Tractator: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
(we can suspect that the human refugees would have moved to a Mutter's Spiral planet, but we don't know where the Tractator's originated)
Line 2: Line 2:
|image = [[Image:st--6n01.jpg|250px]]
|image = [[Image:st--6n01.jpg|250px]]
|Species name = Tractator
|Species name = Tractator
|type = Giant gastropod
|type = Gravity manipulators
|affiliation =  
|affiliation =  
|origin =  
|origin =  
Line 8: Line 8:
}}
}}


'''Tractators''' were aliens resembling giant snails which could exert enormous power over gravity.
'''Tractators''' resembled giant invertebrates and could control [[gravity]] with their minds.


== Physical characteristics ==
== Physical characteristics ==
The Tractators wear giant chitinous shells. Except for their leader, the [[Gravis]], they do not speak.


== History ==
== History ==
Sometime before the [[20th century]], the Tractators invaded [[Trion (planet)|Trion]], As a consequence, the very sight of a Tractator paralyzes some Trions (such as [[Turlough]]) with fear even if they themselves, had never personally seen a Tractator. The invasion etched itself into the [[racial memory]] of the [[Trion (species]]Trion]]s.
Millions of years later, Tractators burrowed underneath the [[Human]] colony on [[Frontios]] and secretly used Human colonists as living parts.
== Culture and technology ==
A figure of authority, a Gravis, acted as central figure of the Tractators. Tractators use scavenged machinery as well as the parts of living beings, as machines. ([[DW]]: ''[[Frontios (TV story)|Frontios]]'')
:''We do not know if Tractators actually possessed a hive mind, though that would seem very possible.''
==Behind the Scenes==
Writer [[Christopher Bidmead]] based the appearance of Tractators on insects known as [[Wikipedia:wood lice]]. The production team toned down some of the more gory deciptions of Tractator technology, thinking them too horrific. The Gravis would have used a floating globe-shaped translation device, which would speak for the Gravis, cobbled together from metal parts and also a severed human head, but the production team vetoed this idea, too. Aside form the difficulty of making the globe float convincingly, they felt that the globe would make distract from one-on-on interaction between the Doctor and the Gravis. Many of these ideas turn up in Bidmead's novelizatoin of the story.
{{Stub}}


== Culture ==
{{Gone to Pot}}


[[Category:Races and Species]]
[[Category:Races and Species]]
[[Category:Mutter's Spiral species]]
[[Category:Fifth Doctor enemies]]

Revision as of 15:46, 2 February 2007


Tractators resembled giant invertebrates and could control gravity with their minds.

Physical characteristics

The Tractators wear giant chitinous shells. Except for their leader, the Gravis, they do not speak.

History

Sometime before the 20th century, the Tractators invaded Trion, As a consequence, the very sight of a Tractator paralyzes some Trions (such as Turlough) with fear even if they themselves, had never personally seen a Tractator. The invasion etched itself into the racial memory of the Trion (speciesTrion]]s.

Millions of years later, Tractators burrowed underneath the Human colony on Frontios and secretly used Human colonists as living parts.

Culture and technology

A figure of authority, a Gravis, acted as central figure of the Tractators. Tractators use scavenged machinery as well as the parts of living beings, as machines. (DW: Frontios)

We do not know if Tractators actually possessed a hive mind, though that would seem very possible.

Behind the Scenes

Writer Christopher Bidmead based the appearance of Tractators on insects known as Wikipedia:wood lice. The production team toned down some of the more gory deciptions of Tractator technology, thinking them too horrific. The Gravis would have used a floating globe-shaped translation device, which would speak for the Gravis, cobbled together from metal parts and also a severed human head, but the production team vetoed this idea, too. Aside form the difficulty of making the globe float convincingly, they felt that the globe would make distract from one-on-on interaction between the Doctor and the Gravis. Many of these ideas turn up in Bidmead's novelizatoin of the story.

StubTab.png
This article needs a big cleanup.

It's unclear what's wrong with the article, because the editor who placed this tag here didn't enumerate the page's problems.

These problems might be so great that the article's factual accuracy has been compromised. Talk about it here or check the revision history or Manual of Style for more information.