Flip-Flop (audio story)

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Revision as of 00:45, 10 May 2010 by CzechOut (talk | contribs) (+lead, -previous notes about 3060; a part of it does take place in 3090, but it's not nearly as big a feautre of the play as the summary suggests)

Flip-Flop was a 2003 release in the Big Finish monthly Doctor Who range featuring the Seventh Doctor and Melanie Bush. It was notable for its highly experimental format. Each of the two discs contained two episodes, and could be listened to in whatever order the listener chose. The serial detailed what happened when the Doctor was coerced into changing the past by altering the fate of the president of a Human colony, but offered no conclusions about which of the versions of history was the "correct" one.

Publisher's summary

Christmas Eve in the year 3060 and the planet Puxatornee is home to a prosperous human colony.

A space craft has arrived in orbit carrying the Slithergees, a race of obsequious alien slugs. Their home world has been destroyed and they are humbly requesting permission to settle on the first moon.

And if they don't get permission, then they are humbly threatening to declare all-out war.

The future hangs in the balance. The decision rests with Bailey, the colony's president -- but she has other things on her mind...

Christmas Eve in the year 3090, and the planet Puxatornee has changed beyond all recognition.

The Doctor and Mel arrive, on a completely unrelated mission to defeat a race of terrible monsters, and soon discover that something rather confusing has been happening to history...

Cast

References

  • Quarks are mentioned.
  • The Doctor and Mel experience (and become part of) events locked in a time loop (though one from which they are able to escape).

Notes

  • The planet's name Puxatornee is an in-joke reference to the movie Groundhog Day.
  • This is another of Big Finish's 'experiments', a Black Disc and a White Disc comprise the adventure, they can be listened to in either order and the story can still make sense.
  • Trevor Martin's character invented a time machine; incidentally Trevor Martin played the Doctor in the stage play Doctor Who and the Daleks in The Seven Keys to Doomsday.
  • Trevor Martin's character, Professor Capra, is named for Frank Capra, director of the classic Christmas movie, It's A Wonderful Life. The other characters are also named for characters in It's A Wonderful Life.
  • The Anti-Radiation Gloves is a reference to DW: The Daleks, where William Hartnell was supposed to say Anti-Radiation Drugs, but instead said Anti-Radiation Gloves.

Continuity

to be added

Timeline

External Links