Death to the Daleks (TV story): Difference between revisions

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director= [[Michael Briant]] |
director= [[Michael Briant]] |
producer= [[Barry Letts]] |
producer= [[Barry Letts]] |
broadcast date= [[23rd February]] - [[16th March]] [[1974]]|
broadcast date= [[23 February]] - [[16 March]] [[1974]]|
format= 4 25-minute episodes |
format= 4 25-minute episodes |
production code= [[List of production codes|XXX]]|
production code= [[List of production codes|XXX]]|

Revision as of 04:03, 14 October 2011

RealWorld.png
For the Big Finish Productions audio drama of this same name, see "Death to the Daleks!".

Death to the Daleks was the third story of Season 11 of Doctor Who. It was notable for being the first time Sarah Jane Smith was on a planet other than Earth, and the first time she encountered the Daleks.

Synopsis

An energy drain makes uneasy allies of the Doctor, Sarah, a Marine Space Corps expedition, and a squadron of Daleks; all are trapped on the planet Exxilon with its hostile natives. The key to escape lies at the heart of a powerful and mysterious lost city, but only after a series of deadly traps.

Plot

Part One

The Doctor and Sarah are en route to Florana for a vacation when the TARDIS suffers a series of power failures. An unknown force somewhere on the nearby planet Exxilon is causing the energy drain, and they barely manage to land on the arid planet in order to find the source. The Doctor and Sarah exit the TARDIS but Sarah goes back to change clothes. The Doctor, exploring the planet, is pursued and captured by the primitive, xenophobic natives.

Sarah searches for the Doctor but, after finding the Doctor's oil lamp covered in blood, is chased by the natives. She escapes to an enormous city, pulsing with energy, but is captured by the natives, called the Exxilons. They consider her presence near their sacred city to be an abomination, and prepare her for sacrifice.

The Doctor, meanwhile, encounters a Marine Space Corps expedition whose ship has also crash landed due to the power drain. They are in search of the rare mineral Parrinium, found only on Exxilon, which is desperately needed to cure a galactic plague. Another ship lands nearby. The Marines initially mistake it for a rescue vessel, but a squad of Daleks emerge, guns at the ready.

Part Two

A Dalek is destroyed by the Exxilons

The energy drain, fortunately, has disabled the Daleks' weaponry. They also are seeking Parrinium, as their own worlds are falling victim to the plague (so they say). The Doctor, the Marines, and the Daleks form an uneasy alliance to find the source of the energy so they can escape. However, they are all captured by the Exxilons in a skirmish that ends with the death of Captain Richard Railton and a Dalek. The Doctor saves Sarah from sacrifice, but is recaptured and is himself sentenced to die.

The Daleks, meanwhile, replace their electronic weaponry with mechanical projectile weapons and soon seize control of the Exxilons, forcing a deal with the high priest which subjugates them to mine the Parrinium. In return, members of the Space Corps are in charge of whipping out a renegade group of Exxilons. The deal also states that the Doctor and Sarah will return to the Exxilons dead or alive.

Part Three

The Doctor, underground after escaping with Sarah during the Daleks seizing of the Exxilons, escapes from an enormous, metallic, snake-like creature. It emerges again and picks off a stray Dalek. Sarah and the Doctor are rescued by Bellal, a friendly Exxilon, who explains that their civilisation had once been very technologically advanced. Thousands of years earlier they had built the enormous city, one of the seven hundred Wonders of the Universe, which became sentient and drove them out. The Doctor realises that they must infiltrate the city to deactivate the energy drain. Before the Doctor leaves, he tells Sarah to make sure the Marines are ready for take off when the beacon is disabled because the Daleks will destroy their ship once they have full power again.

On the surface, the deal is becoming uneasy. The Daleks are becoming aggravated that the Exxilons are not mining fast enough, much to the distaste of Marines' weapons officer Dan Galloway. After a root comes to the surface through a body of water and kills an Exxilon and a Dalek, the Daleks send two of their crew to find the city and destroy the beacon so their power will be restored.

The Doctor and Bellal enter the city and pass a series of tests with the Daleks in hot pursuit. If they fail to pass a test they will likely be killed -- many skeletons are in the city.

Part Four

Successfully passing the tests before them, the Doctor and Bellal reach the centre of the city, where the Doctor interfaces with the city's 'brain,' causing the equivalent of a nervous breakdown. A Dalek bomb destroys the source of the energy drain, and the city begins to crumble.

The Daleks, having amassed enough Parrinium to hold the galaxy to ransom, leave in their spaceship and prepare a plague bomb to wipe out life on Exxilon. However, Galloway who had previously hid on board prior to launch, sacrifices his life to destroy the Dalek ship with a bomb. Sarah and Jill Tarrant, the Marines' scientific advisor, had previously replaced the Daleks' Parrinium with bags of sand. The Marines await the arrival of a rescue ship to bring the much-needed plague cure to the afflicted planets. The Doctor bemoans the city's destruction, as it leaves the Universe with only six hundred ninety-nine Wonders.

Cast

Crew

References

Daleks

  • The Daleks move through psychokinetic power (which presumably allows them to fire their weapons).
  • The Doctor describes the Daleks to Sarah as "only half robots...Inside each of those shells is a living, bubbling lump of hate."

Elements

  • It's also the cure for the space plague, which was caused by the Daleks' 'plague missiles'.

Locations

Medicine

Military

Races and species

  • The Doctor believes the Exxilons travelled to Earth and taught the Peruvian Incas how to build their temples.

Planets

  • The Doctor was intending to take Sarah to the planet Florana which has effervescent water.

TARDISes

  • The TARDIS has emergency storage cells in case of power failure. Without power, its doors need to be hand cranked.

Story notes

  • This story had the working titles of; The Exilons, The Exxilons
  • This story originally did not feature the Daleks, but they were included because of Barry Letts' and Terrance Dicks' desire to cash in on the Daleks' popularity.
  • This story marks the first time the Daleks' weapons do not function on screen. The Daleks are later seen to be able to modify their casings relatively quickly, replacing their energy weapons with slug-throwing rifles.
  • The Daleks target practice with miniature Police Boxes.
  • Many of the Dalek casings utilised for this story dated from the 1960s (due to the unsatisfactory quality of the casings produced for DW: Planet of the Daleks).
  • The cliffhanger to Part Three - the Doctor and Bellal walking towards a patterned area on the floor, only for the Doctor to say "Stop - don't move!" - was not originally going to be the cliffhanger. The original cliffhanger was going to be at the scene where the Doctor is trying to deduce the answer to the logic test concerning symbols, when two Daleks appear. Specifically, the cliffhanger would have hinged on the zoom towards the Dalek's gun. This was changed, however, for timing reasons.
  • Episode 1 was at one point wiped from the BBC archives, but a copy was later found to restore the serial; this is the latest known episode of Doctor Who to be, for a time at least, considered lost.
  • Clips from this story were used in part 5 of the 2001 documentary series "SF:UK".
  • The scene where the Doctor and Sarah Jane exit the TARDIS onto a wasteland and discover a petrified life form may be a homage to DW: The Daleks, when the Doctor's group first landed on Skaro and encountered a petrified creature.
  • Michael Wisher, who supplies the Dalek voices in this story, would later go on to portray Davros.

Ratings

  • Part 1 - 8.1 million viewers
  • Part 2 - 9.5 million viewers
  • Part 3 - 10.5 million viewers
  • Part 4 - 9.5 million viewers

Myths

to be added

Filming locations

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.
  • Effervescent water - as described at the start of the first episode - would not give the illusion of additional buoyancy to a swimmer as the Doctor claims. For the bubbles to rise they would need to be less dense than water, and their presence would therefore reduce the overall density of the liquid. This would make Sarah Jane more likely to sink, not more likely to float.
  • When the root beneath the city destroys the Dalek in the far shots it has white speech globes and when zoomed in it has orange. The other Dalek in the tunnels has the default white lights.

Continuity

1987 release (BBCV 4073)

Timeline

Home video and audio releases

VHS Release

Death to the Daleks was released on VHS in 1987 in the omnibus format. It was later released in 1995 in the episodic format for the UK,Australia and US

DVD release

By April 2011, restoration work had been commissioned for this story.[1]

Novelisation and its audiobook

Death To The Daleks novel.jpg
Main article: Death to the Daleks (novelisation)

External links

Footnotes

Template:Season 11