Dalek

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For the 1963 serial, see The Daleks. For the 2005 episode, see Dalek (TV story).

Daleks were mutated descendants of the Kaleds of the planet Skaro. They fought the Time Lords in the Last Great Time War, resulting in the near-total destruction of both races. Regarded by the Doctor as his greatest enemy, the Daleks are hated and feared throughout time and space. They are the oldest and most frequent foes of the Doctor, having faced him in all of his incarnations.

Biology

The Dalek, despite outwardly appearing entirely mechanical, is in fact a species of cybernetic organism or cyborg, having a biological body sheathed in and supported by a protective outer shell of Dalekanium metal armor, armed and mobile. In this it is similar to a Cyberman, except that a Dalek's body is mutated so drastically from its Kaled ancestors as to have lost all bipedal humanoid appearance save for the eyes (see below).

Anatomy

Exterior

The Dalek casing, originally called a "travel unit", (DW: Genesis of the Daleks) could be separated into three sections.

  • Top: The Dalek's means of vision and communication, a dome with a set of twin speakers on the upper part of the sides and a telescope-like eyestalk in the middle. Attached to the mid-section by a "neck"
  • Mid: On the Dalek's "chest" the Gunstick & Manipulator arm are attached, the Dalek's means of offence and operating capabilities.
  • Bottom: The Dalek's means of mobility is a sturdy base with a "skirt" of plates covered with globes. Allows movement and, in newer models, flight for the Dalek.
Battle armour

The creatures inside their "machines" were most frequently Kaled mutants, which the Doctor once described as "little green blobs in bonded polycarbide armour" (DW: Remembrance of the Daleks), although mutated members of other species, mainly Humans, also occupied the casings on occasion.

In the original story, The Daleks, the mutated creatures are called Dals.

The interdependence of biological and mechanical components arguably made the Daleks a type of cyborg. The Imperial Daleks created by Davros during the Imperial-Renegade Dalek Civil War were inarguably true cyborgs, surgically connected to their shells. (DW: Remembrance of the Daleks)

Externally, Daleks resembled human-sized peppershakers, with a single mechanical eyestalk in a rotating dome, a gunstick and a manipulator arm. The casings were made of bonded polycarbide armour (DW: Remembrance of the Daleks, Doomsday), a material that was also called dalekanium. (DW: The Dalek Invasion of Earth)

The lower shell was covered with 56 hemispherical protrusions, seen as a self-destruct system (DW: Dalek), and are possibly also the shield generators.

The voice of a Dalek was electronic, the Dalek creature having no vocal apparatus as such. Their most infamous statement was "EX-TER-MIN-ATE!", with each syllable individually screeched in a frantic electronic scream. Other common utterances included "I (or WE) OBEY!" to any command given by a superior. Daleks also had a radio communicator built into their shells, and emitted an alarm to summon other nearby Daleks if the casing was opened from outside.

The Dalek's eyepiece was its most vulnerable spot, and impairing its vision often led to its main weapon being fired indiscriminately. The Dalek casing also functioned as a fully-sealed environment suit, allowing travel through the vacuum of space or underwater without the need for additional life-support equipment. (DW: The Dalek Invasion of Earth, DW: The Parting of the Ways)

A Dalek was connected to its casing through a positronic link while the mutant itself accesses nutrient feeders and control mechanisms inside its internal chamber. (BFA: The Time of the Daleks)

Due to their gliding motion, some models of Dalek were notoriously unable to tackle stairs, which made them easy to overcome under the right circumstances. For example, at one time the Fourth Doctor and his companions escaped from Dalek pursuers by climbing into a ceiling duct. (DW: Destiny of the Daleks) Some models appeared to be able to hover, or even travel under their own power like small spacecraft (DW: The Dalek Invasion of Earth, The Chase, Revelation of the Daleks, Remembrance of the Daleks, Dalek, The Parting of the Ways, Doomsday, Evolution of the Daleks, The Stolen Earth, Journey's End, The Big Bang).

The armour of Dalek Sec and Dalek Caan had temporal shift capacity, possibly unique to those units and the others of the Cult of Skaro. (DW: Doomsday, Daleks in Manhattan)

The power source of the Dalek casing appeared to have varied at different points in their history. During his first encounter with them on Skaro, the First Doctor learned that the casing was externally powered by static electricity transmitted through the metal floors of the Dalek City. Isolating a Dalek from the floor using a non-conductive material shut down the casing, although it was not immediately fatal to the occupant. (DW: The Daleks) The Daleks overcame this difficulty by adding dishes to their casing that could receive power. (DW: The Dalek Invasion of Earth) The Daleks ultimately found a way around this impediment. (DW: The Chase)

By the beginning of the Last Great Time War the Daleks had adapted their technology to use a form of energy apparently inextricably linked to the process of time travel (possible Artron Energy.) On more than one occasion Daleks and their devices were seen to leech this energy from time-travellers to power themselves. (DW: Dalek, Doomsday)

Whatever the power source was that the Daleks used in the interim, it was (apparently uniquely) immune to being drained by the City of the Exxilons. Strangely, the Daleks retained motive power and the ability to speak even though their weaponry was shut down (strongly suggesting the weapon systems had a separate power supply). The Third Doctor indicated that this was because the Daleks were psychokinetic, the City being unable to absorb psychic energy. Other references to the Daleks having any kind of psychic potential are rather scarce, but on the planet Kyrol the Doctor later discovered an enclave of humanised Daleks who had, through years of meditation, developed their psychokinesis to a remarkable degree. (DW: Death to the Daleks, DWM: Children of the Revolution)

The casing was also booby-trapped making even dead Daleks a dangerous foe. They were frequently equipped with virus transmitters which worked automatically. (NSA: I am a Dalek) Furthermore, the armour contains an automated distress beacon which activates if disturbed. (DW: Planet of the Daleks)

Interior

The inner casing, in which the actual Dalek resides, is equipped with a life support system and a battle-computer where strategic and tactical knowledge is stored. The Dalek Mutant operated the casings manually and once removed it was possible for other life forms to pilot one, that is, if they could fit within. (DW: The Daleks)

Mutant
Kaled Mutant in Time War armour. (DW: Daleks in Manhattan)

The interior mutant was, as Ace described it, a green or pinkish "blob." (DW: Remembrance of the Daleks) It is the brain of the Dalek and the true creature that hates everything that is not a Dalek. The "blobs" are most often genetically-mutated Kaleds or, at times, other species captured by the Daleks and are depicted as having multiple tentacle-like protrusions and a normal sized right eye with the left eye much reduced in size so as to be easily missed. Despite their apparent lack of any motive capability they are shown to be capable of defending themselves, as demonstrated when a Dalek attacked and killed a soldier. (DW: Resurrection of the Daleks)

While typically the Daleks are small mutants, at least one member of the species, Dalek Sec, had extremely large tentacles and was pale green; he could even produce a sac-like membrane that appeared to come from his mouth (most likely a self-induced alteration in preparation for the final experiment). It was this membrane that he used to absorb Mr. Diagoras and transform into a Human-Dalek. (DW: Daleks in Manhattan, Evolution of the Daleks) Before or during the Time War, the Daleks mutated even more, it had a large eye in the centre of its body and tentacles. (DW: Dalek)

During WWII, three Daleks managed to engage a Progenitor and create five new breeds of pure-breed Dalek. Their current biophysical appearance is unknown, but presumably less mutated. (DW: Victory of the Daleks)

Vulnerabilities

Time War Dalek (DW: Dalek)

Although they were near invulnerable, Daleks had serval exploitable weaknesses. These changed and varied depending on the Dalek's type and ability.

History

The Daleks were the product of a generations-long war between the Kaled and Thal races.

Main article: Creation of the Daleks

Over the course of their history, the Daleks developed time travel (DW: The Chase), an interstellar (and later intergalactic) Dalek Empire (DW: The Daleks' Master Plan) and factory ships for conquest (DW: The Power of the Daleks). The radio dishes which had originally been required to allow them to travel on surfaces without a static charge (DW: The Dalek Invasion of Earth) also vanished, enabling Daleks to move under their own power.

Main article: Dalek history

Origin of name

"Dalek" had been the ancient Kaled word for god. Davros, the creator of the Daleks, appropriated the name, supposing the Daleks to approximate gods in evolutionary terms. (BFD: I, Davros) Obviously, however, "Dalek" is an anagram of Kaled, the race from which the Daleks were genetically engineered. A scientist under the command of Davros mentioned that the word "Dalek" had never been heard before the Doctor, and then hours later, Davros himself, uttered it. (DW: Genesis of the Daleks)

Society and culture

The Daleks were known to write poetry (NA: The Also People), and some of the more elaborate Dalek battlecries had an almost poetic quality about them (for example, "Advance and Attack! Attack and Destroy! Destroy and Rejoice!" (DW: The Chase) and repetition of words such as "Predict! Predict! Predict!" (DW: The Parting of the Ways) In an alternate reality, the Daleks showed a fondness for the works of William Shakespeare. (BFA: The Time of the Daleks)

Due to their frequent defeats by the Doctor, he became a legendary figure in Dalek culture and mythology. They had standing orders to capture or exterminate the Doctor on sight, and were occasionally able to identify him despite his regenerations. This was not an innate ability, but probably the result of good record keeping. The Daleks knew the Doctor as the "Ka Faraq Gatri", (which meant the "Bringer of Darkness"

A Renagade Dalek (DW: Remembrance of the Daleks)

or "Destroyer of Worlds") (DWM: Bringer of Darkness, referencing DWN: Remembrance of the Daleks). The Ninth Doctor claimed that the Daleks also called him "the Oncoming Storm" (DW: The Parting of the Ways).

The second name was also used by the Draconians to refer to the Doctor, though probably in a less pejorative sense. (NA: Love and War)

Psychology

Daleks had little to no individual personality and a strict hierarchy. They were conditioned to obey a superior's orders without question. Ultimately, the most fundamental feature of Dalek culture and psychology was an unquestioned belief in the superiority of the Daleks. Other species were either to be exterminated immediately, or enslaved and then exterminated later once they were no longer necessary. The default directive of a Dalek was to destroy all non-Dalek life forms.

File:Dalek67.jpg
A Pre-Time War Dalek (DW: The Daleks)
File:Jast.jpg
A Post-Time War Dalek. (DW: Dalek)

Daleks even regarded "deviant" Daleks as their enemies and worthy of destruction. The civil war between the Renegade and Imperial Daleks was a prime example of this, with each faction considering the other to be a perversion despite the relatively minor differences between them. This belief also meant that Daleks were intolerant of such "contamination" even within themselves. (DW: Dalek, The Parting of the Ways, Evolution of the Daleks, BFA: The Mutant Phase)

Another offshoot of this superiority complex was their complete ruthlessness, although this was also due to genetic modifications made to the original Kaled mutants by Davros. It was because of this that it was nearly impossible to negotiate or reason with a Dalek and it was this single-mindedness that made them so dangerous and not to be underestimated. However, their reliance on logic and machinery was also a weakness, albeit one that they recognised in themselves. Daleks went so as to consider an illogical action an impossible one. (DW: Destiny of the Daleks) On two occasions they transferred emotions from other life-forms, in the one case Humans, having refined the Human Factor with the help from the Second Doctor to create Humanised Daleks. (DW: The Evil of the Daleks) In another incident, they refined savagery, hatred and cunning from many other life forms (DWM: The Dogs of Doom) One unintentionally Humanised Dalek appeared after it used Rose Tyler's DNA to regenerate after sustaining injuries, resulting in involuntarily developing feelings. However, some traditional Dalek psychology remained and the Dalek self-destructed in disgust. (DW: Dalek)

Religion

As noted above, the Daleks that were created through the manipulation and mutation of Human genetic material by the demented Dalek Emperor were religious fanatics that worshiped the Emperor as their god. Normal Daleks had no religion other than their fanatic belief in their own supremacy. (DW: The Parting of the Ways)

Legal system

Although the Daleks were well known for their disregard for due process and Galactic Law, there were at least two occasions on which they took enemies back to Skaro for a "trial" rather than killing them on the spot; the first was their creator Davros (DW: Revelation of the Daleks), and the second was the renegade Time Lord known as the Master. (DW: Doctor Who)

Accounts differ as to whether the retrieval of Davros was not for a 'trial' in the criminal sense but rather a test to see if he was in fact worthy of becoming the supreme leader of the race (BFD: I, Davros) or if they gave him more of a literal trial (DWM: Emperor of the Daleks)

Dalek hierarchy

Main article: Dalek hierarchy

Although they saw their entire species as superior, the Daleks did have a hierarchy system. This included a wide range of ranks bestowed upon selected Daleks. (DW: The Daleks, The Evil of the Daleks)

Dalek writings

Main article: Dalek writing

Daleks made use of inscriptions as recognition codes. (DW: Doomsday) They were able to read human numerals and wording, even using them upon occasion. (DW: Planet of the Daleks)

Cultural effect

The Daleks have had an incredible effect on the races and individuals that have encountered them. For the most part they have come to epitomise fear and danger, especially for the Doctor, upon arriving in 1966 and seeing the Post Office Tower that contained WOTAN, the First Doctor remarked to his companion that he had felt like that when the Daleks were near him. (DW: The War Machines) He used his encounters with them to warn Zoe Heriot of what she may encounter, and a Dalek was one of many fears that assaulted the Doctor via the Keller Machine. While as he approached his fourth regeneration a vision of a Dalek came to him. (DW: The Wheel in Space, The Mind of Evil, Logopolis) Their power for the Doctor even continued through his personality when he used a Chameleon Arch, with his Human self John Smith sketching a Dalek within his Journal of Impossible Things. (DW: Human Nature)

Their danger though, was on occasion understated compared to a greater threat; when speaking of his fellow Time Lords at his trial he stated that "I have battled against evil...I should have stayed here. The oldest civilisation: decadent, degenerate, and rotten to the core. Power-mad conspirators, Daleks, Sontarans, Cybermen - they're still in the nursery compared to us. Ten million years of absolute power. That's what it takes to be really corrupt." (DW: The Ultimate Foe) Again, when Rassilon threatened to break the Time-lock on the Last Great Time War the Doctor warned the Master, that "not just the Daleks" would be unleashed if it were broken. (DW: The End of Time)

The Daleks' impact on those humans who have encountered them has had a different effect on their psyche, they often appeared in dreams or visions; Ace associated the Daleks with Nazis, with a Dalek with a swastika chasing her chanting "Heil Doktor" following her time in an alternate universe populated by Nazis. (NA: Timewyrm: Exodus), for Bernice Summerfield a Dalek appeared, also in a dream, along side several other races such as Sontarans and Cybermen in which the nature of evil was dissected. (NA: The Also People). Sam Jones, upon awakening from unconsciousness exclaimed Anyone get the number of that Dalek?". (EDA: The Taint) Alternatively, some encounters with the Daleks took a certain pride of place for some individuals, both Rose Tyler and Sarah Jane Smith comparing their experiences encountering Daleks (and in Rose's case the Dalek Emperor) upon meeting. (DW: School Reunion)

Dalek technology

A Progenitor Dalek's view through its eyepiece. (DW:Victory of the Daleks)

The key item of Dalek technology was the casing, evolved from the Mark III Travel Machines built by Davros. The casings of Davros' Imperial Daleks were made out of bonded polycarbide. (DW: Remembrance of the Daleks) The eyestalk of the casing clearly bestowed superior vision to the Dalek creature. The plunger-shaped attachment functioned as a flexible and adaptable limb. Dalek gunsticks could kill almost any sentient being, also having the ability to paralyse their victims both temporarily and

An Imperial Dalek fires its Death Ray. (DW:Remembrance of the Daleks)

permanently.

It would appear that the Dalek's gunstalk has also evolved alongside other aspects of Dalek technology. In the original Dalek story (DW: The Daleks) the gunstalk seemed to have the same qualities as a human gun in as much as extermination was not always guaranteed and some targets could be merely wounded.

On the surface of Skaro, within the confines of the Dalek City, the machines ran on static electricity, which was fed through the floor of the city, and were incapacitated if they were removed from the floor. The technology of the casings changed over the years. The first Daleks to emerge from the bunker in which they were entombed created a city and received power from those. (DW:The Daleks) Those occupying Earth during the their 22nd century invasion had dishes on their backs. (DW: The Dalek Invasion of Earth) Later models of Dalek casing had their own internal power supply. Numerous models of Daleks have some degree of hover technology.

There were a large number of Dalek variants that sported different casings. A Dalek's abilities often depended on what features its casing offered. (DW: The Daleks, The Evil of the Daleks) The Dalek manipulator arm was interchangeable. The default arm could be replaced with the likes of flame-throwers and seismic detectors. (DW: The Chase, The Daleks' Master Plan)

By the era of the Last Great Time War, Dalek technology had moved on even further - Daleks now had force-fields. Whereas previous versions of Daleks could be destroyed by well-placed bastic bullets or the like, these Daleks stopped such bullets from even getting close to the casing. Their propulsion systems not only added hover ability, but enabled independent space travel. These Daleks could use the DNA of a time traveller to regenerate their bodies and their casings just by virtue of the traveller touching the casing.

Dalek syringe attachment (DW:Daleks in Manhattan)

Dalek travel technology varied over time. However, Dalek spaceships were consistently designed in a saucer shape, and hoverbouts allowed individual Daleks to travel without using up their own power source. The Daleks also developed time travel capabilities. Time Corridors allowed limited transport between one era and another. However, the Daleks also developed their own kind of time machine of similar capacities to the Doctor's TARDIS, though they could not change shape.

These time travel machines were also dimensionally transcendental. (DW: The Chase, DW: The Daleks' Master Plan) They could initiate 'emergency temporal shift' which acted as a teleport through time and space and could help the Dalek escape a threat. The destination was totally random, unlike other time machines, so there was no way of telling where the Dalek would end up after teleporting. (DW:Doomsday, DW:Daleks in Manhattan, DW: The Stolen Earth)

It is not known how advanced their time travel technology had become by the time they vanished to fight the Last Great Time War, but the fact that Dalek Caan was able to travel to the time-locked Last Great Time War meant that it must have been approaching the level used by the Time Lords themselves.

The Daleks were also experts in biological warfare, and used (or attempted to use) biological weapons on several occasions. (DW: The Dalek Invasion of Earth, Planet of the Daleks, Death to the Daleks)

Dalek attachments

See Dalek weaponry

Dalek weapons

Alternative weapons

  • Flamethrower - An alternative weapon, mostly used to burn through vegetation or other obstacles.
  • Claw arm - Equipped with a blow torch, used to cut through materials too durable for their death rays to penetrate.
  • Machine Gun - A weapon that fires bullets, used in areas where energy based weapons are rendered useless. (e.g. if they are drained by an external force).

Other attachments

  • Seismic detector - Used to locate the TARDIS.
  • Electrode unit - This allows the Dalek to control electric currents.
  • Syringe - This was used to inject chemicals into Dalek Sec’s casing.
  • Dalek claw - Used to operate Dalek machinery.

Behind the scenes

Other appearances

Two Doctor Who movies starring Peter Cushing featured the Daleks as the main villains: Dr. Who and the Daleks, and Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D., based on the television serials The Daleks and The Dalek Invasion of Earth, respectively. However, the movies are not considered canonical in any way, shape or form. Cushing's Doctor is not an alien, but a human inventor, and is literally named "Doctor Who." The movies used brand new Dalek props, based closely on the original design but with a wider range of colours. Originally, the movie Daleks were supposed to shoot jets of flame, but this was thought to be too graphic for children, so their weapons emitted jets of deadly vapour instead. They also appeared in the Doctor Who parody, The Curse of Fatal Death.

Marvel UK was publishing Doctor Who Magazine at the time, which included comic strip stories in its pages. Aside from meeting up with the Doctor in them, the DWM strips also introduced a new nemesis for the Daleks; the Dalek Killer named Abslom Daak. Daak was a convicted criminal in the 26th century who was given the choice between execution and being sent on a suicide mission against the Daleks. He chose the latter and, when the woman he loved was killed by the Daleks, made it his life's purpose to kill every Dalek he came across. The Daleks have also appeared in the Dalek Empire series of audio plays by Big Finish Productions.

Outside of Doctor Who, Daleks also made an appearance in the film Looney Tunes: Back in Action and the Star Wars comic strip, Fett Club. A Dalek-based Transformer that would transform into a Mark III Travel Machine features in an issue of Marvel UK Transformers comic, as well as the Decepticon Starscream picking up Dalek transmissions while flying over a field in England. Spike Milligan wrote a sketch which featured a working-class Dalek with a family of his own, and a Dalek-spoof race (known as the Deacons) made an appearance in a Futurama comic.

Story titles

Beginning with the 1965 stage play The Curse of the Daleks, the best-known title format for stories featuring the Daleks has been "... of the Daleks". This was first used on television in the 1966 serial The Power of the Daleks and was used most recently on TV in 2010's Victory of the Daleks and used recently on a 2010 adventure game. In fact, if comic strips, audios and novels are included, more stories exist that do not use this title format, but "... of the Daleks" is considered ubiquitous enough that the spoof film Myth Runner includes a joking reference to an apparent future Who story entitled Deuteronomy of the Daleks.

The word Dalek has been titular to more Doctor Who televised story titles than any other noun, although Planet and Death are more ubiquitous if Hartnell-era adventures — which originally did not have story titles as such — are identified only by their episodic titles. Indeed, in the whole of the Hartnell era, Dalek was used exactly once as an onscreen title — for episode two of the adventure later re-christened as The Dalek Invasion of Earth.

A Nazi by any other name

As he grew up during World War II, Terry Nation had vivid memories of the war and, in particular, the Nazis. The Daleks share many deliberate characteristics with the Nazi party. They both believe in the superiority of their race, whether it means the entire species, like the Daleks, or their ethnicity, like the German Nazis. Genesis of the Daleks is the most clear depiction of this parody, with the Kaleds showing dedication to their cause and near-complete conformity. It also showed the killing of any opposed to their ideology; in this case, the Kaled scientists. The casting out or forced labour of the Mutos could be compared to the Holocaust, as could the Kaled consensus of them as lesser beings. Another comparison to the Holocaust appears in The Dalek Invasion of Earth, with the Daleks referring to the destruction of Earth as "the final solution", a phrase associated with Nazism. They even go so far as to greet each other by lifting their plungers up vertically in a way reminiscent of the Nazi salute. Another blatant reference appeared in The Stolen Earth with Daleks chanting "exterminieren" as they invade Germany.

However, other writers have pointed out the flaws in comparing the Daleks to the Nazis. John Peel noted in the introduction to The Official Doctor Who & the Daleks Book:

"They have been compared over the years with Nazis, but this is a tenuous connection at best. Certainly there is a lack of individuality, an unquestioning obedience of orders and a willingness to die for the race - all of this epitomized the Nazi stormtrooper ideal. It isn't hard to see, though, even in the most evil member of the Nazi hierarchy, some spark of buried humanity. Even the elite had their fears and superstitions. The Daleks had none of these."

In aHistory, Lance Parkin expands on this idea:

"Real life analogies quickly fail when applied to the Daleks. At times they're compared to the likes of Nazis, but in truth they're literally lacking in humanity. Even "conquest" as we generally understand the term doesn't really interest them - sometimes they put foes to work as slaves (as in Death to the Daleks), but this is almost inevitably in the interest of facilitating new atrocities and exterminations. The point is that one can (and should) hope to use reason against real-world governments, but there is virtually no chance of diplomacy succeeding against the Daleks. ... Basically, the Daleks collectively remain united behind one goal: kill everything that isn't a Dalek."

The catchphrase

The single word most associated with the Daleks is "Exterminate!" which has been uttered by generations of British children impersonating the creatures. However, although a variant of the word, "exterminated" can be heard from the very first appearance of the Daleks, it was not until "Flashpoint", the final episode of DW: The Dalek Invasion of Earth that a Dalek finally was heard uttering the word "Exterminate!"

Music

In the BBC Wales version, Murray Gold gave the Daleks a leitmotif in the form of the track identified as "The Daleks" on Doctor Who - Original Television Soundtrack. This track was heavily choral. According to Russell T Davies on the DVD commentary to Bad Wolf, the chorus is repeatedly chanting, "What is happening" in Hebrew.

See also

External links

External sources

  • Howe, David J & Walker, Stephen James (2003). The Television Companion: The Unofficial and Unauthorized Guide to DOCTOR WHO (2nd ed.) Surrey, UK: Telos Publishing, ISBN 1-903389051-0.
  • Haining, Peter, (1988) "Doctor Who and the Merchandisers", Doctor Who: 25 Glorious Years London, UK: W.H. Allen, ISBN 0-31837661-X.
  • Davies, Kevin (director) (1993). More than 30 Years in the TARDIS London, UK: BBC Video.
  • Howe, David J & Walker, Stephen James (1994). The First Doctor Handbook London, UK: Virgin Publishing, ISBN 0-426-2-430-1.
  • Finklestone, Peter (producer) (2003). "Talking Daleks" featurette, The Dalek Invasion of Earth London, UK: BBC Video.
  • Seaborne, Gilliane (director) (2005). "Dalek", Doctor Who Confidential BBC Wales.
  • Nation, Terry (ed.) (1979). Terry Nation's Dalek Special, Target Books, bottom.