The Sun Makers (TV story): Difference between revisions

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*The [[Usurian]]s have a file on [[Gallifrey]].
*The [[Usurian]]s have a file on [[Gallifrey]].
*Usarians are listed in [[Gustous R Thripsted|Professor Thripsted's]] ''[[Flora and Fauna of the Universe]]'' as "parasitic fungi".
*Usarians are listed in [[Gustous R Thripsted|Professor Thripsted's]] ''[[Flora and Fauna of the Universe]]'' as "parasitic fungi".
*Three types of gas are mentioned: [[Dianane]], a deadly poison (to which Usurians are immune), [[Balarium]], a muscle neutraliser, which also effects speech, and Pentocyleinicmethylhydrane (PCM), an anxiety inducing agent.
*Three types of gas are mentioned: [[Dianane]], a deadly poison (to which Usurians are immune), [[Balarium]], a muscle neutraliser, which also effects speech, and Pentocyleinicmethylhydrane (PCM), an anxiety inducing agent (which also eliminates air-bourne infection).


==Story Notes==
==Story Notes==

Revision as of 03:24, 25 November 2009


Synopsis

The TARDIS arrives in the future on the planet Pluto where there are now six suns, a breathable atmosphere and a large industrial community. The Company controls the planet and exploits the workers, pays them a pittance and then taxes them on everything imaginable. The Doctor and Leela join forces with an underground band of rebels led by a man named Mandrel.

They learn that the head of the Company's operations on Pluto, represented by the human official Gatherer Hade, is an Usurian known as the Collector. The Usurians enslave planets through economic means and then fleece the inhabitants with exorbitant taxes. The Company keeps the citizens in line by diffusing a calming gas, PCM, through the air conditioning system.

The Doctor manages to stop this, and the workers then rise up against the Company and hurl Gatherer Hade to his death from the roof of a tall building. The Doctor meanwhile gains access to the Company computer and programs it to apply a two per cent growth tax. The Collector, unable to cope with the loss of his profits, reverts to his natural form - a type of poisonous fungus - and is rendered harmless.

Plot

to be added

Cast

Crew

References

Story Notes

  • Michael Keating (here playing Goudry) would later be cast as Vila in Blake's 7 based partially on this performance.
  • Most of the corridors were named after UK tax forms, as the story was intended as a satire of contemporary British taxes.
  • This story marks the last appearance of Leela's darker outfit. For the next two serials - her last - she would continue to wear the lighter (and more revealing) one.

Ratings

  • Part 1 - 8.5 million viewers
  • Part 2 - 9.5 million viewers
  • Part 3 - 8.9 million viewers
  • Part 4 - 8.4 million viewers

Myths

to be added

Filming Locations

  • WD and HO Wills Tobacco Factory (now known as Imperial Park), Hartcliffe Way, Hartcliffe, Bristol
  • Camden Town Deep Tube Shelters, Stanmore Place, Camden Town, London
  • BBC Television Centre (TC3 and TC6), Shepherd's Bush, London

Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors

  • When the Gatherer is to be thrown off the roof by an angry mob it's quite obvious that it is a dummy.
  • A car park insignia is visible on the roof top.
  • How will the liberated humans prevent the artificial suns from burning-out now that the Usurian controlling them has been dispatched? The Doctor could have shown them how before leaving. It's also possible the Usurian was lying, to make the people believe they needed him.

Continuity

Video Releases

Released as Doctor Who: The Sun Makers.

Released:

Novelisation

Sunmakers novel.jpg
Main article: Doctor Who and the Sunmakers

Novelised as Doctor Who and the Sunmakers by Terrance Dicks in 1982.

See also

External Links

Template:Season 15