1637]], [[1663]], [[1689]], [[1715]], [[1740]], [[1766]], [[1792]], [[1818]], [[1843]], [[1869]], [[1895]], [[1921]], [[1947]], [[1972]], [[1998]], [[2024]], [[2050]], [[2075]], [[2101]], [[2127]], [[2153]], [[2178]], [[2204]], [[2230]], [[2256]], [[2281]], [[2307]], [[2333]], [[2296]], [[2259]], [[2222]], [[2180]], [[2140s|214-]], [[2110s|211-]], [[21st century|20--]], and [[20th century|19--]].
** The [[Yearometer]] shows the TARDIS moving through several years as it falls to Earth. In order, these years are [[2143]], [[2207]], [[2272]], [[2337]], [[2402]], [[2467]], [[2424]], [[2381]], [[2337]], [[2294]], [[2251]], [[2208]], [[2165]], [[2121]], [[2078]], [[2035]], [[1992]], [[1949]], [[1906]], [[1862]], [[1819]], [[1776]], [[1733]], [[1690]], [[1646]], [[1603]], [[1560]], [[1586]], [[1612]], [[1637]], [[1663]], [[1689]], [[1715]], [[1740]], [[1766]], [[1792]], [[1818]], [[1843]], [[1869]], [[1895]], [[1921]], [[1947]], [[1972]], [[1998]], [[2024]], [[2050]], [[2075]], [[2101]], [[2127]], [[2153]], [[2178]], [[2204]], [[2230]], [[2256]], [[2281]], [[2307]], [[2333]], [[2296]], [[2259]], [[2222]], [[2180]], [[2140s|214-]], [[2110s|211-]], [[21st century|20--]], and [[20th century|19--]].
** When the TARDIS displays that the Doctor is simultaneously in [[1970]] and [[1980]], wording on the Yearometer says the spatial location is the [[Oxley Woods]], [[UK]], [[Earth]] and the section for the "temporal location" displays "-----ERROR----- [[83-NYRDWAM-6F]]".
** When the TARDIS displays that the Doctor is simultaneously in [[1970]] and [[1980]], wording on the Yearometer says the spatial location is the [[Oxley Woods]], [[UK]], [[Earth]] and the section for the "temporal location" displays "-----ERROR----- [[83-NYRDWAM-6F]]".

Revision as of 19:35, 24 December 2024

RealWorld.png

TVStub.png

The War Games in Colour was a colourised 90-minute re-cut and updated omnibus edition of The War Games, the seventh and final serial of season 6 of Doctor Who, and the last one to be broadcast in monochrome black and white.

Synopsis

The Doctor, Jamie and Zoe land in what appears to be No Man's Land during World War I. They soon discover that they are not on Earth, and uncover a conspiracy by the War Lords to conquer the galaxy, using conditioned humans stolen from Earth's history as their soldiers. The Doctor soon realises that he can't return the human victims to their own times himself, and resorts to sending for his own people, the Time Lords, for aid.

Plot

to be added

Cast

Crew

to be added

Worldbuilding

to be added

Story notes

Deviations from the original serial

Ratings

to be added

Filming locations

to be added

Production errors

If you'd like to talk about narrative problems with this story — like plot holes and things that seem to contradict other stories — please go to this episode's discontinuity discussion.

to be added

Continuity

to be added

Home video releases

DVD and Blu-ray releases

to be added

Digital releases

Following its television premiere, The War Games in Colour was added to BBC iPlayer's Whoniverse catalog of Doctor Who content.

External links

Footnotes

Notes

References