The Dæmons (TV story): Difference between revisions
From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary |
|||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
broadcast date= [[22nd May]] - [[19th June]] [[1971]] | | broadcast date= [[22nd May]] - [[19th June]] [[1971]] | | ||
format= 5 25-minute Episodes | | format= 5 25-minute Episodes | | ||
production code= JJJ| | production code= [[List of production codes|JJJ]]| | ||
previous story= [[Colony in Space]]| | previous story= [[Colony in Space]]| | ||
next story= [[Day of the Daleks]] }} | next story= [[Day of the Daleks]] }} |
Revision as of 03:13, 18 May 2007
Synopsis
to be added
Plot
to be added
Cast
Josephine 'Jo' Grant - Katy Manning
Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart - Nicholas Courtney
Captain Mike Yates - Richard Franklin
Miss Hawthorne - Damaris Hayman
Bert the Landlord - Don McKillop
Prof. Horner - Robin Wentworth
Alastair Fergus - David Simeon
Morris Dancers - The Headington Quarry Men
Crew
to be added
References
- The Master has taken over as vicar in Devil's End.
- Azal is one of the Daemons from the planet Daemos.
- The Doctor has fitted Bessie with a remote control.
Story Notes
- The shot of the exploding helicopter is actually a scene taken from James Bond film From Russia With Love.
- The Master's summoning phrases for Azal is 'Mary had a little lamb' backwards.
- 'Guy Leopold' (the writer), is a pen name for Robert Sloman and Barry Letts.
Ratings
to be added
Myths
to be added
Influences
- This story makes a few nods towards Quatermass and the Pit, and not just for the idea that stories of devils and demons may be a race memory of horned aliens who conducted a eugenics experiment on early humans. Devil's End is essentially the same as Hobb's End, the fictitious London setting of the earlier story, Hob being an old name for the Devil. The use of iron to hold both Azal and Bok at bay is an old folk superstition that is also referred to in the Quatermass story. (See also DW: Image of the Fendahl.)
- The large hoofprints left by Azal as he walks around the village of Devil's End and encircles the community with a heat barrier brings to mind a famous and well-documented case. On the morning of 9th February, 1855 the inhabitants of several villages and towns in Devon awoke to find what appeared to be the tracks of a hooved, two-legged creature in the snow, traversing a total distance of one hundred miles, going over rooftops, a 14-foot wall, and even apparently leaping across a two mile wide estuary. Many believed that the Devil himself had walked through Devon the previous night.
Location Filming
Aldbourne, Wiltshire
Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors
- Various pronunciations of 'Dæmons', 'Dæmos' (and all other permutations) is used throughout the story.
Continuity
- The Doctor uses a few lines of a Venusian lullaby which is heard in full during The Curse of Peladon.
- The Master sends his TARDIS to the Devil's End crypt at the close of The Face of the Enemy.
- The Master is captured by UNIT forces at the conclusion of this story and is next seen in prison in The Sea Devils.
- The Master retrieves his TARDIS from the debris of the church in The Eight Doctors.
- A Daemon carcass is used by the Faction Paradox as a spaceship in Interference: Book Two (The Hour of the Geek).
- Daemos in mentioned in The Satan Pit.
DVD, Video and Other Releases
Video Releases
- The Dæmons was released on VHS in the UK and Australia in 1993, this was a recolourised version of the story.
Target Novelisations / Script Books
- The Daemons was published in 1974 as Doctor Who and the Dæmons By Barry Letts.
- The Dæmons was also released by Titan Books as a script book in the early 1990s.