The War Machines (TV story): Difference between revisions

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(This was not the first serial to take place in the present day--Planet of Giants, anyone?)
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*[[Ben Jackson]] - [[Michael Craze]]
*[[Ben Jackson]] - [[Michael Craze]]
*[[Polly]] - [[Anneke Wills]]
*[[Polly]] - [[Anneke Wills]]
*Major [[Green]] - [[Alan Curtis]]
*Major [[Green (The War Machines)|Green]] - [[Alan Curtis]]
*Professor [[Brett]] - [[John Harvey]]
*Professor [[Brett]] - [[John Harvey]]
*[[Kitty]] - [[Sandra Bryant]]
*[[Kitty]] - [[Sandra Bryant]]

Revision as of 05:04, 27 January 2008


The War Machines was the tenth and final story of Season 3. There were several companion cast changes in this story - Dodo Chaplet, played by Jackie Lane, left, while Polly and Ben Jackson, played by Anneke Wills and Michael Craze, joined.

Synopsis

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Plot

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Cast

Crew

References

  • WOTAN (somehow) works out what TARDIS means.

Story Notes

  • Although Polly was never given an on-screen surname, "Wright" was used in an audition piece for the character at the time. It has since been adopted into various spin-off novels.
  • WOTAN is pronounced with a soft V as VOTAN by many of the characters.
  • This is the first return to contemporary London for the Doctor.

Ratings

  • Episode 1 - 5.4m viewers
  • Episode 2 - 4.7m viewers
  • Episode 3 - 5.3m viewers
  • Episode 4 - 5.5m viewers

Myths

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Location Filming

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Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors

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Continuity

  • The appearance and function of the War Machines is mentioned briefly in EarthWorld.
  • Dodo's life following this story is explored in Who Killed Kennedy.
  • It's revealed in Original Sin who funded Professor Brett's work.

DVD, Video and Other Releases

The Restoration Team did very extensive work on this story for the VHS release. In addition to lots of film and video cleanups, and patching censor clips in for many bits missing from the master copy, this included creation of short sections of new footage from stills and off-cuts to cover missing bits. Despite this, it still has a small amount of missing material where no video could be found to match the complete off-air audio. The audio release is complete.

(TV broadcasts prior to the video release usually used the unimproved, substantially cut, and very very dirty master.)

Target Novelisations

  • The War Machines was published by Target in 1989.

See Also

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External Links


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