Invaders from Mars (audio story): Difference between revisions

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* The headline on the ''Invaders from Mars'' cover is from a real newspaper reporting the ''War of the Worlds'' panic. The imitation poster on the CD booklet was drawn by Mark Gatiss.
* The headline on the ''Invaders from Mars'' cover is from a real newspaper reporting the ''War of the Worlds'' panic. The imitation poster on the CD booklet was drawn by Mark Gatiss.
* This audio drama was recorded on [[16 January|16]] and [[17 January]] [[2001]].
* This audio drama was recorded on [[16 January|16]] and [[17 January]] [[2001]].
[[File:Doctor_Who_Magazine_313_(04).jpg|thumb|Illustration by Lee Sullivan from DWM 313]]


== Continuity ==
== Continuity ==

Revision as of 17:57, 19 January 2013

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Invaders from Mars was the twenty-eighth monthly Doctor Who audio story produced by Big Finish Productions. It was the first in a series of 6 audio stories that begins the second "season" of Eighth Doctor stories. It featured the Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor and India Fisher as Charlotte Pollard.

Publisher's summary

Hallowe'en 1938.

A month after a mysterious meteorite lit up the skies of New York State, Martian invaders laid waste to the nation. At least, according to soon-to-be infamous Orson Welles they did. But what if some of the panicked listeners to the legendary The War of the Worlds broadcast weren’t just imagining things?

Attempting to deliver Charley to her rendezvous in Singapore 1930, the Eighth Doctor overshoots a little, arriving in Manhattan just in time to find a dead private detective. Indulging his gumshoe fantasies, the Doctor is soon embroiled in the hunt for a missing Russian scientist whilst Charley finds herself at the mercy of a very dubious Fifth Columnist.

With some genuinely out of this world 'merchandise' at stake, the TARDIS crew are forced into an alliance with a sultry dame called Glory Bee, Orson Welles himself and a mobster with half a nose known as 'The Phantom'.

And slowly and surely, something is drawing plans against them. Just not very good ones...

Plot

to be added

Cast

References

  • The Doctor tells Charley that, in the 11th century, an "amoral Time Lord" (possibly the Monk) altered history by providing King Canute, which allowed him to turn back the tide and gain greater influence over Saxon England than he would have done otherwise. The Doctor set history back on its correct course.
  • H. G. Wells' novel The War of the Worlds is mentioned and referenced several times.
  • The Doctor is astonished that Orson Welles is ignorant of William Shakespeare's identity.
  • The Laiderplacker are the invaders.

Notes

File:Doctor Who Magazine 313 (04).jpg
Illustration by Lee Sullivan from DWM 313

Continuity

  • The Sixth Doctor previously met H. G. Wells, the author of The War of the Worlds, in Scotland during the summer of 1885 and subsequently took him on a trip to the planet Karfel. (TV: Timelash) Many years later in his personal timeline, the Tenth Doctor would meet Wells once again in 1889. He intimated that they would have a third encounter later in Wells' personal timeline which occurred earlier in his own. (COMIC: The Time Machination)
  • The Doctor once again speed reads a book in a matter of seconds. (TV: City of Death, TV: Rose, TV: The Time of Angels)
  • The reason for Welles' ignorance of Shakespeare is revealed in AUDIO: The Time of the Daleks.
  • In AUDIO: Neverland, it is revealed why there are forty-nine states in the USA (instead of forty-eight in 1938) and how the CIA, which was actually founded in 1947, can exist in 1938.
  • The Celestial Toymaker would later refer to Orson Welles in a riddle while Charley was playing his games in the Celestial Toyroom. (AUDIO: Solitaire)
  • Later during his eighth incarnation, the Doctor and his companion Tamsin Drew would become embroiled in the events surrounding an actual Martian invasion in the 23rd century, though not of Earth but Mars itself. After the settings on their suspended animation chambers in the Deimos catacombs were altered by the Monk, one of the Doctor's fellow renegade Time Lords, to ensure that they awoke several centuries early, nine Ice Warriors led by Lord Slaadek captured the moonbase located on Mars' moon Deimos. Their intention was to use the atmospheric re-ioniser stored in the base to return Mars' atmosphere to the state in which it had existed millions of years earlier so their ancestral home planet would be once again amenable to their physiology. However, their plan was ultimately defeated by the Doctor and his former companion Lucie Miller. (AUDIO: Deimos / The Resurrection of Mars)

External links