The Sea Devils (TV story): Difference between revisions
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|doctor = Third Doctor | |doctor = Third Doctor | ||
|companions = [[Jo Grant|Jo]] | |companions = [[Jo Grant|Jo]] | ||
|enemy = {{Delgado|c}}, [[Sea Devil]]s, [[George Trenchard| | |enemy = {{Delgado|c}}, [[Sea Devil]]s, [[George Trenchard|Trenchard]] | ||
|setting = [[Fortress Island]] and [[HMS Seaspite]], [[England]] | |setting = [[Fortress Island]] and [[HMS Seaspite|HMS ''Seaspite'']], [[England]] | ||
|writer = [[Malcolm Hulke]] | |writer = [[Malcolm Hulke]] | ||
|director = [[Michael Briant]] | |director = [[Michael Briant]] |
Revision as of 02:42, 28 March 2017
The Sea Devils was the third story in the ninth season of Doctor Who. It marked the first appearance of the Sea Devils and the reappearance of the Master, now plotting to escape confinement from a maximum security prison.
Barry Letts and Terrance Dicks had decided they wanted a sea-based story and asked Malcolm Hulke to write it. Rather than merely bringing back the Silurians, Hulke invented an aquatic version called the Sea Silurians. Unlike their earlier counterparts, these "Sea Devils" were given clothing, designed by Maggie Fletcher.
To answer the insistence by fans that the Silurian era could not have spawned man-sized life, Hulke introduced a line in which the Doctor says they should correctly be called Eocenes. However, this period was still well in advance of humanoid life.
After the Master appeared in all five stories of season 8, Letts decided to restrict him to a few appearances each year. This story joins him where The Dæmons left off, in prison. The dialogue implies he and the Doctor were once friends.
Letts had secured the involvement of the Royal Air Force for The Mind of Evil and decided to try to do the same with the Royal Navy. He found the Ministry of Defence eager to take part. Many of the extras that played the navy personnel were active duty sailors. Shortly after broadcast, the BBC was visited by officials from the MOD who believed a top-secret submarine had been used in the show. It was in fact a model, adapted to show the features they were secretly testing.
Expensive location filming left The Sea Devils with a budgeting problem. Director Michael Briant's solution was to not hire regular incidental music composer, Dudley Simpson, and have the score created by the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. Malcolm Clarke's electronic score was one of the serial's signatures.[1] Its significance was attested to by its inclusion in 2013's Doctor Who at the Proms, where it was one of five pieces of incidental music performed as representative of the show's original run.
This story saw the only use of the catchphrase "reverse the polarity of the neutron flow" during the Pertwee era. The phrase became associated with the Third Doctor, so he used it again in The Five Doctors some eleven years later, although between seasons 7 and 11 Pertwee did use a shortened version of the phrase, "reverse the polarity", several times.
Like many of Hulke's stories, it included a moral dimension. The Sea Devils are caught between the Master, the Doctor and the humans. Ultimately, they are betrayed by all three; like their land-based cousins, it is the humans who hurt them the most.
Synopsis
The Doctor and Jo visit the Master in his high-security prison on an island off the south coast of England. The governor, Colonel Trenchard, says ships have been disappearing mysteriously at sea. The Doctor discovers that Trenchard and the Master are in league to contact the Sea Devils, a race of reptiles in hibernation in a base beneath the sea, who have been awoken by recent work on a nearby sea fort. The Master intends to use his new allies to help him conquer the world.
Plot
Episode one
The Third Doctor and Jo visit the Master, now a captive on a small island prison after being captured by UNIT.
The Master is being held indefinitely and is the only prisoner. He is watched by CCTV and the island is patrolled by armed guards – trained to resist the Master's hypnotic powers – and even protected by minefields. He claims to have reformed – but refuses to reveal the location of his TARDIS. As they depart, the old-school, patriotic governor, Colonel Trenchard, tells them that some ships have been disappearing mysteriously. Shortly afterwards, he visits the Master, and it becomes clear that they are in league.
The Doctor cannot resist investigating, so they visit the nearby naval base, HMS Seaspite, run by the efficient Captain John Hart; despite the Doctor's eccentric behaviour - he claims to have known Nelson personally - an alliance forms. The Doctor states that that the linear scorch pattern was caused by a concentrated beam of heat from under the sea. Hart is in charge of the adaptation of the sea fort to a sonar testing station. The Doctor and Jo make their way to the sea fort. While investigating the fort, their boat explodes. They then find the body of one of the maintenance crewman, Hickman. Jo then hears something shuffling towards them.
Episode two
It is the second crewman, Clark, who is now half-mad. He is ranting about "Sea Devils". The Doctor and Jo decided to calm him down. They find that the radio was ripped out. The Doctor decides to go get a transistor radio in order to turn it into a transmitter. On his way, he encounters a hostile reptilian Sea Devil, who fires at him. When it tries to break in, it is injured and flees. Shortly afterwards, the Doctor finishes his transmitter, and they are rescued.
Captain Hart decides to find them after they apparently disappear. The Doctor and Jo attempt to get Hart to tell a higher authority. His assistant gets a call from someone ranting about Sea Devils. The Master comes to HMS Seaspite to steal some equipment. Colonel Trenchard follows, providing a distraction, but Jo sees the Master leaving.
The Doctor and Jo confront Trenchard, and he tries to dissuade them by showing that the Master is in his cell. The Master knocks out a guard and grabs his knife. Trenchard then gets the Doctor to go and see the Master, who attempts to kill him, first with gun and then with sword. The Doctor and the Master engage in a swordfight. The Master then throws a dagger at the back of the Doctor's head....
Episode three
The Master misses and the Doctor is unharmed. Trenchard enters and decides to lock the Doctor in the prison and attempts to capture Jo. The Master tells him that he intends to use the reptiles as an army to conquer the planet. It is revealed that the reason Trenchard is helping the Master because he believes they are fighting enemy agents. Meanwhile, Jo comes and frees the Doctor. The Master and Trenchard give chase, and the Master uses the machine to summon a Sea Devil from the ocean. The Doctor and Jo are trapped between the Sea Devil, the Master, and a minefield!
Episode four
The Doctor is forced to employ his sonic screwdriver to repel the Sea Devils by exploding mines on the beach. While the Doctor and Jo navigate through a mine field, a Sea Devil attacks another submarine. The Doctor and Jo flee to HMS Seaspite, where Hart tells them another naval submarine has disappeared.
Meanwhile, the Master returns to his cell to begin work on a new device. He activates it and it calls the Sea Devils to him. They attack the prison, killing the guards and Trenchard. A battle for the prison rages. Trenchard, who believed he was aiding his country against enemy agents, is killed.
The Reclaim heads out to investigate a section of seabed. The Doctor goes down in a diving bell. When they offer to pull him up, he refuses; however, his communication system fails, and Captain Hart orders the crew to pull up the diving bell. When it reaches the ship, it is empty....
Episode five
The Sea Devils take the Doctor to their leader. The Doctor enters the Sea Devils' base and tries to encourage peaceful negotiation, recalling how he had failed to broker an agreement between mankind and the Silurians. The Master arrives to incite matters by trying to provoke war.
Walker, the parliamentary private secretary, arrives to "solve" the sinking ship problem by dropping depth charges. Meanwhile, the Doctor has gained the upper side of the argument--the Sea Devils agree to consider diplomatic relations. The depth charges disrupt the negotiations. The Master convinces the Sea Devils to take the Doctor away and kill him. He also convinces them to attack one of the naval bases.
In the confusion caused by the depth charges, the Doctor escapes, gets a Silurian gun from a fallen Sea Devil, and uses it to melt a door and rescue two of the submarine crew. They rescue the others still in the submarine. The leader of the submarine crew kills one of the Sea Devils with the gun that the Doctor picked up; it is implied that others were killed on the upper level of the sub. They try to leave, but the Sea Devils hold them back with a force field. They fire torpedoes to provide thrust and escape.
The Doctor confronts Walker about his depth charges, which have just made the Sea Devils angry. The Sea Devils rise and attack the HMS Seaspite. The Doctor attempts to go to negotiate again. As they round a corner, a Sea Devil appears and raises its gun at them....
Episode six
The Doctor fights the Sea Devil off with Venusian karate, but another captures him. The rest of the Sea Devils capture the rest of the people at the base. Jo, Captain Hart, and Mr. Walker are held in one of the offices at the base. The Master tells the Doctor that he needs help to complete his machine so he can revive the colonies all over the world.
Meanwhile, Jo and escapes through a ventilation shaft. Jo reaches the Doctor and he tells her that he will deal with the guards; he sends her back to retrieve Captain Hart and Mr. Walker. The Doctor makes the machine emit a shrill noise which puts the Sea Devils in agony. Captain Hart escapes with Jo, but Mr. Walker retreats into the office and shuts himself back in when faced with a Sea Devil, even though the creature is incapacitated by the noise from the machine. The Master shuts off the machine, and the Doctor apologises for the "mistake" that caused the noise. The Sea Devils, the Doctor, and the Master head back to the Sea Devil base.
The prisoners retake the base. A soldier arrives and the Doctor orders him to keep watch over the Master, but the Master hypnotises him and escapes. The Doctor chases after the Master, and they reach the base, where multiple Sea Devils capture them. Meanwhile, Walker orders a nuclear strike. The Doctor sabotages the machine, and the two Time Lords are imprisoned. The Doctor reveals that he reversed the polarity of neutron flow, which will cause a massive explosion. The Time Lords escape by using the Doctor's sonic screwdriver to get out of their cell; they find diving suits and exit the base. They rise to the surface and are rescued just before the base explodes, and the Sea Devils are destroyed.
The rescuers call an ambulance for the Master, who seems to be very ill; however, when the ambulance arrives, they realise that the man is not really the Master, but someone else wearing a disguise--the Master has hypnotised him and forced him to impersonate the Master. They realise that the Master is escaping in a hovercraft. Too late to do anything to stop him, all they can do is bitterly watch their foe taunt them as he scurries away to freedom.
Cast
- Doctor Who - Jon Pertwee
- Master - Roger Delgado
- Jo Grant - Katy Manning
- Captain Hart - Edwin Richfield
- Trenchard - Clive Morton
- Robbins - Royston Tickner
- Radio Operator - Neil Seiler
- Clark - Declan Mulholland
- Hickman - Hugh Futcher
- 3rd Officer Jane Blythe - June Murphy
- Ldg. Telegraphist Bowman - Alec Wallis
- Castle Guard Wilson - Brian Justice
- Castle Guard Barclay - Terry Walsh
- Sea Devil - Pat Gorman
- C.P.O. Smedley - Eric Mason
- Commander Ridgeway - Donald Sumpter
- Lt. Commander Mitchell - David Griffin
- Ldg. Seaman Lovell - Christopher Wray
- Castle Guard Drew - Stanley McGeagh
- C.P.O. Summers - Colin Bell
- Lt. Commander Watts - Brian Vaughan
- A/B Girton - Rex Rowland
- Walker - Martin Boddey
- Rear Admiral - Norman Atkyns
- Chief Sea Devil - Peter Forbes-Robertson
- C.P.O. Myers - John Caesar
Uncredited cast
- Castle Guards - Mike Stephens, Marc Boyle, Mike Horsburgh, Peter Brace, Philip Weston, Stewart Barry, Bob Blaine, Brian Gilmar, Jim Dowdall, Les Clark
- DJ Voice - Michael Briant
- Sea Devils - Stuart Fell, Brian Nolan, Geoff Witherick, Brian Nolan, Steven Ismay, Frank Seton, Terry Walsh, Mike Stephens, Mike Horsburgh, Marc Boyle, Peter Brace
- Marines - Derek Ware, Alan Chuntz, Billie Horrigan, Jack Cooper
- Sailors - Terry Walsh, Jim Dowdall, Mike Stephens, Stuart Fell, Marc Boyle, Peter Brace, Mike Horsburgh, Dennis Plenty, Roy Pearce, Nick Llewellyn, Ron Tingley
- Sumarine Crewman - Dennis Plenty, Roy Pearce, Ron Tingley, Nick Llewellyn (all DWM 192)
Crew
- Writer - Malcolm Hulke
- The BBC wish to acknowledge the help given to them by the Royal Navy in the making of this programme
- Title Music - Ron Grainer and BBC Radiophonic Workshop
- Incidental Music - Malcolm Clarke, BBC Radiophonic Workshop
- Special Sounds - Brian Hodgson
- Film Cameraman - Peter Sargent
- Film Editor - Martyn Day
- Visual Effects - Peter Day
- Costumes - Maggie Fletcher
- Make-up - Sylvia James
- Studio Lighting - Mike Jefferies
- Sound - Tony Millier, Colin Dixon
- Script Editor - Terrance Dicks
- Designer - Tony Snoaden
- Producer - Barry Letts
- Director - Michael Briant
- Action by HAVOC
Uncredited crew
- Visual Effects Assistant - Len Hutton (INFO: The Sea Devils)
References
- The Master was captured at Devil's End.
Foods and beverages
- The Doctor consumes several sandwiches at the naval base.
- Hickman is seen drinking Old Oak Light Ale.
- Walker continually asks Officer Blythe to bring him food and tea. He also eats smoked salmon.
Species
- The Silurians had emerged from some caves in Derbyshire.
The Doctor
- The Doctor is a trained diver and accomplished golfer.
- The Doctor remarks he was a personal friend of Horatio Nelson.
- The Doctor claims he had been wounded at the Crimean War, Gallipoli or El Alamein.
Vehicles
- The merchant ship SS Pevensey Castle is attacked by the Sea Devils.
- The Royal Navy drove Land Rover vehicles.
Story notes
- This story had the working title The Sea Silurians.
- This is one of two stories where the Third Doctor utters the full line, "I reversed the polarity of the neutron flow" (in episode six). The other is in TV: The Five Doctors.
- The scene involving the Master watching The Clangers on television was a last-minute addition, added because episode one was running ninety seconds short.
- This serial's director, Michael Briant, provided the voice of the radio DJ in episode two.
- Originally, episode one was to include the Doctor water-skiing, which was to be used as the excuse for Jo and him being late to the Master's prison. Increasingly inclement weather made the shoot impossible.
- The Radio Times programme listing for the 90-minute compilation repeat of the story on Wednesday 27 December 1972, billed as Dr Who and the Sea Devils, was accompanied by a black and white illustration by Frank Bellamy depicting a Sea Devil, the Master and the Doctor, along with a comic strip-style caption "THE WHOLE PLACE WILL GO UP IN APPROXIMATELY TEN MINUTES / ENJOY YOUR REVENGE!", with the accompanying caption "Time-warp time — the Doc takes on the Master and the Sea Devils: 3.5". The compilation also received an unscheduled showing at 11:15 a.m. on Monday 27 May 1974 as a replacement for the rained-off Yorkshire -v- Lancashire cricket match.
- Along with Mission to the Unknown, Doctor Who and the Silurians, The Mind of Evil, The Dæmons, The Sontaran Experiment, Genesis of the Daleks, and Midnight, this is one of only eight televised stories in the history of Doctor Who not to feature the TARDIS (The Ambassadors of Death, Inferno and Day of the Daleks feature the central console, but not the TARDIS itself).
- Reproductions of actual script pages, accompanied by extensive production notes about this serial, are featured in the book The Making of Doctor Who.
Ratings
- Episode one - 6.4 million viewers
- Episode two - 9.7 million viewers
- Episode three - 8.3 million viewers
- Episode four - 7.8 million viewers
- Episode five - 8.3 million viewers
- Episode six - 8.5 million viewers
Myths
- Roger Delgado was afraid of the water, as he couldn't swim, and it took great courage for him to film the scene in which the Master and the Doctor are rescued from the sea by the Navy. (This was frequently recalled by Jon Pertwee in later interviews; but according to Delgado's widow, Kismet, it is untrue: Delgado was actually worried about getting his costume wet, as there was no spare available. Nonetheless, Delgado's fear of water is also recalled during the DVD commentary of The Sea Devils by Barry Letts and Terrance Dicks. Michael Briant also recalls this in the documentary Hello Sailor! And Delgado looks very uncomfortable during his scenes in the water.
Filming locations
- The exterior of the Master's prison was in fact Norris Castle, East Cowes, Isle of Wight. The Sea Fort was an actual sea defence fort built in the 1860s in the river Solent, off the South Hampshire coast, in anticipation of a feared French invasion which never came to pass. Abandoned at the time of the story's filming, it has since been a hotel resort. In July of 2007 the fort came up for sale after the company owning the hotel collapsed and its owner was jailed.
- Fraser Gunnery Range, HMS St George, Portsmouth
- Royal Navy ship HMS Reclaim
- No Man's Land Sea Fort, Solent
- Whitecliff Bay, Isle of Wight
- Bembridge Harbour, Isle of Wight
- Norris Castle, East Cowes, Isle of Wight
- Red Cliff, Sandown, Isle of Wight
- Bembridge Sailing Club, Bembridge, Isle of Wight
- Priory Bay, Isle of Wight
- BBC Television Centre (Studio 8), Shepherd's Bush, London
Production errors
- The clock in the Master's prison cell runs backwards.
- The Master knocks out a prison guard who enters his cell in episode two. The guard then subsequently disappears, never to be seen again.
- When the Doctor first takes out the sonic screwdriver in the minefield, a microphone can be seen at the bottom left of the shot.
Continuity
- The Master was captured in TV: The Dæmons.
- The Silurians first appeared in TV: Doctor Who and the Silurians.
- The Fifth Doctor later encounters the Sea Devils and the Silurians together. (TV: Warriors of the Deep)
- The Eleventh Doctor would encounter another variation of Silurians as well. (TV: The Hungry Earth)
- Sea Devils and Silurians appear in PROSE: Blood Heat.
- The Master watches The Clangers in a fashion similar to his later incarnation watching Teletubbies. (TV: The Sound of Drums)
- The Doctor attempts to attribute the misnomer "Silurian" to their discoverer. Dr Quinn had discovered Silurians in the caves in TV: Doctor Who and the Silurians.
- The Saxon Master would later mention their encounter with the Sea Devils to the Tenth Doctor. (TV: Last of the Time Lords)
- The Doctor and the Master would later engage in another sword fight on 4 March 1215. (TV: The King's Demons)
- The Master's escape from custody caused a great scandal in the prison service. (PROSE: Who Killed Kennedy)
Home video and audio releases
Editing for both the VHS and DVD releases was completed by the Doctor Who Restoration Team.
DVD releases
This story was released on DVD as part of the Beneath the Surface collection along with Doctor Who and the Silurians and Warriors of the Deep.
Beneath the Surface
BBC Store
- Is available in BBC Store.
VHS Releases
This was released on video in episodic format.
Audio releases
A CD of the original television soundtrack was released in January 2008, with linking narration by Katy Manning. It was also included in the Monsters on Earth box set along with Doctor Who and the Silurians and Warriors of the Deep.
Footnotes
External links
- The Sea Devils at the BBC's official site
- The Sea Devils at BroaDWcast
- The Sea Devils at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- The Sea Devils at Shannon Sullivan's A Brief History of Time (Travel)
- The Sea Devils at The Locations Guide
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