6 Episodes
Aired between 4th February 1978 and 11th March 1978
Written by David Agnew
Produced by Graham Williams
Directed by Gerald Blake
Synopsis
The Doctor mysteriously makes an alliance with a malicious force of aliens and goes to Gallifrey.
Once there, he demands to claim his right to the Presidency, despite objections from Cardinal Borusa.
The Doctor's claim is upheld and he is crowned, giving his mind access to the memories of past Presidents through the matrix. The aliens and the Doctor are hoping to gain access to the Great Key of Rassilon, but it is an artefact long lost and every successive President has been given the mission to find the great key.
Through the Doctor's ruthless barking orders, Leela is banished outside the citadel of Gallifrey, and his room is decorated so that it's lead lined.
Once inside, he finally tells Cardinal Borusa that the aliens, called Vardan's, are a race so powerful that they can travel along any wavelength and read thoughts. He's had to shield his mind and act out his ruthless ways in order to lull them into a false sense of security.
As part of the Doctor's plan, he's filled K9 in on it, and sends the robotic dog off to blow up the machinery operating the Citadel's transduction barrier.
Leela, very confused at the Doctor's strange actions but convinced he's got good intentions, evades capture so that she can stay in the citadel and help him. She meets Rodan, a female Time Lord who works traffic control.
Together, they are forced outside the citadel where they meet up with primitive Gallifreyan's and begin to form a fighting force to storm the citadel and rescue the Doctor.
Meanwhile, the Vardan's turn up as shiny tin foil ghosts, but are eventually convinced to materialise fully once the great key has been found and a hole in the Citadel's force field has been created.
The Vardan's it turns out are human.
Once they're fully materialised, it's a simple matter for the Doctor and K9 to use Gallifrey's technology to send them back to their home planet and stick them in a time loop. The threat hasn't ended however, as the hole in the force field and the destroyed transduction barrier leads others to invade the planet, namely the Sontarans, led by Commander Stor.
The Doctor bluffs his way out of the panopticon and the Sontaran's give chase to him, Cardinal Borusa, Leela, the guard Captain Andred, and Rodan.
The chase takes them through the bowels of the TARDIS and the Doctor leads them off, leaving K9 and Rodan to use the Great Key of Rassilon to assemble a De-Mat Gun, a weapon of mass destruction.
Ultimately, the Doctor is forced to use the gun on the Sontarans, wiping them out and blanking his own memory in the process.
Everyone cheers now that Gallifrey is safe, and the Doctor goes to leave but Leela decides to stay with Andred, and K9 chooses her over the Doctor. The Doctor's alright however, he simply pushes out a box from the backroom that contains K9 MII.
Trivia
- This was another story rushed into production at the last moment as David Weir who was due to write the season ending had a story idea that would require a blockbuster movie budget to realise. A replacement was therefore written as a collaboration between Graham Williams, Antony Read and writer David Weir. The Pseudonym David Agnew was used.
- If the relationship between Andred and Leela seems strange, it is. Louise Jameson really wanted to leave the show, in big part because of her clashes with Tom Baker. Graham Williams was confident he could talk her round to staying longer, so he left her fate a bit open ended in the script. When he finally accepted that she would go, that's how they wrote her out.
- The character of Rodan was in a way a prototype for Romana (see the next story). For whatever reason, they decided to re-design the Time Lady, but that's alright because we get to see Mary Tamm for a full season
- The shots for the TARDIS interiors were filmed at an abandoned mental asylum.
- The Sontaran that goes flying when he jumps across the pool was a genuine trip, but they kept it in
The Review
On the surface of it, The Invasion of Time has some pretty cool ideas. Picture it, the Doctor has seemingly turned traitor to overcome his most powerful foe, an enemy that can be everywhere and can read your mind. This could have been ingenious. I feel what we get is a half hearted attempt at it.
Let's start with the Vardan's. Even though they are human, they are one of the most powerful forces the Doctor has ever come across but yet no one has ever heard of them. Despite the immense potential we're told they have, they do nothing. Not one thing beyond yelling about needing discipline. They bring a battleship to Gallifrey, even though they don't need it to travel anywhere, and there's three of them. Some invasion force.
Once the Vardan's are gone, the Sontaran's arrive and act like they know all about the Vardans, almost like they were the little fish that lead the mighty Sontaran's to their destination. But what the hell have the Sontaran's got that the Vardan's need, and why would they take orders from them? Oh, and again, despite an invasion fleet turning up, only three or four Sontarans bother to come down to Gallifrey. None of it makes sense: not the invasion fleets, not the de-mat gun, nothing.
If one thing could be taken away from this, then it's the start of Tom Baker's indulgence into comedy. Whilst there's been a quip here and there for some time, from this story on, there's a distinct realisation that Tom Baker has started to believe his own hype. Whilst some of the interactions are genuinely amusing, they get more and more and more "zany" with the effect of the viewer not being able to take the drama seriously because it's lead character doesn't.
The Invasion of Time is a barely bearable mess, with almost full episodes devoted to running through corridors. It was a chore to watch and one that won't be watched again by me for a long, long time.
Rating
4 out of 10
3 out of 10
- The Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS (Doctor Who, Series 7)