Synopsis:
Zoe and Cully have just arrived back at the survey unit by travel capsule, seeking proof of the invaders to show to the ruling council. It has just been visited by the Quarks, who are now ordered by Toba to destroy the installation.
The building begins to collapse around them...
The attack is halted by the arrival of Rago, who is angered that Toba is wasting resources on wanton destruction. The Quarks have limited energy supplies, and they are needed for their drilling operations. Rago orders that any survivors inside be taken alive.
Zoe and Cully manage to open the outer door of the unit - only to be confronted by one of the robots.
The Doctor and Jamie arrive at the Capitol and are granted an audience with Senex and the council.
Rago has been examining Teel more closely and is concerned that the Dulcians may be too physically weak to act as a slave labour force. He instructs Toba that the three prisoners, along with the two from the survey unit, be sent to work on one of the drill sites - their progress to be observed and collapse time noted.
One of the Quarks is sent back to the unit to capture any others who might arrive there.
The Doctor and Jamie are concerned to learn that Zoe and Cully have returned to the island. They struggle to convince the council that the Dominators pose a threat. If they want something on Dulkis, Senex states, then they will simply give it to them. Senex and Bovem also point out that the Dominators let them go - so what can there be to fear from them? Jamie is alarmed to hear that the Dulcians have no armies to defend themselves, being pacifists.
Cully and Zoe are waiting by the museum, where one of the drill sites is located. Discussing a means of escape, Zoe recalls the laser weapon which she saw inside.
Teel, Kando and Balan are sent to join them, accompanied by Quarks.
In the council chamber, video contact is established with the survey unit, and everyone is shocked to see it damaged - and a Quark visible on the screen. Only now does the council begin to accept what Cully and the Doctor have been trying to warn them about. The Doctor and Jamie realise that Zoe and the others are in danger, and insist on returning to the island immediately.
As they set off in a travel capsule, Jamie points out to the Doctor that they know there will be a Quark waiting for them at the survey unit. The Doctor decides that they must make a landing elsewhere on the island - and this will mean overriding the automatic guidance system. He opens a hatch and begins rewiring the controls, much to Jamie's consternation as they are still in flight.
The prisoners are put to work clearing rubble away from the drill site outside the museum, guarded by a pair of Quarks. Whilst Zoe and Cully want to escape and fight back, they find Balan and Kando unwilling to take any action - though Teel begins to accept that it would be wrong to submit.
Rago is surprised to learn that of all the prisoners, it is a female who is proving the strongest - Zoe.
As Balan collapses and has to be moved to the side, Zoe attempts to slip into the museum to seize the weapon - only to find another Quark inside.
His rewiring completed, the Doctor warns Jamie to prepare for a landing.
The Dulcian council has called upon Tensa, Chairman of the Emergencies Committee, to attend them. He usually has to deal with natural disasters and accidents, and has never had to consider a threat of this nature. He informs Senex and the others that they have three options to respond: fight, flight, or capitulation. The Director is shocked. They cannot fight as they have no weapons or armies; they cannot flee as they have nowhere to go; and the idea of submission to some unknown aggressor is unthinkable. Tensa advises that for now they must simply wait, since they do not know for certain that the new arrivals on the island are hostile.
The travel capsule has landed on a hillside near the museum. The Doctor and Jamie set off to look for Zoe.
The prisoners are discussing what they should do next, if they do manage to get the weapon and destroy their guards. Teel recalls that the museum contains a bomb shelter, though he is not sure where the entrance is.
They are being observed from the hillside above by the Doctor and Jamie, who split up to try to make their way down to them.
It is Cully who manages to slip away from the work party into the building, and finds the weapon. He takes aim at one of the Quarks, but cannot get a clear shot. Just he gets one in his sights, he is interrupted by the arrival of Jamie.
The robots note that one of the party is missing.
The Doctor stumbles into Toba and is captured. The rest of the prisoners are being escorted along a path back to the spaceship and the Doctor is forced to join them. On hearing that Cully is missing, Toba returns to the museum with a trio of Quarks.
When Cully refuses to surrender, they begin to open fire on the building. Jamie takes aim and destroys one of the robots, which infuriates Toba.
The Quarks continue to bombard the museum building, with Jamie and Cully trapped inside...
Data:
Written by Norman Ashby
Recorded: Friday 31st May 1968 - Television Centre Studio TC3
First broadcast: 5.15pm, Saturday 24th August 1968
Ratings: 5.4 million / AI 55
VFX: Ron Oates
Designer: Barry Newbery
Director: Morris Barry
Additional cast: Brian Cant (Tensa)
Technically, this is the final episode of Doctor Who to have been written by Mervyn Haisman and Henry Lincoln - for reasons we will go into next week...
As previously mentioned, all the location work involving pyrotechnics was filmed on the same day at Gerrards Cross - Thursday 25th April. This included the partial destruction of the survey unit - a forced perspective model - and the Quark which is attacked by Jamie in this episode. A single dummy Quark was blown up, filmed from different angles so that the footage could be used to show different attacks in more than one episode.
Wendy Padbury was not free in the morning and so attended filming after lunch, including the sequence where Zoe and the Dulcian prisoners are escorted back to the spaceship, with the Doctor being forced to join them. It can clearly be seen that this is not Patrick Troughton, but his stand-in Chris Jeffries.
The next day had seen the travel capsule model footage filmed for this and the previous episode at the Puppet Theatre in Television Centre. A still photograph of the crash-landed capsule, its nose partially buried in the sand, was taken - to be inserted into this episode as a caption.
Joining the cast this week was the legendary Brian Cant, playing Chairman Tensa. For generations of children he was known as the presenter of series Play School and Play Away, as well as the voice of Trumpton, Camberwick Green and Chigley. As with many of the cast, he had previously worked with Morris Barry on Compact.
The Dominators was once again recorded at Television Centre but moved into Studio TC3 this week, where it would remain for the rest of the story.
Earlier on the day of recording, Troughton and Padbury recorded the brief exchange which would act as voice-over introduction for the repeat screening of The Evil of the Daleks.
This episode was allocated an extra 15 minutes recording, taking it up to 10pm. It was also recorded onto 35mm film, taken from a 625-line video monitor, for ease of editing.
The "Episode 3" caption was mistakenly omitted from the opening credits, which rolled over a filmed reprise of the cliff-hanger to the previous week's episode.
Senex's chair was now seen to have a TV monitor built into it, so that he could view the scenes from the damaged survey unit - fed from a camera on that set.
The first recording break was to allow Troughton and Hines to move from the council chamber set into the travel capsule. Its erratic flight was indicated simply through camera movement.
Camera masks were used to show the telescope view of the working party, as seen by the Doctor and Jamie, and to show the cross-hairs on the gun sight as Jamie and Cully tried to aim the laser weapon at a Quark.
Wendy Padbury suffered some wardrobe malfunctions throughout recording as the zip on the back of her dress often came loose.
The final recording break of the evening was to set up flash charges on the museum set to show it being blasted by the Quarks. The end credits ran over this attack, as the charges were detonated.
One small cut to the episode was made during the editing. This had the Doctor and Jamie pause as they left the council chamber to discuss the fact that there would be a Quark waiting for them when the got back to the survey unit - dialogue already covered in a travel capsule scene.
This week we start to see some action, though characters are still mainly going backwards and forwards, and men are debating in rooms. The lack of incident was the main issue of concern for Derrick Sherwin throughout the story, and would be the reason why it was eventually truncated.
The war museum, full of functional weapons, is a "Chekov's Gun" - i.e. if you show a revolver sitting on a table in Act One, then someone will have to have fired it by the end of Act Three.
Unless you really want to include something as a 'red herring', the narrative shouldn't include anything you don't intend to use.
The war museum exists here to show that this island was once the site of a nuclear bomb test, and an initial source of radiation - but the fact that it has working laser guns has to mean something for the plot.
(It's odd that there should be a museum dedicated to the Dulcians' warlike past, as a reminder to cherish their current peace-loving society - but located in a place that only a few students ever visit. And why does it contain working weaponry? Would an energy weapon still have power after 172 years? It is claimed that it is self-charging - though you saw a power cable at one point in Episode 2).
Chairman Tensa is introduced, head of the Emergencies Committee. Despite only having the information given to the council by Cully and the Doctor, plus the video of the Quark in the survey unit, he does initially appear to accept the fact that they are under threat. His advice? Fight, Flight or Surrender. That he should even advocate fighting as an option might show that this society isn't entirely pacifistic. In cut dialogue, Cully had said that one of his father's roles was to maintain their peace-loving existence - which might imply that their pacificism does not run very deeply.
However, Tensa then spoils things by reverting back to the threat only being hearsay at present, and they ought to simply wait and see what happens.
Certainly Balan and Kando are unwilling to get involved in any escape attempt which might involve attacking the Quarks - though it looks like she is simply bowing to the older man's advice. Balan's advice is simply that violence begets violence.
Teel, on the other hand, is beginning to stand up for himself and admits that it would be wrong to capitulate, though he isn't prepared to go quite as far as the rebellious Cully for now.
There's more visual comedy on show from the Doctor and Jamie. First of all there's the clowning around in the travel capsule as the Doctor dismantles the controls and does a spot of mid-air rewiring. At one point he falls head first into the workings and we see his legs waving in the air.
Later, there's the business with the telescope as Jamie snatches it away before the Doctor has a chance to use it. A little moment, but one indicative of the way Troughton and Hines worked together, and are one of the most popular Doctor / Companion combinations.
Apart from these scenes, the Doctor and Jamie have little to do in this episode - until the latter decides to go on the attack right at the end.
In the council chamber, Jamie gets increasingly frustrated by the attitude of the Dulcians, whilst the Doctor actually finds himself being distracted by some of their arguments:
The Doctor: "Because they are aggressive, callous and unfeeling. Don't expect them to act and think as you do. They're alien, from another planet"
Senex: "Well so are you, Doctor"
The Doctor: "Oh dear, you've got me there..."
As for Zoe, well it's nice to see her getting more to do. She gets captured and put on a work party - but immediately starts planning an escape, encouraging the others to contemplate helping. She also takes care of the weaker members of the party, and proves to be the strongest of the lot. This despite her academic background in the City and on the Wheel. The story is trying to say more that the Dulcians are physically rather weak through their indolent lifestyle, rather than that she is particularly strong.
- The ratings drop even further this week, to what will be the lowest figure for this story. The appreciation score remains constant however.
- Brian Cant had previously played Kert Gantry in the recently rediscovered The Nightmare Begins - the opening instalment of The Daleks' Master Plan. His son Richard will appear in the series in 2007, playing Kathy Nightingale's grandson in Blink.
- Now synonymous with the Fourth Doctor, the Second Doctor here enjoys a bag of jelly babies in the travel capsule. He favoured lemon sherbets in the last story.
- In the early spaceship scene where Kando wants the Dominators to leave Teel alone, a camera can just be glimpsed creeping into shot.
- Radio Times included a photograph of Jamie and Cully on the day's listings page in some regions. Note Dee Time at 6.15pm, presented by Simon Dee. Frazer Hines was desperate to appear on this chat show, but they were only interested in getting him along with Troughton - and the latter refused point blank to do TV interviews at this time.




























