The Horns of Nimon (TV story): Difference between revisions

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* A black and white head-and-shoulders shot of Lalla Ward from ''[[Destiny of the Daleks (TV story)|Destiny of the Daleks]]'' accompanied the ''Radio Times'' programme listing for Part Two, the accompanying caption of which also mentioned Ward's appearance on ''Multi-Coloured Swap Shop'' that very same morning: "''Dr. Who'''s friend Romana (Lalla Ward) has another date in space at 5.50, but you can talk to her this morning in ''Multi-Coloured Swap Shop'': 9.30".
* A black and white head-and-shoulders shot of Lalla Ward from ''[[Destiny of the Daleks (TV story)|Destiny of the Daleks]]'' accompanied the ''Radio Times'' programme listing for Part Two, the accompanying caption of which also mentioned Ward's appearance on ''Multi-Coloured Swap Shop'' that very same morning: "''Dr. Who'''s friend Romana (Lalla Ward) has another date in space at 5.50, but you can talk to her this morning in ''Multi-Coloured Swap Shop'': 9.30".
* This serial was supposed to have been followed by one more, ''[[Shada (TV story)|Shada]]'', but due to a strike, production of ''Shada'' was abandoned, making ''The Horns of Nimon'' a premature season finale. As such it marked the end of several eras: it is producer [[Graham Williams]]' last ''Doctor Who'' story, as well as the final script to be edited by [[Douglas Adams]]. This is the final story in which [[David Brierley]] voices K9, and it featured the final use of the original [[1963]] arrangement of the "Doctor Who Theme", from the [[1967]] remix by [[Delia Derbyshire]], as well as the last use of the diamond-shaped series logo and "tunnel" opening sequence by Bernard Lodge, which had been in place (with some modifications) since ''[[The Time Warrior]]''. The opening credits image of Tom Baker, now close to six years old, is also retired. This is also the last story to be scored by composer [[Dudley Simpson]].
* This serial was supposed to have been followed by one more, ''[[Shada (TV story)|Shada]]'', but due to a strike, production of ''Shada'' was abandoned, making ''The Horns of Nimon'' a premature season finale. As such it marked the end of several eras: it is producer [[Graham Williams]]' last ''Doctor Who'' story, as well as the final script to be edited by [[Douglas Adams]]. This is the final story in which [[David Brierley]] voices K9, and it featured the final use of the original [[1963]] arrangement of the "Doctor Who Theme", from the [[1967]] remix by [[Delia Derbyshire]], as well as the last use of the diamond-shaped series logo and "tunnel" opening sequence by Bernard Lodge, which had been in place (with some modifications) since ''[[The Time Warrior]]''. The opening credits image of Tom Baker, now close to six years old, is also retired. This is also the last story to be scored by composer [[Dudley Simpson]].
* Both the Pilot and the Co-pilot were unnamed on-screen, but were given the names Sekkoth and Sardor respectively by [[Terrance Dicks]] for his novelisation of the story. This was not derived from any information given in the television version.
* Both the Pilot and the Co-pilot were unnamed on-screen, but were given the names Sekkoth and Sardour respectively by [[Terrance Dicks]] for his novelisation of the story. This was not derived from any information given in the television version.
* [[Graham Crowden]] (Soldeed) was considered for the role of the [[Fourth Doctor]] following [[Jon Pertwee]]'s departure.
* [[Graham Crowden]] (Soldeed) was considered for the role of the [[Fourth Doctor]] following [[Jon Pertwee]]'s departure.
* [[John Bailey]] (Sezom) previously played the [[Commander (The Sensorites)|Commander]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Sensorites]]'' and [[Edward Waterfield]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks]]''.
* [[John Bailey]] (Sezom) previously played the [[Commander (The Sensorites)|Commander]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Sensorites]]'' and [[Edward Waterfield]] in [[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks]]''.

Revision as of 01:53, 30 June 2013

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The Horns of Nimon was the fifth and final broadcast story of Season 17 of Doctor Who. This was not the original intention, only becoming the case when the incomplete Shada was cancelled. Horns marked David Brierley's final vocal appearance as K9. Moreover, it was the final story to be broadcast, in full or in part, during the 1970s - and the first during the 1980s.

Synopsis

With the TARDIS in for repairs, the Doctor and Romana must battle the Nimon, a monster who enslaves a planet.

Plot

Part 1

The glory days of the Skonnan Empire are long since past, but many of its citizens and soldiers yearn for those days of control and conquest. The arrival of the mysterious horned Nimon to Skonnos has brought hope of imperial restoration. The fearsome creature lives within its labyrinth Power Complex, and has promised to rebuild the empire providing it receives a series of tributes from the Skonnans and their fawning, arrogant leader, Soldeed. This tribute is to consist of groups of youthful sacrifices from the nearby planet Aneth, as well as a supply of hymetusite crystals with each group. Young people have thus been abducted from Aneth and transferred to the labyrinth of the Nimon, into which only Soldeed is permitted to venture. On the final collection, however, the interstellar craft bearing the sacrifices breaks down in space. The ancient war craft has simply worn out, and when the co-pilot over extends the engines, a control panel explodes and kills the pilot.

The Doctor is in the TARDIS console room with Romana and K9, making modifications to the ship. Various controls are disconnected. Unfortunately, the area of space he has chosen to materialise the ship in is perilously close to what seems to be the basis of a manufactured black hole. They are in danger of being drawn in. The Doctor extends the TARDIS door force field to a nearby spaceship – the Skonnan battle cruiser – and he and Romana board the ageing warship. Once aboard the Doctor notices an abundance of radioactive hymetusite crystals and then soon finds a hold full of young prisoners. They are from the peaceful world of Aneth and one of them, Teka, has a seemingly misplaced faith that another prisoner, Seth, can free them from their incarceration. The co-pilot investigates the hold and there finds the Doctor and Romana among the “weakling scum”. He takes the two of them at gunpoint to the bridge and forces them to help fix the stranded Skonnan ship. Romana offers to repair the ship using a hymetusite crystal and one is brought to her while the Doctor is permitted to return to K9 and the TARDIS to assist from there. Aboard the TARDIS, K9 informs the Doctor about the collapse of the Skonnan Empire in civil war.

With the Skonnan craft repaired, the co-pilot starts to move his ship away, stranding the TARDIS in space. With the TARDIS still not fully repaired and the gravity increasing, the Doctor and K9 face obliteration as a vast planetary body advances directly toward them.

Part 2

Using a cricket ball strategy, the Doctor bounces the TARDIS off the approaching planetoid. He then starts work on repairing the console in order to pilot the ship to Skonnos. On Skonnos, the Nimon is angry when Soldeed reports the Skonnan craft with the last batch of sacrifices has not reached Skonnos and says it will withhold the arms that will help rebuild the Skonnan Empire until the ship arrives.

Fortunately for Soldeed, once he emerges from the Power Complex he hears from his guard captain, Sorak, that the ship has been found. The warship soon arrives on Skonnos and Soldeed leads the party of greeting, being unnerved to see Romana aboard. The co-pilot then lies that she is the cause of all the problems on the ship, being a pirate who stole aboard and killed the captain. Soldeed does not believe this and then forces the co-pilot into the Nimon Power Complex where he is sure to be killed. Moments later Romana and the Anethans are loaded up with hymetusite and also sent into the maze. Shortly thereafter the TARDIS materialises in the central square of Skonnos and the Doctor emerges. He is taken to Soldeed but soon escapes and heads into the Power Complex to escape his pursuers.

A Nimon kills the co-pilot.

Deep in the Complex – whose walls seem to shift and change creating various patterns of progress that all lead to the Nimon – Romana finds the husks of previous Anethans, the life drained from them. The co-pilot also arrives, still pleading for his life, and when the Nimon appears too it dispatches the desperate soldier first before turning its mighty horns on Romana and the cowering Anethans.

Part 3

The Doctor arrives in the nick of time to distract the Nimon and thus save Romana, Seth and Teka who make a break for it after him, though the other Anethans are too scared to leave. He leads them deeper into the Complex and finds a power source close to the heart of the maze, but he needs a computer to interpret the machine and so blows his dog whistle to summon K9. When the robot dog emerges from the TARDIS it encounters Soldeed, who immobilises it and takes it away for examination.

Back in the heart of the Complex the Nimon has now reached the power source room and starts manipulating the controls of the machine, which begins to cause the Complex to glow with energy. It also enables a shimmering tunnel to appear, down which comes a travel globe that bears two more Nimon. They announce to the other Nimon that the planet Crinoth is dying and that all the Nimon must continue the Great Journey of Life to Skonnos. Once the Nimon stalk away the Doctor examines the globes and pronounces that they are travelling vessels that have journeyed down a tunnel set between two black holes. By mishap the Doctor sends the globe down the tunnel with Romana in it but before he can reverse this Soldeed arrives and uses his staff to destroy the control panel.

Romana encounters Sezom.

Part 4

Romana has arrived in the dying world of Crinoth where she encounters many Nimon who live as per their operation on Skonnos. Their equivalent of Soldeed is a broken old man named Sezom, who helped the Nimon establish themselves on his world and now knows they have destroyed it. He compares the Nimon to intergalactic locusts, swarming between planets and draining them of energy. He has also discovered that when jacenite is integrated into the staff that he was supplied with by the Nimon, it has the ability to stun them. He gives Romana an extra piece that he has, but is shortly afterward killed by a Nimon while helping her to escape.

Seth shoots Soldeed unconscious, and the Doctor then attempts to repair the transportation system. Just as he is about to complete the repairs, the Nimons return to the power source room and restrain him. However, they finish his work by reversing the tunnel, which brings Romana back in the capsule she had been waiting in on Crinoth. Romana tosses the jacenite to Seth, who now has possession of Soldeed's staff, and he uses it to stun two of the Nimons. Having managed to free himself from Soldeed's laboratory, K9 arrives just in time to deal with the remaining one. Soldeed, having escaped from the power source room, has seen the multiple Nimons and his faith is badly damaged. He is shot down by Seth but in his death throes manages to trigger a chain reaction, which will destroy the Complex. The Doctor and his party make their way out, using K9 to work out a proper exit path through the labyrinth. They all escape and join up with the remaining members of the Skonnan military council, all of whom evacuate the main square as the Nimon Power Complex explodes.

Later in the TARDIS, the Doctor reflects on their adventure as they watch Seth and Teka pilot a spacecraft away from Skonnos, having been granted their freedom. Elsewhere, Crinoth can be seen disintegrating. It seems that the Nimon threat is over.

Cast

Crew

References

Cricket

Minerals

Planets

  • Skonnos was once home to an empire of over a hundred star systems, but it fell to civil war. The empire still includes Crinoth, which has been invaded and devastated by the Nimon and Aneth.

Plays from the real world

  • The Doctor quotes Hamlet in saying, "Oh my prophetic soul".

TARDIS

  • The TARDIS defence shields can extend outside the ship, maintaining an atmosphere. In addition, the TARDIS's gravitic anomaliser could generate a localised field of artificial gravity around the outside of the TARDIS.

Technology

Transport technology

Weapons

  • The Doctor states that everywhere he goes he has guns, phasers and blasters pointed at him. (Phasers are the main personal weapon in Star Trek and blasters are the main handheld weapon in Star Wars.)

Story notes

  • This story is based on the Greek myth of Theseus and the Minotaur. Several names in the story are anagrams or near-anagrams of names from the myth: thus, Athens becomes Aneth, Theseus becomes Seth, and Corinth becomes Crinoth. The Power Complex is analogous to the Labyrinth, and the Nimon to the Minotaur.
  • The time rotor in the Doctor's TARDIS is removed, the first and only time this has occurred.
  • The line,"I'm glad I reminded them to paint their ship white; last time anything like this happened, completely forgot; caused quite a hoo-ha," is another reference to Greek mythology,specifically when Theseus forgot to paint his flag white, causing his father (who had an agreement with Theseus to paint his flag white if he came back alive) to jump off the palace in despair.
  • Clifford Norgate is credited as 'Voice of the Nimon' for Parts One to Three, and as 'Voice of the Nimons' for Part Four. Radio Times credits Norgate as 'Voice of the Nimon' for Parts One and Two, and as 'Voice of the Nimons' for Parts Three and Four.
  • A black and white head-and-shoulders shot of Lalla Ward from Destiny of the Daleks accompanied the Radio Times programme listing for Part Two, the accompanying caption of which also mentioned Ward's appearance on Multi-Coloured Swap Shop that very same morning: "Dr. Who's friend Romana (Lalla Ward) has another date in space at 5.50, but you can talk to her this morning in Multi-Coloured Swap Shop: 9.30".
  • This serial was supposed to have been followed by one more, Shada, but due to a strike, production of Shada was abandoned, making The Horns of Nimon a premature season finale. As such it marked the end of several eras: it is producer Graham Williams' last Doctor Who story, as well as the final script to be edited by Douglas Adams. This is the final story in which David Brierley voices K9, and it featured the final use of the original 1963 arrangement of the "Doctor Who Theme", from the 1967 remix by Delia Derbyshire, as well as the last use of the diamond-shaped series logo and "tunnel" opening sequence by Bernard Lodge, which had been in place (with some modifications) since The Time Warrior. The opening credits image of Tom Baker, now close to six years old, is also retired. This is also the last story to be scored by composer Dudley Simpson.
  • Both the Pilot and the Co-pilot were unnamed on-screen, but were given the names Sekkoth and Sardour respectively by Terrance Dicks for his novelisation of the story. This was not derived from any information given in the television version.
  • Graham Crowden (Soldeed) was considered for the role of the Fourth Doctor following Jon Pertwee's departure.
  • John Bailey (Sezom) previously played the Commander in TV: The Sensorites and Edward Waterfield in TV: The Evil of the Daleks.

Ratings

  • Part 1 - 6.0 million viewers
  • Part 2 - 8.8 million viewers
  • Part 3 - 9.8 million viewers
  • Part 4 - 10.4 million viewers

Filming locations

Studio filming

Model filming

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.
  • The Co-pilot's trousers rip at the end of Part Three when the Nimon kills him.
  • In part four, Soldeed's body disappears from where it fell.
  • The Nimons' 'heads' become loose on several occasions and the actors' necks are visible beneath.
  • Graham Crowden starts laughing during Soldeed's death scene in Part Four, at the point where Soldeed pulls a wall-mounted lever to send the nuclear furnace critical just before he finally collapses and dies. (Crowden had mistakenly believed the final recording of this scene to be simply a camera rehearsal.)
  • The 'computer bank' scenery elements on the set of the Nimon Power Complex control room are unfortunately all too recognisable as those seen in Noel Edmonds's desk area on Multi-Coloured Swap Shop.

Continuity

The Nimon appear again in AUDIO: Seasons of Fear

Home video and audio releases

DVD releases

  • This story was first released on DVD in the UK on 29 March 2010 as part of the Myths And Legends Boxset. The one disc set includes a restored version of the story, as well as the following special features:
  • Commentary by Lalla Ward (Romana), Janet Ellis (Teka), Graham Crowden (Soldeed) and Anthony Read (Writer).
  • Who Peter – Partners In Time
  • Easter Egg- On the special features page, go to 'Read the Writer', then press right to highlight a hidden Doctor Who logo. Press enter to see a sketch by the sock puppets.
  • Read The Writer
  • Peter Howell Music Demos
  • Coming Soon Trailer
  • Radio Times Billings
  • Production Subtitles
  • Photo Gallery

Box sets

Video releases

The Horns of Nimon was the last Fourth Doctor story to be released by BBC Video on VHS videotape.

External links