Doctor Who - Mark Campbell - E-Book

Doctor Who E-Book

Mark Campbell

0,0
9,59 €

oder
-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.
Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

Now officially the most popular drama on television, Doctor Who has seen many ups and downs in its long and colourful history. From humble beginnings on 23 November 1963 to its cancellation in 1989 and eventual resurrection in 2005, the show has always been a quintessential element of British popular culture. The spine-chilling theme music, the multi-dimensional Tardis, the evil metallic Daleks and the ever-changing face of the Doctor himself have become trademarks of the programme's witty, eclectic house style. Over the years Doctor Who has embraced such diverse genres as science fiction, horror, westerns, history, romance, adventure and comedy - but has never strayed from its first and most important remit: telling damn good stories. Eleven Doctors, a multitude of companions, and a veritable cornucopia of monsters and villains: Doctor Who has it all. 'The children's own programme which adults adore,' said Gerard Garrett in The Daily Sketch newspaper back in the early 1970s - and it's still the perfect summation of the programme's unique charm. This new, updated edition of the best-selling Pocket Essential guide puts all the Doctors under the microscope with facts, figures and opinions on every Doctor Who story televised. There are sections on TV, radio, cinema, stage and internet spin-offs, novels and audio adventures, missing episodes, and an extensive website listing and bibliography.

Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:

EPUB

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2012

Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.



Now officially the most popular drama on television, Doctor Who has seen many ups and downs in its long and colourful history. From humble beginnings on 23 November 1963 to its cancellation in 1989 and eventual resurrection in 2005, the show has always been a quintessential element of British popular culture.

The spine-chilling theme music, the multi-dimensional Tardis, the evil metallic Daleks and the ever-changing face of the Doctor himself have become trademarks of the programme’s witty, eclectic house style. Over the years Doctor Who has embraced such diverse genres as science fiction, horror, westerns, history, romance, adventure and comedy - but has never strayed from its first and most important remit: telling damn good stories.

Eleven Doctors, a multitude of companions, and a veritable cornucopia of monsters and villains: Doctor Who has it all. ‘The children’s own programme which adults adore,’ said Gerard Garrett in The Daily Sketch newspaper back in the early 1970s - and it’s still the perfect summation of the programme’s unique charm.

This new, updated edition of the best-selling Pocket Essential guide puts all the Doctors under the microscope with facts, figures and opinions on every Doctor Who story televised. There are sections on TV, radio, cinema, stage and internet spin-offs, novels and audio adventures, missing episodes, and an extensive website listing and bibliography.

Mark Campbell is theatre critic for The Kentish Times, has written for The Independent, Midweek and Crime Time, and is one of the main contributors to the two-volume British Crime Writing: An Encyclopedia. He has produced a Pocket Essential on Sherlock Holmes, Agatha Christie and Carry On Films. He is married with two children and lives in South East London.

DOCTOR WHO

Mark Campbell

www.pocketessentials.com

for Emily and Ben, my favourite critics

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

As ever, many thanks to Ion Mills and Claire Watts for all their hard work, and for Him Upstairs for keeping me grounded.

CONTENTS

Foreword by Kim Newman

Introduction: Doctor Who: Continuing the Myth

Television

Afterword: What Makes a Good Doctor Who Story?

Audio

Books

Missing Episodes

Spin-offs

Reference Materials

FOREWORD

by Kim Newman

So, still here then?

There used to be people walking around who had lived through World War I and then, a generation or so later, went through it all again with World War II. When it comes to Doctor Who, I feel like that. I remember vividly the way Doctor Who–and, almost more than Doctor Who, the Daleks!–was a Beatlemania-type phenomenon in the early 1960s. I saw The Curse of the Daleks at the theatre, I owned a plastic Mechonoid, I had a battered paperback (it fell to pieces and was replaced) of The Dalek Pocketbook and Space Travellers Guide, I saw the two Peter Cushing films the week they opened, and I was watching television when–with no advance notice!–William Hartnell fell down and got up again as Patrick Troughton.

At some point, soon after, it became just another television programme: part of the schedule and important to watch–like, say, Dad’s Army or Monty Python–but not quite as huge as it had been. Thunderbirds and Batman came and went too, with much more merchandising, and even The Avengers didn’t stay on the schedules quite as long as Doctor Who, which, as a children’s programme, was less liable to summary cancellation. Besides, the genius stroke of incorporating a change-over of leading actor into the premise meant it could theoretically go on forever. But it didn’t. I stopped regularly watching the series just about the time K-9 showed up, but came back to it intermittently for the rest of its original run–most of Peter Davison’s first two seasons–and, when the old stuff started being recycled on video or cable, I filled in the gaps I’d missed, though without much enthusiasm. Seriously, John Nathan-Turner, what were you thinking…?

When the axe fell in 1989, it was long past due. Doctor Who began, and caught on, as a show which appealed to a wide audience–it died when it appealed only to Doctor Who fans and even they scorned most of it. When it came back in 2005, it was like the 1960s over again. It became the favourite programme of children of the new millennium, just as it had been my favourite programme when I was a child. The merchandising began, in a regimented way that made all those Dalek toys of the ’60s seem half-hearted. This Who has had spin-off shows! We await the ‘I’m Gonna Spend My Christmas With a Dalek’ remix, though. The new Doctor Who has had highs and lows and troughs the way the old show did, and at the time of writing–with Matt Smith in the offing and a year’s worth of dodgy ‘specials’–it may just about be reaching its K-9 point. Or it may regenerate, again.

Whatever, as the Time Lords know: this is unlikely to be the final end… and this is equally unlikely to be the last edition of this useful little book.

Kim Newman is a contributing editor to Sight & Sound and Empire magazines. His fiction includes the novels Anno Dracula and Life’s Lottery and the novella Doctor Who: Time and Relative.

INTRODUCTION

DOCTOR WHO: CONTINUING THE MYTH

Hello and welcome to this, the fifth edition of my Pocket Essential guide. We’ve all come a long way since 2000, when I expressed the rather strong opinion that Doctor Who would never return to television and that we should all just get on with our lives.

And now? Well, if Doctor Who is not the most popular thing on telly, I’d like to know what is. Even Young Butcher of the Year doesn’t come close to matching it. And Hole in the Wall might as well sit in a corner and cry.

In fact, it is debatable whether Doctor Who has become almost too popular. BBC’s Christmas schedules (2009) were awash with appearances by that skinny Tennant bloke, even to the extent of him introducing his own ruddy show. How mad is that? And that Tardis sleigh ident was fun, but by the end of the year I was sort of glad never to see it again.

Tennant’s swansong was a disappointment for me, doing pretty much everything that Russell T Davies had strenuously avoided when he brought the show back in 2005. It was loud, portentous (read: pretentious), convoluted and brimful of SF clichés. It was full of what my wife describes as ‘Big Poo Acting’, that is, everyone taking themselves Very, Very Seriously. A non-Who friend tuned in–on my recommendation–and when she saw the silly green aliens, she promptly turned over to watch Emmerdale instead.

I like Matt Smith. He looks good. He’s got a characterful face. He’s not pretty boy handsome. I wish new producer Steven Moffat all the luck in the world.

But please, if the stories aren’t good enough, then it doesn’t matter how active the BBC’s Hype Machine is. It doesn’t matter how many times the acting is described as ‘raising the bar’ (whatever that means), or the monsters as ‘the scariest yet’. It’s no accident that Blink and Midnight were the two most impressive stories of the twenty-first century revival. Both make an asset of their limitations. Both tell bloody good stories with nary a special effect in sight.

Less is more. Let’s hope the new production team remembers this.

After all, I want to go on updating this thing. With the fees the publishers pay I should be able to go out and buy a new pair of shoes soon. It’s been a cold winter and my feet are freezing.

Mark Campbell

Plumstead, London, January 2010 As taken from the fifth edition.

Previous introductions to this book can be viewed online at

www.skonnos.co.uk

TELEVISION

Notes on the format:

Cast: Principal artistes only

Crew: If ‘Music’ is unlisted, no specially composed music was used

Broadcast: Original UK transmission dates, followed by average rating in millions, with Novelisation (N), DVD, soundtrack CD and Audiobook (A) dates where relevant.

Précis: The set-up in a nutshell.

Observations: Technical notes, locations and miscellaneous trivia.

Verdict: Is it any good?

(Episodes are approximately 25 minutes in duration unless otherwise specified.) [NB All existent episodes up to Doctor Who (156) released on BBC Video between 1983-2003.]

SEASON 1

Producer: Verity Lambert | Story Editor: David Whitaker | First Doctor: William Hartnell | Companions: Carole Ann Ford (Susan Foreman), William Russell (Ian Chesterton) & Jacqueline Hill (Barbara Wright)

1. AN UNEARTHLY CHILD

(four episodes)

1: AN UNEARTHLY CHILD, 2: THE CAVE OF SKULLS,

3: THE FOREST OF FEAR, 4: THE FIREMAKER

Cast: Reg Cranfield (Policeman), Derek Newark (Za), Jeremy Young (Kal), Alethea Charlton (Hur), Eileen Way (Old Mother), Howard Lang (Horg) | Crew: Director: Waris Hussein; Writer: Anthony Coburn; Music: Norman Kay | Broadcast: 23 November– 14 December 1963, 5.9m (N, 1981; DVD, 2006)

Précis: Schoolteachers Ian and Barbara follow their pupil Susan to a junkyard where they meet her grandfather, the Doctor, and are taken back to the Stone Age in his time/space machine…

Observations: Bernard Lodge and Joe Starie designed Doctor Who’s innovative title sequence with specially shot electronic ‘howlround’ (a video camera capturing its own output from a monitor screen, akin to audio feedback), mixed with surreal footage from Gian Carlo Menotti’s television nativity opera Amahl and the Night Visitors. Ron Grainer composed the theme tune, which was arranged by Delia Derbyshire of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. An unbroadcast pilot of the first episode was recorded, with minor changes. Peter Brachacki designed the Tardis interior for the pilot, replicated by Barry Newbery for the transmitted version. A widespread power cut prevented many from seeing the first episode and so it was hastily repeated the following Saturday before episode two.

Verdict: The first episode’s collision of mundane reality and science fantasy is audacious. The following cavemen adventure is gritty and violent, and no other story comes close to capturing the discomfort of being uprooted from familiar surroundings and having to survive in a strange, hostile world. 10/10.

2. THE DALEKS

(seven episodes)

1: THE DEAD PLANET, 2: THE SURVIVORS, 3: THE ESCAPE, 4: THE AMBUSH, 5: THE EXPEDITION, 6: THE ORDEAL, 7: THE RESCUE

Cast: Philip Bond (Ganatus), John Lee (Alydon), Virginia Wetherell (Dyoni), Alan Wheatley (Temmosus), Gerald Curtis (Elyon), Jonathan Crane (Kristas), Marcus Hammond (Antodus), Peter Hawkins, David Graham (Dalek voices), Robert Jewell, Kevin Manser, Peter Murphy, Michael Summerton, Gerald Taylor (Daleks) | Crew: Directors: Christopher Barry (1, 2, 4–5) & Richard Martin (3, 6–7); Writer: Terry Nation; Music: Tristram Cary | Broadcast: 21 December 1963–1 February 1964, 9m (N, 1964; DVD, 2006; A, 2005)

Précis: The Tardis lands on Skaro, home to the beautiful Thals and the mutated, metallic Daleks…

Observations: The Daleks were designed by Raymond Cusick, based on a description by Terry Nation. Four fibreglass and plywood props were constructed by Shawcraft Models and, as with most 1960s Dalek stories, life-size cardboard cut-outs were used to swell their ranks. Dalek actors’ voices were passed through a ring modulator (an electronic device used in early synthesisers) to give them their unique sound. The Dead Planet was remounted because of an audio feedback problem.

Verdict: Memorable moments abound, particularly episode one’s cliffhanger, but the simplistic morality fable sags in the middle and virtually comes to a halt halfway through the last episode. But the conviction of the cast just about carries it off. 7/10

3. THE EDGE OF DESTRUCTION

(two episodes)

1: THE EDGE OF DESTRUCTION, 2: THE BRINK OF DISASTER

Crew: Directors: Richard Martin (1) & Frank Cox (2); Writer: David Whitaker; Special Sound: Brian Hodgson | Broadcast: 8–15 February 1964, 10.2m (N, 1988; DVD, 2006)

Précis: The Tardis appears to be under alien control…

Observations: This unusual two-parter, featuring only the four regular cast members and the Tardis interior, was written to offset overspends on the previous stories, to introduce a ‘sideways’ narrative (instead of ‘past’ or ‘future’), and to complete the series’ probationary run of 13 episodes.

Verdict: Strong imagery, weak plot–it’s sometimes painfully slow, although there are some exquisite moments of psychological horror. 6/10

4. MARCO POLO

(seven episodes)

1: THE ROOF OF THE WORLD, 2: THE SINGING SANDS,

3: FIVE HUNDRED EYES, 4: THE WALL OF LIES, 5: RIDER FROM SHANG-TU,

6: MIGHTY KUBLAI KAHN, 7: ASSASSIN AT PEKING

Cast: Mark Eden (Marco Polo), Zienia Merton (Ping-Cho), Derren Nesbitt (Tegana), Jimmy Gardner (Chenchu), Charles Wade (Malik), Philip Voss (Acomat), Gabor Baraker (Wang-Lo), Paul Carson (Ling-Tau), Tutte Lemkow (Kuiju), Peter Lawrence (Vizier), Martin Miller (Kublai Khan), Claire Davenport (Empress) | Crew: Directors: Waris Hussein (1–3, 5–7) & John Crockett (4); Writer: John Lucarotti; Music: Tristram Cary | Broadcast: 22 February–4 April 1964, 9.5m (N, 1984; DVD, 2006 [abridged reconstruction]); CD, 2003)

Précis: The Doctor and his companions accompany Marco Polo on his journey to Kublai Khan’s court in Peking…

Observations: Lucarotti had previously written a Canadian radio serial on the same subject. Filmed inserts punctuated the narrative, showing

Marco Polo writing his diary and a map of the route thus far. This was the first Doctor Who story to feature on the cover of the Radio Times.

Verdict: It’s a major feat to produce a serial as ambitious as this in Lime Grove’s tiny Studio D, and the attention to detail in the script and settings is impressive. The narrative takes place over a period of several months, adding a welcome note of reality to proceedings. 9/10

5. THE KEYS OF MARINUS

(six episodes)

1: THE SEA OF DEATH, 2: THE VELVET WEB, 3: THE SCREAMING JUNGLE,

4: THE SNOWS OF TERROR, 5: SENTENCE OF DEATH, 6: THE KEYS OF MARINUS

Cast: George Coulouris (Arbitan), Robin Phillips (Altos), Katharine Schofield (Sabetha), Heron Carvic (Morpho voice), Edmund Warwick (Darrius), Francis de Wolff (Vasor), Dougie Dean (Eprin), Henley Thomas (Tarron), Michael Allaby (Larn), Fiona Walker (Kala), Martin Cort (Aydan), Donald Pickering (Eyesen) | Crew: Director: John Gorrie; Writer: Terry Nation; Music: Norman Kay | Broadcast: 11 April–16 May 1964, 9m (N, 1980; DVD, 2009)

Précis: On Marinus, the Tardis crew hunt for four keys to a strange machine that will overcome the hideous Voords…

Observations: The Tardis was seen materialising for the first time, albeit as a silent model shot. Hartnell was on holiday for episodes three and four.

Verdict: The series’ first turkey, this is a badly written, badly realised homage to old film serials with very shoddy production values. There are effective moments, but not many. 3/10

6. THE AZTECS

(four episodes)

1: THE TEMPLE OF EVIL, 2: THE WARRIORS OF DEATH, 3: THE BRIDE OF SACRIFICE, 4: THE DAY OF DARKNESS

Cast: John Ringham (Tlotoxl), Keith Pyott (Autloc), Ian Cullen (Ixta), Margot Van Der Burgh (Cameca), Tom Booth (First Victim), David

Anderson (Aztec Captain), Walter Randall (Tonila), Andre Boulay (Perfect Victim) | Crew: Director: John Crockett; Writer: John Lucarotti; Music: Richard Rodney Bennett | Broadcast: 23 May–13 June 1964, 7.5m (N, 1984; DVD, 2002)

Précis: Barbara is mistaken for an Aztec god in fifteenth-century Mexico…

Observations: The Doctor’s flirtation with Cameca was his only obvious romantic liaison until the 1996 Doctor Who TV movie (156). The story was the first to have episodes videoed at the BBC Television Centre, which opened in 1960. Carole Ann Ford was absent from studio recording for the middle two episodes.

Verdict: John Ringham’s hammy Richard III impersonation spoils the seriousness of the story, but the production is strong and there are some well-crafted scenes. 7/10

7. THE SENSORITES

(six episodes)

1: STRANGERS IN SPACE, 2: THE UNWILLING WARRIORS, 3: HIDDEN DANGER, 4: A RACE AGAINST DEATH, 5: KIDNAP, 6: A DESPERATE VENTURE

Cast: Ilona Rodgers (Carol), Stephen Dartnell (John), Lorne Cossette (Maitland), Ken Tyllsen (First Sensorite/First Scientist), Joe Greig (Second Sensorite/Second Scientist), Peter Glaze (Third Sensorite), Arthur Newall (Fourth Sensorite), Eric Francis (First Elder), Bartlett Mullins (Second Elder), John Bailey (Commander), Martyn Huntley (First Human), Giles Phibbs (Second Human) | Crew: Directors: Mervyn Pinfield (1–4) & Frank Cox (5–6); Writer: Peter R Newman; Music: Norman Kay | Broadcast: 20 June–1 August 1964, 6.9m (N, 1987; CD, 2008)

Précis: Telepathic balloon-headed aliens terrorise a twenty-eighth century spaceship crew…

Observations: Peter Glaze was better known for his appearances on the BBC children’s show Crackerjack (‘Crackerjack!’) from 1960 to 1979. Hidden Danger was delayed for a week by an extended edition of Grandstand. Jacqueline Hill took time off from episodes four and five.

Verdict: A spooky first episode gives way to a humdrum story set against the bland environs of the Sense-Sphere. The Sensorites, although initially impressive, end up looking rather silly. 3/10

8. THE REIGN OF TERROR

(six episodes)

1: A LAND OF FEAR, 2: GUESTS OF MADAME GUILLOTINE,

3: A CHANGE OF IDENTITY, 4: THE TYRANT OF FRANCE,

5: A BARGAIN OF NECESSITY, 6: PRISONERS OF CONCIERGERIE

Cast: James Cairncross (Lemaître), Jack Cunningham (Jailer), Donald Morley (Jules Renan), Peter Walker (Jean-Pierre), Laidlaw Dalling (Rouvray), Neville Smith (D’Argenson), Howard Charlton (Judge), Jeffry Wickham (Webster), Dallas Cavell (Road Works Overseer), Roy Herrick (Jean), John Barrard (Shopkeeper), Caroline Hunt (Danielle), Edward Brayshaw (Leon Colbert), Keith Anderson (Robespierre), Ronald Pickup (Physician), John Law (Paul Barrass), Tony Wall (Napoleon) | Crew: Director: Henric Hirsch (1–2, 4–6) & John Gorrie (3); Writer: Dennis Spooner; Music: Stanley Myers | Broadcast: 8 August–12 September 1964, 6.7m (N, 1987; CD, 2006)

Précis: The Tardis lands in Paris during Robespierre’s infamous Reign of Terror…

Observations: This story featured the first location filming for the series–Tilehouse Lane, Denham, Bucks, represented a poplar-lined French lane (with Brian Proudfoot doubling for Hartnell), while other brief inserts were filmed in the Gerrards Cross area. William Russell was absent from studio recording for episodes two and three.

Verdict: With a little more humour than on previous occasions, this is a well-observed, albeit slow, historical story in which the Doctor exhibits a suprisingly violent streak. 6/10

SEASON 2

Producer: Verity Lambert | Story Editors: David Whitaker (9–10), Dennis Spooner (11–16) & Donald Tosh (17) | First Doctor: William Hartnell | Companions: William Russell (Ian Chesterton 9–16), Jacqueline Hill (Barbara Wright 9–16), Carole Ann Ford (Susan Foreman 9–10), Maureen O’Brien (Vicki 11–17) & Peter Purves (Steven Taylor 16–17)

9. PLANET OF GIANTS

(three episodes)

1: PLANET OF GIANTS, 2: DANGEROUS JOURNEY, 3: CRISIS

Cast: Frank Crawshaw (Farrow), Alan Tilvern (Forester), Reginald Barratt (Smithers), Rosemary Johnson (Hilda Rowse), Fred Ferris (Bert Rowse) | Crew: Directors: Mervyn Pinfield (1–3) & Douglas Camfield (3); Writer: Louis Marks; Music: Dudley Simpson | Broadcast: 31 October–14 November 1964, 8.5m (N, 1990)

Précis: A miniaturised Tardis crew try to prevent the manufacture of a lethal insecticide…

Observations: Appropriately reduced from four episodes to three shortly before transmission (the fourth was originally entitled The Urge to Live), this story featured many large props built by Raymond Cusick. This was the first serial for composer Dudley Simpson and director Douglas Camfield, who would both go on to be prolific contributors to the programme.

Verdict: The fantastic props never fail to impress and the adherence to realism is commendable, but the story drags a little even in its truncated form. 7/10

10. THE DALEK INVASION OF EARTH

(six episodes)

1: WORLD’S END, 2: THE DALEKS, 3: DAY OF RECKONING, 4: THE END OF TOMORROW, 5: THE WAKING ALLY, 6: FLASHPOINT

Cast: Peter Fraser (David Campbell), Bernard Kay (Tyler), Alan Judd (Dortmun), Ann Davies (Jenny), Michael Goldie (Craddock), Richard McNeff (Baker), Graham Rigby (Larry Madison), Nicholas Smith (Wells), Patrick O’Connell (Ashton), Jean Conroy, Meriel Hobson (Women in Wood), Peter Hawkins, David Graham (Dalek voices), Robert Jewell, Gerald Taylor, Kevin Manser, Peter Murphy, Ken Tyllsen, Nick Evans (Daleks) | Crew: Director: Richard Martin; Writer: Terry Nation; Music: Francis Chagrin | Broadcast: 21 November–26 December 1964, 11.9m (N, 1977; DVD, 2003; A, 2009)

Précis: On a devastated twenty-second century Earth the Daleks have subjugated the population with brainwashed Robomen…

Observations: London locations included Westminster and Hammersmith Bridges, Trafalgar Square, the South Bank, the Albert Memorial and Whitehall. The six Daleks were given ‘solar energy receptors’ on their backs and larger ‘bumpers’ to navigate exterior terrain. Hartnell was written out of episode four after sustaining an injury during camera rehearsals for Day of Reckoning. The serial saw the programme’s second Radio Times cover.

Verdict: Clumsy direction and dire modelwork are symptomatic of this wildly overambitious tale that seems predicated to fail. The moody build-up in the first episode and Susan’s farewell scene in the last are nicely done, but in every other way the 1965 big-screen version is superior. 4/10

11. THE RESCUE

(two episodes)

1: THE POWERFUL ENEMY, 2: DESPERATE MEASURES

Cast: Ray Barrett (Bennett/Koquillion), John Stuart, Colin Hughes (Didonians), Tom Sheridan (Space Captain Voice/Sand Monster) | Crew: Director: Christopher Barry; Writer: David Whitaker; Music: Tristram Cary | Broadcast: 2–9 January 1965, 12.5m (N, 1987; DVD, 2009)

Précis: On Dido, two survivors of a crashed spaceship are living in fear of a hideous alien…

Observations: Koquillion was credited as ‘Sydney Wilson’ for episode one–a pseudonym based on Doctor Who creators Sydney Newman and Donald Wilson–to maintain the secret of his identity. Vicki’s character was originally called Lukki.

Verdict: A nice character study with good production values and an effective climax–although why Bennett didn’t just kill Vicki is never explained. 7/10

12. THE ROMANS

(four episodes)

1: THE SLAVE TRADERS, 2: ALL ROADS LEAD TO ROME, 3: CONSPIRACY, 4: INFERNO

Cast: Nicholas Evans (Didius), Derek Sydney (Sevcheria), Derek Francis (Nero), Bart Allison (Maximus Pettulian), Barry Jackson (Ascaris), Peter Diamond (Delos), Michael Peake (Tavius), Dorothy-Rose Gribble (Woman Slave), Gertan Klauber (Galley Master), Brian Proudfoot (Tigilinus), Kay Patrick (Poppaea), Ann Tirard (Locusta) | Crew: Director: Christopher Barry; Writer: Dennis Spooner; Music: Raymond Jones | Broadcast: 16 January–6 February 1965, 11.6m (N, 1987; DVD, 2009)

Précis: In first-century Italy, Ian and Barbara are captured by slave traders and the Doctor falls in with Nero…

Observations: Inspired by a visit to the Carry On Cleo film set at Pinewood, Dennis Spooner penned the series’ first deliberately humorous Doctor Who story.

Verdict: Confidently played by all concerned, this sparkling comedy has many fine jokes and a particularly charming performance by Hartnell, clearly revelling in the slapstick. 8/10

13. THE WEB PLANET

(six episodes)

1: THE WEB PLANET, 2: THE ZARBI, 3: ESCAPE TO DANGER, 4: CRATER OF NEEDLES, 5: INVASION, 6: THE CENTRE

Cast: Roslyn de Winter (Vrestin), Arne Gordon (Hrostar), Martin Jarvis (Hilio), Arthur Blake (Hrhoonda), Jolyon Booth (Prapillus), Jocelyn Birdsall (Hlynia), Ian Thompson (Hetra), Barbara Joss (Nemini), Catherine Fleming (Animus voice), Robert Jewell, Jack Pitt, Gerald Taylor, Kevin Manser, John Scott Martin (Zarbi), Hugh Lund (Larvae Gun) | Crew: Director: Richard Martin; Writer: Bill Strutton | Broadcast: 13 February–20 March 1965, 12.6m (N, 1965; DVD, 2005; A, 2005)

Précis: On Vortis, the winged Menoptra are at war with the ant-like Zarbi, slaves of the Animus…

Observations: The only Doctor Who story not to feature humanoid characters other than the regular cast, director Richard Martin employed Vaseline-smeared lenses to create an alien feel to the planet Vortis. Jacqueline Hill was absent for episode three. The story featured on a third Radio Times cover.

Verdict: In 1965 it may have been a laudable attempt to create an alien world, but nowadays a huge suspension of disbelief is required. Nonetheless, there is some striking imagery. 5/10

14. THE CRUSADE

(four episodes)

1: THE LION, 2: THE KNIGHT OF JAFFA, 3: THE WHEEL OF FORTUNE, 4: THE WARLORDS

Cast: Julian Glover (Richard), Jean Marsh (Joanna), John Flint (William des Preaux), Walter Randall (El Akir), Bruce Wightman (William de Tornebu), David Anderson (Reynier de Marun), Reg Pritchard (Ben Daheer), Tony Caunter (Thatcher), Roger Avon (Saphadin), Bernard Kay (Saladin), Robert Lankesheer (Chamberlain), George Little (Haroun), Zohra Segal (Sheyrah), Gabor Baraker (Luigi), Petra Markham (Safiya), John Bay (Earl of Leicester), Tutte Lemkow (Ibrahim) | Crew: Director: Douglas Camfield; Writer: David Whitaker; Music: Dudley Simpson | Broadcast: 27 March–17 April 1965, 9.4m (N, 1966; DVD, 2004 [episodes 1 & 3], CD, 2005; A, 2005)

Précis: The Tardis occupants are caught in a Holy War between Richard the Lionheart and the Saracen ruler Saladin…

Observations: Dialogue concerning Richard’s incestuous relationship with his sister Joanna was cut prior to recording. William Russell refused to do a scene with real ants crawling along his arm, so production assistant Viktors Ritelis doubled for him. Russell took a week’s holiday during studio production on part three.

Verdict: Intelligent costume drama, if a little mannered. 7/10

15. THE SPACE MUSEUM

(four episodes)

1: THE SPACE MUSEUM, 2: THE DIMENSIONS OF TIME, 3: THE SEARCH, 4: THE FINAL PHASE

Cast: Peter Craze (Dako), Richard Shaw (Lobos), Peter Sanders (Sita), Jeremy Bulloch (Tor), Ivor Salter (Commander), Peter Hawkins (Dalek voice), Murphy Grumbar (Dalek) | Crew: Director: Mervyn Pinfield; Writer: Glyn Jones | Broadcast: 24 April–15 May 1965, 9.2m (N, 1987; DVD, 2010; CD, 2009)

Précis: The Tardis jumps a time-track and arrives on Xeros in its own future…

Observations: Episode one is virtually a story on its own, the only speaking roles being those of the regular cast. Writer Glyn Jones would later play Krans in The Sontaran Experiment (77).

Verdict: Stunning first episode aside, this is a very dull ‘rebels vs dictators’ runaround. 2/10

16. THE CHASE

(six episodes)

1: THE EXECUTIONERS, 2: THE DEATH OF TIME, 3: FLIGHT THROUGH ETERNITY, 4: JOURNEY INTO TERROR, 5: THE DEATH OF DOCTOR WHO, 6: THE PLANET OF DECISION

Cast: Robert Marsden (Abraham Lincoln), Hugh Walters (Shakespeare), Roger Hammond (Francis Bacon), Vivienne Bennett (Queen Elizabeth), Ian Thompson (Malsan), Hywel Bennett (Rynian), Al Raymond (Prondyn), Arne Gordon (Guide), Peter Purves (Morton Dill), Dennis Chinnery (Richardson), David Blake Kelly (Briggs), Patrick Carter (Bosun), Douglas Ditta (Willoughby), John Maxim (Frankenstein’s Monster), Malcolm Rogers (Dracula), Roslyn de Winter (Grey Lady), Edmund Warwick (Robot Doctor), David Graham (Dalek voices/Mechonoid voices), Murphy Grumbar, Jack Pitt (Mechonoids), Peter Hawkins (Dalek voices), Robert Jewell, Kevin Manser, Gerald Taylor (Daleks), John Scott Martin (Mechonoid/Dalek) | Crew: Director: Richard Martin; Writer: Terry Nation; Music: Dudley Simpson | Broadcast: 22 May–26 June 1965, 9.4m (N, 1989; DVD, 2010)

Précis: The Daleks chase the Tardis crew though space and time…

Observations: Very brief location filming was conducted at Camber Sands, East Sussex and White City Underground Station, London. Unusually, new companion Peter Purves played another role in the same story–hillbilly Morton Dill atop the Empire State Building. The Chase was the first story showing the Daleks (two of which were modified movie versions) with vertical slats on their midriffs. Three Mechonoids with fully-operating flamethrowers were built by Raymond Cusick.

Verdict: Neither witty enough to be amusing nor fast enough to be exciting, The Chase ends up looking cheap and tired. The Mechonoids impress, but they’re only in it for half an episode. 3/10

17. THE TIME MEDDLER

(four episodes)

1: THE WATCHER, 2: THE MEDDLING MONK, 3: A BATTLE OF WITS, 4: CHECKMATE

Cast: Peter Butterworth (Monk), Alethea Charlton (Edith), Peter Russell (Eldred), Michael Miller (Wulnoth), Norman Hartley (Ulf), David Anderson (Sven), Geoffrey Cheshire (Viking Leader), Ronald Rich (Gunnar), Michael Guest (Saxon Hunter) | Crew: Director: Douglas Camfield; Writer: Dennis Spooner | Broadcast: 3–24 July 1965, 8.4m (N, 1987; DVD, 2008)

Précis: In 1066, a shady monk wants to reverse the outcome of the Battle of Hastings…