Terror of the Autons (TV story): Difference between revisions

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'''''Terror of the Autons''''' was the first story of [[Season 8]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. It was notable for being a "gentle reboot" of the [[Jon Pertwee]] era, offering a number of elements which would remain prevalent for the next three seasons. It marked the debut of three new recurring characters: [[Jo Jones|Jo Grant]], [[Mike Yates|Captain Mike Yates]] and the [[the Master|Master]]. Furthermore, it was the first story in which [[John Benton|Sgt. Benton]]'s portrayer, [[John Levene]], was given an annual contract, rather than employment as a day player. It also introduced what became [[Unified Intelligence Taskforce|UNIT]]'s standard, green uniforms — the replacements for what [[Barry Letts]] disparagingly called the "chocolates" of [[Season 7]] — and a new UNIT laboratory which would be used by the [[Third Doctor]] until the end of his exile.
'''''Terror of the Autons''''' was the first story of [[Season 8]] of ''[[Doctor Who]]''. It was notable for being a "gentle reboot" of the [[Jon Pertwee]] era, offering a number of elements which would remain prevalent for the next three seasons. It marked the debut of three new recurring characters: [[Jo Grant]], [[Mike Yates|Captain Mike Yates]] and the [[the Master|Master]]. Furthermore, it was the first story in which [[John Benton|Sgt. Benton]]'s portrayer, [[John Levene]], was given an annual contract, rather than employment as a day player. It also introduced what became [[Unified Intelligence Taskforce|UNIT]]'s standard, green uniforms — the replacements for what [[Barry Letts]] disparagingly called the "chocolates" of [[Season 7]] — and a new UNIT laboratory which would be used by the [[Third Doctor]] until the end of his exile.


It also featured the first return of the [[Auton]]s since [[Spearhead from Space|their debut]] in [[Season 7]], and the first direct contact between [[the Doctor]] and [[Time Lord|his people]] since the end of [[Season 6]]. It was one of very few stories — and the first since [[DW]]: ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'' in [[1967]] — in which each new episode drew more viewers than the one that had preceded it. Finally, it was also the only televised ''Doctor Who'' story to be at least partially adapted as a non-parodic comic strip, in [[DWM 164]].
It also featured the first return of the [[Auton]]s since [[Spearhead from Space|their debut]] in [[Season 7]], and the first direct contact between [[the Doctor]] and [[Time Lord|his people]] since the end of [[Season 6]]. It was one of very few stories — and the first since [[DW]]: ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'' in [[1967]] — in which each new episode drew more viewers than the one that had preceded it. Finally, it was also the only televised ''Doctor Who'' story to be at least partially adapted as a non-parodic comic strip, in [[DWM 164]].
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Once mixed with plastic, the Nestene will form into faceless automatons, a willing army of destruction easily controlled by the Master himself. This is the terrible threat now facing Earth - the terror of the Autons.
Once mixed with plastic, the Nestene will form into faceless automatons, a willing army of destruction easily controlled by the Master himself. This is the terrible threat now facing Earth - the terror of the Autons.


Aided by the Brigadier and his new companion [[Jo Jones|Jo Grant]], only the [[Third Doctor]] can combat their evil power, but first he must destroy the Master...
Aided by the Brigadier and his new companion [[Jo Grant]], only the [[Third Doctor]] can combat their evil power, but first he must destroy the Master...


== Plot ==
== Plot ==
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Circus manager Luigi Rossini sees a horsebox materialise in the field near the circus tent. Out steps the [[the Master (UNIT years)|Master]], who quickly overpowers him with hypnosis. He enlists Rossini to help him steal a [[Nestene]] meteorite (leftover from [[Spearhead from Space|the previous invasion]]) from a nearby museum.
Circus manager Luigi Rossini sees a horsebox materialise in the field near the circus tent. Out steps the [[the Master (UNIT years)|Master]], who quickly overpowers him with hypnosis. He enlists Rossini to help him steal a [[Nestene]] meteorite (leftover from [[Spearhead from Space|the previous invasion]]) from a nearby museum.


[[Liz Shaw]] has returned to Cambridge. the Brigadier assigns [[UNIT]] trainee [[Jo Jones|Jo Grant]] as the [[Third Doctor]]'s new assistant. She immediately makes a bad first impression when she extinguishes a small fire on the Doctor's lab bench, destroying his dematerialisation circuit. Dismayed at her lack of qualifications, he attempts to fire her but cannot bring himself to do so.
[[Liz Shaw]] has returned to Cambridge. the Brigadier assigns [[UNIT]] trainee [[Jo Grant]] as the [[Third Doctor]]'s new assistant. She immediately makes a bad first impression when she extinguishes a small fire on the Doctor's lab bench, destroying his dematerialisation circuit. Dismayed at her lack of qualifications, he attempts to fire her but cannot bring himself to do so.


The Master appears at a deep space radio telescope, overpowering Professor George Phillips and his assistant, Goodge. He connects the Nestene meteorite to the telescope and transmits a signal.
The Master appears at a deep space radio telescope, overpowering Professor George Phillips and his assistant, Goodge. He connects the Nestene meteorite to the telescope and transmits a signal.
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* This story had a working title of ''The Spray of Death''.
* This story had a working title of ''The Spray of Death''.
* Although credited, Bill McGuirk (Policeman) does not actually appear in the story. His scenes was been cut prior to broadcast.
* Although credited, Bill McGuirk (Policeman) does not actually appear in the story. His scenes was been cut prior to broadcast.
* This is the first story to feature [[Mike Yates]], [[Jo Jones|Jo Grant]] and the [[the Master|Master]].
* This is the first story to feature [[Mike Yates]], [[Jo Grant]] and the [[the Master|Master]].
* Both [[Christopher Burgess]] (Professor George Philips) and [[Andrew Staines]] (Goodge) previously appeared in [[DW]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'', in which they played [[Swann]] and [[Benik]]'s sergeant respectively. Furthermore, they would later appear in [[DW]]: ''[[Planet of the Spiders (TV story)|Planet of the Spiders]]'' together, in which they played [[Barnes]] and [[Keaver]] respectively.
* Both [[Christopher Burgess]] (Professor George Philips) and [[Andrew Staines]] (Goodge) previously appeared in [[DW]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'', in which they played [[Swann]] and [[Benik]]'s sergeant respectively. Furthermore, they would later appear in [[DW]]: ''[[Planet of the Spiders (TV story)|Planet of the Spiders]]'' together, in which they played [[Barnes]] and [[Keaver]] respectively.



Revision as of 04:40, 14 August 2012

RealWorld.png

Terror of the Autons was the first story of Season 8 of Doctor Who. It was notable for being a "gentle reboot" of the Jon Pertwee era, offering a number of elements which would remain prevalent for the next three seasons. It marked the debut of three new recurring characters: Jo Grant, Captain Mike Yates and the Master. Furthermore, it was the first story in which Sgt. Benton's portrayer, John Levene, was given an annual contract, rather than employment as a day player. It also introduced what became UNIT's standard, green uniforms — the replacements for what Barry Letts disparagingly called the "chocolates" of Season 7 — and a new UNIT laboratory which would be used by the Third Doctor until the end of his exile.

It also featured the first return of the Autons since their debut in Season 7, and the first direct contact between the Doctor and his people since the end of Season 6. It was one of very few stories — and the first since DW: The Tomb of the Cybermen in 1967 — in which each new episode drew more viewers than the one that had preceded it. Finally, it was also the only televised Doctor Who story to be at least partially adapted as a non-parodic comic strip, in DWM 164.

The Autons would not appear on television again until DW: Rose, the first episode of the revived series, in 2005.

Synopsis

The Earth is in terrible danger when an evil renegade Time Lord known as the Master arrives at a circus run by a man named Luigi Rossini and steals a dormant Nestene energy unit from a museum. He reactivates it using a radio telescope and uses his hypnotic abilities to take control of a small plastics firm run by the Farrel family, where he organises the production of deadly Auton dolls, chairs and daffodils.

File:Master TARDIS.jpg
The Master's TARDIS arrives on Earth...

The Master has an evil scheme to destroy humanity and silence his old foe, the Doctor, forever. His plan is to awaken the awesome power of the Nestene - a ruthlessly aggressive alien life form.

Once mixed with plastic, the Nestene will form into faceless automatons, a willing army of destruction easily controlled by the Master himself. This is the terrible threat now facing Earth - the terror of the Autons.

Aided by the Brigadier and his new companion Jo Grant, only the Third Doctor can combat their evil power, but first he must destroy the Master...

Plot

Episode one

Circus manager Luigi Rossini sees a horsebox materialise in the field near the circus tent. Out steps the Master, who quickly overpowers him with hypnosis. He enlists Rossini to help him steal a Nestene meteorite (leftover from the previous invasion) from a nearby museum.

Liz Shaw has returned to Cambridge. the Brigadier assigns UNIT trainee Jo Grant as the Third Doctor's new assistant. She immediately makes a bad first impression when she extinguishes a small fire on the Doctor's lab bench, destroying his dematerialisation circuit. Dismayed at her lack of qualifications, he attempts to fire her but cannot bring himself to do so.

The Master appears at a deep space radio telescope, overpowering Professor George Phillips and his assistant, Goodge. He connects the Nestene meteorite to the telescope and transmits a signal.

Investigating the theft of the meteorite and the disappearance of the scientists, the Doctor arrives at the radio telescope. Outside the control tower, a Time Lord arrives, 'inconspicuously' dressed in a dark suit and bowler hat and hovering in the air, to warn the Doctor of the Master's arrival on Earth and alert him to a booby trap inside. Disarming it, the Doctor opens Goodge's lunchbox to find his shrunken corpse inside.

At a small local plastics factory, production manager James McDermott confronts the owner, young Rex Farrel, about the mysterious Colonel Masters and the new line of products he has commissioned them into producing.

File:Autons rise.jpg
The Master brings the Autons back to life...

The Doctor correctly surmises that the Master is in league with the Nestenes. He obtains a list of nearby plastic factories. Jo, against the Doctor's will, goes off on her own to investigate. By chance, she arrives at the Farrel factory. She is quickly discovered by the Master and hypnotised. She returns to UNIT with a crate that apparently once contained the Nestene meteorite, but as she begins to open it the Doctor quickly realises that it's a bomb. The Doctor shouts for someone to stop her, but Jo is determined to open the crate.

Episode two

The Doctor throws the box out of the window. It explodes in the river. He announces that Jo has been hypnotised by the Master and attempts to work through it.

Back at the plastics factory, Mr McDermott confronts the Master about his apparent domination over the Farrel factory. The Master invites him to sit in one of their new products, a self-inflating plastic chair, which comes alive and smothers him. Rex Farrel is impressed with its effectiveness, but the Master realises that they should explore smaller products.

At UNIT, the Doctor frees Jo from the Master's control. She tells him about the office she was in and also about the bomb. The Doctor realises this must be the work of the Master. The factory's retired founder, the elder Mr Farrel, is very upset over Mr McDermott's death and the arrival of "Colonel Masters." After his attempt at hypnotising Mr Farrel fails, the Master gives him a new sample product, a demonic-looking plastic doll. He takes it home and puts it on the radiator, where it comes to life and kills him.

UNIT scouts spot the missing Professor Philips at Rossini's circus. The Doctor goes to investigate but is quickly captured; the Master left Professor Philips at the circus to lure the Doctor there. The circus's strongman Tony is menacing him inside a trailer, but Jo (who followed the Doctor) knocks him out. Professor Philips enters with a grenade in his hand, but the Doctor works through his hypnosis. Philips detonates the grenade outside, killing himself.

The Doctor and Jo find the Master's TARDIS (the horse box) and are confronted by an angry mob of circus employees led by Rossini. They are rescued from the mob by an arriving police car. The Brigadier and Captain Yates arrive at the circus, see what is happening and follow them. Instead of being taken back to UNIT, the Doctor and Jo arrive in a remote quarry. The Doctor discovers that the policemen are Autons in disguise.

Episode three

The Doctor struggles with the two Autons, causing the car to veer and crash. Jo and he escape from the car, relentlessly pursued by the Autons. The Brigadier and Captain Yates arrive and rescue them.

Back at the lab, the Doctor replaces his non-functional dematerialisation circuit with the one he stole from the Master's TARDIS, but they are incompatible. The Doctor's frustration is abated when he realises that as long as he has the Master's circuit, he's stuck on Earth too.

The Master is pleased with the factory's latest product, a realistic-looking plastic daffodil. The Autons, led by Rex Farrel, wear enormous carnival masks and matching yellow suits. They tour the countryside, handing daffodils to the public.

The Brigadier is alerted to a rash of unexplained asphyxiation deaths all over England. Jo's memory is jogged by the mention of Mr Farrel among the casualties. They meet his grieving widow and take the doll for examination; meanwhile a mysterious repairman replaces the cord on the Doctor's lab telephone.

The Doctor and the Brigadier investigate the now-abandoned plastics factory and discover a leftover plastic daffodil (and narrowly elude an Auton). Meanwhile, Jo and Captain Yates accidentally reactivate the troll doll with the heat from the Doctor's Bunsen burner, which they borrowed to make cocoa. The doll attacks Jo, but Yates blows it to pieces with his gun.

The Master telephones the Doctor in his lab to say goodbye. He activates a signal device and the Doctor's telephone cord comes to life. It wraps itself around him, and starts squeezing the life out of him.

Episode four

The Doctor looks at the daffodil

The Brigadier hears the Doctor shouting for help and disconnects the phone, cutting off the signal. The Doctor tells the Brigadier that the Nestenes can put life into anything made of plastic. While examining the daffodil, the Doctor and Jo accidentally discover it is activated by radio waves. The daffodil sprays an asphyxiating film over Jo's nose and mouth, though the Doctor removes it in time. The daffodils are to be activated by a signal from the Radio Telescope; the unexplained deaths were shortwave radio users who activated theirs prematurely.

The Master arrives at the Doctor's lab, armed with his shrinking weapon. The Doctor shows that he is holding the Master's dematerialisation circuit, which would be destroyed if he fired. Jo breaks the stalemate when she blurts out that UNIT has identified the coach bus and is planning an airstrike. The Master alters his plan, kidnapping them and leaving them tied up in the bus to be killed in the strike. The Brigadier and Benton see this and cancel the strike just in time. The Doctor communicates to UNIT by tapping a Morse Code message on the bus brake pedal, while Jo impresses the Doctor with her skills at escapology.

While the Autons hold off a UNIT force led by Yates and Benton, the Doctor and the Brigadier confront the Master in the radio telescope control room as he opens the signal for the Nestene invasion force. The Doctor convinces the Master that he'll be expendable once the Nestenes arrive. The Master is persuaded. Together they reverse the radio signal, expelling the force into deep space. With the signal cut off, the Autons drop dead.

The Master escapes from the control room, but is cornered inside the bus by UNIT troops. He emerges with his hands up, but quickly draws a pistol. Captain Yates is quicker and shoots him dead. The dubious Doctor examines the body and reveals it is actually Rex Farrel in disguise. The real Master drives away in the bus. Now that both he and the Master are stranded on Earth, the Doctor admits that he will rather be looking forward to their next meeting.

Cast

Crew

References

The Doctor

  • The Doctor intuitively leaps to the conclusion that Jo is opening a bomb when he sees her trying to open the box.

The Master

  • The Time Lord who appears to the Doctor informs him that the Master is on Earth, and the Doctor recognises him by that name.
  • The Master has special abilities including hypnosis that can make people act against their usual nature.

Music from the real world

Military

  • The Doctor says that he regards military intelligence as a contradiction in terms.

Species

Science

  • The Doctor discovers that carbon dioxide from the lungs dissolves the film that the daffodils shoot at people's faces.

TARDISes

  • The Master's TARDIS is disguised as a horsebox, and uses a Mark Two dematerialisation circuit, as opposed to the Doctor's Mark One. It isn't compatible with the Doctor's TARDIS.

UNIT

The Doctor with Jo and Mike.
  • Jo's uncle pulled some strings to get her a job at UNIT.

Weapons

  • This story features the first appearance of the Master's Tissue Compression Eliminator.
  • The Doctor boils away the contents of a weapon of the Master's so that the Earth military cannot get hold of and try to duplicate it.

Story notes

Ratings

  • Episode One - 7.3 million viewers
  • Episode Two - 8.0 million viewers
  • Episode Three - 8.1 million viewers
  • Episode Four - 8.4 million viewers

Myths

  • The production team had initially envisioned the new regular villain for the series as a female character, possibly called the Controller, to be played by Susan Jameson. (The role was always envisaged as a male character called the Master, and Roger Delgado was the only actor considered for it.)

Filming locations

  • St. Peter's Court, Chalfont St. Peter, Buckinghamshire
  • Hodgemoor Woods, Chalfont St. Giles, Buckinghamshire
  • Lee Valley Ice Centre, Leyton, London (Location of Rossini's circus)
  • Zouches Farm Relay Station, Caddington, Bedfordshire (Location used for exterior of Beacon Hill Research Establishment)
  • Church Lane car park, Chalfont St. Peter, Buckinghamshire
  • Queen's Wharf, Hammersmith, London (Exterior location of the Master's bomb exploding outside UNIT lab, in water)
  • Totternhoe Lime and Stone Co Ltd, Totternhoe, Dunstable (The quarry the Doctor and Jo are taken to)
  • Ecomould (formerly Thermo Plastics Ltd), Luton Road, Dunstable (Farrell's Plastics Factory)
  • BBC Television Centre (Studio 8 and 6), Shepherd's Bush, London

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.
  • All elements of CSO have a lot of flaring/fuzzing around the edges of the CSOed image (a museum, the outside of a radio telescope, a lunchbox interior, a lab, the interior of two cars and the coach, a phone box, a kitchen, a quarry and everywhere the killer doll goes).
  • Near the beginning of Episode Three, the actual interior of the Police Box prop can be clearly seen from the outside.
  • In Episode Four when the Doctor and Jo are being held prisoners on the coach, one of the Auton's hands is missing a white glove and as it picks up the Doctor, a human hand is clearly visible for a few seconds.
  • When Mr McDermott is swallowed by the plastic chair, he can be seen pulling the headrest on top of him.
    The DVD Production Notes states that this sequence was actually recorded in reverse.

Continuity

Timeline

Comic strip adaptation

The opening scenes of episode 1 were adapted as a comic published in September 1990, as part of a larger article on the production of the story.

Home video releases

Video releases

  • This story was released as a recolourised edition based on black and white and colour source material in the UK April 1993, in Australia/New Zealand June 1993 (BBC catalogue #4957), and in US/Canada June 1995 (WHV catalogue #E1276) in episodic format.
  • This release was part of the thirtieth Anniversary celebrations releases.
  • This was a colour restored version of the story completed by the Doctor Who Restoration Team.
  • VHS UK cover

    VHS UK cover

  • VHS Australian cover

    VHS Australian cover

  • VHS US cover

    VHS US cover

DVD release

This story was released as Doctor Who: Terror of the Autons

Released:

Region 2: 9th May 2011
Region 1: 10th May 2011
Region 4: 2nd June 2011

Special Features:

Notes:

  • It is only available in the UK and Australia as part of the Mannequin Mania box set, released with a special edition of Spearhead from Space.

External links