More actions
Spearhead From Space was the first story of Season 7 of Doctor Who, and was the first story to feature Jon Pertwee as the Third Doctor. The story also introduced new companion Liz Shaw (Caroline John), and launched a multi-year story arc that saw the Doctor exiled on Earth and working for UNIT as its scientific advisor. Nicholas Courtney, as The Brigadier, becomes a regular -- the first time the series had introduced a character who was not (immediately, at least) considered a companion (although he would come to be considered thus in the future).
Spearhead from Space was the first Doctor Who story of the 1970s (although it was produced in 1969), was the first Doctor Who story to be produced in colour, and was the only story of the 1963-89 original series to be completely shot on film.
Synopsis
Newly exiled by the Time Lords, the regenerated Doctor arrives on Earth and swiftly discovers a plot by the Nestene Consciousness to invade the Earth through their ability to control plastic. After the defeat of the alien invasion, he reluctantly decides to stay on with UNIT.
Plot
Episode One:
The TARDIS arrives on Earth in Oxley Woods during the middle of a meteorite shower. Exiled to earth by the Time Lords, the newly regenerated Doctor collapses outside his TARDIS. Meanwhile, the Brigadier recruits a scientific advisor, Dr. Elizabeth Shaw. The unconscious Doctor is found by UNIT troops and taken to Ashbridge Cottage Hospital. Sam Seeley, a local poacher, has found what looks like a meteorite. The Doctor, meanwhile, recovers in hospital. Because the Doctor has changed form, he no longer resembles the Doctor the Brigadier knew. Later, while escaping from the hospital, the Doctor is kidnapped by two strange men under the instruction of a gentleman called Channing. He manages to escape in a wheelchair, but then abandons it and tries to return to the TARDIS on foot. A UNIT soldier guarding the police box shoots the Doctor as he crashes through the trees. The Doctor collapses once again.
Episode Two:
The press, hearing about a "man from space" at the hospital, make matters even more difficult and John Ransome, an ex-employee of Auto Plastics who claims he has seen a walking mannequin. The meteorites turn out to be hollow globes containing the Nestene Consciousness, a disembodied alien intelligence which can inhabit and animate plastic and create robot-like plastic slaves which can appear either as mannequins or replica Humans. The plastic polyhedron is actually a power unit for a non-physical alien intelligence known as the Nestene Consciousness. Normally disembodied, it has an affinity for plastic, and is able to animate humanoid facsimiles made from that material, known as Autons. The Nestene have taken over a toy factory in London, and plan to replace key government and public figures with Auton duplicates. The Auton in charge of the factory sends other, less human-looking Autons to retrieve the power units from UNIT and the poacher. Channing, who is a Nestene agent, has taken over Auto Plastics to facilitate the invasion. Later, John Ransome returns to the plastics factory and breaks into his old workshop to find it full of new equipment. As he inspects a strange computer-like device, a plastic shop dummy steps down from a plinth behind him and advances towards him.
Episode Three:
There is a war in the streets of Central London. The Autons have escaped from the window of a shopping centre, and are killing lots of people. One man has even been shot by one as he is camping in his tent. The Doctor discovers that his TARDIS has been disabled by the Time Lords and he is trapped on Earth. He convinces Lethbridge-Stewart that he is the same man who aided him before to defeat the Yeti and the Cybermen, despite his change in appearance. Together with Liz, he uncovers the Nestene plot, just as Auton mannequins are activated across Britain and start killing people. However, the Doctor creates an electroshock device that he believes will disable the Autons. The Brigadier telephones his regular army contact General Scobie to ask for support in investigating Auto Plastics. Scobie agrees to meet the Brigadier but hangs up as there is a knock at his front door. Scobie opens the door to reveal an exact duplicate of himself, who advances on him.
Episode Four:
UNIT attacks the plastics factory, but they discover bullets can't stop the Autons. The Doctor and Liz break into the factory, where the Doctor finds that the Nestene Consciousness has created a monstrous tentacled body for itself inside a tank. As the Doctor struggles with the creature, Liz repels the Nestene consciousness into space. Without the motive power of the Consciousness, the Autons will have no more power. Channing, revealed to be no more than a sophisticated Auton, is likewise deactivated. The Brigadier floats the offer to the Doctor to let him work on a means to escape Earth while meanwhile helping UNIT stop future alien invasions. The Doctor, with misgivings, agrees, and Liz also agrees to become his new assistant. The Brigadier goes to prepare the paperwork and asks the Doctor what his name is. 'Smith,' replies the Doctor. 'Doctor John Smith.'
Cast
- The Doctor - Jon Pertwee
- Liz Shaw - Caroline John
- Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart - Nicholas Courtney
- Channing - Hugh Burden
- Sam Seeley - Neil Wilson
- Mullins - Talfryn Thomas
- Captain Munro - John Breslin
- Dr. Henderson - Antony Webb
- Nurse - Helen Dorward
- Corporal Forbes - George Lee
- UNIT Officer - Tessa Shaw
- Technician - Ellis Jones
- Michael Wagstaffe - Allan Mitchell
- 2nd Reporter - Prentis Hancock
- Major General Scobie - Hamilton Dyce
- Dr. Beavis - Henry McCarthy
- George Hibbert - John Woodnutt
- John Ransome - Derek Smee
- Meg Seeley - Betty Bowden
- Sergeant - Clifford Cox
- Attendant - Edmund Bailey
Uncredited
- UNIT Commissionaire - Derrick Sherwin
- UNIT Soldiers- Roy Brent, Alan Cooper, Victoria Croxford, Trevor Cuff, Antonio De Maggio, Dave Dewhurst, Rachel Hipwood, Michael Horsburgh, John Hughes, Marie Johnson, June Johnson, Arthur Judd, Vicky Maxine, Patrick Milner, Dave Mobley, Robert Needham, Iain Smith, Hugh Wood
- Auto Plastics- Constance Carling, Christine Bradley, Denis MacTighe, Brian Nolan, Lindy Russell, Rosemary Turner, Robert Windman
- Extras - Barry Ashton, Keith Ashley, Bernadette Barry, David Billa, Joy Burnett, Arnold Chazen, Alan Clements, Diana Collins, Fred Davis, Gary Dean, Grace Dola, Michael Earl, Walter Goodman, Alan Granville, June Gray, Michael Harrison, Denis Haywood, Roger Houghton, Derek Hunt, Alfred Hurst, Brian Justice, Vi Kane, Peter Kaukus, Barry Kennington, Leonard Kingston, Sheila Knight, Gideon Kolb, Doris Lang, Kenneth Lindford, Norman Littlejohn, Reg Lloyd, Anthony Maine, Claire Maine. Bill Matthews, David Melbourne, Roger Minnis, Lola Morrice, Robert Murphy, Lesley Pates, Maurice Quick, Henry Rainer, Laurence Ross, Christopher Rushton, Tom Segal, Maurice Selwin, Keith Simon, John Spradbury, Sandy Stel, Cara Stevens, Cy Town, Hein Viljoen, Sonny Willis
Crew
- Assistant Floor Manager - Liam Foster
- Costumes - Christine Rawlins
- Designer - Paul Allen
- Film Cameraman - Stan Speel, Robert McDonnell
- Film Editor - William Symon, Adam Dawson
- Incidental Music - Dudley Simpson
- Make-Up - Cynthia Goodwin
- Producer - Derrick Sherwin
- Production Assistant - Peter Grimwade
- Script Editor - Terrance Dicks
- Special Sounds - Brian Hodgson
- Theme Arrangement - Delia Derbyshire
- Title Music - Ron Grainer
- Visual Effects - John Horton
References
- The Doctor can communicate with his eyebrows in the language of the planet Delphon.
- The Time Lords have changed the dematerialization codes for the TARDIS
- UNIT have monitoring stations and a London HQ.
- The Doctor uses the alias John Smith.
- This episode contains a lot of new information about the Doctor's physiology. We discover the Doctor has a binary vascular system, that his blood type isn't comparable to any human one, and that he can willfully go into a coma. This is also the first time that we see regeneration as a difficult physical process, with lingering effects.
- Unlike the Fourth, Fifth and Seventh Doctors (DW: Robot, Castrovalva, Time and the Rani), the Third Doctor immediately recognizes people he's known in his previous body. In this instance, he recognizes Lethbridge-Stewart the first time he sees him. On the whole, the Third Doctor endures the effects of regeneration in much the same way that the Tenth Doctor did (DW: The Christmas Invasion).
- The rationale the Brigadier gives Liz for aliens suddenly being interested in Earth is used, almost word-for-word, by the Tenth Doctor, when he tries to explain to Prime Minster Harriet Jones why the Sycorax won't be the last aliens to visit Earth. (DW: The Christmas Invasion)
Story Notes
- This is the first story featuring Jon Pertwee as the Doctor, as well as the first appearance of companion Liz Shaw and villains the Nestene Consciousness and its servants the Autons.
- There is a new title sequence designed by Bernard Lodge (who designed the previous title sequence).
- There are scenes featuring real waxworks shot at Madame Tussaud's in London.
- This story had the working title of; Facsimile.
- Due to a scene-shifters' strike, this story is completely shot on film and almost completely on location.
- The actor playing the Doctor is credited for the first time as 'Doctor Who' in the closing credits as opposed to 'Dr. Who' which had been the norm since 1963. This form of credit would continue until the end of the Tom Baker era in 1981, after which the credit became the correct form, 'The Doctor'.
Ratings
- Episode 1 - 8.4 million viewers
- Episode 2 - 8.1 million viewers
- Episode 3 - 8.3 million viewers
- Episode 4 - 8.1 million viewers
Myths
to be added
Filming Locations
- Location filming took pace at the BBC facility of Wood Norton near Evesham and in the nearby pub in Radford.
- Madame Tussaud's in London
Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors
- If UNIT is a top secret organisation, how does the media know about it? Perhaps UNIT is an "open secret" as MI5 and MI6 used to be i.e. people knew about the intelligence organisations but the government did not officially acknowledge their existence. Or perhaps it is a secret organisation in the vein of the CIA, in which the existence of the group is not secret, but its activities.
- In the cliffhanger of part 1, why would the UNIT soldiers open fire on someone they don't know? Even if it is a secure area wouldn't shooting someone be a bit unprofessional for UNIT? With white clothes and erattic movements, the doctor could have been mistaken for another alien by an inexperienced soldier.
- If the Nestenes needed to take control of a plastics factory to create Autons, and they gained control of said factory through Channing, an advanced Auton, then who created Channing? Perhaps Channing was a Scout Auton and fell to Earth with the first Energy Unit
- The freshly regenerated Doctor sports a visible tattoo on one arm (which can be seen during the shower sequence), even though he hasn't been "alive" long enough to get one. NA: Christmas on a Rational Planet suggests that this tattoo was applied to the Doctor by the Time Lords to mark him as an exile or criminal.
- Why don't the Nestenes kill the general, once duplicated, instead of leaving him comatose in a wax museum?
The Doctor is gurning as he's attacked by tentacles.
At the start of episode two the Doctor clutches his head before being shot.
- At the beginning of the story, the Brigadier says that since UNIT was formed there have been two attempts to invade the Earth and that the Doctor helped on both occasions. The only invasion attempt between the time UNIT was formed and the beginning of this story was during The Invasion Most likely there is an undocumented adventure that pits UNIT and the Doctor against an threat
- The simplest explanation (and undoubtedly the real world one) is that the Brigadier was including DW:The Web of Fear. Even though it was not technically a UNIT operation, it did lay the groundwork for the forming of the operation. Another possibility is that UNIT was formed before the events of The Web of Fear, but the British branch was only established after the events of that story.
Continuity
- The Autons and the Nestenes reappear in: DW: Terror of the Autons, Rose, PDA: Synthespians™ and PDA: Business Unusual.
- UNIT last appeared in DW: The Invasion.
- The Doctor's exile lasts until DW: The Three Doctors.
Timeline
- Spearhead from Space occurs after: TVC: The Night Walkers
- Spearhead from Space occurs before: TVC: The Arkwood Experiments
DVD, Video and Other Releases
DVD Releases
Released as Doctor Who: Spearhead from Space, this release was slipped into the DVD schedule by BBC Worldwide so that a second DVD could be released in 2000. In the event, the DVD was delayed till the following year.
Released:
- Region 2 29th January 2001
- PAL - BBC DVD BBCDVD1012
- Region 4 15th April 2002
- Region 1 11th September 2001
- NTSC - Warner Video E1120
Contents:
- UNIT Recruitment Film
- Trailer
- Photo Gallery
- Production Subtitles
- Easter Egg (Test Footage for the titles sequence.)
- Commentary: Nicholas Courtney and Caroline John
Rear Credits:
- Starring Jon Pertwee
- By Robert Holmes
- Produced by Derrick Sherwin
- Directed by Derek Martinus
- Incidental Music composed by Dudley Simpson
Notes:
- The Fleetwood Mac song Oh Well - Part One has been removed from the DVD.
- Editing for DVD release completed by Doctor Who Restoration Team.
Video Releases
Released as Doctor Who: Spearhead from Space.
Released:
- First Release:
- NTSC - Warner Video E1163
Notes: Released in an edited movie-format, with the Fleetwood Mac song Oh Well - Part One removed.
- Second Release:
- PAL - BBC Video BBCV5509
Notes: Released unedited.
Novelisation
- Main article: Doctor Who and the Auton Invasion
- Novelised as Doctor Who and the Auton Invasion in 1974 by Terrance Dicks. This was the first original release in the Target Books novelisation line (the first three books were reprints of earlier publications). The Target novelisations line would continue into the 1990s.
Unofficial prequel
In the mid-1990s, production began on a fan film entitled Devious, which takes place prior to Spearhead from Space and featured Jon Pertwee as the Doctor. Pertwee died soon after filming his scenes and as of 2009 the film remains a work in progress. Although not authorised by the BBC, a 12-minute excerpt from the film was included on the BBC Video DVD release of DW: The War Games in 2009.