Doctor Who and the War Games (novelisation): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
m (Enforcing T:SPELL)
m (Robot: Automated text replacement (-Target Novelisation +Target novelisation))
Line 4: Line 4:
novel name= Doctor Who and the War Games|
novel name= Doctor Who and the War Games|
image= [[file: War games_novel.jpg|250px]] |
image= [[file: War games_novel.jpg|250px]] |
series=[[Doctor Who]] -<br/>[[Target Novelisation]] |
series=[[Doctor Who]] -<br/>[[Target novelisation]] |
number= 70 (given to later editions) |
number= 70 (given to later editions) |
doctor=[[Second Doctor]] |
doctor=[[Second Doctor]] |

Revision as of 02:22, 3 November 2011

RealWorld.png


Novelisation

  • This novelisation is based on the original television serial DW: The War Games which was written by Malcolm Hulke and Terrance Dicks and shown from 19th April 1969.
  • The original Target novel cover illustrated at right features the artwork of John Geary. (See below for information on other UK and international editions which published with a different cover).
  • Hulke was allowed only 143 pages in which to adapt a 10-episode story. By comparison, the later novelisation of The King's Demons, a two-episode story, runs 10 pages longer than this book.

Publisher's summary

1979 edition

Mud, barbed wire, the smell of death… The year is 1917 and the TARDIS had materialised on the Western Front during the First World War.
Or had it? For very soon the Doctor found himself pursued by the soldiers of Ancient Rome; and then he and his companions were reliving the American Civil War of 1863. And was this really Earth, or just a mock-up created by the War Lords?
As Doctor Who solves the mystery, he has to admit he is faced with an evil of such magnitude that he cannot combat it on his own - he has to call for the help of his own people, the Time Lords.
So, for the first time, it is revealed who is Doctor Who - a maverick Time Lord who `borrowed’ the TARDIS without permission. By appealing to the Time Lords he gives away his position in Time and Space. Thus comes about the Trial of Doctor Who…

1990 edition

I think we have arrived in one of the most terrible times in the history of the Earth...
Mud. Barbed wire. The smell of death. The year is 1917 and the TARDIS has materialised on the Western Front during the First World War.
Or has it? Escaping from execution by firing squad, the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe meet charioteers from Ancient Rome, Georgian Redcoats, and Confederates from the American Civil War.
Someone - someone as knowledgeable as the Doctor himself - has created a simalcrum of Earth, and has gathered soldiers from every era of the planet's bloody history. And someone is playing war games.
This adventure was first broadcast on television in 1969. It marked the end of Patrick Troughton's tenure of the role of the Doctor, and it revealed for the first time something of the Doctor's past and of his fellow Time Lords. This novelization, first published in 1979, is by Malcolm Hulke, one of the writers of the original television script.
Doctor Who - The War Games is available as a BBC Video and will be broadcast on BSB television during 1990.

Book Chapters

01 - Sentence of Death
02 - Escape
03 - The Time Mist
04 - Back to the Chateau
05 - The War Room
06 - The Process
07 - The Security Chief
08 - Battle for the Chateau
09 - The Trap
10 - Fall of the War Chief
11 - The Trial of Doctor Who

Illustrations

  • Contains no illustrated pages

Deviations from televised story

  • The crude space-time machines have a name: SIDRATs. This name was actually used in the production material for the serial (a blueprint identified as a SIDRAT is included as a DVD-ROM bonus feature on the DVD release) and even appeared in dialogue on one occasion. The novelisation reveals the word is an acronym for Space and Inter-time Directional Robot All-purpose Transporter.
  • Given that Hulke had only one hundred forty-four pages to cover ten episodes, much of the original story has been condensed.
  • The original theft of the TARDIS becomes an additional charge at the Doctor's trial. In the original, although the subject was discussed in episode 8, no mention was made at the trial itself of the Doctor having stolen the TARDIS. The inclusion of theft of the TARDIS as a charge at the Doctor's trial agrees with the versions of the trial as depicted both at the start of Doctor Who and the Auton Invasion and in the original edition of The Making of Doctor Who.)

Writing and publishing notes

  • This was the final novelisation written by Malcolm Hulke. It was not published until October 1979, three months after his death.
  • The soldier depicted on the cover of the original Target edition is often mistaken for the Brigadier, even though that character does not appear. This is likely due to the fact the original cover art for DWN: Doctor Who and the Auton Invasion uses a similar image to depict the Brigadier.

Additional cover images

British publication history

To be added

First Publication:

  • Hardback
W.H. Allen & Co. Ltd. UK
  • Paperback
Target

Re-issues:

1990 Virgin Publishing with a new cover by Alistair Pearson priced £2.99 (UK)

Editions published outside Britain

To be added

See also

External links