The Face of Evil (TV story): Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox Story | {{Infobox Story SMW | ||
|image= Faceofevil title.jpg | |image= Faceofevil title.jpg | ||
|series=[[Doctor Who television stories|''Doctor Who'' television stories]] | |series=[[Doctor Who television stories|''Doctor Who'' television stories]] | ||
|season number= Season 14 | |season number= Season 14 (Doctor Who 1963)| | ||
|season serial number = 4 | |season serial number = 4 | ||
|story number= 89 | |story number= 89 | ||
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|companions= [[Leela]] | |companions= [[Leela]] | ||
|enemy= [[Xoanon]] | |enemy= [[Xoanon]] | ||
|setting= [[Mordee | |setting= [[Mordee]], [[far future]]; Inside Xoanon | ||
|writer= | |writer= Chris Boucher | ||
|director= [[Pennant Roberts]] | |director= [[Pennant Roberts]] | ||
|producer= [[Philip Hinchcliffe]] | |producer= [[Philip Hinchcliffe]] | ||
|novelisation= Doctor Who and the Face of Evil (novelisation) | |novelisation= Doctor Who and the Face of Evil (novelisation) | ||
|epcount = 4 | |epcount = 4 | ||
|broadcast date= | |broadcast date= 1 - 22 January 1977 | ||
|network = | |network = BBC1 | ||
|format= 4x25-minute episodes | |format= 4x25-minute episodes | ||
|serial production code= [[List of production codes|4Q]] | |serial production code= [[List of production codes|4Q]] | ||
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|thwr2 = 158|thwr3=187 | |thwr2 = 158|thwr3=187 | ||
}}{{you may|The Face of Evil (reference book)|n1=the reference book of the same name}} | }}{{you may|The Face of Evil (reference book)|n1=the reference book of the same name}} | ||
'''''The Face of Evil''''' was the fourth serial of [[Season 14 (Doctor Who 1963)|season 14]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. When broadcast, it was originally billed in [[Radio Times/1970s|Radio Times]] as the start of a new series, due to the six-week gap since the final episode of ''[[The Deadly Assassin (TV story)|The Deadly Assassin]]''. As originally broadcast, it in fact followed [[omnibus]] editions of ''[[Pyramids of Mars (TV story)|Pyramids of Mars]]'' and ''[[The Brain of Morbius (TV story)|The Brain of Morbius]]'', amongst other, unrelated programmes. ([[INFO]]: ''The Face of Evil'') However, this marketing ploy has not been recognised by the BBC—nor has it been propagated in reference books such as ''[[Doctor Who The Handbook: The Fourth Doctor|The Fourth Doctor Handbook]]''. | |||
'''''The Face of Evil''''' was the fourth serial of [[season 14]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. When broadcast, it was originally billed as the start of a new series, due to the six-week gap since the final episode of ''[[The Deadly Assassin (TV story)|The Deadly Assassin]]''. As originally broadcast, it in fact followed [[omnibus]] editions of ''[[Pyramids of Mars (TV story)|Pyramids of Mars]]'' and ''[[The Brain of Morbius (TV story)|The Brain of Morbius]]'', amongst other, unrelated programmes. ([[INFO]]: ''The Face of Evil'') However, this marketing ploy has not | |||
== Synopsis == | == Synopsis == | ||
The [[Fourth Doctor|Doctor]] arrives on a planet where two tribes, the savage [[Sevateem]] and the technically brilliant [[Tesh]], are at war. He meets [[Leela]], an exile from the Sevateem, and discovers that their god of evil is apparently himself. | The [[Fourth Doctor|Doctor]] arrives on a planet where two tribes, the savage [[Sevateem]] and the technically brilliant [[Tesh]], are at war. He meets [[Leela]], an exile from the Sevateem, and discovers that [[Xoanon|their god of evil]] is apparently himself. | ||
== Plot == | == Plot == | ||
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* [[Guard (The Face of Evil, part 1)|Guard]] - [[Tom Kelly]] | * [[Guard (The Face of Evil, part 1)|Guard]] - [[Tom Kelly]] | ||
* [[Guard (The Face of Evil, part 2)|Guard]] - [[Brett Forrest]] | * [[Guard (The Face of Evil, part 2)|Guard]] - [[Brett Forrest]] | ||
* [[Xoanon]] - [[Rob Edwards (actor)|Rob Edwards]], [[Pamela Salem]], [[Anthony Frieze]], [[Roy Herrick]] | * [[Xoanon]] - [[Rob Edwards (actor)|Rob Edwards]], [[Pamela Salem]], [[Anthony Frieze]], [[Roy Herrick]] ''(voices only)'' | ||
* [[Jabel]] - [[Leon Eagles]] | * [[Jabel]] - [[Leon Eagles]] | ||
* [[Gentek]] - [[Mike Elles]] | * [[Gentek]] - [[Mike Elles]] | ||
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* [[Script Editor]] - [[Robert Holmes]] | * [[Script Editor]] - [[Robert Holmes]] | ||
* [[Producer]] - [[Philip Hinchcliffe]] | * [[Producer]] - [[Philip Hinchcliffe]] | ||
* [[Director]] - [[Pennant Roberts]] | * [[Director (crew)|Director]] - [[Pennant Roberts]] | ||
* [[Fight Arranger]] - [[Terry Walsh]] | * [[Fight Arranger]] - [[Terry Walsh]] | ||
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* [[Costume Assistant]] - [[Ann Bloomfield]] <ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=voDnYqEIzTU Doctor Who In Memoriam 2022]</ref> | * [[Costume Assistant]] - [[Ann Bloomfield]] <ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=voDnYqEIzTU Doctor Who In Memoriam 2022]</ref> | ||
== | == Worldbuilding == | ||
=== Individuals === | === Individuals === | ||
* [[Korus]] is killed. | * [[Korus]] is killed. | ||
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* When the Doctor offers a [[jelly baby]] to Leela, she misunderstands his gesture and accuses him of being the Evil One who eats [[baby|babies]]. | * When the Doctor offers a [[jelly baby]] to Leela, she misunderstands his gesture and accuses him of being the Evil One who eats [[baby|babies]]. | ||
* The Doctor threatens to turn the Sevateem into [[toad]]s. | * The Doctor threatens to turn the Sevateem into [[toad]]s. | ||
*The Doctor describes a non-functioning communicator as being "Dead as a [[Dalek]]." | * The Doctor describes a non-functioning communicator as being "Dead as a [[Dalek]]." | ||
=== Science === | === Science === | ||
* Xoanon produces [[psi-tri projections]] called [[Phantom]] | * Xoanon produces [[psi-tri projections]] called [[Phantom (The Face of Evil)|Phantoms]]. | ||
=== The TARDIS === | === The TARDIS === | ||
* The TARDIS displays [[nexial discontinuity]]. The Doctor suggests that it may be a fault in the [[TARDIS tracer]]s. | * The TARDIS displays [[nexial discontinuity]]. The Doctor suggests that it may be a fault in the [[TARDIS tracer]]s. | ||
=== Influences === | |||
* [[Chris Boucher]] was inspired by many of the science-fiction stories he had adored since childhood: ''[[Brave New World]]'' influenced Boucher's ideas about how the Sevateem religion had evolved, while he drew upon [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Harrison_(writer) Harry Harrison]'s [[1969]] novel ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captive_Universe Captive Universe]'' for the element of an insane computer. | |||
== Story notes == | == Story notes == | ||
* This story had the working titles ''The Tower of Imelo'' and ''The Day God Went Mad''. The latter was objected to by Philip Hinchcliffe, not because it might offend viewers with religious sensibilities, but because it was out of keeping with other titles. | * This story had the working titles ''The Tower of Imelo'' and ''The Day God Went Mad''. The latter was objected to by Philip Hinchcliffe, not because it might offend viewers with religious sensibilities, but because it was out of keeping with other titles. | ||
* The ''Radio Times'' programme listing for part one was accompanied by a black-and-white artwork illustration by Roy Ellsworth depicting the Doctor and Leela being watched over by the face of Xoanon on a screen, with the accompanying caption "''Dr. Who'' and new girl companion, Leela, confront ''The Face of Evil'': 6.20". | * The ''Radio Times'' programme listing for part one was accompanied by a black-and-white artwork illustration by Roy Ellsworth depicting the Doctor and Leela being watched over by the face of Xoanon on a video screen, with the accompanying caption "''Dr. Who'' and new girl companion, Leela, confront ''The Face of Evil'': 6.20". | ||
* On emerging from the TARDIS in part one, the Doctor [[fourth wall|directly addresses the camera/audience]]: | * On emerging from the TARDIS in part one, the Doctor [[fourth wall|directly addresses the camera/audience]]: | ||
::<u>Doctor:</u> "I think this is not Hyde Park. Could be a nexial discontinuity. Must remember to overhaul those tracers. Put a knot in my hanky. ''(Pause. He puts his hand in his trouser pocket, and produces a blue handkerchief which already has a knot tied in it. He looks at it quizzically for a second, then turns back to the camera.)'' Wonder what that was for? ''(Pause, as he tries to remember. No luck. He puts the handkerchief away.)'' Little look round, Doctor? Why not?" ''(He takes a single step forward towards the camera, then turns around and walks away into the jungle.)'' | ::<u>Doctor:</u> "I think this is not Hyde Park. Could be a nexial discontinuity. Must remember to overhaul those tracers. Put a knot in my hanky. ''(Pause. He puts his hand in his trouser pocket, and produces a blue handkerchief which already has a knot tied in it. He looks at it quizzically for a second, then turns back to the camera.)'' Wonder what that was for? ''(Pause, as he tries to remember. No luck. He puts the handkerchief away.)'' Little look round, Doctor? Why not?" ''(He takes a single step forward towards the camera, then turns around and walks away into the jungle.)'' | ||
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* The [[Janis thorn]]s which Leela uses were originally pronounced with the first syllable rhyming with "can"; however, [[Tom Baker]] pointed out that "Janice Thorn" sounded like the name of an out-of-work soap actress, so the pronunciation was changed. ([[DCOM]]: ''The Face of Evil'') | * The [[Janis thorn]]s which Leela uses were originally pronounced with the first syllable rhyming with "can"; however, [[Tom Baker]] pointed out that "Janice Thorn" sounded like the name of an out-of-work soap actress, so the pronunciation was changed. ([[DCOM]]: ''The Face of Evil'') | ||
* The story was written with two endings, one with Leela going off with the Doctor and one where she didn't. | * The story was written with two endings, one with Leela going off with the Doctor and one where she didn't. | ||
* The story does not explicitly explain when the Fourth Doctor repaired the Starfall Seven's computer. The novelisation suggests that the earlier visit to the planet of the Sevateem took place during his post-regenerative phase in ''[[Robot (TV story)|Robot]]'' when the Doctor left in the TARDIS one night, travelled to that world and afterwards returned to UNIT H.Q. before anyone realized he had been gone — with the Doctor's still-addled mind due to his recent | * The story does not explicitly explain when the Fourth Doctor repaired the Starfall Seven's computer. The novelisation suggests that the earlier visit to the planet of the Sevateem took place during his post-regenerative phase in ''[[Robot (TV story)|Robot]]'' when the Doctor left in the TARDIS one night, travelled to that world and afterwards returned to UNIT H.Q. before anyone realized he had been gone — with the Doctor's still-addled mind due to [[Third Doctor's regeneration|his recent regeneration]] causing him to forget the whole trip. This was not derived from any information given in the televised version. | ||
* [[Pamela Salem]] and [[Rob Edwards (actor)|Rob Edwards]] provide two of the voices of Xoanon. Both actors were at the time also rehearsing for the following story, ''[[The Robots of Death (TV story)|The Robots of Death]]''. | * [[Pamela Salem]] and [[Rob Edwards (actor)|Rob Edwards]] provide two of the voices of Xoanon. Both actors were at the time also rehearsing for the following story, ''[[The Robots of Death (TV story)|The Robots of Death]]''. | ||
* [[Anthony Frieze]], credited as one of the voices of Xoanon, was a student at the school where [[Pennant Roberts]]' wife taught. [[Philip Hinchcliffe]] arranged for a recording of his voice to be made shouting, "Who am I?", for the climax to part three. After the initial recording (in a sound studio), Frieze made a second visit to the set and re-recorded the line. ([[DOC]]: ''[[Into the Wild (documentary)|Into the Wild]]'') | * [[Anthony Frieze]], credited as one of the voices of Xoanon, was a student at the school where [[Pennant Roberts]]' wife taught. [[Philip Hinchcliffe]] arranged for a recording of his voice to be made shouting, "Who am I?", for the climax to part three. After the initial recording (in a sound studio), Frieze made a second visit to the set and re-recorded the line. ([[DOC]]: ''[[Into the Wild (documentary)|Into the Wild]]'') | ||
* In light of the [[Timeless Child|revelations]] in ''[[The Timeless Children (TV story)|The Timeless Children]]'', [[Jonathan Morris]] theorised that Xoanon's other split-personality voices (Rob Edwards, Pamela Salem and Anthony Frieze) may in fact have been drawn from forgotten incarnations of [[the Doctor]] (similar to [[The Doctor (The Brain of Morbius)|the ''Brain of Morbius'' Doctors]]) which Xoanon had drawn from the Doctor's subconscious.<ref>[https://twitter.com/jonnymorris1973/status/1238746694763851777 Jonathan Morris on Twitter]</ref> | * In light of the [[Timeless Child|revelations]] in ''[[The Timeless Children (TV story)|The Timeless Children]]'', [[Jonathan Morris]] theorised that Xoanon's other split-personality voices ([[Rob Edwards (actor)|Rob Edwards]], [[Pamela Salem]] and [[Anthony Frieze]]) may in fact have been drawn from forgotten incarnations of [[the Doctor]] (similar to [[The Doctor (The Brain of Morbius)|the ''Brain of Morbius'' Doctors]]) which Xoanon had drawn from the Doctor's subconscious.<ref>[https://twitter.com/jonnymorris1973/status/1238746694763851777 Jonathan Morris on Twitter]</ref> | ||
* Leela's costume was leotard-based, and designed by John Bloomfield. | * Leela's costume was leotard-based, and designed by [[John Bloomfield]]. | ||
* The Doctor expertly whistles an extended version of the "[[Colonel Bogey March]]" (from the film ''The Bridge on the River Kwai'') at the beginning of part one. This whistling continues a tradition [[Patrick Troughton]] began of the Doctor displaying musical aptitude. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'' and others) [[Jon Pertwee|Pertwee]] similarly sang on occasion, ([[TV]]: ''[[Terror of the Autons (TV story)|Terror of the Autons]]'', ''[[The Curse of Peladon (TV story)|The Curse of Peladon]]'' and others) while [[Peter Davison|Davison]] had some proficiency as a [[harp]]ist, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'') [[Christopher Eccleston|Eccleston]] could play delicate, non-[[human]] instruments, ([[TV]]: ''[[Dalek (TV story)|Dalek]]'') [[David Tennant|Tennant]] at least ''fancied'' himself a composer and conductor, ([[TV]]: ''[[Music of the Spheres (TV story)|Music of the Spheres]]'') and [[Peter Capaldi|Capaldi]] demonstrated skill in guitar. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)|The Magician's Apprentice]], [[Before the Flood (TV story)|Before the Flood]], [[Hell Bent (TV story)|Hell Bent]] ''and others)'' ''Tom Baker also whistled the "Colonel Bogey March" in [[TV]]: ''[[The Talons of Weng-Chiang (TV story)|The Talons of Weng-Chiang]]'' and ''[[The Invasion of Time (TV story)|The Invasion of Time]]'', and plays [[Johann Sebastian Bach|Bach]] on an improvised flute in ''[[The Power of Kroll (TV story)|The Power of Kroll]]'' | * The Doctor expertly whistles an extended version of the "[[Colonel Bogey March]]" (from the film ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bridge_on_the_River_Kwai The Bridge on the River Kwai]'') at the beginning of part one. This whistling continues a tradition [[Patrick Troughton]] began of the Doctor displaying musical aptitude. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'' and others) [[Jon Pertwee|Pertwee]] similarly sang on occasion, ([[TV]]: ''[[Terror of the Autons (TV story)|Terror of the Autons]]'', ''[[The Curse of Peladon (TV story)|The Curse of Peladon]]'' and others) while [[Peter Davison|Davison]] had some proficiency as a [[harp]]ist, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'') [[Christopher Eccleston|Eccleston]] could play delicate, non-[[human]] instruments, ([[TV]]: ''[[Dalek (TV story)|Dalek]]'') [[David Tennant|Tennant]] at least ''fancied'' himself a composer and conductor, ([[TV]]: ''[[Music of the Spheres (TV story)|Music of the Spheres]]'') and [[Peter Capaldi|Capaldi]] demonstrated skill in guitar. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Magician's Apprentice (TV story)|The Magician's Apprentice]], [[Before the Flood (TV story)|Before the Flood]], [[Hell Bent (TV story)|Hell Bent]] ''and others)'' ''Tom Baker also whistled the "Colonel Bogey March" in [[TV]]: ''[[The Talons of Weng-Chiang (TV story)|The Talons of Weng-Chiang]]'' and ''[[The Invasion of Time (TV story)|The Invasion of Time]]'', and plays [[Johann Sebastian Bach|Bach]] on an improvised flute in ''[[The Power of Kroll (TV story)|The Power of Kroll]]''. | ||
* [[Robert Holmes]] suggested that Leela possess some sort of supernatural powers, which he thought might be inherited from a witch-priestess grandmother. [[Chris Boucher]] was not fond of this idea, and instead opted to grant her a sort of sixth sense for danger. | * [[Robert Holmes]] suggested that Leela possess some sort of supernatural powers, which he thought might be inherited from a witch-priestess grandmother. [[Chris Boucher]] was not fond of this idea, and instead opted to grant her a sort of sixth sense for danger. | ||
* The script originally called for the Doctor to threaten a Sevateem tribesman with a knife. [[Tom Baker]] objected to this, thinking it was too violent and out of character, so it was changed to a jelly baby. | * The script originally called for the Doctor to threaten a Sevateem tribesman with a knife. [[Tom Baker]] objected to this, thinking it was too violent and out of character, so it was changed to a jelly baby. | ||
* Tomas was originally named Loke and originally had a more prominent role before it was decided to give Leela more focus. | * Tomas was originally named Loke and originally had a more prominent role before it was decided to give Leela more focus. | ||
* [[Leslie Schofield]] would later appear in the ''[[Blake's 7 (series)|Blake's 7]]'' episode "[https://blakes7.fandom.com/wiki/Space_Fall_(episode) Space Fall]", which was directed by [[Pennant Roberts]], script-edited by [[Chris Boucher]] and scored by [[Dudley Simpson]]. | |||
*[[Leslie Schofield]] would later appear in the ''[[Blake's 7 (series)|Blake's 7]]'' episode "Space Fall", which was script-edited by [[Chris Boucher]] and scored by [[Dudley Simpson]]. | * This is the first episode to use Roman Numerals at the end of the episode. This would be the norm for all episodes from this point onwards, bar [[Doctor Who (TV story)|the 1996 TV Movie]]. | ||
* [[Philip Hinchcliffe]] came up with the idea of the Doctor's face being carved in rock, inspired by [[Mount Rushmore]]. | |||
* [[Pamela Salem]] auditioned for Leela. She wound up voicing Xoana instead. | |||
=== Ratings === | === Ratings === | ||
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The DVD was released in [[Region 2]] on [[5 March (releases)|5 March]] [[2012 (releases)|2012]] and in [[Region 1]] on [[13 March (releases)|13 March]] 2012. | The DVD was released in [[Region 2]] on [[5 March (releases)|5 March]] [[2012 (releases)|2012]] and in [[Region 1]] on [[13 March (releases)|13 March]] 2012. | ||
Special features | ==== Special features ==== | ||
* | * Commentary with actors [[Louise Jameson]] ([[Leela]]), [[Leslie Schofield]] ([[Calib]]), [[David Garfield]] ([[Neeva]]), [[Mike Elles]] ([[Gentek]]) and [[Harry Fielder|Harry H Fielder]] ([[Second assassin|Assassin]]), producer [[Philip Hinchcliffe]] and film cameraman [[John McGlashan]]. Moderated by [[Toby Hadoke]] | ||
*[[Into the Wild (documentary)|Into the Wild]] — | * ''[[Into the Wild (documentary)|Into the Wild]]'' — Cast and crew talk about the making of ''The Face of Evil'' | ||
* From the Cutting Room Floor — | * ''From the Cutting Room Floor'' — A behind-the-scenes glimpse at the film shoot | ||
*[[Tomorrow's Times (documentary | * ''[[Tomorrow's Times: The Fourth Doctor (documentary)|Tomorrow's Times - The Fourth Doctor]]'' — Our on-going series looking at the press coverage of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' reaches the [[Tom Baker]] era. Presented by [[Wendy Padbury]]. | ||
* [[Doctor Who Stories: Louise Jameson]] — | * ''[[Doctor Who Stories: Louise Jameson (documentary)|Doctor Who Stories: Louise Jameson]]'' — The actress talks about her role on the programme in this interview originally shot for 2003's ''[[The Story of Doctor Who]]'' | ||
* | * ''[[Swap Shop]]'' — [[Noel Edmonds]] interviews Louise Jameson ''(previously included on VHS release)'' | ||
* [[Denys Fisher Toys]] Advert | * [[Denys Fisher Toys]] Advert | ||
* 1976 Typhoo Tea ''Doctor Who'' Promotion (trading cards and ''[[The Amazing World of Doctor Who]]'' book) (DVD-ROM) | |||
* ''[[Radio Times]]'' Listings (DVD-ROM) | |||
* Production Information Subtitles | |||
* Photo Gallery | * Photo Gallery | ||
* | * Coming Soon Trailer - ''[[The Dæmons (TV story)|The Dæmons]]'' | ||
<gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true"> | <gallery position="center" captionalign="center" hideaddbutton="true"> | ||
File:TheFaceofEvilDVDRegion2.jpg|Region 2 UK DVD cover | File:TheFaceofEvilDVDRegion2.jpg|Region 2 UK DVD cover | ||
File:The face of evil.jpg|Region 1 DVD cover | |||
File:Doctor-Who-The-Face-of-Evil-DVD.jpg|Region 4 DVD cover | |||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
== Footnotes == | == Footnotes == | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
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{{DWTV}} | {{DWTV}} | ||
{{TitleSort}} | {{TitleSort}} | ||
[[es:The Face of Evil]] | |||
[[ru:Лицо зла]] | |||
[[Category:Doctor Who (1963) television stories]] | [[Category:Doctor Who (1963) television stories]] | ||
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[[Category:Stories set in the far future]] | [[Category:Stories set in the far future]] | ||
[[Category:Four part serials]] | [[Category:Four part serials]] | ||
Latest revision as of 20:06, 3 November 2024
- You may be looking for the reference book of the same name.
The Face of Evil was the fourth serial of season 14 of Doctor Who. When broadcast, it was originally billed in Radio Times as the start of a new series, due to the six-week gap since the final episode of The Deadly Assassin. As originally broadcast, it in fact followed omnibus editions of Pyramids of Mars and The Brain of Morbius, amongst other, unrelated programmes. (INFO: The Face of Evil) However, this marketing ploy has not been recognised by the BBC—nor has it been propagated in reference books such as The Fourth Doctor Handbook.
Synopsis[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Doctor arrives on a planet where two tribes, the savage Sevateem and the technically brilliant Tesh, are at war. He meets Leela, an exile from the Sevateem, and discovers that their god of evil is apparently himself.
Plot[[edit] | [edit source]]
Part one[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Doctor, alone in the TARDIS, arrives on a mysterious jungle planet which he cannot resist exploring. He soon encounters Leela, a savage from the local tribe. She denounces him as the Evil One of her people's fables. She has been exiled from her tribe, the Sevateem, for profaning their god, the mysterious Xoanon, who speaks to them through the tribe's shaman, Neeva. Her father, tribal elder Sole, tried to protect her but died taking the Test of the Horda on her behalf. Now Leela is an outcast beyond the invisible barrier around her tribal home.
Neeva, meanwhile, has sent two men to murder her, an action witnessed by Leela's friend Tomas. He kills one of them as Leela dispatches the other. In the jungle beyond, she encounters the Doctor, who soon wins her over by defending her from invisible monsters that rampage about, attracted by vibration of any kind. Exploring further, the Doctor finds a sophisticated sonic disruptor. It creates the force field that keeps creatures from attacking the village itself. Leela regales him with more folklore; the god Xoanon is kept prisoner by the Evil One and his followers, the reclusive Tesh, beyond a strange black wall.
The Sevateem have decided to launch an attack on the Tesh to free their god. They are led by the combative Andor, who is determined to free his god. He also believes an attack will unite the people. Andor suspects Neeva of being a false prophet, and Tomas tells him of Neeva's attempted murder of Leela. Still, Andor believes the attack will succeed and is prepared to go ahead.
Two warriors are scouring the jungle when they find the Doctor. They also call him the Evil One and make a hand gesture which the Doctor interprets as the sequence for checking the seals on a Starfall Seven spacesuit. The warriors seize the Doctor but not Leela. They take him to the village council, where his face is shown to the tribe. Andor is convinced the prisoner is the Evil One and has him confined. However, Leela frees him using poisonous Janis thorns, which paralyse, then kill the victim. The Doctor is horrified by this. He instructs her, "No more Janis thorns, ever."
The pair flees the village and heads to a clearing beyond, where the Doctor is greeted by a stunning sight. Carved into a mountain nearby is a relief of his own face.
Part two[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Doctor cannot recall clearly why his face is here. He persuades Leela to return to the village to learn more, despite their death sentences. They return to Neeva's holy tent. The Doctor inspects the ancient tribal relics, recognising them as artefacts from an Earth survey expedition. He also finds a transceiver used by Neeva to hear the commands of Xoanon. It speaks with the Doctor's own voice, exhilarated at hearing the Doctor, saying, "At last we are here. At last I shall be free of us."
They head off to inspect the dark wall that stands at the entrance to the realm of the Evil One. The Doctor deduces it is a primitive time barrier. He is certain the Sevateem warriors will be massacred if they attack the fortress of their enemy, the Tesh. From afar they see the massacre unfold, as laser beams cut down warriors armed only with crossbows and other basic weapons. Half the tribe is lost in the assault.
One of the elders, the devious Calib, is first back at the camp, where he finds the Doctor and Leela. He is evidently intent on using the Doctor to break Neeva's hold on the tribe by exposing the faith in Xoanon as mythology. Leela's friend Tomas also arrives. He is apalled to find Calib has stabbed Leela with a Janis thorn to prevent her exposing his schemes. The Doctor gets Tomas to help him move Leela to Neeva's tent, where he uses a bio-analyser to synthesise an antidote to the poison.
When the surviving warriors return, the Doctor, Leela and Tomas are invited to address the tribal elders in defence of their lives. Leela makes matters worse when she accuses Xoanon of causing the trap at the wall. Calib intervenes to suggest the Doctor is not the Evil One. He suggests this be proven by getting him to take the fabled Test of the Horda.
In the centre of the village is a pit full of Horda, two-foot-long worms which hunt in packs and react to the movements of their prey. They are reputed to strip flesh from a man in an instant. The Sevateem evolved the Test of the Horda as a trial of justice and bravery. It involves the defendant standing on a board over the pit, who then must shoot a rope attached to a boulder that is pulling the board out from under him.
The Doctor is given a crossbow. He must fire it at a precise moment to sever the rope without making him fall into the pit — the fate of the guilty. The Doctor succeeds, is proven a non-malign influence and freed. He proceeds to examine some relics of the tribe and repair a disruptor gun. He also tells some of the tribe that the Sevateem are the descendants of a "survey team" from a Starfall Seven Earth colony ship. The Doctor and Leela go to examine the face in the mountain; they climb into it by scaling the Doctor's teeth.
Neeva returns to his tent, where the voice of Xoanon tells him the tribe will be destroyed. The mysterious being shuts down the sonic disruptor, leaving the village open to attack from the invisible beings. These descend on the village, killing indiscriminately and crushing Andor to death. Tomas uses the disruptor gun built by the Doctor to expose the true appearance of the invisible beings: ferocious, angry versions of the Doctor's face.
Part three[[edit] | [edit source]]
Leela and the Doctor notice a figure in a spacesuit in the "mouth" entrance and follow it through a projection of a wall. Beyond this barrier is a rocket, which the Doctor recalls as belonging to the Mordee Expedition; his memory of events earlier in his incarnation are returning. Xoanon has detected the Doctor. When he reaches the ship, the god-creature is ecstatic that "we are here" and also maniacally pledging that "we must destroy us".
The Doctor and Leela meet three of the Tesh who serve and worship Xoanon. They are human too, but technologically advanced and possessing telepathic abilities. The Doctor deduces both Sevateem and Tesh are descendants of the same crew from the Mordee Expedition, with the Tesh (or technicians) involved in the same deadly eugenics exercise as the Sevateem.
The invisible creatures which attacked the Sevateem are also part of the same deranged scheme. Xoanon is a highly sophisticated computer, designed to think independently. The Doctor repaired Xoanon but forgot to wipe his personality print from the data core, leaving the computer with a split personality.
The Doctor and Leela are soon imprisoned, then escape and find the device used to communicate with Neeva. The Doctor, speaking as Xoanon, instructs Neeva to tell Calib, who is now tribal leader, to lead the Sevateem survivors through the mouth of the carved face in the mountain. Calib accepts this instruction and leads them into the safety of the mouth, where the invisible beings cannot threaten the tribe.
With Leela keeping guard and holding the Tesh at bay with a disruptor gun, the Doctor ventures into the computer room of the ship to confront Xoanon. He blames himself for creating the computer's maddened split personality. He attempts to persuade Xoanon that he is separate from itself. Xoanon cannot accept this and channels a vicious mental attack at the Doctor. As the Doctor writhes on the floor, Xoanon shouts in a child's voice: "Who am I?"
Part four[[edit] | [edit source]]
Leela rescues the Doctor from the mental assault. As he recovers, he warns her of Xoanon's power. Moments later they realise the computer has electrified the walls to kill them. The Tesh become more purposeful in tracking them down in the spaceship.
The Tesh also come under attack by Calib, Tomas and the survivors of the Sevateem, who reach the spaceship too. This diverts the Tesh while the Doctor and Leela return to the computer room. Xoanon briefly takes control of Leela's mind, as he does of most of the Sevateem.
The Tesh and Sevateem soon converge on the computer room too and interrupt the Doctor as he tries to repair Xoanon. The computer has triggered the countdown to an atomic explosion. Elsewhere in the ship Neeva is alone and crazed, his faith in Xoanon shattered. The shaman uses the disruptor gun against one of the images of Xoanon/the Doctor projected through a wall. The ensuing blast kills Neeva but also interrupts Xoanon's control of its subjects, allowing the Doctor to resume and complete his repairs. Xoanon's circuits explode, knocking the Doctor out.
Two days later the Doctor wakes up to find himself aboard the spaceship in Leela's care. She explains Xoanon has been quiet, and he interprets this as success for his extraction experiment. They visit the computer room and find Xoanon's identity and sanity restored. The computer confirms it was running a eugenics experiment and thanks the Doctor for his repair work. The Doctor contacts the survivors of the Tesh and Sevateem to tell them Xoanon is cured and able to support their new society.
Unwilling to help them sort out the political question of which group should control the planet, the Doctor heads off to the TARDIS, followed by Leela. She insists on joining him on his travels. When the Doctor refuses, Leela runs past him and into the TARDIS. The Doctor follows Leela inside, telling her to come out. He is heard saying "Don't touch that...!", but it's too late. Leela has started the dematerialisation process, and the TARDIS departs from the planet.
Cast[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Doctor Who - Tom Baker
- Leela - Louise Jameson
- Neeva - David Garfield
- Andor - Victor Lucas
- Tomas - Brendan Price
- Calib - Leslie Schofield
- Sole - Colin Thomas
- Lugo - Lloyd McGuire
- Guard - Tom Kelly
- Guard - Brett Forrest
- Xoanon - Rob Edwards, Pamela Salem, Anthony Frieze, Roy Herrick (voices only)
- Jabel - Leon Eagles
- Gentek - Mike Elles
- Acolyte - Peter Baldock
Crew[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Writer - Chris Boucher
- Incidental Music - Dudley Simpson
- Title Music - Ron Grainer and the BBC Radiophonic Workshop
- Title Sequence - Bernard Lodge
- Production Assistant - Marion McDougall
- Production Unit Manager - Chris D'Oyly-John
- Lighting - Derek Slee
- Sound - Colin Dixon
- Film Cameraman - John McGlashan
- Film Recordist - Stan Nightingale
- Film Editors - Pam Bosworth, Tariq Anwar
- Visual Effects Designer - Mat Irvine
- Special Sound - Dick Mills
- Costume Designer - John Bloomfield
- Make-Up Artist - Ann Ailes
- Designer - Austin Ruddy
- Script Editor - Robert Holmes
- Producer - Philip Hinchcliffe
- Director - Pennant Roberts
- Fight Arranger - Terry Walsh
Uncredited crew[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Visual Effects Assistants - Steve Drewett, Charlie Lumm (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Inlay Operator - Dave Chapman (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Make-Up Assistants - Karen Bryan, Sue Frear, Jennifer Hughes, Carol Wilson (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Props Buyer - Brenda Barker, Val Woodford (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Production Secretary - Ann Rickard (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Artists Booker - Nansi Davies (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Floor Assistant - Ellen Grech (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Vision Mixers - Nick Lake, James Gould (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Technical Manager - Ron Bristow (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Grams Operator - Gordon Phillipson (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Assistant Floor Managers - Linda Graeme, Richard Leyland (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Senior Cameraman - Colin Reed (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Post-Production Sound - Derek Miller-Timmins (INFO: The Face of Evil)
- Costume Assistant - Ann Bloomfield [1]
Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]
Individuals[[edit] | [edit source]]
The Doctor[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Doctor mentions that he once studied marksmanship with William Tell.
- When the Doctor offers a jelly baby to Leela, she misunderstands his gesture and accuses him of being the Evil One who eats babies.
- The Doctor threatens to turn the Sevateem into toads.
- The Doctor describes a non-functioning communicator as being "Dead as a Dalek."
Science[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Xoanon produces psi-tri projections called Phantoms.
The TARDIS[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The TARDIS displays nexial discontinuity. The Doctor suggests that it may be a fault in the TARDIS tracers.
Influences[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Chris Boucher was inspired by many of the science-fiction stories he had adored since childhood: Brave New World influenced Boucher's ideas about how the Sevateem religion had evolved, while he drew upon Harry Harrison's 1969 novel Captive Universe for the element of an insane computer.
Story notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- This story had the working titles The Tower of Imelo and The Day God Went Mad. The latter was objected to by Philip Hinchcliffe, not because it might offend viewers with religious sensibilities, but because it was out of keeping with other titles.
- The Radio Times programme listing for part one was accompanied by a black-and-white artwork illustration by Roy Ellsworth depicting the Doctor and Leela being watched over by the face of Xoanon on a video screen, with the accompanying caption "Dr. Who and new girl companion, Leela, confront The Face of Evil: 6.20".
- On emerging from the TARDIS in part one, the Doctor directly addresses the camera/audience:
- Doctor: "I think this is not Hyde Park. Could be a nexial discontinuity. Must remember to overhaul those tracers. Put a knot in my hanky. (Pause. He puts his hand in his trouser pocket, and produces a blue handkerchief which already has a knot tied in it. He looks at it quizzically for a second, then turns back to the camera.) Wonder what that was for? (Pause, as he tries to remember. No luck. He puts the handkerchief away.) Little look round, Doctor? Why not?" (He takes a single step forward towards the camera, then turns around and walks away into the jungle.)
- The Doctor's opening fourth wall break would be mirrored in TV: Before the Flood in 2015 by the Twelfth Doctor discussing the Bootstrap paradox with the audience.
- The Janis thorns which Leela uses were originally pronounced with the first syllable rhyming with "can"; however, Tom Baker pointed out that "Janice Thorn" sounded like the name of an out-of-work soap actress, so the pronunciation was changed. (DCOM: The Face of Evil)
- The story was written with two endings, one with Leela going off with the Doctor and one where she didn't.
- The story does not explicitly explain when the Fourth Doctor repaired the Starfall Seven's computer. The novelisation suggests that the earlier visit to the planet of the Sevateem took place during his post-regenerative phase in Robot when the Doctor left in the TARDIS one night, travelled to that world and afterwards returned to UNIT H.Q. before anyone realized he had been gone — with the Doctor's still-addled mind due to his recent regeneration causing him to forget the whole trip. This was not derived from any information given in the televised version.
- Pamela Salem and Rob Edwards provide two of the voices of Xoanon. Both actors were at the time also rehearsing for the following story, The Robots of Death.
- Anthony Frieze, credited as one of the voices of Xoanon, was a student at the school where Pennant Roberts' wife taught. Philip Hinchcliffe arranged for a recording of his voice to be made shouting, "Who am I?", for the climax to part three. After the initial recording (in a sound studio), Frieze made a second visit to the set and re-recorded the line. (DOC: Into the Wild)
- In light of the revelations in The Timeless Children, Jonathan Morris theorised that Xoanon's other split-personality voices (Rob Edwards, Pamela Salem and Anthony Frieze) may in fact have been drawn from forgotten incarnations of the Doctor (similar to the Brain of Morbius Doctors) which Xoanon had drawn from the Doctor's subconscious.[2]
- Leela's costume was leotard-based, and designed by John Bloomfield.
- The Doctor expertly whistles an extended version of the "Colonel Bogey March" (from the film The Bridge on the River Kwai) at the beginning of part one. This whistling continues a tradition Patrick Troughton began of the Doctor displaying musical aptitude. (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Three Doctors and others) Pertwee similarly sang on occasion, (TV: Terror of the Autons, The Curse of Peladon and others) while Davison had some proficiency as a harpist, (TV: The Five Doctors) Eccleston could play delicate, non-human instruments, (TV: Dalek) Tennant at least fancied himself a composer and conductor, (TV: Music of the Spheres) and Capaldi demonstrated skill in guitar. (TV: The Magician's Apprentice, Before the Flood, Hell Bent and others) Tom Baker also whistled the "Colonel Bogey March" in TV: The Talons of Weng-Chiang and The Invasion of Time, and plays Bach on an improvised flute in The Power of Kroll.
- Robert Holmes suggested that Leela possess some sort of supernatural powers, which he thought might be inherited from a witch-priestess grandmother. Chris Boucher was not fond of this idea, and instead opted to grant her a sort of sixth sense for danger.
- The script originally called for the Doctor to threaten a Sevateem tribesman with a knife. Tom Baker objected to this, thinking it was too violent and out of character, so it was changed to a jelly baby.
- Tomas was originally named Loke and originally had a more prominent role before it was decided to give Leela more focus.
- Leslie Schofield would later appear in the Blake's 7 episode "Space Fall", which was directed by Pennant Roberts, script-edited by Chris Boucher and scored by Dudley Simpson.
- This is the first episode to use Roman Numerals at the end of the episode. This would be the norm for all episodes from this point onwards, bar the 1996 TV Movie.
- Philip Hinchcliffe came up with the idea of the Doctor's face being carved in rock, inspired by Mount Rushmore.
- Pamela Salem auditioned for Leela. She wound up voicing Xoana instead.
Ratings[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Part one - 10.7 million viewers
- Part two - 11.1 million viewers
- Part three - 11.3 million viewers
- Part four - 11.7 million viewers
Myths[[edit] | [edit source]]
- During Xoanon's repeating of the phrase, "Who am I?", the child's voice was that of the Doctor's during his childhood. (There is no evidence on-screen to prove this.)
- Anthony Frieze, who recorded the child's voice, was a Doctor Who competition winner. (He was a pupil of the director's wife.)
- Leela is the only female member of the Sevateem. (Another female warrior is seen as the tribe prepares to attack the Wall.)
Filming locations[[edit] | [edit source]]
Production errors[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Louise Jameson pronounces Calib's with a short "a" ("Callib") in the sequences captured on film, but with a long "a" ("Kaye lib") during the sequences later recorded on video at Television Centre. This was because the sequences on film were shot before the script readthrough, so Jameson had not yet heard the name said aloud.
- After Neeva is vapourised, the sonic gun is left lying on the floor. However, during the effect used to represent his death, although David Garfield drops the gun as he is faded out, it has already become caught up in the effect and is see-through before it falls off-screen.
- In part four, Leela turns her gun on the Doctor and fires. The "ray gun effect" was recorded live in shot, but had limited flexibility as to how it could behave with respect to the actors. In effect, it was merely laid down on top of the rest of the action in frame. Thus, when Tom Baker moves downstage (i.e. towards the camera and away from Leela), the "ray gun effect" remains in front of him, and actually appears to hit him — even though Leela's gun is still clearly pointed behind Baker.
- When Leela wrestles the Tesh guard to the floor in part three, his gun falls a considerable distance away from him. Some cuts later, however (though still in the same scene), she picks up the gun, and it has miraculously relocated right next to the fallen guard.
- In part two, following the test, Calib says "untie [the Doctor]", despite the Doctor being bound in no way any more.
- Towards the end of part two, the sound of the gong being struck is out of sync.
- In part two, the Doctor refers to Tomas as "Thomas".
Continuity[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Eleventh Doctor helps a ship be born in PROSE: The Way Through the Woods.
- Leela experiences intense edited flashbacks to her father's death in AUDIO: The Evil One, as part of the Decayed Master's attempts to brainwash her into becoming his assassin.
Home video and audio releases[[edit] | [edit source]]
Video releases[[edit] | [edit source]]
This story was released on VHS in May 1999 in the UK and in March 2000 in the US.
DVD release[[edit] | [edit source]]
The DVD was released in Region 2 on 5 March 2012 and in Region 1 on 13 March 2012.
Special features[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Commentary with actors Louise Jameson (Leela), Leslie Schofield (Calib), David Garfield (Neeva), Mike Elles (Gentek) and Harry H Fielder (Assassin), producer Philip Hinchcliffe and film cameraman John McGlashan. Moderated by Toby Hadoke
- Into the Wild — Cast and crew talk about the making of The Face of Evil
- From the Cutting Room Floor — A behind-the-scenes glimpse at the film shoot
- Tomorrow's Times - The Fourth Doctor — Our on-going series looking at the press coverage of Doctor Who reaches the Tom Baker era. Presented by Wendy Padbury.
- Doctor Who Stories: Louise Jameson — The actress talks about her role on the programme in this interview originally shot for 2003's The Story of Doctor Who
- Swap Shop — Noel Edmonds interviews Louise Jameson (previously included on VHS release)
- Denys Fisher Toys Advert
- 1976 Typhoo Tea Doctor Who Promotion (trading cards and The Amazing World of Doctor Who book) (DVD-ROM)
- Radio Times Listings (DVD-ROM)
- Production Information Subtitles
- Photo Gallery
- Coming Soon Trailer - The Dæmons
Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]
External links[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The Face of Evil at the BBC's official site
- The Face of Evil at RadioTimes
- The Face of Evil at BroaDWcast
- The Face of Evil at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- The Face of Evil at Shannon Sullivan's A Brief History of Time (Travel)