Wednesday, 30 September 2015

Doctor Who and the Silurians



7  episodes
Aired between 31st January 1970 and 14th March 1970

Written by Malcolm Hulke
Produced by Barry Letts
Directed by Timothy Combe

Synopsis

Two men, Spencer and Davis, make their way down a rope into a cave system.  They believe it's an undiscovered cave and are clearly happy about finding it, until they hear a loud roar from deeper inside the tunnels.  The two of them explore and come across a ferocious monster.


It claws Davis to death and Spencer flees in terror.

Over at UNIT HQ, the Doctor is doing his own modifications to a vintage yellow car that has been bought for him.  He affectionately calls it "Bessie".  Liz Shaw enters the room and tells him that they've been ordered to go down to Wenley Moor to a research station where they're having trouble with missing scientists.


The Doctor huffs and tells Liz that nobody orders him to do anything he doesn't want to and goes back to tinkering with "Bessie".  He soon changes his mind though when Liz mentions the fact that there are lots of cave networks about and he can go exploring.  The Doctor changes his mind and tells Liz he'll drive them down.

When they get to Wenley Moor, they find the Director, Charles Lawrence has called a meeting of all staff.  He tells them all in a very strict way that UNIT have been authorised to investigate the disappearances of the scientists.


He orders that they are to be given every courtesy, but is clear that he expects them to be gone sooner rather than later as it will interfere with the work.

Once the meeting is over, the Brigadier greets Liz and the Doctor, and introduces them to Dr Lawrence, Dr Quinn, his chief scientist. and Major Baker, the stations security chief.  The Doctor asks what the station is here for.  Dr Quinn tells them that this is the place for the Cyclotron, a huge proton accelerator.  He says that the station is there to experiment using the Cyclotron to create unlimited nuclear energy.  The machine has been recently suffering some unexplained power losses though, and the staff have begun to show high incidents of mental breakdowns and accidents.

The Brigadier orders Liz to look at the personnel records to try and identify trends in the breakdowns, Baker is ordered to increase the security on the place, and the Doctor is given the task of exploring the power cuts.  He offers to whip out his sonic screwdriver and dismantle the Cyclotron, but Lawrence is adamant that he will not do anything to upset their work.  To keep close to the scene, the Brigadier commandeers the meeting room as his office.

Dr Quinn takes them to the Cyclotron operations room.  The Doctor is concerned at the fact that the experiments are still being conducted even though power losses are reported.  The losses seemingly make the process unstable and if handled incorrectly, could send the station into meltdown, blowing up like an atom bomb.  Quinn agrees with the Doctor, but says that only the Director can give the order to stop the Cyclotron.  It's an order everyone knows that Dr Lawrence is too stubborn to make.

As they are talking, Liz suddenly comes over dizzy.  She soon recovers but cannot explain it.  She decides to go and see Dr Meredith (the centre's physician) to check on the personnel records.  The Doctor remains in the control room and he chats with Dr Quinn about the local caves nearby.  Quinn mentions that he's a keen potholer, but he's banned from the caves following a scientists death in there.  Someone was with him, but they went mad with grief and are confined to an infirmary in the station.  Quinn suspects that whatever happened to them down in the caves has been covered up by Dr Lawrence.

The Doctor asks if there's any discernible pattern to the power losses, but Quinn doesn't think so.  He directs the Doctor to the experiment log where everything should be noted.  The Doctor studies the log and determines that some of it is incomplete.  It turns out that it's because Spencer, the scientist in the infirmary was the one who normally updated the log.  Quinn is happy with that explanation, but the Doctor points out that even though that's the case, some of the data has been torn out of the book deliberately.

Over in the infirmary, Liz talks to Dr Meredith.  He is distinctly unhappy about UNIT personnel coming in and trying to cast doubt on his work.  He doesn't want to let Liz see Spencer, nor the Doctor when he turns up, but is forced to when they cite their credentials.

Meredith takes both the Doctor and Liz to see Spencer, who is drawing pictures on the wall as they enter.


Dr Meredith explains that its the only thing that keeps Spencer from being violent, so they let him do it.  The Doctor tries to talk to Spencer, but the man turns and attacks the Doctor, nearly throttling him to death.  The Doctor manages to calm the patient down until he goes back to drawing on the wall.  Dr Meredith and Liz look worried but the Doctor is fine.  He is fascinated, stating that something made Spencer's mind regress millions of years ago to being a caveman, drawing crude pictures of reptiles on the walls.

Now the Doctor has left the Cyclotron control room, Dr Quinn and his assistant, Miss Dawson argue about their next course of action.  Miss Dawson tells Quinn to make "them" stop taking the power from the Cyclotron for a little while.  Quinn says that he's already tried but they're not listening.  He says that the potential knowledge gain outweighs the risk.

Major Baker meanwhile checks up on all the UNIT personnel, and finds that the Doctor's file is totally blank.  He wants to investigate further, but the Brigadier forbids it.

Another power failure grips the cyclotron, drawing the Doctor back to the control room.  As Quinn talks the scientists through the procedure to safely shut it down, one of the staff goes mad and is forced to abandon his post.  The Doctor rushes in and takes over, successfully shutting the machine down without incident.

Once the Doctor has double checked the medical histories with Liz, he becomes convinced that the cyclotron room is the focus for the illnesses.  Given the condition of Spencer, he believes the answer lies somewhere in the caves.  He confirms it when they look at Davis' postmortem report - he was found with claw marks on him.

His mind made up, the Doctor changes into some overalls and goes to the caves.  It's not long before he finds the place where Spencer and Davis were attacked.  He hears the distant roars as well and as he investigates, he is confronted by a huge dinosaur.


Just as the Doctor's goose is cooked, the dinosaur is called off at the last moment by a strange bleeping sound.  The Doctor seizes the chance to escape and returns to the research station.  Once back there he fills the Brigadier in on what he's seen.  Much to the Doctors frustration, the Brigadier decides that the only answer is to send armed men into the caves.  He decides to go with the Brigadier anyway.


Once at the caves, the Doctor takes the soldiers to the spot where he met the dinosaur.


No tracks remain and it looks like the Doctor imagined it.  Major Baker however sees something in the shadows and rushes off in pursuit.  He finds a humanoid at the end of a tunnel and fires his gun, wounding it.  The dinosaur turns up again and attacks Major Baker, but is called off at the last moment by the bleeping sound.  The Brigadier and UNIT soldiers catch up to Major Baker but find no trace of anyone.

The Doctor takes some samples of blood from where the humanoid was injured and decides to take them back to the research station for study, taking Major Baker back with him whilst the Brigadier gives chase to the humanoid.

The humanoid makes it to the surface, stumbling about the moors until it finds a barn to hide in.


Back at the station, the Doctor and Liz study the blood samples and discover that it bears similarities to the high end reptiles.  They go to question Dr Quinn but Miss Dawson tells them that he's gone home ill.

Knowing that UNIT have entered the cave systems, Dr Quinn decides that he must go in there too.  He seems to know where he's going.  He stops at the face of the cave wall and is bathed in red light as the strange bleeping sound echoes around the cave.


As if under hypnosis, he is taken through a door in the wall into an alien base, where he is brought back around to speak to the aliens.  He tells them that UNIT are investigating but discovers that they have already met them, wounding one of their kind.  Quinn asks for the knowledge they've promised him, but the aliens tell him he must help their wounded comrade first.  They give him a hand held signaling device and send him on his way to find the wounded alien.

Out in the barn, the alien is discovered by the farmer who approaches it with a pitchfork.  The alien kills the farmer and frightens the farmers wife half to death.  The bodies are found by UNIT and the farmers wife is admitted to hospital with shock.  The Doctor goes to visit her whilst Liz searches the barn for clues.

Once by the farmers wife, the Doctor discovers that the alien never left the barn.

Sure enough, as Liz is searching the hay, the alien humanoid approaches her from behind and attacks her.

The Doctor and the Brigadier rush back to the barn, finding that Liz has just been knocked unconscious.


Despite the barn being closed from the inside, it seems that the alien has escaped.  The Brigadier orders a manhunt across the moors.

Out of nowhere, Dr Quinn turns up at the barn with the excuse that it's on his way to the station.  The Doctor asks if he's recovered from his sudden illness.  Dr Quinn is confused at first but makes excuses once he sees that the alien has gone.  As he goes to leave the Doctor asks him to take Liz to the station, but Quinn says he's got some errands to run first and he leaves, looking more suspicious to the Doctor than ever before.

As the manhunt gets underway, Dr Quinn drives around the moors, using the summoning device to draw the alien to him.  The Doctor and Brigadier find the location too late, noting alien footprints leading to tyre marks.

The Doctor follows his instincts and goes to Dr Quinns cottage, finding him at home rather than the station where he said he was heading.


Quinn tries to say that he just popped back to his house because he forgot something.  The Doctor notes how hot it is in there, and Quinn tells him the thermostat is broken.  Despite all his attempts to get Quinn to cooperate, the Doctor cannot persuade him.  He leaves but lets it be known that he's aware Quinn is up to something.



The Doctor goes back to the research station and with the help of Liz, breaks into Dr Quinns office.  There they find a miniature globe depicting the Earth but with the continents drawn together, just like they were millions of years ago during the Silurian epoch.  Miss Dawson finds them and is on the verge of spilling the beans but the Brigadier walks in at the wrong time and she decides to keep her lips sealed.

She leaves the station and goes to Dr Quinn's house where she tries to get Quinn to open up to the Doctor.  Quinn is adamant that he can get the aliens to reveal vast amounts of superior knowledge and the Doctor is only interested in claiming the glory for himself.  He intends to hold the alien for ransom in his basement until the rest of them tell him what he wants to know.

Later that night, the Doctor returns to Quinn's house he finds the scientist dead.


He recovers the summoning device from Quinn's lifeless hand and uses it.  From behind him, the alien approaches.


The Doctor notices it at the last moment and tries to communicate with it.  It clearly understands the Doctor, but chooses to run away.

Back at the station's sick bay, Major Baker is recovered and wants to go after the Silurians once again.  Liz won't let him, but he waits until she has gone and he overpowers the guard watching him, and heads off to the caves, only to be captured by the Silurians.

The Doctor finds Liz and tells her what happened at Quinn's house.  He intends to go to the caves alone, but Liz is adamant that this time, she goes with him.  They use a map found in Quinn's office to navigate the tunnels and soon find evidence that Major Baker has come back to the caves.  Not long after that, they discover a secret door and use the beeping device Quinn had to open it.


Inside, they find a vast alien complex and see Major Baker locked in a cage.  He tells the Doctor that they have been interrogating him on the size and strength of the human armies.  The Doctor asks Baker to stall for time and he and Liz leave, returning back to the station.


On the way out, they witness the Silurians reviving one of their kind from a long hibernation. .


Dr Lawrence greets Masters, the Permanent Undersecretary who has arrived on the back of the Brigadiers request for a sizable force of soldiers to be brought down from the British Army.  Lawrence is scathing of UNIT's help and says they should be made to leave.  The Doctor and Liz turn up as the Brigadier, Masters and Lawrence are all debating the situation.


The Doctor decides to tell them all what's going on and urges for peaceful negotiations to take place.  They are almost convinced until Miss Dawson turns up and tells them that Quinn is dead, killed by these monsters.  She is fervent that they must mean all humans harm and something should be done about it.

Having failed to convince them to keep soldiers away from the cave, the Doctor decides that his only option left is to go into them caves before the soldiers can be commandeered and organised.  He intends to forewarn the Silurians and hope they are willing to negotiate.

He does as he intends, and warns the Silurians, but they lock him up next to Major Baker.  The Major is furious when he finds out that the Doctor is betraying the UNIT force but there's little he can do.


The Doctor is willing to gamble everything on the fact that the Silurians will listen.

The Doctor didn't count on one of the Silurians having his eyes on leadership.  The leader of the Silurians agrees to talk to the Doctor, but the young Silurian thinks he's unfit to lead.  He sneaks off and meets up with the UNIT forces, trapping them in an air tight room before returning to base.


Once back there, he tell the Doctor that he intends to kill him.  He uses his eye beam, but the Silurian leader stops him and orders that the Doctor will not be harmed.

When the young Silurian leaves, the leader releases the Doctor.  He tells him about how the Silurians lived on Earth millions of years ago, but were forced into hibernation when their scientists spotted a large planet approaching and they assumed that it would disrupt the atmosphere.


They set their alarm clocks for the machinery to revive them a few thousand years after, in the hopes that they would survive the planets collision, but it seems that the machinery failed and they remained in hibernation until a new power source (the Cyclotron) was placed nearby and so revived them.

As they are having this chat, the Brigadier and his men are slowly suffocating in the caves.  One of his men starts to regress to caveman status and just like Spencer did, starts drawing on the walls.


The Doctor convinces the Silurian leader to release the Brigadier and his men, and promises to go back and help negotiate a peace between the humans and Silurians, where the reptiles can live in the deserts where they like it warm but man doesn't want to use.

The young Silurian is outraged that they are making peace with the "apes" when it was the Silurians planet first.  He convinces the only other awakened Silurian, a scientist, to help him destroy the "apes".  The scientist is uncomfortable with the prospect of genocide, but is threatened into compliance.  He gives the young Silurian a test tube containing a potent virus that they used against the "apes" when they used to raid their crops.

The young Silurian takes the virus and infects Major Baker with it before releasing him back into the caves.


When the Silurian leader finds out, he releases the Doctor, giving him a sample of the virus and asking him to warn the humans and to make an antidote (because one doesn't exist).  Once the Doctor has left, the leader confronts the young Silurian, but is killed by the rebel.

Back at the station, Miss Dawson is urging Masters to call for the Army and send them down into the caves after the Brigadier and his men.  Liz tries to make them see that there's no need to attack the Silurians, but nobody listens.


Masters is almost about to make the call when the Brigadier turns up with his men,  He explains how they were trapped but then miraculously freed on the brink of suffocation.  Major Baker turns up not long after, ranting about how much of a traitor the Doctor is and also calling for Silurian deaths.  The Doctor enters and makes everyone stay away from Baker, pointing out the fact that he's infected.

Baker is taken to a local hospital for quarantine, and Masters decides that the only safe course of action is to shut the research station down, an act that Dr Lawrence is devastated by, as it's likely the end of his career.  Masters shows signs of weariness, but brushes it off and heads back to London.

The Doctor and the Brigadier head to the hospital to check on Baker, but find him dead in the forecourt.  It's clear that the Silurian virus is about to rage out of control.  They warn the hospital staff to quarantine, and race off back to the station to begin work on a cure.

The Brigadier and Liz discover that Dr Lawrence is missing and that Masters has returned to London.  They spend their time trying to locate and quarantine them.  As a stop gap measure, everyone at the research station is also given a healthy dose of antibiotics.


Masters meanwhile, arrives in London and looks decidedly ill.  He catches a cab to the ministry of Science building.

As hours pass, the Silurian plague begins to spread, reaching as far as France.  As they wait for the Doctor's experiments to yield success, Dr Lawrence turns up half eaten by the plague.


He rants at the fact that the Brigadier has ruined his career and attacks him.  The exertion proves too much for him and he ends up dying on the conference room floor.

The Police eventually find Masters, but it's too late.  He's also covered in plague and runs away from them, eventually dying on the run.


Down in the caves, the Silurians monitor the situation on a strange TV monitor.  Much to their annoyance, they determine that the Doctor could possibly find a cure.  The young Silurian decides that he wants to deal with the Doctor once and for all.  They find the section of caves that are nearest to the base and they use their third eye to melt through the rock, making a tunnel towards the base.

The Doctor meanwhile finds the correct combination of drugs to form the cure and sends a test of it to a patient in the sick bay.  The test is a success and he goes back to the lab to write the formula down for mass production.  As he is working there, the Silurians burn their way into the corridor behind and stun him with their third eyes.


The Brigadier and Liz wait anxiously for the formula as more and more reported cases of the plague come in.

The Silurians are discovered by a UNIT soldier as they take the unconscious Doctor back into the tunnels.  They shoot the soldier dead and seal up the tunnel.  Not long afterwards, Liz goes to check on the Doctor and the alarm is raised that he's been snatched.  Luckily, Liz finds the Doctors screwed up note paper and is able to locate the correct formula to stop the Silurian Plague.

The Doctor comes round to find himself back in the Silurian prison.  The young Silurian gloats about stopping the Doctor, but the Doctor tells him he's too late and that the plague is cured.  The young Silurian curses and decides to go to plan B - using a huge sonic disruptor to destroy the Van Allen belt around the Earth and fry everyone with the incoming solar radiation, leaving the Silurians to live in perfect perpetual summer.  The only thing they need to do is start up the Cyclotron again so it can be powered.

With the plague cured, Liz urges the Brigadier to save the Doctor.  She can only see the way forward being an attack on the caves by what few UNIT soldiers he has.  He agrees and sends his men there. At the same time however, the Doctor and the Silurians are coming back up the tunnel towards the station.  They melt through the wall again, coincidentally at the same moment as Liz and the Brigadier are nearby.  They are all taken prisoner and led to the Cyclotron control room.


Once at the control room, the Doctor obeys the Young Silurians command and starts up the Cyclotron, secretly giving Liz orders in the process to drop all the uranium rods into the reactor at once on his command.  He builds up the power, and gives the order.  The resulting power surge breaks the sonic disruptor, ending the threat of the Silurian weapon.

The young Silurian is ready to kill all the humans around him when the Doctor tells him that the reactor is beyond his control and is about to melt down.  The resulting explosion will kill everything in the area and the radiation will last for decades.  The young Silurian decides that it's more fitting for the humans to die in the radiation explosion and so he leads his men back to their cave.

Liz and the Brigadier congratulate the Doctor on the victory, but he isn't smiling.  He really did push the reactor to breaking point and there's no clear way of escaping.

The Silurians return to base and enter another period of hibernation.  The scientist tells the young Silurian that the alarm clock mechanism is still faulty and someone will have to stay awake.  The young Silurian volunteers to do this, giving the scientist an order to set the hibernation period for fifty years and when they re-awaken, to carry on his quest to destroy the humans.

Back at the Cyclotron, a bit of jiggery pokery by the Doctor doing something with the neutron flow (not reversing the polarity of it though), fixes the reactor and averts disaster.


Once the crisis is over, he revisits the Silurian base, coming face to face with the young Silurian.  The alien leader realises he's been duped and tries to kill the Doctor, but he himself is killed by the Brigadier.  The Doctor thanks the Brigadier for his help and says he can't wait to wake the Silurians up again and negotiate properly.

Later, the Doctor prepares to leave Wenley Moor to go and get more equipment and scientists.  He says he'll be back tomorrow and tells the Brigadier not to let anyone inside those caves.  The Brigadier is unusually complacent and waves the Doctor off.  Once his scientific advisor has left, the Brigadier gives orders for them to seal the Silurian base permanently.

On the moors, "Bessie" has a bit of trouble and stalls.  The Doctor uses an odd red liquid to get her started again, but as he gets into the car, a huge explosion goes off in the distance.  He's appalled when he realises what the Brigadier has done.


Liz claims that its more like the Government who will have given him orders.

The Doctor watches the explosions for a moment with disgust and says it's genocide before driving off.


Trivia


  • No sooner as Jon Pertwee was on board, Derrick Sherwin finally got his wish to jump ship (which Pertwee was furious about).  As a replacement, they turned to Doctor Who veteran Director, Douglas Camfield, but he was unavailable.  They needed someone, preferably a Director, who could rewrite scripts under pressure and had a good track record of succeeding in the BBC pressure cooker.  That person was Barry Letts (Director of Enemy of the World).  
  • Unfortunately for Letts, he didn't have much of a handover.  On his way out, Sherwin handed Letts his huge production bible and said "see ya".  The first thing Letts did was reduce the number of stories, giving the much needed break that Troughton would have danced a jig for.
  • You can see from the title, it's the only Doctor Who story on TV that used the naming conventions of the Target Novels e.g. used "Doctor Who and the..." in the title
  • Never noticed it until now, but Paul Darrow played one of the UNIT soldiers in charge of the manhunt.  To the uninitiated, Paul Darrow played the hugely popular character: Kerr Avon in Blake's 7.
  • As you can tell, the music in this story is....unusual to say the least.   The idea for it was actually quite innovative.  Because the Silurians were meant to be prehistoric, it was decided to use olden style instruments.  As such, medieval instruments such as the Crumhorn were used,
  • This story came about from a debate between Terrence Dicks and Malcolm Hulke.  The latter said that moving to an all Earth based Who was a bad idea because you can only do two types of story - mad scientist, or alien invasion.  Terrence countered the argument by saying not if the aliens were there in the first place.  He then commissioned Malcolm to write it.


What worked


  • The fact that Dr Quinn wasn't mad, he wanted to help mankind, just so long as he had the credit
  • Timothy Combe did a good job of hiding the Silurians until episode 3.  The first person view gives a good build up of tension
  • I love the bit when Dr Quinn uses the tracker to summon the Silurian.  Given all the deaths so far, you naturally assume he's next when the three lens camera focuses on him
  • When Dr Lawrence refuses to take antibiotics for the epidemic, he reminds me of the Government minister who fed his family beef during the mad cow outbreak and refused to acknowledge that there was a problem.
  • Dr Lawrence's outrage was just top class!
  • The end scene where the Doctor realises what the Brigadier has done is also a great scene


What didn't work


  • The C.S.O. shots of the cave monster
  • Why does the Doctor decide to go in the caves when most of the incidents occurred in the Cyclotron control room?
  • Why do people go insane in the Cyclotron control room?  I can't see where it's ever explained
  • If the Silurians killed Quinn, why did the wounded one hang around and why did they leave the summoning device in his hands?
  • A national crisis like a plague spreading across London and they send every single drug being developed to a complete stranger like the Doctor.  Seems unlikely to me
  • The melting through walls and building them with a third eye is just ridiculous
  • Surely, the Silurians would die anyway if they got rid of the Van Allen belt
  • The Silurians themselves, particularly the young Silurian are the epitome of Bond villains.  They have numerous opportunities to just kill the Doctor and get him out of their hair, but they don't.
  • Both Miss Dawson and Liz do a complete rethink on attacking the Silurians at one point or another
  • Nothing to do with the story itself, but if you watch the DVD, episode 6 has the title "Doctor Who, Jon Pertwee" embossed on the screen all the way through the start of the episode up to the point where Masters arrives at Marylebone Station.  Once you know it's there, it's very off putting


Overall Feelings

There's no doubt in my mind that there's a lot to like about this story.  It's the first story in Jon Pertwee's run where we can really get into the plot as there's no side explanations need working in to account for the Doctors regeneration.

The setup is nice and intriguing, with a good cast to help it along.  The Director does a good job of keeping the monsters mysterious too and even when they're revealed, there's always the welcome addition of monster infighting just like we saw in the Dominators.

Additionally, this story shows a case almost unique to the third Doctor when he has loads of time to find a cure, even though people are clearly dropping like flies.  Even later in the classic series we don't particularly see this level of studying the problem, but as soon as we hit the 2005 reboot, it is not seen again because the time frame is too tight to allow it.  And judging by this story, I can sort of see why.  If only slightly, the pace of this story is a little bit too slow.  We get a good couple of minutes showing people putting stuff in test tubes, and more running back and forth from the caves.

The pacing isn't the only problem though.  There's just a few too many unexplained situations to make this story epic.  Case in point is the regression to caveman status and headaches in the Cyclotron.  At least one of these if not both can be explained away as legit psychological neuroses, but once the story's over, I just found myself thinking that they were pointless red herrings.

The final episode or two throw up more things to hate like the burning through walls and worse, re-building them; or what about the fact that the Brigadier touches people with the plague at least three times but doesn't get infected.

Don't get me wrong though, I loved "the Silurians" in spite of all the odd bits.  You just can't help but love the bad guys here, from the outfits to the voices and mannerisms.  It's just a thought provoking and interesting take on something that could have been run of the mill base under siege.

Rating

9 out of 10

Great story well filmed, but just a little too slow paced and just a couple of bonkers red herrings and explanations

Rewatchability Factor

7 out of 10

Great classic episode that deserves to be watched again and again, but with healthy gaps in between.

Watch this if you liked...
  • The Hungry Earth (Doctor Who, Series 5)
  • Cold Blood (Doctor Who, Series 5)

Consulting the Matrix

Could we live in peace with a race like the Silurians?

Saturday, 19 September 2015

Spearhead from Space




4 episodes
Aired between 3rd January 1970 and 24th January 1970

Written by Robert Holmes
Produced by Derrick Sherwin
Directed by Derek Martinus


Synopsis

A UNIT (see The Invasion) radar tracking station picks up a meteor storm that gives the technician cause for concern - it's flying in formation.  They track their descent to Oxley forest in Epping, Essex.
Local poacher, Sam Seeley witnesses the meteors coming down.


He investigates and finds one of them in the ground pulsating but too hot to touch.  He buries it until it cools off and marks the spot.

Elsewhere in the woods, the TARDIS lands and the Doctor emerges only to fall to the ground unconscious.


Back over at UNIT, Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart has a meeting with successful scientist, Dr Elizabeth Shaw.  He tells "Miss Shaw" that she has been seconded to work for UNIT as a scientific adviser to investigate the crashed meteors. She's not too happy about it and quite skeptical.  The Brigadier assures her that the human race has encountered alien life forms, but in the past has always had help from the Doctor, but he's nowhere to be seen.  As soon as he says that, the Brigadier gets a call from his staff to explain that a strange man with a Police Box has been taken to the local hospital.  The Brigadier orders a guards placed on the box, and rushes off with Liz in tow to visit the Doctor.

At the hospital, Dr Henderson looks over his patient and realises that here are some fantastic anomalies in his patient.  He thinks its a joke and goes to contact the X-Ray dept.  One of the janitors overhears about the strange patient and decides to call the press to cash in.


The Brigadier and Liz arrive at the hospital to see a throng of news reporters asking questions about meteorites and alien patients.  The Brigadier bats off the questions and heads off into the hospital to see the Doctor.  He and Liz speak to Henderson and find out that the Doctor has two hearts and an unknown blood type.  They look at the man in the bed, but the Brigadier cannot identify him.  He does wake up though and knows exactly who the Brigadier is, complains about the look of his face and falls asleep again.



Out in Oakley woods, Sam Seeley goes back and digs up the meteorite, finding that it's more like a flashing orb that emits a strange beeping sound.  He puts it in his sack but finds that UNIT soldiers are in the area too, searching the ground.  He skulks away but comes across one of the soldiers keeping guard on the area.


Seeley is questioned by the soldier but acts as if he's been out poaching.  The soldier tells him it's a restricted area and tells him to "push off".

Back at the hospital, the Brigadier and Liz slip out of the back door to avoid giving the press any more statements.  One of the reporters goes to ring head office but is frustrated by the odd man who has been stood in the booth doing nothing for the last half hour.  The man (Channing) looks wide eyed at the reporter before casually walking off.

Once Dr Henderson has liaised with his colleagues, he returns to the Doctor to find that he is awake but oddly fixated with the whereabouts of his shoes.  Dr Henderson can't see any harm in giving him them, so he does. The Doctor snatches them and looks content until Henderson and the nurse have left.  He then picks out his spare TARDIS key from his shoe and bides his time.  As Henderson's back is turned he is hit over the head and knocked out.  The Doctor is then gagged by Channing and a couple of orderlies and taken out of the hospital.  As he is wheeled into an ambulance however, he pushes the chair down the ramp and begins riding the wheelchair down the path away from his kidnappers.



The UNIT guards are alerted to the Doctor's absence whilst Channing and his henchmen make a getaway in their ambulance,  UNIT soldiers chase the Doctor, discovering that he's making his way back to Oakley woods.  They give chase, but one of the guards protecting the area is startled by the Doctor suddenly coming out of the bush and fires at him.  The Doctor clutches his head and falls to the ground.  Luckily the bullet only grazed him.


Once back at the hospital, Dr Henderson checks him over once more and tells the Brigadier that he seems to be in a self induced coma.  He gives the TARDIS key to the Brigadier and says they found it on him.


He's also shown a picture of Channing, the likely culprit of the kidap attempt, and the remains of one of the meteorites that the team have found.  The Brigadier doubles the guard at the hospital and orders the TARDIS and meteor remains to be taken back to UNIT HQ.

At Auto Plastics, a local manufacturing firm, John Ransome meets with the manager, George Hibbert.


Ransome is furious as he was away on a business trip selling the premise of a special toy doll to America, and when he comes back he finds that Hibbert has sacked most of the staff and ruled his workshop is out of bounds and top secret.  Hibbert (holding his neck) says that things have changed and he's teamed up with Channing.  He tells Ransome to stay away from the factory and they'll send his possessions to him.


Ransome leaves and Channing approaches Hibbert, reassuring him that he said all the right things.

Back at his house, Sam Seeley transfers the orb to an old chest under the nose of his suspicious wife.


At UNIT HQ, the Brigadier inspects the TARDIS whilst Liz works on analysing the meteorite fragment.  She jokes about the Police Box really being a spaceship and does so openly when Major General Scobie (Lethbridge-Stewarts superior) arrives for an update.




Back at the hospital, the Doctor comes out of his coma.  He sneaks off to the hospital staff room, where, after evading capture by having a shower, he steals the flamboyant clothes of a medical consultant and even takes his vintage car!


In the woods, the UNIT search team uncover another meteorite.  Its hollow bleeping alerts a strange plastic looking dummy that is searching nearby.


As the meteorite is transported back to HQ, the dummy (Auton) walks out into the road, causing the driver to swerve and hit a tree, killing those on board.


The Auton takes the meteorite and disappears into the woods.

The Doctor takes the vintage car directly to the UNIT HQ, where he arrogantly bluffs his way in.  Once inside he locates the TARDIS where he meets the Brigadier and Liz Shaw.   He says he found the TARDIS thanks to a trusty homing beacon and explains that the Time Lords have taken part of his memory, changing his face along with it.


He agrees to help the Brigadier in exchange for the TARDIS key.

The Doctor immediately deduces that the meteorites were more like hollow orbs containing some sort of life force.  He also deduces that because the meteorites are hard to find (apparently there were fifty of them), they have been taken somewhere.  The question is, where?

Upset by his dismissal at Auto Plastics, Ransome returns and jumps the fence.  As he's snooping about, Channing and Hibbert are talking to Major General Scobie, showing him the prototype of a dummy made in his image to be displayed at Madame Tusaudes.  As they leave, Ransome barely remains undetected, but manages to get access to his previous workshop.  Once inside, he finds lots of Auton dummies stood about and a large metal box.  As he inspects the box, one of the Autons comes alive, its hand flips open and a gun appears.


The terrified Ransome just ducks out of the way as the Auton fires.  He races out of the factory and escapes thanks to the Major General walking past, forcing the Auton to hide.  Now outside, Ransome rushes into the woods where he is found by UNIT and taken back to base.

Sam Seeley goes to see UNIT and asks Captain Munroe how much he could get paid if he finds one of the "thunderballs".  Captain Munroe is not in the mood for playing games and brow beats Seeley into admitting that he took one.

Back at the factory, Scobie leaves, and Channing tells Hibbert that the swarm leader is missing.  As soon as its found, he intends to take it and then kill Ransome using his Auton puppets.

Back at UNIT, Ransome explains to the Brigadier what he saw.  Whilst the Brig is distracted, the Doctor convinces Liz to take the TARDIS key.  Although he can gain entry to the ship, it refuses to take off.  An angry Brigadier turns up and demands to know what's happened to the key.  The Doctor emerges from a smoking TARDIS looking sheepish and saying that the Time Lords have changed the dematerialisation codes.


Back at Sam Seeley's house, his wife discovers the missing meteorite.  As she opens the trunk, a nearby Auton picks up the signal and starts to ransack the house looking for it.  Mrs Seeley is terrified when she looks on the dummy but has enough courage to grab Sams shotgun.


It doesn't do her any good however as the shots don't have any effect.  The Auton knocks her unconscious and searches for the meteorite.

Having the confession from Sam Seeley, the UNIT crew race to his house to find the Auton in the act of taking the glowing orb.  They open fire, and Channing telepathically commands the Auton to retreat, leaving the meteorite in the hands of UNIT.  He switches to plan B and goes after Ransome, cutting a hole in the back of the tent and shooting him with the Auton's "hand-gun".  Channing orders "total destruction" and the Auton fires a powerful shot, vapourising Ransome, leaving no trace.


When the Brigadier finds Ransome gone, he presumes he's been kidnapped and taken back to the factory.  The Doctor, Liz and the Brigadier go to Auto Plastics and question Hibbert about Ransome's allegations.  Hibbert passes it off as Ransome being jealous and making up stories to discredit the company.  Whilst they are there though, the Brigadier spots Channing through one of the opaque windows.

He decides to get clearance from Major General Scobie to storm the place.  He calls Scobie who agrees to come and meet him, but as he puts the phone down, the doorbell rings.  Scobie answers the door to see a shiny plastic version of himself staring back at him,


The Brigadier takes a call from Major General Scobie who tells him that Auto Plastics is catagorically off limits and no action is to be taken.

Knowing that the meteors contain life forms that can inherit bodies, the Doctor figures out with the help of Liz and the Brigadier that it's likely one was used to inhabit the "facsimile" of Scobie that was due to be sent to Madame Tusaudes.  They decide that checking out the museum is the logical next step whilst the Brigadier goes over the Generals head to get clearance to storm the factory.

Once at Madame Tusaudes, the Doctor and Liz find that many world leaders have had plastic facsimiles done of them.  The tables are turned however when the Doctor finds that Scobie is wearing a watch that is set to the right time.  The dummy is in fact the immobilised Scobie himself!


Back at the plastics factory, Hibbert talks to Channing about the plan.  Channing reveals that the life force from the meteorites has created a body for the swarm leader to inhabit.  The body is sat lifeless within the metal box hidden inside the old workshop.


Hibbert is concerned at the fact that UNIT have the swarm leader.  Channing reassures him that they will retrieve it with the help of Major General Scobie's facsimile, and they will activate all the Autons the following day.

As predicted, the Scobie facsimile turns up at UNIT HQ and demands Captain Munroe turns over the meteorite.

As night comes, the exhibits at Madame Tusaudes are closed.  When the security guard leaves, the Doctor and Liz come out of hiding.  They are forced to hide once more however as Channing and Hibbert enter the exhibit.  They activate the dummies and supervise them moving out into the world to take control of their respective offices.  Channing leaves but Hibbert finds the Doctor and Liz hiding.  The Doctor tries to convince Hibbert to break the mind control Channing has over him.  Channing returns to see what the problem is, but Hibbert doesn't give up the Doctors location.

Once they return to the factory, Channing and Hibbert are given the swarm leader meteorite.  Channing transfers the life essence to the creature and it begins to pulsate.  Hibbert is anxious of a UNIT attack, but Channing says he's ready for them, explaining that all the Autons will be activated at dawn.


Back at UNIT HQ, the Doctor uses the facts learned from his encounter with Hibbert to build a machine capable of jamming telepathic waves to subjects.


As dawn arrives, the Autons activate.  Shop windows smash and dozens of Auton shop dummies emerge onto the streets of London, shooting innocent civilians and Police at will.


Once the Doctor has perfected his device, the Brigadier confirms he will assault the factory to get the Doctor close enough to Channing so they can stop the invasion.

Over at the factory, Hibbert finally frees himself of the mental control and begins smashing up the metal box containing the creature.


He confronts Channing, who says it is a Nestene.  They have colonised thousands of planets in the past and now they will do the same to Earth.  Hibbert attacks the Nestene in the tank again, but this time he's vaporised by one of the Autons.

As promised, UNIT assaults the plastics factory and are met by a host of Autons.  Major General Scobie turns up and demands that the Brigadier steps down.



To everyone's surprise, the Doctor uses his nifty sonic blocking device and Scobie falls to the floor in agony, being reduced to an inanimate plastic dummy once more.


The real General Scobie awakens in Madame Tusaudes.

As the UNIT soldiers battle the Autuons, the Doctor and Liz make their way to the old workshop where they find the Nestene.  They give Channing the option of surrendering or they will destroy the Nestenes, but Channing triumphantly yells "nothing can destroy the Nestenes" and he switches the incubator tank to full power.


The Doctor tells Liz to switch on his jamming device, but it doesn't work.


The Nestene's tentacled alien body bursts out of the incubator and wraps its coils around the Doctor trying to kill him.


At the last second, Liz finds the fault in the jamming device and corrects it, allowing the Doctor to blast the creature with the sonic disruption.  Cut off from the rest of the Autons and having its own body closed down, the Nestene consciousness drifts off back into the depths of space.  They find that even Channing himself was an Auton and is now little more than a plastic dummy.


Back at UNIT HQ, the Doctor is congratulated by the Brigadier on defeating the creature.  He asks the Doctor to stay on a scientific advisor, which the Doctor agrees to do, but only if he can have a new wardrobe of clothes like the ones he stole from the medical consultant, and a vintage car too.

The Brigadier reluctantly agrees but says he doesn't even know the Doctor's name. The Doctor smiles and says "Smith...Doctor John Smith."



Trivia

  • With the exception of the TV Movie (and the Peter Cushing one's), this is the only time when a Doctor Who story has been produced entirely on film as opposed to video tape.  This is because there was a strike at TV centre and so Derrick Sherwin told the bosses to give him enough film and he'd go out and do it himself.
  • Speaking of Derrick Sherwin, he was the guy who played the security guard at UNIT HQ when the Doctor turns up in the vintage car
  • As for Jon Pertwee being cast as the new Doctor, he heard on the grapevine that the BBC were looking for another actor to play the star role.  His friend told him to take a punt at it and so he got his agent to call the Doctor Who production office.  As it turned out, his name was in the top three anyway.  Knowing this, Jon played coy and made them take him out for quite a few meals before he finally said yes, which is why his face is never shown in The War Games.
  • Less interesing, but worth mentioning is the fact that the crew weren't allowed to smash any glass on the high street, so that's why the camera cuts away as the Auton dummies break out of the shop windows


What worked


  • The setup of UNIT is quite well done.  It's clear that Liz Shaw is Dana Scully, the Brigadier is Walter Skinner and this is all the X Files twenty some years ahead of its time.
  • The number of sub-plots going on is great.  A real mix of conflicts
  • The guy playing Channing does "intense" very well indeed
  • In fact, most of the acting is great
  • Yes, the monsters do look a bit lame, but the concept of dummies coming to life is a tried and tested horror trope that's used here to maximum effect
  • The comedy is genuinely funny, just look at the scene with the Doctor and his shoes
  • If the comedy is great, the brutality is even more shocking.  The body count in this is pretty high, and the show undertakes this without blinking, even showing dead bloodied driver in full colour for the first time.


What didn't work


  • The Doctor's gurning when he's being strangled by the tentacled Nestene
  • Liz Shaw is a little bit too accepting, given her adamant stance at the beginning of the story that this is all hog wash
  • Why does the Brigadier expect the Doctor to run off when he never has before?
  • The explanation for the Nestenes is a bit dubious.  I mean, what if they landed on a primitive planet incapable of manufacturing?  
  • The Madame Tusaudes bit is also really confusing.  Why would such a reputable company allow a doll factory to exibit works there?  Why would foreign leaders all agree in such a short space to have them done and how can the factory produce them so quick?
  • As a matter of fact, why does the Doctor hang around there at all?  Surely the top priority is storming the factory

Overall Feelings

You would be forgiven for having a strong case of Deja Vu here.  Aliens attacking London at dawn, the Doctor creating some kind of jamming device and assaulting a factory with soldiers.  Yes, this is effectively a remake of The Invasion, which didn't necessarily need remaking.

I can only presume that Derrick Sherwin in his desire to create an Earth based, Quatermass style show, returned to his base attempt at such a premise.

But where the Invasion was focused on Tobias Vaughn, this shows no such compunction to highlight Channing or even Hibbert as the stars.  It's very clear that the focus is on the Doctor. Despite a good introduction to the UNIT organisation, the Brigadier and Liz are clearly stalling for time and carrying the show until Jon Pertwee gets out of bed and does the problem solving.

What's great is that from the start this is wonderfully complicated with at least five characters having conflicting goals in the first episode alone.  This sadly peters out, but we get solid performances throughout.

Just like the Invasion, Spearhead from Space shows a lack of scope resorting to killing a few innocent civilians on an otherwise deserted high street, but the shock and unapologising brutality of it more than makes up for the lack of people or the dodgy plastic masks.

So, is this an improvement on the Invasion.  No, I don't think it quite manages to top the invasion, but what it does do is convey the scope and complexity of the former show whilst also giving a good background and setup to UNIT.  And it does it all in four parts.

Rating

10 out of 10!

A compact and good representation of a brilliant story, with the added horrifying image of shop dummies gunning civilians down in the middle of the street.

Rewatchability Factor

8 out of 10

Quick, quirky and interesting, if slightly dated by today's standards

Watch this if you liked...


  • Rose (Doctor Who, Series 9)


Consulting the Matrix

Which do you prefer?  This or the Invasion?