Production Code: 5J

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First Transmitted
1 - 01/09/1979 18:10
2 - 08/09/1979 18:10
3 - 15/09/1979 18:10
4 - 22/09/1979 18:15


Cast

The Doctor - Tom Baker
Romana - Lalla Ward
Agella - Suzanne Danielle
Commander Sharrel - Peter Straker
Dalek Operator - Cy Town
Dalek Operator - Mike Mungarvan
Dalek Voice - Roy Skelton
Davros - David Gooderson David Gooderson also supplied some Dalek voices in this story, but uncredited
Jall - Penny Casdagli
Lan - Tony Osoba
Movellan Guard - Cassandra Although she is credited on Episode Four, the appearance of the Movellan Guard played by Cassandra is actually in Episode Three.
Tyssan - Tim Barlow
Veldan - David Yip

Crew
Director - Ken Grieve
Assistant Floor Manager - David Tilley
Assistant Floor Manager - Anthony Root
Costumes - June Hudson
Designer - Ken Ledsham
Film Cameraman - Philip Law
Film Cameraman - Kevin Rowley
Film Cameraman - Fred Hamilton
Film Editor - Dick Allen
Incidental Music - Dudley Simpson
Make-Up - Cecile Hay-Arthur
Producer - Graham Williams
Production Assistant - Henry Foster
Production Unit Manager - John Nathan-Turner
Script Editor - Douglas Adams
Special Sounds - Dick Mills
Studio Lighting - John Dixon
Studio Sound - Clive Gifford
Title Music - Ron Grainer and the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, arranged by Delia Derbyshire
Visual Effects - Peter Logan
Writer - Terry Nation


Plot Outline from Wikipedia

The Doctor, following the preceding events of The Armageddon Factor, has installed a "Randomiser" onto the TARDIS, to elude the Black Guardian, and is repairing K-9. After marvelling at K-9's impressive and complex "brain" (in fact a complicated electrical circuit), he notices that K-9 is, unusually for a robot, coughing. The Doctor establishes that K-9 has a form of laryngitis (which is, as the Doctor points out, pointless as a robot would have no use for such an affliction). He calls for Romana, and is surprised when Princess Astra from the preceding adventure emerges (in full regal regalia). However this is not Astra at all: this is Romana, and she has regenerated into a form she has modelled on the princess. The Doctor, however, is not impressed and tries to dissuade her from "going around wearing copies of bodies", but to no avail. He then urges Romana to try another body, to which she agrees and walks out of sight to do just that. When she returns she appears to be a dwarfish, purple-faced (or face-painted) female, who retains Romana's voice. Unhappy with the height, she is told by the Doctor to "lengthen it", and she leaves to try again. When she returns, she resembles a drag queen; and the Doctor (possibly slightly disturbed by this) gives a polite "No thank you, not today." Romana then tries an extremely tall, willowy and serious-looking female form, which the Doctor then dismisses as being too tall. He then advises her to wear something more sensible and stylish, and she returns in a costume resembling his own (by which he is delighted). He soon realises that she once again resembles Astra; but he gives up, realising that her mind is made up, and agrees to let her resemble Astra. The TARDIS then lands...

The TARDIS has landed on a seemingly very rocky planet which has breathable air and hospitable conditions; but has dangerously high levels of radioactivity. He gives her tablets to combat the radiation and a beeper-like device to inform her when she must take her pills. They exit the TARDIS and establish that this a rocky planet with seismic disturbances. They witness what appear to be ragged-looking natives burying one of their dead (although this deceased fellow is not all he appears: he is from the planet Kantra, a tropical paradise; so he should not have been there in theory). They come across a spaceship which half-buries itself into the ground in a valley; and just as the Doctor and Romana are about to investigate, underground explosions force them back towards the ruins, and whilst exploring, a column falls upon the Doctor which is too heavy for Romana to lift alone. She agrees to reassemble the literally "brainless" K-9 and get him to assist in removing the debris. She sets off, but finds the TARDIS half-buried in rubble (and, unbeknownst to her, she is being followed). Realising that she cannot reach K-9, she starts to turn back.

Meanwhile, the Doctor is quite happily reading a book ("Origins of the Universe" by Oolon Colluphid), and remarking that he needs to remind Romana to take her anti-radiation pills, a troupe of silver-haired humanoids appear and point their weapons at him. He seems to try to charm them, but it does not seem to be working.

Romana returns to the ruin, to find that the Doctor has vanished. As she turns to leave, she finds the man who has been following her blocking her path. She backs away, only to fall down a rubble chute, and she loses consciousness. The man then prepares to climb down and help her, but before he can do so she recovers consciousness and hears a noise coming from one of the walls that resembles drilling. She backs away from the wall; when suddenly a pair of Daleks burst through the wall: "Do not move. Do not move. Do not move. Do not move. Do not move. Do not move. You are our prisoner - do not move. You are our prisoner!"


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The Daleks threaten to exterminate Romana if she does not comply with their instructions explicitly, and then command Romana to come with them. (The man, meanwhile, has seen the whole thing.)

Meanwhile, the Doctor is thanking the Movellans (as these silver-haired humanoids are called) for helping him, and he remarks at their strength. He then asks their commander Sharrel where he is, and Sharrel replies that the planet is known as D-5-Gamma-Z-Alpha. The Doctor then enquires to its name, he is astonished hear that it is Skaro, and that the Movellans are here to wage war against the Daleks.

Romana, meanwhile, is being interrogated by the Daleks. After they learn that she is of no threat to them, the Daleks command Romana to work at one of their drilling sites.

The Doctor and the Movellans meet with the man who has been following him and Romana; he identifies himself as Starship Engineer Tyssan, who was captured by the Daleks two years ago. He collapses after revealing that the Daleks have used him during a drilling operation for a search operation. He soon comes around, and says he does not know what the Daleks are looking for. He then tells the Doctor about what has happened to Romana, and they set out to rescue her.

In the meantime Romana meets with some other workers, with whom she discusses the Daleks' hatred for humanoids, and she learns that she is getting weaker as a result of radiation sickness. She learns that the only way out is to die; when within minutes she seems to die. Her fellow workers remove her body.

The Doctor, Tyssan and the Movellans Sharrel, Lan, and Agella are shocked to find Romana's grave. As the Doctor frantically tries to dig her out, she appears and explained that she feigned death to escape, and that at school she was taught how to stop her hearts. They then head into the Dalek headquarters. Lan is left on guard outside of the Control Center, and is shot by a Dalek who is out searching for them. The Doctor establishes that the Daleks are searching for something on a level that they have yet to access. He remembers an alternative route to this area, so he, Romana, and Agella make their way to this floor while Sharrel returns to his ship. There they discover Davros, the creator and leader of the Daleks (who was seemingly exterminated at the end of Genesis of the Daleks). Something gives way up above, and part of the ceiling collapses onto Agella. Whilst the party is distracted by this, Davros starts to stir: his fingers move, his central, artificial eye lights up - and Davros lives...


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The Doctor finds Davros and takes him into a blocked-off room in the old Dalek city. He lets Romana and Tyssan escape out of the window, and they return to the Movellan ship. The two geniuses talk about the Daleks' "accomplishments": whilst the Doctor comments on the countless lives the Daleks have ruined, Davros replies that this is only the beginning - the Daleks have only just begun their conquest of the cosmos. The Daleks find them both, and proceed to exterminate their prisoners until the Doctor complies. The Doctor then threatens to kill Davros with a makeshift explosive he has just concocted. He then orders the Daleks to free all their prisoners, and to let him escape. The Daleks say that these conditions are unacceptable and illogical (and therefore, to a Dalek, impossible); and that the exterminations would continue. However Davros makes them see that the Doctor's logic is "impaired by irrational sentiment". The Daleks then comply, and the Doctor attaches the explosive to Davros' chair, and tells him that it will detonate when he uses his sonic screwdriver. He then escapes. Davros frantically orders the Daleks to remove the explosive; which they do (although the Doctor detonates and the explosion seems to take a Dalek with it). Davros then vows to make the Daleks invincible, and the supreme power of the universe. (However, we notice that Agella is not dead; and that she will return and report all she has just heard to her fellow Movellans.)

Romana reaches the Movellan spaceship; but learns that the Movellans are not as altruistic as they appear; and Agella uses her weapon on her, which knocks her out. The Movellans than test out their nova device: a weapon which changes air molecules so that a planet's atmosphere becomes flammable and can be set alight - killing all lifeforms.

The Doctor meets up with Tyssan and they both find a Movellan scout. The Doctor deactivates her by removing the power pack/controlling circuit on her belt and reveals that the Movellans are, in fact, robots. He finds that the unconscious Romana has been attached to the nova device (sealed inside an airtight container). He sends Tyssan away and tries to open the container, as the timer is ticking down...


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Just as the timer approaches zero, the Doctor is knocked out by one of the Movellans' weapons. However, the nova device was revealed to be a "dud" - a decoy used to lure the Doctor.

The Doctor learns that the Daleks and Movellans have been in a stalemate for over two centuries, and that both sides' battle computers have been calculating the best strategy and precise moment at which to attack - so far not a single shot has been fired. The Daleks want Davros to help them gain an advantage. The Movellans want the Doctor to do the same for them, which the Doctor refuses to do. Davros, on the other hand, is all too eager to give the Daleks the upper hand; and he orders them to make a suicide bombing attack on the Movellan craft upon realising that the Doctor might do the same thing for the Movellans. The Doctor leads an attack by the slaves on the Movellans, which ends with them all being deactivated.

While the prisoners take control of the Movellan ship, the Doctor makes his way to the city to confront Davros. The Doctor informs Davros that the Movellans have been disabled; unfortunately Davros does not believe him and intends to destroy the Movellan ship anyway. As the Daleks approach the ship, the Doctor goes to detonate the bombs prematurely, only to discover too late that Davros didn't send all the Daleks on the suicide run when one ambushes him and holds him at gunpoint.

The slaves are no match for the Daleks, who begin exterminating them. Seeing the events, the Doctor throws his hat on the Dalek's eye-stalk, blinding it. As the Dalek fires around blindly (nearly killing Davros in the process) the Doctor attaches an explosive to it and blows it up, then activates the bomb detonator and destroys the attacking Dalek squad. He then takes Davros into the custody of the former slave workers. Davros shall be placed in cryogenic suspension and taken to Earth to stand trial for his crimes. The Doctor and Romana leave; remarking on the fact that whoever makes mistakes often wins (as the Doctor knows only too well).


Analysis by Cuisle

Before the action starts we have a prelude in which we see Romana’s regeneration. This has puzzled fans for a long time since it appeared that she had several goes at choosing her body and the regeneration was completely non-traumatic and voluntary. This has not been our experience with The Doctor’s regenerations and the reason why she had it so easy is never explained. The eventual choice of the body double of the Princess Astra makes Lalla Ward the precedent for the introduction in 2007 of Freema Agyeman playing new companion Martha after being an incidental character in Army of Ghosts in 2006.

Meanwhile, to the plot.

The randomiser can take them anywhere in time and space and it takes them to Skaro! What are the odds of that! When The Doctor realises where he is, he knows he has trouble. Two kinds of trouble, in fact. There are Daleks with Human slaves and Movellans with the daftest costumes and dopiest attitude outside of the spoof science fiction film Galaxy Quest which deliberately played on this sort of 70s fashion for aliens in silver hair and white stockings.

The Doctor takes a surprisingly long time to work out that the Movellans are actually robots. When he does, his way of explaining to them why they cannot beat the Daleks is an interesting one. He and Romana play rock, scissors, paper time and time again in order to prove the point of a stalemate. The same point was made, a few years later in the Matthew Broderick film, War Games, using the game Tic Tac Toe to convince a computer that there are no winners in nuclear war. But Doctor Who did it first.

The Daleks, of course, are looking Davros, their creator, who they believe will give them the edge over the Movellans. It is not explained WHY they are so keen on defeating them. Obviously the Daleks like a challenge.

The underlying concept of the stalemate between equally matched foes is an interesting one. The Doctor, despite his dislike for the Daleks was equally determined not to let the Movellans win. He recognised that they were just as dangerous with their weapons of mass destruction. His solution eventually resulted in a lot of dead Daleks and a neutralised Movellan force and the humanoid slaves taking a cryogenically frozen Davros back to Earth - for a fair trial. That would have to be the equivalent of the trial of Saddam Hussein.


The return of the Daleks as well as Davros was a reversal of policy after the Key to Time series without any regular enemies. Although the series had been popular it was felt that Doctor Who NEEDED the old foes. And all told, it is a pretty good opening to the new series, with the new look companion. All jokes about the Movellan costumes aside they made an interesting race. But the question of whether Doctor Who can be popular without regular doses of Daleks is one that still rages now. They turned up in both of the new series and are due to reappear in 2007. and those episodes have got good viewer ratings. The important thing, is to make sure Dalek episodes are distinguishable from each other. One reason why they were halted for several seasons was the lack of good, original scripts from Terry Nation. The producers of Genesis of the Daleks commented on the sameness of a lot of previous episodes. But Destiny of the Daleks, while not as spectacular as Genesis DID manage to be fairly original.

Incidentally, having K-9 out of order for most of the episode was a good move. There was really no use for him in the episode.