The Power of the Daleks (TV story): Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
(→‎Myths: addressing in-series contradictions)
Line 194: Line 194:


=== Myths ===
=== Myths ===
* Doctor Who's planet Vulcan predated Star Trek's. ''([[Star Trek]] made its on-air debut in the US on 8 September 1966, pre-dating transmission of The Power of the Daleks by almost two months; and although Spock's home planet was referred to initially as 'Vulcanis' it became 'Vulcan' just a few episodes later.)''
* Doctor Who's planet Vulcan predated Star Trek's. ''[[Star Trek]] made its on-air debut in the US on 8 September 1966, pre-dating transmission of The Power of the Daleks by almost two months; and although Spock's home planet was referred to initially as 'Vulcanis', it became 'Vulcan' just a few episodes later.''
* [[Tristram Cary]]'s incidental music in this story was taken entirely from the first Dalek story, ''[[The Daleks]]''. ''(Some of it was taken from season three's The Daleks' Master Plan.)''
* [[Tristram Cary]]'s incidental music in this story was taken entirely from the first Dalek story, ''[[The Daleks]]''. ''Some of it was taken from season three's ''[[The Daleks' Master Plan]]''.''
* The story is set in the year 2020. ''This is stated in a trailer but not confirmed on screen. (In any case, this now conflicts with events in [[The Waters of Mars]] in which it is revealed that Earth's first insterstellar traveller, [[Susie Fontana Brooke]], is not born until 2059. This also conflicts with depictions of the early 21st century as a present day/near future location in other stories of the Revived Series - including 2020 itself in [[The Hungry Earth]]/[[Cold Blood]] - in which the overall level of technology is generally portrayed as insufficiently advanced for interstellar travel to be credible''.)
* The story is set in the year 2020. ''This is stated in a trailer but not confirmed on screen. If true, this conflicts with events in [[The Waters of Mars]] in which it is revealed that Earth's first insterstellar traveller, [[Susie Fontana Brooke]], is not born until 2059. This also conflicts with depictions of the early 21st century as a present day/near future location in other stories of the Revived Series -- including 2020 itself in [[The Hungry Earth]]/[[Cold Blood]] -- in which the overall level of technology is generally portrayed as insufficiently advanced for interstellar travel to be credible.  However, people sometimes incorrectly assume that time is a strict progression from cause to effect, when actually -- from a non-linear, non-subjective viewpoint -- it's more like a big ball of wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey stuff.''


=== Filming locations ===
=== Filming locations ===

Revision as of 03:07, 27 December 2011

RealWorld.png


The Power of the Daleks was the third story of Season 4 of Doctor Who. It was the first full story to feature the Second Doctor, played by Patrick Troughton. All six episodes are missing from the BBC archives.

Synopsis

Following the Doctor's regeneration into a new, younger body, the TARDIS lands at an Earth colony on the planet Vulcan in the far future. Mistaken as an official Earth Examiner, the Doctor discovers that a scientist called Lesterson is attempting to reactivate two inanimate, subserviant Daleks found in a crashed space rocket. The colonists refuse to take heed of the Doctor's dire warnings that the Daleks are dangerous until it is too late. Once reactivated, the Daleks secretly begin to reproduce themselves in a bid to take control of the colony.

Plot

Episode 1

The Doctor awakens from his regeneration.

Ben and Polly are bewildered after watching the First Doctor transform into a completely different, younger man. As this new Doctor recovers, he rummages through his old things, finding a 500-Year Diary, and a piece of metal that brings "extermination" to his mind.

The TARDIS lands on planet Vulcan, and as they cross the mercury swamps, the Doctor meets an Examiner from Earth who is then murdered by an unseen assassin. In examining the body, he discovers the Examiner's badge of office. Meanwhile, the Doctor is almost the assassin's next target; he is knocked unconscious, though he manages to pull a button off the attacker's clothes.

The Doctor reads his Five Hundred Year Diary while walking through the mercury swamps.

As Ben and Polly look around, Polly is nearly overcome by mercury fumes, but is rescued by Quinn, Deputy Governor, and Bragen, Head of Security. The Doctor decides to pose as the Examiner with Ben and Polly as his assistants. They are taken to a colony of humans, led by Governor Hensell. The colonists are unsure why an Examiner has been summoned; some believe it is due to the activities of an underground rebel movement, others believe it is because of a mysterious space capsule that had crashed in the swamps hundreds of years earlier, that the colonists are now studying. The Doctor admits nothing, even playing the fool (much to Ben's annoyance), hoping to expose the murderer of the real Examiner, and uses the badge he took from the Examiner's body to freely explore and observe.

With Hensell, Quinn, and Bragen, the Doctor and his two friends are brought to the laboratory where scientists Lesterson and Janley are studying the capsule. They are able to open a hatch where they find nothing but an empty entryway. The Doctor orders that they go no further tonight, to the great annoyance of Hensell.

The Doctor returns later that night and secretly re-enters the capsule, using the piece of metal from the TARDIS and an identical piece that Lesterson had; Ben and Polly follow him. Finding his way into an inner chamber, the Doctor discovers two dormant Daleks, and a space where a missing third one must have been. Polly screams as a mutant creature scurries across the floor.

Episode 2

Watched by Resno, one of Lesterson's research assistants, the travellers suspect that Lesterson has already been inside and taken the missing Dalek. Polly thinks the creatures must be dead, but the Doctor tells her that power is all they need to revive, and that one Dalek could wipe out the colony.

Quinn cannot find the Examiner in his quarters, but Bragen finds Quinn and questions him. Quinn is dismissive and distrusting, and knocks Bragen over in his attempt to block Quinn's departure. Bragen orders a search for the Examiner.

Lesterson discovers the Doctor and friends in his laboratory, and the Doctor confronts him about the missing Dalek as Bragen arrives. The Doctor urges the Daleks be destroyed, and leaves with Bragen to get permission from the Governor. Lesterson orders Resno to find Janley, and retrieves the missing Dalek from a compartment, excited at the prospect of bringing the machine back to life.

Bragen tells the Examiner about the underground rebel movement, and advises discretion in the Examiner's investigations. After Bragen leaves to set up a meeting with the Governor, the Doctor discovers a listening device embedded in a piece of fruit in their quarters. Bragen returns to announce that the Governor cannot see him until the next morning. Meanwhile, Lesterson, Janley and Resno commence experiments on the Dalek. They manage to re-activate it. Resno is uneasy, but the others are excited and focused on their work.

The Doctor goes to the communications room, but finds it smashed; the operator has been attacked and the equipment damaged. Quinn steps from the shadows and tries to speak to the Doctor, but Bragen arrives and arrests Quinn on circumstantial evidence, including the button the Doctor took from his attacker; a button is missing from Quinn's tunic.

During the experiment, Resno is shot by the Dalek. Janley announces that he's been knocked out. As Lesterson goes to get help, Janley wraps up the body. Back in the Examiner's quarters, Polly doesn't believe that Quinn could be guilty. The three are escorted by Bragen to attend Quinn's inquiry.

Lesterson interrupts the inquiry excitedly to present the re-activated Dalek to all assembled. The Dalek seems to recognise the Doctor. Lesterson shows some of the capabilities of the machine, and it surprises everyone when it speaks. As the Doctor fruitlessly pleads for the Dalek to be destroyed, the Dalek intones "I am your servant!"

Episode 3

The Governor is persuaded that the Daleks could be of great help to the colony, and gives permission for Lesterson to continue his experiments. The Doctor tests the Dalek's servility by ordering it to immobilise itself, which it does begrudgingly. It immediately activates after the Doctor has left, and announces that it obeys Lesterson.

Meanwhile, the inquiry continues, and Quinn admits that it was he who sent for the Examiner. His explanation is brushed aside by Bragen, who suggests that Quinn did all this to undermine Governor Hensell's authority, and is himself in league with the rebels. Hensell orders Quinn imprisoned, and promotes Bragen to Deputy Governor.

The Doctor has cobbled together a small device, and the three travellers go to the laboratory. Lesterson is suspicious, but the Doctor is suppliant and asks to observe the experiments, and Lesterson agrees as the Doctor hustles his friends out of the lab. As the experiments continue, the Doctor secretly attaches his device to the power generator, causing the Dalek to painfully lose control. Lesterson destroys the device and pushes the Doctor out; the Dalek watches him go as its detached gun mechanism clicks uselessly.

Janley and Bragen meet in secret; she is a rebel leader, and Bragen is using the rebels to gain power himself. Janley believes that the Dalek's gun stick could be the clinching factor in their plans to take control of the colony. She has kept the knowledge of Resno's death from Lesterson (she told him he was injured) to avoid distracting him from his work. Janley and her compatriot Valmar, under orders from Bragen, kidnap Polly.

Ben worries about the disappearance of Polly, but the Doctor is distracted with the Daleks, and doesn't believe she is in danger. Ben drags the Doctor off to report his worries. Meanwhile, the Dalek delights Lesterson with the breadth of its knowledge. In exchange for increased power and equipment, it promises to manufacture beneficial equipment for the colony. When the Dalek is alone, it increases the flow of power from the generator, and enters the capsule.

The Doctor and Ben, having spotted Lesterson leaving his lab, enter and investigate. They discover a thick cable leading from the generator into the capsule. The unarmed Dalek attempts to stop them, and Ben short-circuits the generator, but is stopped by two armed Daleks that emerge from the capsule. In front of the Governor and the Examiner, Lesterson feigns indifference of this latest news, claiming he was about to re-activate them anyway.

Bragen tells the Doctor and Ben that a body has been found in the mercury swamp, and suggests that the Doctor isn't the Examiner. He holds this over their heads, instructing them to leave Lesterson and the Daleks alone. A threatening note about Polly is pushed through their door.

Lesterson's trust in the Daleks starts to crack when he sees the trio chant conspiratorially, "WE WILL GET OUR POWER!"

Episode 4

Lesterson reacts by turning down the generator, and uses it to try to keep control of the Daleks. He turns it back up when the Daleks assure him of their obedience.

Bragen is settling in with his new power, with Hensell out on the perimeter of the colony for a day or two. The Doctor and Ben push their way in, and show him the note telling of Polly's kidnapping. The Doctor is unnerved as a Dalek brings drinks on a tray. Bragen is unhelpful.

The Doctor sees that more Daleks have been reactivated. In the lab, Lesterson is disturbed by the large quantities of supplies the Daleks are requesting, and wants to ask the Examiner's advice. Janley blackmails Lesterson by revealing Resno's death to him, to prevent his acting against the Daleks, and the rebels. The Doctor and Ben arrive, inquiring about Polly, and tell Lesterson about the new Daleks. The Doctor disabuses him of the idea that the Daleks are just machines; they are brilliant engineers. Lesterson is very shaken by this and collapses; Janley forces them out. Janley informs the Daleks that they will be installing the new cables, as requested.

The Doctor discovers that a notice board is being used in secret to announce rebel meetings. They conceal themselves in the meeting room. Janley and Valmar display the Dalek to the meeting; Valmar has connected a controlling device to the Dalek's gun. When they mention they are holding Polly, Ben accidentally reveals their presence and is knocked out. The Doctor is brought before Bragen—the leader of the rebels—who has him imprisoned with Quinn. He tells Quinn of Bragen's crimes, and that he is not the real Examiner. He sets about trying to imitate the sonic key used to lock their cell.

Lesterson sees the Daleks conspiring together and that there are now four Daleks. He fearfully enters the capsule and, discovering a room where Daleks are mass-producing, is horrified to see dozens of Daleks.

Episode 5

Lesterson deactivates the power generator, and tells Janley what he's seen inside; she runs off to get help for Lesterson. He tries to communicate with the Examiner, only to discover him in prison. The Daleks emerge from the capsule, to Lesterson's horror, announcing they can store power. He runs off in panic. A Dalek instructs another that no more than three are to be seen together at any one time.

The Daleks, meanwhile are laying a network of static electricity conduits along the corridors that, once active, will give them free range of motion throughout the colony. Valmar and Kebble will help the Daleks with this network, as they also keep guard on Polly.

At the prison, Lesterson breaks in to speak to the Doctor; he screams what he's discovered and is hauled away by guards. The Doctor is using a glass full of water to replicate the sonic key's tone. Lesterson is brought before Bragen, as a Dalek works laying cables in his office. Janley arrives and tries to paint him as a madman. Bragen orders him restrained.

Polly tries to convince Valmar and Kebble of the Daleks' true natures, revealing to them the deception about the Examiner. Meanwhile, Hensell returns from the perimeter, and begins to discover Bragen's treachery. The Doctor and Quinn escape from prison.

Hensell returns to find Bragen seated at his desk. When he attempts to reclaim his power, Bragen kills him with a blast from a Dalek. Janley and Valmar hear that the Governor has returned, and leave the lab accompanied by a Dalek.

Quinn and the Doctor find Polly and release her; they escape from the lab. The three discover Hensell dead, but they are captured by Bragen and his guards. The Dalek army, now complete, emerges to engage in full-scale slaughter, chanting, "DALEKS CONQUER AND DESTROY!!"

Episode 6

As the guards usher the Doctor, Quinn, and Polly to prison, they are stopped by armed Daleks. Quinn leads the humans away, with the Daleks merely watching them go. Janley find Bragen and rejoices that the revolution is over. But Bragen is unsatisfied; he wants to wipe out the rebels as well. Janley reluctantly agrees, and turns to see Bragen putting down his gun.

The Doctor and friends take an opportunity to escape from their guards. Meanwhile, Valmar has taken Ben and is hiding in the guest quarters. Valmar leaves to find the Doctor and Polly.

Bragen announces to the colony that Hensell has been murdered by the rebels, and that he has taken control. Quinn, the Doctor, and Polly find Ben on their own, and Ben tells them of Bragen's power-mad plans. The Doctor goes off alone as the Dalek order is given: Commence extermination.

The Doctor is almost captured by Kebble and two guards, but they are attacked by Daleks; he and Kebble escape. In the lab, Valmar has attached control wires to three Daleks. Janley enters and convinces Valmar that she has not betrayed them. The Daleks offer to fight for them, and ask to be taken to where their people are fighting.

The Doctor, Ben, and Polly attempt to escape through their window; they do so as the Daleks arrive, killing Kebble. Bragen is attempting to maintain control, and orders his guards to fight despite the fact that the Daleks are attacking them too. Janley and Valmar soon lose control of the Daleks, who are firing indiscriminately at all humans; they escape.

The Doctor and friends make it to the lab, and are hidden by a deranged Lesterson as more Daleks emerge from the capsule. The Daleks announce that their static circuit is almost complete, allowing them to cast off their reliance on the colony's power. Quinn saves Valmar as Janley is murdered by a Dalek. Lesterson tells of a secret cable connecting the colony's power supply with the Dalek's capsule. The Doctor finds Valmar and he tells the Doctor where the cable is.

Quinn enters Bragen's office as Bragen desperately and futilely tries to contacts his guards. Bragen orders his guards to return to the capitol; they will be a diversion for the Daleks. Back in the lab, the Doctor finds the junction box with the cable he needs to sabotage the Dalek's static power. Lesterson gives his life to distract the Daleks while the Doctor overloads the power, destroying the Daleks and wreaking havoc throughout the colony. Bragen is killed by Valmar.

Quinn, now in charge, is appalled at the aftermath: not only are casualties enormous, but the Doctor's fiddling has destroyed the colony's power supply and will take months to repair. The Doctor suggests to Ben and Polly that they'd better leave "before they send us the bill," and they sneak away in the TARDIS. Later, as they are leaving a destroyed Dalek's eyestalk lifts up, as if to watch the TARDIS depart.

Cast

Crew

References

Story notes

  • This story had a working title of The Destiny of Doctor Who.
  • Dennis Spooner wrote the final version of the scripts, but received no on screen credit.
  • A photo of William Hartnell is used to achieve the Doctor's 'mirror trick'.
  • Polly is absent from Episode Four and Ben from Episode Five as Anneke Wills and Michael Craze were on holiday during the respective weeks in which they were recorded.
  • This is the first Dalek story (excluding The Daleks) in which there is no regular cast change.
  • This is the second story to feature no original cast members, as the previous season's Mission to the Unknown did not feature the First Doctor or his companions at all.
  • This is the first story to show the Dalek mutants from inside the Dalek machine.
  • Less than five minutes of footage survives of this story, but there are full telesnaps and audio recordings of the story.
  • One of the more notable clips shows the Daleks going round in a circle crying in a mad-like chorus:
  • Dalek#1: Exterminate all humans!
  • Dalek#2: Exterminate all humans!
  • Dalek#1: Exterminate! Annihilate! Destroy! Daleks conquer and destroy!
  • Daleks: Daleks conquer and destroy! Daleks conquer and destroy! Daleks conquer and destroy!
Although they are indeed the same four Dalek props, the intended effect is that of several different Daleks going through the doorway
  • This is the first Dalek story not to be written (or co-written) by Terry Nation.
  • This is the first Dalek story to use the title format "...of the Daleks", the most commonly used title format for stories featuring the creatures, most recently used in the 2010 video game City of the Daleks, and most recently on television in DW: Victory of the Daleks.
  • The chilling incidental soundtrack is reused from The Daleks and The Daleks' Master Plan.
  • The living Dalek creatures are seen clearly for the first time as tentacled blobs.

Archive Status

All six episodes are missing. The original broadcast video was wiped, and no 16mm telerecordings exist in the BBC Archives. The audio for all six episodes, however, does exist, thanks to a fan's home recording. Telesnaps for all six episodes exist. Short segments of 8mm film footage from off-air recordings exist. Some footage copied for use in promotional material exists.

Ratings

  • Episode 1 - 7.9 million viewers
  • Episode 2 - 7.8 million viewers
  • Episode 3 - 7.5 million viewers
  • Episode 4 - 7.8 million viewers
  • Episode 5 - 8.0 million viewers
  • Episode 6 - 7.8 million viewers

Myths

  • Doctor Who's planet Vulcan predated Star Trek's. Star Trek made its on-air debut in the US on 8 September 1966, pre-dating transmission of The Power of the Daleks by almost two months; and although Spock's home planet was referred to initially as 'Vulcanis', it became 'Vulcan' just a few episodes later.
  • Tristram Cary's incidental music in this story was taken entirely from the first Dalek story, The Daleks. Some of it was taken from season three's The Daleks' Master Plan.
  • The story is set in the year 2020. This is stated in a trailer but not confirmed on screen. If true, this conflicts with events in The Waters of Mars in which it is revealed that Earth's first insterstellar traveller, Susie Fontana Brooke, is not born until 2059. This also conflicts with depictions of the early 21st century as a present day/near future location in other stories of the Revived Series -- including 2020 itself in The Hungry Earth/Cold Blood -- in which the overall level of technology is generally portrayed as insufficiently advanced for interstellar travel to be credible. However, people sometimes incorrectly assume that time is a strict progression from cause to effect, when actually -- from a non-linear, non-subjective viewpoint -- it's more like a big ball of wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey stuff.

Filming locations

Production errors

If you'd like to talk about narrative problems with this story — like plot holes and things that seem to contradict other stories — please go to this episode's discontinuity discussion.
  • There are quite obviously only four actual Daleks - the others are clearly cardboard.
  • A Dalek crashes into a camera in one of the few surviving scenes.

Continuity

  • EDA: War of the Daleks offers an explanation of where the Dalek ship comes from.
  • The Daleks' reliance on static electricity is first referenced in The Daleks. In that story, as in this one, they draw it from the metal floor. In the second Dalek story, The Dalek Invasion of Earth, the Daleks draw electricity by means of dishes on the back of their casings. In The Chase they no longer have these dishes and can move freely with neither the need for metal floors or dishes. In Power the Daleks have apparently reverted to their dependence on static electricity. Or perhaps these are a group of the more 'primitive' city-bound Daleks that somehow reached Vulcan from Skaro.The Daleks do indeed chant that they are a 'new race of Daleks'. This suggests that they may indeed represent the more primitive Daleks which have elsewhere been superseded and destroyed. Or that the Dalek race, as a whole, had been destroyed. In the latter case, the events of Power could be placed after The Evil of the Daleks. Or after long periods of "hibernation" the Daleks need static for a while.
  • The Doctor regenerates for the first time, though the term "regenerate" is not used. The transformation of the Doctor's persona is not referred to as "regeneration" until Planet of the Spiders (Third Doctor/Fourth Doctor). In Power, the Troughton figure refers to the Doctor in the third person, and assumes the identity of another person, the Examiner, as if to make his true identity ambiguous. Polly is sure that he is the Doctor. Ben is less so, though he is sure by the end of the story.
  • The Doctor went to China in DW: Marco Polo.
  • During their "service" to the Vulcan colony team, the Daleks repeatedly say, "I am your servant," with particular emphasis on the "er" of "servant". This line is recycled in Victory of the Daleks with, "I am your soldier," pronounced with similar intonation.

Timeline

Home video and audio releases

Video/DVD

  • The surviving footage was released as part of the Lost in Time DVD in 2004.
  • 2 surviving clips were discovered after the release of Lost in Time. They have been featured on The Dalek Tapes, which was included on the Genesis of the Daleks DVD.
  • Loose Cannon Productions have released a reconstruction of all 6 episodes on VHS using audio, telesnaps, stills and surviving footage
  • On 20 June 2005, BBC Audiobooks released their own, official reconstruction of the story in MP3 format. (ISBN 0-563-50417-X)

Audio

  • This story's first official release was on a 1993 double-cassette set with linking narration provided by Tom Baker in character as the Fourth Doctor. The audio in this instance was of low quality, making some parts of the story almost impossible to understand. The Baker narration might have been used on future releases, but, ironically, the master tapes weren't kept. This release was perhaps most properly known as Doctor Who - The Missing Stories: The Power of the Daleks. (ASIN B001BGHEQA)
  • BBC Audiobooks commissioned a new, cleaned-up version of the audios for inclusion in their December 2003 combined release with The Evil of the Daleks, officially called Doctor Who: Daleks, but commonly known as the "Dalek Tin". (ISBN 0-563-49476-X) For about a year it wasn't possible to obtain the new version, including linking narration by Anneke Wills, as an individual story.
  • In August 2004, the 2003 version was released on its own. (ISBN 0-563-52503-7)


Novelisation and its audiobook

Power of the Daleks novel.jpg
Main article: The Power of the Daleks (novelisation)

Script book

  • In March 1993, Titan Books published the scripts for the serial as part of its Doctor Who: The Scripts line of books.
    The Power of the Daleks 2.jpg


External links

Template:Wikipedia