Time and the Rani (TV story): Difference between revisions
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== Story notes == | == Story notes == | ||
* The concept of creating a weapon by collecting the minds of all the great thinkers, including the Doctor's, was also used in the unfinished and unbroadcast story [[DW]] [[Shada]]. Both stories involve the Doctor using his stolen consciousness to counteract the weapon. | |||
* Loyhargil is an anagram of 'holy grail'. | * Loyhargil is an anagram of 'holy grail'. | ||
* The working title for this story was '''Strange Matter'''. | * The working title for this story was '''Strange Matter'''. |
Revision as of 04:39, 9 December 2011
Time and the Rani was the first story in season twenty-four of Doctor Who. It marked the debut of Sylvester McCoy as the Seventh Doctor (McCoy also, briefly, portrayed the Sixth Doctor for the regeneration sequence). An all-computer animated opening titles sequence was introduced with this story. Kate O'Mara makes her second and final televised appearance to date, (not including the non-canonical Dimensions in Time) as the Rani.
Synopsis
The Rani kidnaps the recently regenerated and unstable Doctor along with various other scientific geniuses on the remote planet Lakertya, harnessing their intellects to control an approaching asteroid composed entirely of Strange Matter.
Plot
While the TARDIS is flying through space, it is assaulted by multiple laser beams befor from the planet Lakertya before being captured in a tractor beam. The Rani and her servant break into the TARDIS to find both the Sixth Doctor and Mel unconscious. The Rani orders her servant to retrieve the Doctor and it turns him over. When the Doctor is turned over, his face is covered by a rainbow of swirling light. In the following moment, his features fade along with the light, leaving a freshly regenerated Seventh Doctor in his place.
The Rani, with her four-eyed servants the Tetraps, has forced the Lakertyans into helping kidnap an array of genius scientists, including Albert Einstein, Louis Pasteur, and Hypatia, and she now also requires the Doctor. The Doctor recovers from the crash and seemingly is continuing a conversation his previous incarnation was having with Mel. He then notices that he is no long in the TARDIS and recognises the Rani. Angered by her presence, he wonders what kind of monstrous experiment she is up to now before taking his umbrella (which was oddly taken along with him) to strike her. However, the Rani knocks him out with a laser gun and injects him with an amnesia-inducing drug and disguises herself as Mel. Once the Doctor recovers, she attempts to convince him to repair some broken machinery in 'his' lab. Beyond the lab is a closed-off chamber.
Mel, meanwhile, has been left behind in the TARDIS. She encounters, and eventually wins the trust of the young hot-headed Lakertyan Ikona, eager to dispatch the evil Rani and liberate his people.
In the meantime, the Doctor has returned to the TARDIS to change his clothes as he finds the clownish outfit of the Sixth not a fitting match for his new persona. After failing with a Napoleon outfit, a British guard outfit, one of the Third's outfits and the Fourth's final season outfit, the Doctor walks out from behind a clothes rack wearing the Second's fur coat, but opens it to reveal his new outfit, which the Rani finds befitting of a Time Lord.
They leave and return to the lab, where the Doctor finds the problem and instructs "Mel" to return to the TARDIS and retrieve a tool. While doing so, the Rani orders her minion to kill Mel. Once the Rani returns and gives the Doctor the device he needs, he sees one of the mineral plates inside the device is broken and they need a replacement. The Rani tells the Doctor that she can get a replacement from the locals, contradicting her earlier statement that they were not advanced enough for the Doctor's technological knowledge. The Doctor catches this as she leaves, realising that he has been duped. While the Rani leaves, Mel enters the lab and the Doctor mistakes her for the Rani. Mel, not noticing the Doctor is himself due to his new face and clothes, wonders what he has done with the Doctor. After Mel mentions carrot juice and the Doctor responds with his great hatred of the beverage, Mel accepts that he is the Doctor.
They decided to find out what the Rani has been planning and find an enormous brain in an inner chamber that channels the kidnapped scientists' mental ability into a single gestalt mind. An asteroid composed entirely of strange matter, a very rare and superheavy material, is passing, and the Rani has constructed a fixed-trajectory rocket to collide with it at the approaching solstice. The only known substance that can destroy Strange Matter is Strange Matter itself, so she is using the brain to discover a lightweight substitute.
The Rani captures the Doctor and feeds his intellect into the brain, but to her extreme annoyance the brain starts spouting bad puns and nonsense. Once disconnected, the Doctor inadvertently provides the brain with the means to determine the needed substance: Loyhargil.
Upon impact, the Strange Matter would form a shell of chronons around Lakertya, causing the brain to expand to fill the entire surface of the planet, converting it into a time manipulator. With this, the Rani can change the course of history and control the randomness of evolution throughout the universe.
The Lakertyan leader Beyus sacrifices his life to destroy the brain and delay the launch long enough for the rocket to miss the asteroid. The Rani escapes in her TARDIS, but finds it overrun with Tetraps who 'invite' the Rani to accompany them to her homeworld.
On Lakertya the Doctor and Mel make their goodbyes with the people they had befriended and helped liberate from the Rani. Before going in to the TARDIS, Mel tells the Doctor that his new self is going to take some getting used to, to which he replies, "I'll grow on you, Mel, I'll grow on you."
Cast
- Seventh Doctor - Sylvester McCoy
- Mel Bush - Bonnie Langford
- The Rani - Kate O'Mara
- Ikona - Mark Greenstreet
- Faroon - Wanda Ventham
- Beyus - Donald Pickering
- Sarn - Karen Clegg
- Urak - Richard Gauntlett
- Lanisha - John Segal
- Voices - Peter Tuddenham, Jacki Webb
Crew
- Assistant Floor Manager - Joanna Newbery, Christopher Sandeman
- Costumes - Ken Trew
- Designer - Geoff Powell
- Incidental Music - Keff McCulloch
- Make-Up - Lesley Rawstorne
- OB Cameraman - Alastair Mitchell, John Hawes
- Producer - John Nathan-Turner
- Production Assistant - Joy Sinclair
- Production Associate - Anne Faggetter
- Script Editor - Andrew Cartmel
- Special Sounds - Dick Mills
- Studio Lighting - Henry Barber
- Studio Sound - Brian Clark
- Theme Arrangement - Keff McCulloch
- Title Music - Ron Grainer
- Visual Effects - Colin Mapson
References
- Loyhargil is a lightweight substitute for strange matter.
- Chronons are discrete particles of time.
Human scientists
Humanoid species
- Tetraps
- Lakertyans are civilised reptilian humanoids.
Time Lords
- The Rani and the Doctor studied together.
- The Doctor states he is in his seventh incarnation.
Story notes
- The concept of creating a weapon by collecting the minds of all the great thinkers, including the Doctor's, was also used in the unfinished and unbroadcast story DW Shada. Both stories involve the Doctor using his stolen consciousness to counteract the weapon.
- Loyhargil is an anagram of 'holy grail'.
- The working title for this story was Strange Matter.
- This is the first story to feature computer generated images (CGI) for the titles and many of the effects (including the TARDIS's flight through space in the pre-title sequence).
- The story's 'problems' can be partly explained as Pip and Jane Baker (the writers) in that they had no idea who would be playing the new Doctor or how he would be characterised - and, at least when they started work on the project, the series had no script editor for them to discuss things with.
- Colin Baker declined to return for a to return to his role for a regeneration sequence. As a result, Sylvester McCoy donned a wig and the Sixth Doctor's costume and briefly appeared as the Sixth Doctor, making him the only Doctor actor to play two different incarnations. McCoy also spends much of the early part of the story clad in the Sixth Doctor's outfit.
- io9.com ranked the Sixth Doctor's death as the second weakest death in science fiction history.[1]
- Sylvester McCoy protested about wearing the question mark jumper.
- In this story, the Seventh Doctor wears a certain part of his costume piece with an odd style, this would not be used again. Sylvester McCoy admitted it was a regrettable choice, that he wore braces on the OUTSIDE of the pullover, with it tucked in. He says it made injustice to the appeareance of his tummy, gave him a "beer gut" look.. For future stories, the actor would instead keep to wearing his braces over his shirt, and have the pullover over that, as is more traditional.
- During the regeneration, the exercise bike the Sixth Doctor rides in Terror of the Vervoids is visible in the TARDIS control room. In Issue 409 of Doctor Who Magazine, in an article on regeneration, the writer suggests that the Sixth Doctor's "mortal" injury may have been caused by him falling off the bike.
- While trying on clothes, the Seventh Doctor briefly wears the outfits of his fourth, third, and fifth incarnations, and also the fur coat of his second incarnation.
- The Doctor refers to his new regeneration as his 'seventh persona'. This would seem to settle the question of the Doctor having other regenerations before the First Doctor. In The Brain of Morbius there had been strong suggestions that there were previous Doctors.
- This story gives no on-screen explanation for how The Rani survived being attacked by the dinosaur at the end of The Mark of the Rani. However, in the novelisation, she stated that it had broken its neck on the ceiling of her TARDIS.
- This is the first time the Doctor is seen regenerating at the beginning of a serial, as opposed to its end (barring recap footage, of course).
- This would be the last time a TARDIS other than the Doctor's was shown on-screen until the charity special Dimensions in Time.
Ratings
- Part 1 - 5.1 million viewers
- Part 2 - 4.2 million viewers
- Part 3 - 4.3 million viewers
- Part 4 - 4.9 million viewers
Myths
- Colin Baker refused to film a regeneration sequence. That's sort of half true, in an extra found on the The Trial of a Time Lord DVD box set, Colin Baker said that when he was asked to film a regeneraton sequence, he agreed as long as he was allowed to do a full third season playing The Doctor. They refused, so Colin refused
Filming locations
- Cloford Quarry, Cloford, Frome, Somerset (Exterior of Rani's base)
- Westdown Quarry, Chantry, Frome, Somerset (Location where the TARDIS lands)
- Whatley Quarry, Whatley, Frome, Somerset
- BBC Television Centre (TC1 & TC8), Shepherd's Bush, London
Production errors
- Sylvester McCoy pronounces "Princeton University" as "Prince Town" without narrative cause. Since "Princeton" has more or less standard pronunciation across all English dialects — even Scottish ones — this is simply a fluff on McCoy's part.
- The overhead microphone is visible in part one after the Rani introduces herself as Mel. The boom operator seems to have trouble following the Doctor's erratic movements.
- Mel is sliding from hills and sits in a cavelike pipe, still her trousersbottom is very clean!.
- Third part, when the Rani searches for the Doctor outside of the building: she wears red pants instead of the white one earlier.
Continuity
- The Rani last appeared in DW: The Mark of the Rani.
- The final portion of PDA: Spiral Scratch leads into this story as (paradoxically) does that of Craig Hinton's novel, Time's Champion.
- The Rani's fate is followed up in BBV: The Rani Reaps the Whirlwind.
- In NA: Timewyrm: Revelation, NA: Love and War and NA: Head Games, the reasons why the Doctor regenerated are further explored.
- The Doctor states that he is 953 years old (as is the Rani) although this number is contradicted in DW: Aliens of London.
- The next on-screen appearance of Einstein would be in DW: Death is the Only Answer.
Timeline
- Time and the Rani occurs after: PDA: Spiral Scratch
- Time and the Rani occurs before: BE: The Useful Pile
Home video and audio releases
DVD releases
- This story was first released on DVD in Region 2 on 13 September 2010. Region 4 release came out 4 November 2010 and Region 1 on 14 June 2011. The one disc set includes a restored version of the story, as well as the following special features:
- Commentary by Sylvester McCoy (The Doctor), Bonnie Langford (Mel), and Pip & Jane Baker (Writers).
- The Last Chance Saloon - includes McCoy's audition footage for the Doctor, with an appearance by Janet Fielding
- 7D FX
- Helter-Skelter
- Lakertya
- Hot Gossip
- Blue Peter
- Breakfast Time
- Coming Soon Trailer
- Radio Times Billings
- Production Subtitles
- Photo Gallery
- Easter Egg: CGI Regeneration sequence, with Colin Baker added.
- Easter Egg: Eye-Sore
- Easter Egg: The Name'sh McCoy, Shylveshter McCoy
- Editing for DVD release completed by Doctor Who Restoration Team.
VHS releases
Released on VHS as per follows:
Region 2: July 1995
Region 1: September 1995
Region 4: October 1995
Novelisation and its audiobook
- Main article: Time and the Rani (novelisation)
- Novelised by Pip and Jane Baker in 1987.
External links
- BBC Episode Guide for Time and the Rani
- Time and the Rani at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- A Brief History of Time (Travel): Time and the Rani
- The Locations Guide to Doctor Who - Time and the Rani
Footnotes
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