Red (audio story)

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Revision as of 05:46, 18 May 2017 by CzechBot (talk | contribs) (Getting rid of name variable in infobox. Screws things up. Leave a message at user talk:CzechOut if you want more info.)
RealWorld.png
You may be looking for the colour.

Red was the eighty-fifth monthly Doctor Who audio story produced by Big Finish Productions. It was the fifth audio story to feature Sylvester McCoy as the Seventh Doctor and Bonnie Langford as his companion Melanie Bush. It was writer Stewart Sheargold's first Doctor Who audio for Big Finish; he had previously written for their Bernice Summerfield series.

Publisher's summary

Subject 2660 ­ Celia Fortunaté, designated citizen of the needle. Subject experiencing traumatic, violent delusions during waking moments. Subject remains passified and under control of Whitenoise. Medication has been prescribed.

Subject 0357 Vi Yulquen, designated Matriarch of the needle. Subject is under constant surveillance due to her wish to experience harm. This is in direct contravention of Whitenoise's programming. Also supplier of the drug classified as Slow. Editing is required.

Subject 0841 ­ Chief Blue. Technician in symbiotic relationship with this Whitenoise system. Knowledgeable in human psychological evaluation. Subject has been diagnosed a voyeur, and has a dangerous obsession with the Red Tape. Machine augmentation is favoured to curb this defect.

Subject [error] ­ Melanie Bush, designated companion of subject 3999. Subject [error] is not chipped and is a threat. Her ability to harm has not been checked, compromising the continued security programming of this Whitenoise system. She must be inhibited.

Subject 3999 ­ the Doctor. Subject has committed homicide. This subject now in constant redline. His propensity for violence remains unchecked. Analysis suggests synchronisation with the killer. The Doctor will attempt to kill again. He must be stopped.

Plot

to be added

Cast

References

to be added

Notes

Illustrated preview from DWM 372 by Martin Geraghty.

Continuity

External links