The Caves of Androzani (TV story): Difference between revisions
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* The regeneration sequence features specially recorded cameos by [[Matthew Waterhouse]], [[Janet Fielding]], [[Sarah Sutton]], [[Mark Strickson]], [[Gerald Flood]] and [[Anthony Ainley]]. Because Waterhouse & Sutton had left the show in previous seasons, special contracts had to be written for their cameos. Furthermore, Nyssa's appearance in the episode required the producers to pay her creator, [[Johnny Byrne]], royalty fees. | * The regeneration sequence features specially recorded cameos by [[Matthew Waterhouse]], [[Janet Fielding]], [[Sarah Sutton]], [[Mark Strickson]], [[Gerald Flood]] and [[Anthony Ainley]]. Because Waterhouse & Sutton had left the show in previous seasons, special contracts had to be written for their cameos. Furthermore, Nyssa's appearance in the episode required the producers to pay her creator, [[Johnny Byrne]], royalty fees. | ||
* This is the first time an explanation has been given for the Doctor wearing celery on his lapel. | * This is the first time an explanation has been given for the Doctor wearing celery on his lapel. | ||
* This story marks the first occasion since 1980's [[TV]]: ''[[The Keeper of Traken (TV story)|The Keeper of Traken]]'' (or 1977's [[TV]]: ''[[Horror of Fang Rock]]'' if Nyssa's pre-companion role in [[Season 18]] is discounted) that the Doctor has spent a complete adventure with only a single incumbent companion, and the first time since 1977's TV: ''[[The Invisible Enemy (TV story)|The Invisible Enemy]]'' (or, again, TV: ''Horror of Fang Rock'' if [[K9 Mark I|K9 Mk. I's]] pre-companion role is discounted) that the Doctor has travelled without any non-human companions. | * This story marks the first occasion since 1980's [[TV]]: ''[[The Keeper of Traken (TV story)|The Keeper of Traken]]'' (or 1977's [[TV]]: ''[[Horror of Fang Rock]]'' if Nyssa's pre-companion role in [[Season 18]] is discounted) that the Doctor has spent a complete adventure with only a single incumbent companion, and the first time since 1977's TV: ''[[The Invisible Enemy (TV story)|The Invisible Enemy]]'' (or, again, TV: ''Horror of Fang Rock'' if [[K9 Mark I|K9 Mk. I's]] pre-companion role is discounted) that the Doctor has travelled without any non-human companions. | ||
* In [[DWM 400]], ''The Caves of Androzani'' was voted the readers' favourite televised story. Conversely, ''[[The Twin Dilemma (TV story)|The Twin Dilemma]]'', the very next serial, bottomed out at #200 as the least favourite, effectively bookending the charts. | * In [[DWM 400]], ''The Caves of Androzani'' was voted the readers' favourite televised story. Conversely, ''[[The Twin Dilemma (TV story)|The Twin Dilemma]]'', the very next serial, bottomed out at #200 as the least favourite, effectively bookending the charts. | ||
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=== Production errors === | === Production errors === | ||
* The closing credits to part four feature the face of new Doctor [[Colin Baker]] and list him before Peter Davison. | |||
** Davison's tenure seems to come full-circle in this case: Part 4 of both ''[[Logopolis (TV story)|Logopolis]]'' (his first physical appearance in the series) and ''The Caves of Androzani'' give him second billing in the credits. | |||
* [[Nicola Bryant]], or her stunt double, bounces after slipping down the cliff-face in episode one, obviously having landed on a safety cushion of some kind. | * [[Nicola Bryant]], or her stunt double, bounces after slipping down the cliff-face in episode one, obviously having landed on a safety cushion of some kind. | ||
* The electronic device that Morgus uses in his office during his first scene in part one is obviously a TV/teletext remote control, with John Normington's thumb conveniently placed to hide the manufacturer's logo. | * The electronic device that Morgus uses in his office during his first scene in part one is obviously a TV/teletext remote control, with John Normington's thumb conveniently placed to hide the manufacturer's logo. |
Revision as of 11:20, 1 September 2016
The Caves of Androzani was Peter Davison's final regular appearance as the Doctor. It was also Graeme Harper's first credited Doctor Who directorial gig. Widely praised by fans, Caves was voted the single best televised Doctor Who story in a 2009 poll conducted by Doctor Who Magazine. (DWM 413)
As a regeneration story, it offered many unusual elements. Perhaps the most obvious was that it was written by Robert Holmes. Although the most prolific writer of the 1963 version of the programme, this was his only regeneration story. Caves was also the first regeneration story to allow for a brief scene with the incoming Doctor. Unlike any of his predecessors, the new Doctor was given the final words of the story — something that would happen for several subsequent regeneration stories. It was also the first time the Doctor willingly and explicitly underwent a regeneration solely to save a companion. Furthermore, it was the first time since 1966's The Tenth Planet that the Doctor regenerated before the end of the then-current series.
From a behind-the-scenes perspective, Harper's direction was hailed by those involved with the production as highly innovative. Particularly noteworthy were Harper's more free use of camera movement than usual at the time and his direction from the studio floor. Harper's energetic and more personal directorial style sharply contrasted most who preceded him. Unlike Harper, most directors of the 1963 version of Doctor Who generally preferred to work in the booth and relay their messages to the actors and crew through the production assistant stationed on the floor. Peter Davison, in particular, found Harper's more direct style much to his liking. He lamented he had waited until his last story to receive this bolder style of direction, and that he would've stayed on the series longer if this directorial style was present during more of his tenure (DCOM: The Caves of Androzani).
Another unique aspect of the production was its use of Shakespearian soliloquy. Morgus, the principal villain of the piece, sometimes turned away from the characters and spoke his thoughts aloud, often appearing to break the fourth wall in the process by gazing into the camera. Though apparently the result of a mistaken impression about the script by actor John Normington, Harper kept the asides in, feeling they effectively ramped up the dramatic tension. (DCOM: The Caves of Androzani)
Synopsis
Arriving on the barren world of Androzani Minor, the Doctor and Peri find themselves embroiled in a long running, literal underground war. At the heart of the conflict is a substance called Spectrox - both valuable and deadly! The Doctor & Peri wind up being poisoned by the material, which is killing them slowly and painfully unless they can find a cure. As the conflict heats up and the situation gets more desperate, the Doctor realises time is running out - both for Peri and himself...
Plot
Part one
The TARDIS lands on Androzani Minor, one of twin planets in the Sirius star system. The Doctor and Peri decide to explore a set of tracks that lead into some nearby caves.
The Doctor finds a spaceship has arrived, carrying a strange cargo. Deep in the caves, a soldier is killed by a monster. In another part of the caves, Peri catches her foot in an unknown, sticky substance. The Doctor pulls her free. He gets some on himself. Despite its sting, he is unconcerned. Peri asks why the Doctor wears a stick of celery; it is a safety precaution. He is allergic to certain gases in the praxis range of the spectrum; in their presence, celery turns purple. They discover a hoard of weapons and hear footsteps. Soldiers capture them and take them to their leader, General Chellak. As the two explain their innocence to Chellak and Major Salateen, there is a call from Trau Morgus, a business conglomerate leader on Androzani Major and CEO of the Sirius Conglomerate. Believing the two to be working for gunrunners Stotz and Krelper, he loses all interest in them and orders their deaths after seeing that Chellak's "gunrunners" are not his own men over holographic communication.
Deep in the caves, the masked madman Sharaz Jek has monitored the broadcast between Morgus and Chellak. He is delighted at Peri's beauty. In their cell the Doctor and Peri await their deaths. The Doctor notes Androzani Minor is the only source of a powerful drug called spectrox, produced by bats in the planet's caves. Spectrox is highly valued by the people of nearby Androzani Major for its ability to extend life.
The spectrox mines are controlled by Morgus, but the operation is threatened by the masked Sharaz Jek and his army of androids, causing public tension on Androzani Major over limited supplies. Morgus has funded a military operation by Androzani Major's government against Jek's androids. He has also secretly backed a gunrunning group to deliver weapons to Jek to profit from the war.
The Doctor and Peri are brought to the execution squad, dressed in red to hide the blood of their impending wounds. General Chellak asks if they have any last words; the Doctor tells him the whole thing is a mockery of justice. The soldiers step forward and take aim. On command, they pump bullets into the Doctor and Peri.
Part two
Chellak has the soldiers check their weapons. As the bodies are cut free of the execution posts, Morgus switches off. He tells the President anyone without a valid work permit has been sent to Eastern labour camps to reduce crime. The President realises Morgus has been closing plants in the West and opening them again in the East. If he accepts Morgus' suggestion, the same people will be working for him without pay.
It turns out that the Doctor and Peri have been rescued by Sharaz Jek, who was watching them and had prepared android duplicates to take their place in the execution. They are taken to his base to become his companions in exile. Chellak and Salateen go to look at the bodies. When they turn out to be androids, Chellak realises his career is at risk. He decides to not let anyone know about it. Meanwhile, the Doctor asks Jek if he could show him and Peri the way to the surface, but Jek explains that he intends to make them stay with him and keep him company. He assures them, with a hint of threat in his voice, that he will take care of their every need. Meanwhile, Stotz is having trouble. Krelper is getting fed up with the lack of pay and their recent string of failures and wants to leave the gunrunning enterprise. But when Stotz threatens with killing him, Krelper relents and Stotz decides to let him live for the time being.
At Jek's base, the Doctor and Peri complain of rashes and cramps where they touched the sticky substance in the caves. Jek returns, and Peri asks him why he wants to keep them prisoners here. Jek answers that he is attracted to her beauty and that he likes the idea of having the Doctor as an intellectual sparring partner. He then tells the Doctor that he sees him as the most expendable person in this arrangement and he therefore expects him to be obedient towards him, warning him if he does not submit, then he will kill him, but Peri, on the other hand, he intends to keep alive forever. When Peri answers that eternal life is impossible, Jek explains that refined spectrox can extend someone's life, forever if need be, and he now owns all of it. "Until the army takes it away from you," comments the Doctor dryly, but Jek angrily retorts it will not happen. Thanks to his monitoring equipment, he knows the army's every move, and so far their fight against his androids have been slow and very costly in manpower for them; at the current rate it will take five years for the army to actually threaten his operations and by that time he excepts to the people of Androzani Major already to having risen up and forced the Presidium to agree to his terms: they can have all the spectrox they want once the head of Morgus lies at his feet.
Meanwhile at Morgus' headquarters, Morgus is surprised to hear from Timmin that the copper mine has exploded. This takes care of overproduction and makes the price of copper rise. Morgus wants every employee to leave their place and stand in silence for a minute but then changes his mind and says half a minute.
Back at Jek's base, the Doctor meets Salateen. He has been a prisoner here, too. Jek captured him months ago and replaced him with an android that looks like him. The real Salateen realises Jek will kill him now he has them for company. When the Doctor tries asking him about the weird symptoms he and Peri are experiencing and how they got them, Salateen breaks into a bitter laugh. He explains that they are in the first stage of spectrox toxaemia from exposure to unrefined spectrox. Their symptoms are only going to get worse from here and the poisoning will eventually kill them in a few hours. While there is an anti-toxin, it requires the milk of the queen bat. Due to the mining activity, all the bats have fled to deeper levels of the caves, where there is no oxygen, making it next to impossible to acquire.
Stotz contacts Jek and tells him his ship is in good shape and it wasn't his fault that the androids didn't show up. Before Jek leaves to meet with Stotz and the gunrunners, Peri asks why he wears a mask. Jek flies into a rage. When one of Androzani Minor's mud bursts erupted, he had no warning and Morgus left him to die. Jek survived, horribly scalded. He leaves them guarded by his androids.
In the lower levels of the caves, Jek agrees to pay half the price for the spectrox. In Jek's HQ, the Doctor reprograms the android outside the door. Peri, Salateen and he escape. Meanwhile, Stotz realises he and the gun runners can walk past Jek's androids, kill Jek and steal his spectrox. The Doctor, Peri and Salateen head into the lower levels of the caves to find the queen bat. An android fires at them. One shot hits the Doctor. Salateen fires back and destroys it. The Doctor wakes and discovers Peri has vanished. He goes to find her. Jek returns to his base, but flies into a rage that Peri has gone. The Doctor takes cover behind a rock as Stotz and the gun runners enter. One of the gun runners is attacked and killed by a fierce magma beast. The other gun runners open fire on the beast and it kills another gun runner. It ignores the bullets and approaches the rock where the Doctor is crouching.
Part three
The beast is distracted by the gun runners. It turns on them again. The Doctor escapes as the gun runners retreat. Meanwhile, Peri is taken with Salateen to General Chellak. She tells him what has happened. Stotz and the gun runners meet Jek. The Doctor meets Jek again. He tortures the Doctor and the Doctor finally tells him that Peri has been taken to Chellak. Stotz arrives. Jek tells him to take the Doctor to Androzani Major to see if he is a government spy. The Doctor is in the third stage of spectrox toxaemia and is feeling unwell, but Stotz doesn't care; the Doctor will live long enough to be questioned. In the army base, Peri also isn't feeling well, but General Chellak doesn't care; she and the Doctor have been working with Jek. Chellak orders an assault on Jek's base. Salateen agrees to tell Morgus about the assault and to throw Jek off guard when he broadcasts a message.
Jek discovers the real Salateen is free to walk around the planet, leaving Peri unguarded. Meanwhile, Stotz chains the Doctor in the bridge of his spaceship and calls Morgus. As Stotz discusses the situation with Morgus, the businessman sees the Doctor still alive. He tells Stotz that Chellak faked the attack on Jek's base. Morgus is worried the President will see his double dealings. He tells Stotz to remain in orbit and Stotz, furious, leaves the Doctor on his own. When Stotz is gone, the Doctor tries to escape. He pulls himself free of the wall and uses the power core in the centre of the ship's bridge to sear the chains from his hands. He is still very weary from the Spectrox but programs the spaceship to land or "crash" on Androzani Minor.
Meanwhile, Morgus, fearing deception, invites the President into his office and opens his private lift so the President can leave. The President doesn't realise it's just an empty shaft. Morgus pushes the President into the lift and he falls to his death. Morgus orders Timmin to have the lift maintenance engineer shot and makes his own plans to travel to Androzani Minor to put the situation right himself. Meanwhile, Jek has kidnapped Peri and taken her back to his HQ, where he finds the Doctor has gone. He is now insane and needs Peri's beauty to forget the trouble that Morgus has put him in. Peri tells him the army will attack soon, but Jek already knows that - he has changed the recognition code for the belt buckle. General Chellak and his men are in for a shock...
The Doctor is in the centre of the ship's bridge. Suddenly an extreme tiredness overtakes him, and his vision becomes distorted. However, he manages to shake it off and return to clarity as he hears shouting at the door. It is Stotz, who has been alerted by the loud, rumbling noise from the landing procedure. He demands the Doctor unlocks the door, but the Doctor refuses. Stotz shouts for something to cut the door open with, and tries to coax the Doctor into open the door willingly, but the Doctor rebuffs him, telling him he rather should focus on finding something to hold on to, as their landing could easily be a rough one. Stotz's men proceeds to cut a hole in the door open with a blowtorch, but the edges of the cutout is too hot for Stotz to reach the door controls, so instead he points his weapon at the Doctor and threatens to shoot him. The Doctor notices that it is hardly a persuasive argument, since he will die soon anyway unless he can cure his toxaemia. Stotz gives him to the count of three to surrender, but the Doctor is unmoved by this, and he tells Stotz that he owes it to Peri to find the antidote as he got her into danger in the first place. "So you see," shouts the Doctor defiantly as Stotz finishes his countdown, "I'm not gonna let you stop me now!".
Part four
The ship's rocket pods fire at the last moment, throwing Stotz's aim off and allowing the Doctor to violently land the ship on the surface of Androzani Minor. Still experiencing the effects of the Spectrox poisoning, the Doctor escapes from the spaceship. Krelper and another gun runner chase after him. Meanwhile, General Chellak plans the real assault on Jek's base, making him believe an attack lies elsewhere. As the assault force, guided by Salateen, heads towards the base, they come to a hold as they run into an android. Salateen assures them that there is nothing to fear, as the belt buckles will protect them, but as he moves towards the android to prove this, he is immediately gunned down. Panic erupts in the ranks as the soldiers realize that the signal is not working, and they frantically return fire. They eventually manage to disable all of Jek's androids, but at a very high cost of lives. Meanwhile, Krelper and his cohort are still chasing the Doctor. He approaches a cliff and falls. As they are about to kill him, a mudburst begins and they run back to the ship. The Doctor gets to his feet and makes his way into the caves to save Peri.
Chellak and the few remaining soldiers have no choice but to push against the mudburst. Chellak sees Jek and chases him to his base. Once there, he struggles with Jek until he pulls his mask off. He is so horrified at Jek's scalded face that Jek is able to push him outside into the path of the mudburst. Jek goes to Peri. She screams at the sight of Jek's face and Jek himself lets out a cry of agony. The Doctor arrives, struggling to hold off the effects of the Spectrox poisoning, and the regeneration that would rid him of the infection. When the Doctor explains that he can hold his breath much longer than a human and therefore has a better chance to survive in the lower parts of the caves, Jek provides him with an oxygen tank and directions, so he can find and milk the queen bat. As the Doctor departs to get the milk, Morgus arrives on the planet. He finds Timmin has betrayed him and taken his dirty dealings to the government, which means he is now deposed from power and isolated from his wealth.
Morgus declares that he is not beaten yet, and quickly works out a deal with Stotz. Krelper and his friend, however, have decided to cut their losses and want no part in it. Stotz pretend to accept this only to shoot and kill them as soon as their guard is down. Morgus and Stotz continue on ahead, plotting to secure Jek's private stash of spectrox so they may disappear quietly to another planet. The two make their way to Jek's base, lured by extractor fans that Jek is using to to keep the base temperature cool for Peri. Morgus orders Jek to give him the Spectrox.
Jek sees Morgus and, consumed by rage, forgets all about Peri and everything else. He pulls off his mask, showing Morgus his scalded face. As Morgus looks at Jek in shock, Jek throttles him. Stotz opens fire on Jek, but the Salateen android returns and kills him. With his last ounce of life, Jek pushes Morgus' head into his extractor fans. Morgus dies in seconds and the extractor fans short circuit and burst into flames. Jek dies in the arms of the Salateen android, giving it his last orders to hold him. The Doctor arrives just after the battle, and escapes, but the Salateen android stays where it is as the fire destroys Jek's base.
The Doctor takes the unconscious Peri back to the surface and the TARDIS, but a mud burst is on its way. While he unlocks the TARDIS, the Doctor spills half the bat's milk in the sand. He manages to open the door, get inside the TARDIS and dematerialise as the planet's surface explodes in boiling mud.
Inside the TARDIS, the Doctor feeds Peri all of the remaining bat's milk, then collapses on the floor of the TARDIS, now so close to death that he is starting to doubt that regeneration is possible, saying aloud "Is this death?". Peri recovers to find the Doctor lying in pain on the floor. The Doctor quickly explains he only had enough bat's milk to cure Peri. He tells Peri that there's nothing she can do, that he will be going soon, and it's time to say goodbye. Peri encourages him not to give up and pleading he can't leave her now. He then says that he "might regenerate", but he doesn't know for certain that he will be able to, because the process "feels different this time".
A bright glow surrounds the Doctor as his image distorts; he begins hallucinating his previous companions urging him to live, telling him the universe still needs him. He is particularly affected by the vision of someone who died, and his final word is, "Adric?" A vision of the Tremas Master appears, laughing at the Doctor and telling him to die. The visions of his companions begin to swirl, all their voices overlapping together and drowning out the taunts of his foe. The glow grows brighter and covers the Doctor. As the visions subside all at once, it fades to reveal the Doctor's new incarnation, a man with a sharp gaze and curly blond hair atop his head. Peri moves toward the regenerated Doctor and addresses him by name. The Doctor, now sitting up and fully alert, challenges his now-detoxified assistant with the words, "You were expecting someone else?" Speechless, she trips up, "I, I, I..." . He ironically scolds her, "That's three I's in one breath. Makes you sound a rather egotistical young lady." Peri asks, "What's happened?" He grandly declares, "Change, my dear, and it seems not a moment too soon," staring forward with a proud grin and a glint in his eye.
Cast
- The Doctor - Peter Davison
- Peri Brown - Nicola Bryant
- Sharaz Jek - Christopher Gable
- Morgus - John Normington
- Salateen - Robert Glenister
- Stotz - Maurice Roëves
- Chellak - Martin Cochrane
- Krelper - Roy Holder
- Timmin - Barbara Kinghorn
- President - David Neal
- Soldier - Ian Staples
- The Tremas Master - Anthony Ainley
- Adric - Matthew Waterhouse
- Nyssa - Sarah Sutton
- Tegan Jovanka - Janet Fielding
- Turlough - Mark Strickson
- Voice of Kamelion - Gerald Flood
- The Doctor - Colin Baker
Uncredited cast
- Gun-runners - Les Conrad, Robert Smythe, Gerry O'Brien (DWM 279)
Crew
- Assistant Floor Manager - Sue Hedden
- Camera Supervisor - Alec Wheal
- Costumes - Andrew Rose
- Design Effects - John Peyre
- Designer - John Hurst
- Film Cameraman - John Walker
- Film Editor - Roger Guertin
- Film Sound - John Campbell
- Incidental Music - Roger Limb
- Make-Up - John Nethercot, Shirley Stallard
- Producer - John Nathan-Turner
- Production Assistant - Juley Harding
- Production Associate - June Collins
- Production Managers - Elizabeth Trubridge, Corinne Hollingworth
- Script Editor - Eric Saward
- Special Sounds - Dick Mills
- Studio Lighting - Don Babbage
- Studio Sound - Scott Talbott
- Technical Co-ordinator - Alan Arbuthnott
- Theme Arrangement - Peter Howell
- Title Music - Ron Grainer
- Videotape Editor - Steve Newnham
- Video Effects - Dave Chapman
- Vision Mixer - Dinah Long
- Visual Effects - Jim Francis, Stuart Brisdon
References
Planets
- Androzani Major and Androzani Minor are "twin planets".
Individuals
- Morgus is (or was, before being deposed by Timmin) "the richest man in the Five Planets", chairman of the Sirius Conglomerate and a descendant of the first colonists.
- The Doctor claims to be able to store oxygen for several minutes.
- The Doctor confesses to Peri he tried to keep a diary, but he never finds the time to update it.
- Boze is one of the people killed by the Magma Beast. Rones was killed in a gas attack.
Technology
- Peri mentions a reticular vector gauge.
- In the smugglers' cave, the Doctor and Peri find gas carbines, bombs and poison volatisers.
- Analysing traces of fused silica on the ground of Androzani Minor, the Doctor deduces a small spaceship had recently landed.
- The Doctor also demonstrates tracking skill by studying monoskid tracks and deducing it had departed with a heavy load, and returned unloaded.
Substances
- The Doctor wears a stick of celery because he is allergic to certain gases in the praxis range of the spectrum, the presence of which causes the celery to turn purple.
- When refined, Spectrox can slow the ageing process of the taker. When unrefined, it causes Spectrox toxaemia on contact.
illnesses
- Spectrox toxaemia causes rash, cramp, spasms, slow paralysis of the thoracic spinal nerve and finally thermal death. Milk from a Queen Bat is the only known cure besides regeneration (though the latter is unique to Time Lords.).
Story notes
- Despite the title, the Doctor notes that the caves are in fact blowholes.
- The maps of the caves shown on screen bear an uncanny resemblance to the video game Dig Dug.
- This story had the working title of Chain Reaction.
- This is Peter Davison's final regular television appearance as the Doctor. However, he reprised the role on screen in Dimensions in Time in 1993 and Time Crash in 2007.
- The regeneration sequence features specially recorded cameos by Matthew Waterhouse, Janet Fielding, Sarah Sutton, Mark Strickson, Gerald Flood and Anthony Ainley. Because Waterhouse & Sutton had left the show in previous seasons, special contracts had to be written for their cameos. Furthermore, Nyssa's appearance in the episode required the producers to pay her creator, Johnny Byrne, royalty fees.
- This is the first time an explanation has been given for the Doctor wearing celery on his lapel.
- This story marks the first occasion since 1980's TV: The Keeper of Traken (or 1977's TV: Horror of Fang Rock if Nyssa's pre-companion role in Season 18 is discounted) that the Doctor has spent a complete adventure with only a single incumbent companion, and the first time since 1977's TV: The Invisible Enemy (or, again, TV: Horror of Fang Rock if K9 Mk. I's pre-companion role is discounted) that the Doctor has travelled without any non-human companions.
- In DWM 400, The Caves of Androzani was voted the readers' favourite televised story. Conversely, The Twin Dilemma, the very next serial, bottomed out at #200 as the least favourite, effectively bookending the charts.
- The only characters who do not die during this story are Peri and Timmin, who are also the only female characters: counting the Doctor's regeneration as the death of his fifth incarnation, every male character dies. The Salateen android is not destroyed on-screen, but it is not definitely shown as surviving the story's events (and it's debatable whether an android would count as being "alive" in the first place).
- This story was rife with on-screen mishaps that ended up causing minor injuries to Peter Davison; Davison himself would later jokingly claim that the staff were actually attempting to kill him. Among these accidents are two notable instances:
- During a scene in which Sharaz Jek backhands the Doctor, the mask Christopher Gable was wearing impaired his vision enough to make him legitimately strike Davison by mistake.
- As the Doctor carries Peri back into the TARDIS at the end of the story, he flinches at a nearby mud burst. This is because the explosion was prematurely triggered by the technicians, shooting sand into Davison's eyes and forcing him to recoil in pain.
- The effect used for the Doctor's distorted vision near the end of Part 3 is the same effect used for his regeneration at the end of the serial, with the former appearing to subtly foreshadow the latter. The use of this effect in Part 3 was intended by the director to indicate the onset of the Doctor's regeneration, which means that the Doctor is holding off his regeneration for the entirety of Part 4.
- This story is notably one of few where the eventual outcome negates the importance of the plot. The Doctor's role provided no historical accomplishments, and instead caused an inadvertent massacre, a gigantic power collapse, and even his own "death", all of which could've been prevented had the Doctor never gotten involved (or even went to Androzani Minor, for that matter).
- This story was chosen by fans to represent the Peter Davison era by fans to be rebroadcast for Doctor Who @40.
Influences
- Frank Herbert's Dune (people being killed over a drug that extends life; the unstable "tripod of power" between the rulers of Androzani; the "mud bursts" and Androzani Minor's generally arid climate)
- The Phantom of the Opera (a mentally unbalanced but brilliant recluse wears a mask to conceal his facial disfigurement; develops an obsessive fascination with an attractive young woman and eventually abducts her)
Ratings
- Part one - 6.9 million viewers
- Part two - 6.6 million viewers
- Part three - 7.8 million viewers
- Part four - 7.8 million viewers
Filming locations
- Masters Pit, Hansons Aggregates, Stokeford Heath, Dorset
- BBC Television Centre (TC6), Shepherd's Bush, London
Production errors
- The closing credits to part four feature the face of new Doctor Colin Baker and list him before Peter Davison.
- Davison's tenure seems to come full-circle in this case: Part 4 of both Logopolis (his first physical appearance in the series) and The Caves of Androzani give him second billing in the credits.
- Nicola Bryant, or her stunt double, bounces after slipping down the cliff-face in episode one, obviously having landed on a safety cushion of some kind.
- The electronic device that Morgus uses in his office during his first scene in part one is obviously a TV/teletext remote control, with John Normington's thumb conveniently placed to hide the manufacturer's logo.
- When Stotz cuts through the door of his ship, the polystyrene is visible on the fake door.
- Androzani Minor is supposed to be barren, deserted and uninhabited. Yet in part four, shots of the Doctor being chased by the gunrunners show a house and tree-lined hills.
- The background changes position as the TARDIS dematerialises.
- When the Fifth Doctor says his last word, his mouth doesn't seem to move (Though it can be argued that the Doctor is just thinking the word rather than saying it.)
Continuity
- Speaking about the mud in the Androzanian landscape, Peri says it's "a change from lava". (TV: Planet of Fire)
- Peri and the newly-regenerated Sixth Doctor quickly become immersed in another adventure. (TV: The Twin Dilemma)
- The Doctor's last word before regenerating is "Adric?"
- AUDIO: Winter takes place during the Doctor's regeneration, which reveals that the Master's appearance as the Doctor dies is the result of him using his and the Doctor's old telepathic link to Kamelion to try and 'block' the Doctor's regeneration, requiring indirect support from the Fifth Doctor's other companions to keep him alive.
- The Doctor survives in the vacuums of Androzani Minor's caverns through use of an oxygen cylinder, and later his respiratory bypass system. (TV: Pyramids of Mars).
- Following this story, the Sixth Doctor goes through a brief period where he subconsciously blames Peri for his previous self's death. He tries to distance himself from her while telling himself that he is working towards a greater good, until he finally realises this in PROSE: Burning Heart.
- In PROSE: Timewyrm: Revelation, it is revealed that after the Fifth Doctor dies, he becomes the mental personification of the Doctor's conscience, but is buried by the Seventh Doctor following his regeneration.
- An alternative version of the Doctor never visited Androzani Minor. (PROSE: So Vile a Sin)
- In PROSE: Matrix, an alternative timeline is referenced where the influence of the Dark Matrix, wielded by the Valeyard, the Doctor's dark future self, provokes the Fifth Doctor to take the bat's milk himself while leaving Peri to die, turning the Fifth Doctor into a wraith loyal to the Valeyard until this is undone by the Seventh Doctor.
- Trees, technology, and soldiers from Androzani Major all play a major factor in a Christmas adventure for the Eleventh Doctor (TV: The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe).
- The Doctor was stated to have died on Androzani Minor after the Great Intelligence had entered the Doctor's time stream. He was, presumably, saved by a version of Clara Oswald. (TV: The Name of the Doctor)
- Due to her infection with spectrox toxaemia, Peri was rendered infertile. (AUDIO: The Widow's Assassin)
DVD, VHS and audio releases
DVD releases
Released as Doctor Who: The Caves of Androzani, this release was the third of 2001.
Released:
- PAL - BBC DVD BBCDVD1042
- NTSC - Warner Video E1606
Contents:
- Audio Commentary by actors Peter Davison (the Doctor), Nicola Bryant (Peri) and director Graeme Harper
- Chain Reaction - Making of
- Directing Who: Then and Now - with Graeme Harper
- Behind the scenes - The Regeneration - Footage of final studio session, with commentary.
- Behind the scenes - Creating Sharaz Jek - Interview with Christopher Gable.
- BBC News - Report of Peter Davison's departure (28 July 1983).
- South East at Six News - Peter Davison and John Nathan-Turner talk about the future of the series.
- PDF materials - Radio Times Listings
- Extended Scene
- Music-only Option
- Trailer
- Photo Gallery
- Production Subtitles
Rear Credits:
- Starring Peter Davison
- By Robert Holmes
- Produced by John Nathan-Turner
- Directed by Graeme Harper
- Incidental Music by Roger Limb
Notes:
- Editing for the DVD release was completed by the Doctor Who Restoration Team.
Special Edition release
This story was released as Doctor Who: The Caves of Androzani: Special Edition.
Released:
- UK 4 October 2011 Region 2
- Australia 2 December 2010 Region 4
- US 14 February 2012 Region 1
Special Features:
- Chain Reaction - The making of The Caves of Androzani
- Directing Who, Now and Then - Graeme Harper
- Russell Harty - chat show excerpt with Peter Davison and Colin Baker
- New Photo Gallery
Notes:
- It is only available in the UK and Australia as part of the Revisitations 1 box set, out in Region 2 on 4 October 2010. It was released with special editions of The Talons of Weng-Chiang and Doctor Who.
VHS releases
This story was released as Doctor Who: The Caves of Androzani.
Released:
- UK January 1992
- PAL - BBC Video BBCV4713
- NTSC - Warner Video E1183
External links
- The Caves of Androzani at the BBC's official site
- The Caves of Androzani at BroaDWcast
- The Caves of Androzani at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- The Caves of Androzani at Shannon Sullivan's A Brief History of Time (Travel)
- The Caves of Androzani at The Locations Guide
Footnotes
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