The Dark Dimension (unproduced TV story): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
(fixing link rot via wayback machine)
m (Updating links from Season 23 to Season 23 (Doctor Who 1963))
 
(153 intermediate revisions by 51 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''The Dark Dimension''' was a planned direct-to-video film commissioned by BBC Enterprises that was to have been released in [[1993]] to commemorate the 30th Anniversary of [[Doctor Who]].
{{title dab away}}
{{real world}}
{{unprod}}
{{Infobox Story SMW
| image          = The Dark Dimension-Cyberman Redesign.jpg
| series          = Unproduced Doctor Who TV stories
| number          =
| season          =
| story number    =
| doctor          = Fourth Doctor
| companions      = [[Ace]], [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart|The Brigadier]]
| featuring      = Third Doctor
| featuring2      = Fifth Doctor
| featuring3      = Sixth Doctor
| featuring4      = Seventh Doctor
| enemy          = Oliver Hawkspur
| setting        = [[Earth]] [[1936]], [[1999]], [[2136]]
| writer          = Adrian Rigelsford
| director        = [[Graeme Harper]]
| producer        =
| broadcast date  =
| format          = Unproduced direct-to-video film, rumoured limited cinema release
| production code =
| adapted into    =
}}
'''''The Dark Dimension''''', written by fan scholar [[Adrian Rigelsford]], was a planned film commissioned by [[BBC Enterprises]] that was to have been released in 1993 to commemorate the thirtieth anniversary of ''[[Doctor Who]]''.


It was to be a direct-to-video release, written by [[Adrian Rigelsford]] (a 'fan scholar').
== Initial production ==
=== Cancellation ===
''The Dark Dimension'' (later known as ''Lost in the Dark Dimension''<ref name="TSV">[http://nzdwfc.tetrap.com/archive/tsv44/darkdimension.html NZDWFC - TSV 44: "Inside the Dark Dimension" by Jon Preddle]</ref>) ran into obstacles which prevented it from being produced.


:''According to Rigelsford, 'Tom Baker went to the BBC and said "I would like to be Doctor Who again", and that's the reason why it happened.' Apparently Baker even suggested Douglas Adams as the script writer.'' <ref name="TSV">[http://nzdwfc.tetrap.com/archive/tsv44/darkdimension.html NZDWFC - TSV 44: '''Inside the Dark Dimension By Jon Preddle]</ref>
Some of the actors, particularly [[Jon Pertwee]] and [[Colin Baker]], were not pleased that their roles were so small (the script featured the [[Fourth Doctor]] prominently while the others had small scenes).<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20070714054815/http://www.msoe.edu/library/dr_who/on_with_the_show.htm On With The Show: Doctor Who's Legacy After Cancellation] via [http://www.archive.org/web/web.php Internet Archive: Wayback Machine] <small>accessed 17th March 2010</small></ref>


==Initial Production==
The main cancellation of the project fell to a miscalculation in the cost of the programme. A large sum of money had not been added to both the cost and revenue of the project — that of the cost of putting the show on the air. When the calculations were corrected, it became clear that it was no longer viable to produce the film financially.
'''The Dark Dimension''' (later known as ''Lost in the Dark Dimension'' <ref name="TSV"/>) ran into obstacles which prevented it from being produced.
Large among which was that BBC Enterprises (which was in charge of generating revenue, not producing films) it therefore lacked facilities, staff and experience in producing something such as '''The Dark Dimension'''.
:''...November 1992, BBC1 Controller Jonathan Powell heard of the project and objected to Enterprises making the production on the grounds that it was a marketing wing of the BBC and not a drama production unit.'' <ref name="TSV"/>


Actor availability was another of the problems which faced the production which began at some indeterminate time in 1992 (with an aimed release date of November 1993) scheduling all the surviving actors who played the Doctor ([[Jon Pertwee]], [[Tom Baker]], [[Peter Davison]], [[Colin Baker]] and [[Sylvester McCoy]]) up to that point would have been incredibly challenging and almost impossible considering the set date of release.
Attempts were made afterward to lighten the cost of the film by cutting key scenes and restructuring the film entirely - but these eventually fell through. Some minor elements of the scripts — such as characters not being able to be visible because of being in another level of time — were later used in the television story ''[[Dimensions in Time (TV story)|Dimensions in Time]]''.
Finally when [[Philip Segal]] (then part of [[Amblin Television]]) joined with [[Universal Television]] to co-produce a new TV series of Doctor Who (for the American Market), BBC Enterprises had to pull out of the project due to a conflict of interest. <ref name="Nth Doctor">Lofficer, Jean-Marc, [[1997]], ''[[The Nth Doctor]]'', [[Virgin Publishing Ltd]], Great Britain</ref>


Some of the actors, particularly Jon Pertwee and Colin Baker were not pleased that their roles were so small (the script featured the fourth Doctor prominently while the others had cameos). <ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20070714054815/http://www.msoe.edu/library/dr_who/on_with_the_show.htm On With The Show: Doctor Who's Legacy After Cancellation] via [http://www.archive.org/web/web.php Internet Archive: Wayback Machine] <small>accessed 17th March 2010</small></ref>
== The story ==
Far in the future of Earth, most humans have been wiped out. The Earth is left in ruins, the only people left on the planet being a resistance group which has been trying to hunt the creature that has done this to the planet. The group is searching an area, and their leader, Summerfield, suddenly finds a body. It is the [[Seventh Doctor]] — murdered by the creature. The Doctor is given a funeral which Summerfield finds fitting, as they are sent floating into sea and lit aflame. With the Doctor gone, Summerfield tells the others that they have to finish what the Doctor started on their own, attempting to send the creature who killed him into the [[time vortex]] to be destroyed. However, this would have instead sent him into Earth's distant past, where he would have plotted to change history.


==Central Characters and Ideas==
The central idea to the story was that the creature — disguised as the human scientist Hawkspur — would have averted the events of [[TV]]: ''[[Logopolis (TV story)|Logopolis]]'' so that the Fourth Doctor would have survived his fall instead of regenerating. Hawkspur also would have manipulated politics on Earth for the decades remaining, creating a world where he has ultimate power and a horde of monsters.
'''The Dark Dimension''' would have featured all surviving actors who played the Doctor plus [[Ace]] and a slew of monsters (in particular [[Cybermen]], [[Dalek]]s, [[Ice Warrior]]s, [[Yeti]]).
[[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart]] would also have appeared along with a character named ''Summerfield'' (who could be then Virgin Publishing's [[Bernice Summerfield]]).


The central idea to the story was that a creature prevented the [[Fourth Doctor]] from dying when he fell off the [[Pharos Project]] (at the end of [[Logopolis (TV story)|Logopolis]]), however his future incarnations do survive (some how), but, in doing so, the creature creates a 'Dark Dimension'. <ref name="Nth Doctor"/>
The story would have centred on an older version of the [[Fourth Doctor]], [[the Brigadier]] and [[Ace|"Dorothy"]] (all three from the timeline where the Fifth through Seventh Doctors never existed), with shorter appearances by the other surviving Doctors in minor roles, trying to defeat Hawkspur and set the universe right. Returning monsters would have included the [[Cyberman (Mondas)|Cybermen]], [[Dalek]]s, [[Ice Warrior]]s and the [[Robot Yeti|Yeti]].


==Monsters==
At one point, the Doctor, Dorothy, and the Brigadier would have been sent through time, encountering the [[Fifth Doctor|Fifth]] and [[Sixth Doctor]]s on the brisk of being erased from history. The former Doctors would have then been kidnapped by Hawkspur. Throughout the adventure, Dorothy would have slowly regained her former memories as "Ace" in the original timeline, culminating in her encountering the [[Seventh Doctor]] in a void, where he would he ceased to exist before her. In the same void, the Fourth Doctor would have spoken to a lingering spirit of [[Third Doctor|his third incarnation]], who would have given him solace.
Along with the inclusion of almost all the 'classic' monsters, many of them were to be redesigned or feature totally new developments of the original design.
[[Image:The_Dark_Dimension-Cyberman_Redesign.jpg|100px|right]]
:''"'The Cybermen were not like any we've ever seen before,' says Rigelsford. 'There was a specific Cyberman who was being made by the people at Henson's Creature Workshop. The guy who designed it, Nigel Johns, was trained by H.R. Giger [who designed Alien], so you can imagine that this particular Cyberman looked terrifying. It had holes in its knuckles and there was a point where it held up its hand, made a fist, and six-inch blades shot out of its knuckles! It was like Wolverine out of the X-Men comics; Cyberrine!'"''<ref name="TSV"/>


The Daleks also were to have featured a resign featuring a new special weapons Dalek.
The film was to have ended with the Fourth Doctor engaging in a sword fight with Hawkspur. The fight would eventually make it to the roof of the church — the form which the TARDIS would've taken in this alternate timeline — where the Doctor would eventually force the creature out of Hawkspur's body.


:''"'The Daleks were going to have laser-guns that were going to be done with computer animation so the laser bolts would be in 3-D rather than just going 'Zap!' with a blue line. The bolts were going to be like spears coming out in 3-D.'"'' <ref name="TSV"/>
The creature would have then mortally wounded Ace, causing the Doctor to use his remaining strength to throw the creature into a vortex opening, not only killing it but erasing it from time. The Doctor would have then regenerated into his Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh incarnations as the original timeline was restored.


==Production==
[[File:DWMSE 5 The Dark Dimension.jpg|thumb|The Fourth Doctor and Ace ([[Daryl Joyce]], [[DWMSE 5]])]]
[[Graeme Harper]] was scheduled to direct '''The Dark Dimension'''.
The Seventh Doctor and Ace would have found themselves at a church, with the Doctor reflecting that they would soon likely forget the alternate timeline. The two would eventually continue their travels in time and space, with the Doctor pondering how humanity has survived so much throughout history and beyond...


:''"About three weeks worth of test filming was done including model and titles effects, and some location filming was also undertaken. 'We were going to go down to [[Shepperton Studios|Shepperton film studios]],' says Rigelsford, 'and have it shot on film on one of the largest sound-stages on Shepperton.'"'' <ref name="TSV"/>
The "Summerfield" featured in the story was written to perhaps be an alternate version of the [[Seventh Doctor]]'s [[companion]] [[Bernice Summerfield]] from the [[New Adventures]] book series. However, the story did not touch upon this and was extremely ambiguous on the topic.


==Further Development==
[[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart]]'s son, [[Alexander Stewart (The Dark Dimension)|Alexander Stewart]], would have a minor role in the film. In the alternative timeline he would have been the boyfriend of [[Ace|Dorothy]]. At the end of the film, at the church, the Brigadier would have been seen visiting Alexander's grave. In the normal timeline, he died in [[1979]] at the age of ten.<ref name=":0">[[The Nth Doctor]]</ref>
Adrian Rigelsford wrote a book entitled ''The Making of the Dark Dimension'' which contained scripts and concept drawings. However, it repeatedly ran into release problems and has never been released. <ref name="TSV"/> '''The Dark Dimension''' and its production were briefly mentioned in Rigelsford's '''Classic Who: The Harper Classics'''.


==External Links==
== Monsters ==
*[http://home.earthlink.net/~qstnmark/melted/dark_dim.htm Short Synopsis taken from ''The Nth Doctor'' of '''The Dark Dimension]
The villain of the story was a creature "Entirely made out of chronal energy". No concrete description of the creature has been given, although multiple people who worked on the project have given basic outlines for how they wanted to depict it. Kevin Davies, who was to work on post-production effects, described it as "The big alien, Death itself" which would "float across the landscape spreading death and destruction beneath it."<ref name="TSV" /> In the beginning of the film, the resistance group led by Summerfield would try to kill this creature by sending it into the [[time vortex]], only for it to escape into the past, where it would possess Professor Hawkspur in 1936 and travel to the future to save the Fourth Doctor on the Pharos Project.
*[http://nzdwfc.tetrap.com/archive/tsv44/darkdimension.html NZDWFC - TSV 44: '''Inside the Dark Dimension By Jon Preddle]


==Footnotes==
[[File:DarkDimensionDalek.jpg|thumb|Special Weapons Dalek concept art (Scifinow #37)]]
This story was to also feature almost all the classic monsters, with many of them being redesigned or feature totally new developments of the original design. The Ice Warriors were similar to their classic design, however being slimmed down from their bulky armour to a more fitting shape, while also losing the helmet design for proper heads with bulbous white eyes. The Yeti were also similar to their original depiction, with the inclusion of a proper face being the main redesign. In the original script written by Rigelsford, the story introduced a new type of Cyberman, the [[Cyber-Commander|Cybercommander]]. Its skeletal design has been commonly associated with the project.
 
The Daleks also were to have been give a redesign, featuring several white and red Daleks as well as a one-off new special weapons Dalek by BBC Workshop under Tony Harding supervision.<ref name=":0" /> A design of this "Special Weapons Dalek" was passed by BBC visual FX assistant [[Alan Marshall]].<ref name=":1">Scifinow #37 (March 2010)</ref> According to visual effects assistant [[Mike Tucker]], the Dalek guns were going to be computer animated, with bolts "like spears coming out in 3-D."<ref name="TSV" />
 
== Characters ==
* [[Third Doctor]] - [[Jon Pertwee]]
* [[Fourth Doctor]] - [[Tom Baker]]
* [[Fifth Doctor]] - [[Peter Davison]]
* [[Sixth Doctor]] - [[Colin Baker]]
* [[Seventh Doctor]] - [[Sylvester McCoy]]
* [[Ace]] - [[Sophie Aldred]]
* [[Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart]] - [[Nicholas Courtney]]
* Summerfield
* [[Alexander Stewart (The Dark Dimension)|Alexander Stewart]]
* Prof. Oliver Hawkspur - [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rik_Mayall Rik Mayall]<ref name=":1" />
 
== Production ==
 
* [[Graeme Harper]] was scheduled to direct the story.
 
{{Quote|About three weeks worth of test filming was done including model and titles effects, and some location filming was also undertaken. 'We were going to go down to [[Shepperton Studios|Shepperton film studios]],' says Rigelsford, 'and have it shot on film on one of the largest sound-stages on Shepperton.'|[[Time Space Visualiser (fanzine)|TSV]] 44<ref name="TSV" />}}
 
* [[Brian Blessed]], [[David Bowie]] and [[David Warner]] were considered for Professor Oliver Hawkspur.
* [[Jon Pertwee]], [[Peter Davison]] and [[Colin Baker]] were unhappy that their roles would have been mere cameos. Baker recalled that his scene would have had the [[Sixth Doctor]] defending an [[Ice Warrior]] on trial. He complained that [[Season 23 (Doctor Who 1963)|his last series]] saw him on trial. [[Graeme Harper]] offered to swap his scene with Davison's, which would have seen the [[Fifth Doctor]] battling [[Cyberman]]. This further upset Baker, as he felt that the producers saw the Doctors as interchangeable.
 
=== Details ===
* Written by [[Adrian Rigelsford]]
* Director: [[Graeme Harper]]
* Producer: David Jackson
* Executive Producers:
** Penelope Mills
** [[Tony Greenwood]]
* Assistant Director: [[Kevan Van Thompson]]
* Script Editor: Joanna McCaul
* Production Manager: Nick Jagels
* Location Manager: Stanislaw Fus
* Costume Design: Bridget Tudor Evans
* Visual Effects Supervisor: [[Tony Harding]]
* Visual Effects Assistants:
** [[Mike Tucker]]
** [[Alan Marshall (crew)|Alan Marshall]]
* Video Effects Designer: [[Dave Chapman]]
* Post Production Effects: Kevin Jon Davies
* Special Effects Prosthetics: Chris Fitzgerald
* Title Sequence: William Latham<ref name=":1" />
 
== Further development ==
Adrian Rigelsford wrote a book entitled ''The Making of the Dark Dimension'' which contained scripts and concept drawings. However, it repeatedly ran into release problems and has never been published.<ref name="TSV" /> ''The Dark Dimension'' and its production were briefly mentioned in Rigelsford's own ''[[Classic Who: The Harper Classics]]''.
 
== External links ==
* [http://home.earthlink.net/~qstnmark/melted/dark_dim.htm Short Synopsis taken from ''The Nth Doctor'' of '''The Dark Dimension''']
* [http://nzdwfc.tetrap.com/archive/tsv44/darkdimension.html NZDWFC - TSV 44: "Inside the Dark Dimension" by Jon Preddle]
 
== Footnotes ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
 
{{Unproduced stories}}
[[Category:Unproduced Doctor Who stories|Dark Dimension]]
{{TitleSort}}
[[Category:Unproduced Doctor Who TV stories]]

Latest revision as of 20:10, 22 April 2024

RealWorld.png
Unproduced Tag.jpg

The Dark Dimension, written by fan scholar Adrian Rigelsford, was a planned film commissioned by BBC Enterprises that was to have been released in 1993 to commemorate the thirtieth anniversary of Doctor Who.

Initial production[[edit] | [edit source]]

Cancellation[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Dark Dimension (later known as Lost in the Dark Dimension[1]) ran into obstacles which prevented it from being produced.

Some of the actors, particularly Jon Pertwee and Colin Baker, were not pleased that their roles were so small (the script featured the Fourth Doctor prominently while the others had small scenes).[2]

The main cancellation of the project fell to a miscalculation in the cost of the programme. A large sum of money had not been added to both the cost and revenue of the project — that of the cost of putting the show on the air. When the calculations were corrected, it became clear that it was no longer viable to produce the film financially.

Attempts were made afterward to lighten the cost of the film by cutting key scenes and restructuring the film entirely - but these eventually fell through. Some minor elements of the scripts — such as characters not being able to be visible because of being in another level of time — were later used in the television story Dimensions in Time.

The story[[edit] | [edit source]]

Far in the future of Earth, most humans have been wiped out. The Earth is left in ruins, the only people left on the planet being a resistance group which has been trying to hunt the creature that has done this to the planet. The group is searching an area, and their leader, Summerfield, suddenly finds a body. It is the Seventh Doctor — murdered by the creature. The Doctor is given a funeral which Summerfield finds fitting, as they are sent floating into sea and lit aflame. With the Doctor gone, Summerfield tells the others that they have to finish what the Doctor started on their own, attempting to send the creature who killed him into the time vortex to be destroyed. However, this would have instead sent him into Earth's distant past, where he would have plotted to change history.

The central idea to the story was that the creature — disguised as the human scientist Hawkspur — would have averted the events of TV: Logopolis so that the Fourth Doctor would have survived his fall instead of regenerating. Hawkspur also would have manipulated politics on Earth for the decades remaining, creating a world where he has ultimate power and a horde of monsters.

The story would have centred on an older version of the Fourth Doctor, the Brigadier and "Dorothy" (all three from the timeline where the Fifth through Seventh Doctors never existed), with shorter appearances by the other surviving Doctors in minor roles, trying to defeat Hawkspur and set the universe right. Returning monsters would have included the Cybermen, Daleks, Ice Warriors and the Yeti.

At one point, the Doctor, Dorothy, and the Brigadier would have been sent through time, encountering the Fifth and Sixth Doctors on the brisk of being erased from history. The former Doctors would have then been kidnapped by Hawkspur. Throughout the adventure, Dorothy would have slowly regained her former memories as "Ace" in the original timeline, culminating in her encountering the Seventh Doctor in a void, where he would he ceased to exist before her. In the same void, the Fourth Doctor would have spoken to a lingering spirit of his third incarnation, who would have given him solace.

The film was to have ended with the Fourth Doctor engaging in a sword fight with Hawkspur. The fight would eventually make it to the roof of the church — the form which the TARDIS would've taken in this alternate timeline — where the Doctor would eventually force the creature out of Hawkspur's body.

The creature would have then mortally wounded Ace, causing the Doctor to use his remaining strength to throw the creature into a vortex opening, not only killing it but erasing it from time. The Doctor would have then regenerated into his Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh incarnations as the original timeline was restored.

The Fourth Doctor and Ace (Daryl Joyce, DWMSE 5)

The Seventh Doctor and Ace would have found themselves at a church, with the Doctor reflecting that they would soon likely forget the alternate timeline. The two would eventually continue their travels in time and space, with the Doctor pondering how humanity has survived so much throughout history and beyond...

The "Summerfield" featured in the story was written to perhaps be an alternate version of the Seventh Doctor's companion Bernice Summerfield from the New Adventures book series. However, the story did not touch upon this and was extremely ambiguous on the topic.

Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart's son, Alexander Stewart, would have a minor role in the film. In the alternative timeline he would have been the boyfriend of Dorothy. At the end of the film, at the church, the Brigadier would have been seen visiting Alexander's grave. In the normal timeline, he died in 1979 at the age of ten.[3]

Monsters[[edit] | [edit source]]

The villain of the story was a creature "Entirely made out of chronal energy". No concrete description of the creature has been given, although multiple people who worked on the project have given basic outlines for how they wanted to depict it. Kevin Davies, who was to work on post-production effects, described it as "The big alien, Death itself" which would "float across the landscape spreading death and destruction beneath it."[1] In the beginning of the film, the resistance group led by Summerfield would try to kill this creature by sending it into the time vortex, only for it to escape into the past, where it would possess Professor Hawkspur in 1936 and travel to the future to save the Fourth Doctor on the Pharos Project.

Special Weapons Dalek concept art (Scifinow #37)

This story was to also feature almost all the classic monsters, with many of them being redesigned or feature totally new developments of the original design. The Ice Warriors were similar to their classic design, however being slimmed down from their bulky armour to a more fitting shape, while also losing the helmet design for proper heads with bulbous white eyes. The Yeti were also similar to their original depiction, with the inclusion of a proper face being the main redesign. In the original script written by Rigelsford, the story introduced a new type of Cyberman, the Cybercommander. Its skeletal design has been commonly associated with the project.

The Daleks also were to have been give a redesign, featuring several white and red Daleks as well as a one-off new special weapons Dalek by BBC Workshop under Tony Harding supervision.[3] A design of this "Special Weapons Dalek" was passed by BBC visual FX assistant Alan Marshall.[4] According to visual effects assistant Mike Tucker, the Dalek guns were going to be computer animated, with bolts "like spears coming out in 3-D."[1]

Characters[[edit] | [edit source]]

Production[[edit] | [edit source]]

About three weeks worth of test filming was done including model and titles effects, and some location filming was also undertaken. 'We were going to go down to Shepperton film studios,' says Rigelsford, 'and have it shot on film on one of the largest sound-stages on Shepperton.'TSV 44[1]

Details[[edit] | [edit source]]

Further development[[edit] | [edit source]]

Adrian Rigelsford wrote a book entitled The Making of the Dark Dimension which contained scripts and concept drawings. However, it repeatedly ran into release problems and has never been published.[1] The Dark Dimension and its production were briefly mentioned in Rigelsford's own Classic Who: The Harper Classics.

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]