Colony in Space (TV story)

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Colony in Space was the fourth serial of season 8 of Doctor Who. It was narratively significant for being the first off-Earth story recorded in colour. It was the first time any companion had travelled in the TARDIS with the Doctor since The War Games and therefore, Jo Grant's first visit to another planet. It introduced the Interplanetary Mining Corporation (IMC), which would reappear in several stories in other media. The Virgin Missing Adventures novel The Menagerie would retcon a link between The Space Pirates and Colony through the IMC. Subtextually, the script was Malcolm Hulke's intentional science fictional comment on the struggle between European settlers and Native Americans.[1]

Colony was the first Doctor Who directorial assignment for Michael Briant, who had been a production assistant, amongst other roles, during the Innes Lloyd and Peter Bryant producerships. Briant would later direct some of the most iconic serials of the 1970s, including The Robots of Death and The Sea Devils.

Synopsis

The Time Lords discover that the Master has stolen their secret file on the Doomsday Weapon. They grant the Doctor a temporary reprieve from his exile on Earth to deal with the crisis. Jo and he arrive on the planet Uxarieus and become enmeshed in a struggle between an agrarian colony and a powerful mining corporation.

Plot

Episode 1

The Time Lords find the Master has stolen their secret file on the Doomsday Weapon. They allow the Third Doctor temporary control of his TARDIS to deal with the situation. He is showing Jo around the TARDIS for the first time when it activates spontaneously and dematerialises. Jo is terrified at first, but the Doctor is excited at the prospect of being, temporarily at least, free from the bounds of imprisonment on Earth.

They arrive on the planet Uxarieus in the year 2472, where they find an agrarian colony of Earth, led by Ashe. Despite their uneasy truce with the mute Uxariean primitives, the colony struggles to survive; their crops are failing for no reason, the outer settlements are being attacked by a mysterious monster and they fear they will lose their charter in favour of the powerful and corrupt Interplanetary Mining Corporation (IMC). Some of the colonists wonder if they should return to Earth despite its horrible pollution, overpopulation, and repressive government.

A couple named Leeson is attacked and killed in their dome by the mysterious monster. When the colonists and the Doctor arrive at the dome, Ashe decides they will track the creatures in the morning.

Morale worsens when a dishevelled man named Norton arrives, claiming to be the last survivor of another Earth colony beyond the mountains. He claims the monsters wiped out most of his fellows and the Uxarieans picked off the rest. The next morning the Doctor and Ashe arrive at the dome to investigate. After Ashe leaves, the Doctor is attacked by a huge robot.

Episode 2

A man named Caldwell, holding a remote control, follows the robot and stops it attacking the Doctor. He is from the IMC and didn’t think there were any colonists on the planet. The Doctor accompanies Caldwell back to his ship. He meets the captain, Dent, who doesn’t seem to care that people have been killed, but only cares that Uxarieus is rich in the much-needed duralinium. He has Morgan bring the Doctor back to the colony, but arranges for a robot to attack him.

At the colony, Winton is showing Norton around. They watch Jim, the colony’s only engineer, repair the power generator. Later, Norton, who works for Dent, returns and attacks Jim and the primitive working with him, killing them both. He also sabotages the generator. He accuses the primitive of killing Jim and attacking himself before he killed it in self defence.

Caldwell begins to be suspicious of Dent’s methods, but Dent blackmails him to keep quiet and obedient. Morgan and the Doctor arrive at the Leeson dome. Morgan pulls a gun on the Doctor and a robot appears.

Episode 3

When the robot attacks him, the Doctor lunges at Morgan, grabbing the remote control. Morgan runs off and the Doctor deactivates the robot.

Dent meets with Ashe and says he will send for an adjudicator to decide whose claim will be honoured. The Doctor returns and explains that the 'monster' is actually an IMC robot with a holographic device to create the image of an enormous lizard. Dent returns to his ship and is warned by Norton that Jo and Winton are on their way to investigate his ship. When they arrive at the ship, they are captured.

The Doctor fixes the colony’s power supply and goes to the IMC ship to rescue Jo. Dent explains that a bomb is attached to Jo and Winton.

Jo and Winton are in a cave, attached to a bomb. They escape, causing the bomb to start flashing, which brings the guards in. Winton runs off, pursued by guards. Winton comes across Caldwell, who tells the guards he has killed Winton. Instead, he helps Winton get back to the colony and advises the colonists to leave because it’s too dangerous to stay.

When Winton returns, the colonists want to attack the IMC ship. The Doctor urges them not to attack and goes to meet Caldwell. He tries to convince Caldwell to free Jo and tells Caldwell about the colonists’ attack plans. Caldwell thinks the colonists would be slaughtered if they attack.

Primitives attack the ship and take Jo away. The colonists reach the ship, with the Doctor and Winton sneaking in to find Jo. They succeed in taking the IMC guards prisoner. The Doctor learns Jo has been taken by the primitives. She is taken to a hole in the ground.

Episode 4

The Doctor plans to go to the Uxarieans to get Jo back. Winton, on the IMC ship, finds evidence that IMC are behind the monster attacks. The Adjudicator’s ship arrives and he wants both sides to prepare for him. Jo is taken to a room in the Uxarieans’ city that is filled with sophisticated equipment. An alien in a hood comes to see her.

On the IMC ship, Morgan overpowers Winton and releases the rest of the IMC guards. The Doctor arrives at the Uxarieans’ city and offers them food if they will release Jo. They bring him into the city and lock him in with Jo. He speculates that there is more than one race of Uxarieans on the planet.

The Adjudicator arrives at the colony’s dome -- he is the Master. The Doctor and Jo learn they are to be sacrificed, and briefly escape from the nearly blind guards, but are recaptured. The Guardian, overseer of the city and the last of the ancient Uxarieans, meets with them and lets them go.

The Master has nearly finished his hearing when the Doctor and Jo arrive. He meets with Jo and the Doctor privately, admitting he has forged credentials but they have none. He returns to the hearing and rules in favour of IMC. Winton, against Ashe’s orders, wants to raid the IMC ship. He organises his ambush but Norton warns the IMC men.

Ashe talks with the Adjudicator, who tells him an appeal will fail unless the planet has some historical value. Ashe tells him of the primitives and their city.

The IMC men arrive at the colony and the fighting begins. Caldwell sneaks away, refusing to fight. The Doctor and Jo try to stop the fighting but are threatened at gunpoint by the Master.

Episode 5

The Master hides his weapon when Ashe appears, trying to stop the fighting. The colonists gain the upper hand over the IMC men. They lock the IMC men up in their ship and force them to leave the planet.

The Doctor, seeing the Master’s interest in the Uxariean city, tells Ashe that he is not the real Adjudicator, but the Master then tells Ashe that the Doctor has no credentials. The Doctor decides to inspect the Adjudicator’s spaceship, which is the Master’s TARDIS. They find the real Adjudicator’s credentials and information on the planet, but as they leave the TARDIS they trip an alarm, alerting the Master. He releases a sleeping gas in the TARDIS that chokes them.

Meanwhile, Dent has learned that the Master is not the real Adjudicator. The Master gets a map of the city from Ashe, but learns that only the Doctor has been inside the city and returned. The Master revives the Doctor and uses Jo as a hostage so the Doctor will take him to the city.

The IMC ship, which has remained in orbit, lands, and the guards overpower Winton’s men. Another gunfight breaks out. This time the colonists surrender, and Dent holds a trial. He finds them guilty and orders them to leave the planet immediately. He doesn’t care that their spaceship is old and probably wouldn’t make the trip.

The Doctor and the Master arrive at the Uxariean city but don’t know how to open the door. Caldwell and Morgan try to search the Adjudicator’s ship, and find the key. When they go inside, they try to rescue Jo. This triggers an alarm, and the Master is ready to kill Jo.

Episode 6

The Doctor kicks the Master’s control device away. Primitives arrive and take the two into the city. They are brought to the waiting room, where the Master explains what he learned from the Time Lord files. He wants the old civilisation’s super weapon.

Dent and his men make sure the colonists have boarded their ship. Caldwell has rescued Jo and is bringing her back to the city. On their way they see the ship take off and explode. They arrive at the city and overpower a primitive to get inside.

The Master and Doctor discover the Doomsday Weapon, which can cause any star in the Universe to go supernova, in the Guardian's chamber. With this weapon, the Master plans to rule the Universe. He offers the Doctor a partnership; appalled, the Doctor declines.

The Doctor convinces the Guardian the Doomsday Weapon is responsible for the decline and fall of the Uxariean civilisation. The Guardian allows the Doctor and Master to leave and destroys himself, the Weapon, and the city. The Master escapes, but the Doctor and Jo are overjoyed to learn that the colonists are safe; they escaped shortly before takeoff except for Ashe, who sacrificed himself to launch the ship. The colonists overpower Dent and his henchmen. With sufficient evidence of their illegal activity, they are confident the real Adjudicator will rule in their favour.

The radiation from the Doomsday Weapon was the cause of their crop failures, and the Doctor assures the colonists that their future is now secure. The TARDIS returns the Doctor and Jo to UNIT seconds after they left.

Cast

Crew

References

The Doctor

  • The Doctor claims to be an expert in agriculture during John Robert Ashe's plea to the colonists in part one.

The Master

Organisations

  • IMC has a mining contract for Uxarieus.

Planets

  • The Doctor recognises the planet Uxarieus.
  • Earth, at this time, is home to a hundred billion people. It is polluted and has a repressive government.
  • In a discussion between the Doctor and the Master, it is revealed that the Earth's sun will explode about ten billion years from the time of this story.

Species

  • The Uxarieans have mutated into three varieties, all psychic, the highest of which can communicate and teleport small items.

TARDISes

Technology

Vehicles

  • Caldwell smuggles Jo away from IMC in a space buggy. The Uxarieans destroy a second buggy.

Weapons

Story notes

Ratings

  • Episode 1 - 7.6 million viewers
  • Episode 2 - 8.5 million viewers
  • Episode 3 - 9.5 million viewers
  • Episode 4 - 8.1 million viewers
  • Episode 5 - 8.8 million viewers
  • Episode 6 - 8.7 million viewers

Myths

  • The main action of this story takes place on the planet Exarius. (The name given to the planet in Malcolm Hulke's script for Episode One is "Uxarieus".)

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.
  • In episode two the monitor screen on board the ship turns bright blue in every close up.
  • In episode one, the Doctor and Jo exit the TARDIS, leaving the door open; soon after it is closed without explanation
  • In episode three, as Winton, pursued by IMC guards, falls at Caldwell's feet, seagulls can be heard.
  • In the last scene of episode six, after the Brigadier has repeated his "come back at once" line, the shadow of a crew member can be seen projected across his front.
  • In episode four, when the diminutive leader of the Primitives exits from the wall, its puppeteer, particularly his hand, is visible.
  • Briant admits in the commentary track for the dvd release and in the accompanying documentary IMC Needs You! that the reason the TARDISes pop in and out of sight in episodes 1 and 6 instead of phasing out is that he just didn't know they were supposed to.

Continuity

  • This is the first time since TV: The War Games that the TARDIS travels to another planet.
  • From the Brigadier's perspective, the Doctor and Jo were only away from UNIT headquarters for seconds. It is thus the only televised example of Rose Tyler's admonition to her mother in TV: World War Three that the TARDIS is "a time machine. I could go travelling around suns and planets and all the way out to the end of the universe, and by the time I get back, ten seconds would've passed. Just ten seconds."
  • The TARDIS was previously carried away during the Doctor's absence in TV: The Web Planet.
  • This story gives us a glimpse of Time Lords on Gallifrey. Time Lords are again depicted as wearing black and white robes, as they were in TV: The War Games.
  • The Doctor and Jo gain entry to the Master's TARDIS using the key the Doctor obtained in TV: Terror of the Autons. However, the Doctor appears not to have the key at the conclusion of this story. He probably never retrieved it from Morgan after he dropped it on the ground.
  • This is the first time Jo Grant sees the interior of the Doctor's TARDIS. Much of the first half of episode one revolves around Jo's adjustment to her new status as a time/space traveller. Though having been the Doctor's companion for some time, she reveals that she never really believed that the Doctor could travel in time and space until this story. Thus, this story has many features of the traditional "first story" for a new companion.
  • The Adjudicators are expanded upon in PROSE: Lucifer Rising and Original Sin.
  • The Doctor himself posed as an earth magistrate, the Examiner, on the planet Vulcan in The Power of the Daleks.

Comic strip adaptation

  • The opening scenes of episode 1 were adapted as a two-page comic strip illustrated by Frank Bellamy in the 10th April 1971 issue of Radio Times.

Home video and audio releases

VHS releases

This story was released as Doctor Who: Colony in Space.

Released:

DVD Release

The commentary was recorded in January 2011, and the DVD was released on the 24th of October, 2011.

External links

Footnotes