Sunday, 15 March 2026

Episode 200: Fury From The Deep (3)


Synopsis:
The Doctor warns his friends not to touch the piece of seaweed they have found on the floor of the Harris' living quarters, pointing out that Victoria has said that it can move. He sends Harris back to the compound to arrange for Maggie to be transferred to its medical bay, then carefully collects up the seaweed - intending to take it to the TARDIS to examine it properly there.
As they leave, they fail to notice fronds of seaweed sprouting from the comatose Maggie's sleeve.
Van Lutyens informs Robson and the Chief Engineer that he is sure there is some living organism at the base of the impeller shaft, and it is this which is causing the blockages. Robson dismisses the idea and sticks to his own belief that it is a mechanical fault - even though they have all heard the heartbeat sound.
The TARDIS has drifted to shore. The seaweed sample has been taken into the Doctor's laboratory where Victoria is running some tests on a small piece of it - the rest being placed in a glass tank. They have discovered that it emits a toxic gas, and under the microscope see movement.
Harris learns from Price that their doctor still hasn't returned from D Rig, and communications are still down. Harris begins organising his wife's transfer to the medical bay, telling Van Lutyens and Robson that she has been poisoned by some form of gas. The latter is more concerned that Harris has lost their prisoners, whom he still believes to be saboteurs.
The impeller starts up again - only to stop moments later. Robson is becoming increasingly agitated by events and continues to ignore the Dutchman's advice to shut off the gas flow and conduct a thorough inspection. He accuses Harris and Van Lutyens of deliberately trying to damage his reputation.
He goes off to rest in his cabin for half an hour, and Van Lutyens lays out his plan for what they ought to do next - including locking down the compound and evacuating the rigs.
The Chief reluctantly agrees to approach Robson with their plan, hoping he will listen if they all present a united case.
In the TARDIS, the Doctor has found an old book which has an illustration of a ship being attacked by tentacles rising from the sea. It dates back to the 18th Century. Showing it to Victoria, she confirms that this resembles what she saw in the oxygen storeroom.
The main mass of seaweed they brought has been fed natural gas, and they suddenly discover that it has grown in size and is emitting toxic fumes. It threatens to climb out of its tank. Victoria screams and it retreats before the Doctor seals it in. He deduces that the creatures feed on natural gas, converting it to a toxic form.
Robson refuses to listen to Van Lutyens, Harris and the Chief, and they see that he is becoming increasingly unhinged. Van Lutyens approaches Price and asks him to contact his superiors in The Hague. He will ask them to put pressure on Robson's own superiors in London for action to be taken.
Mr Oak creeps along the corridor and locks Robson in his room, before operating the ventilation controls. Robson cries out for help as he smells the room begin to fill with gas.
Luckily Harris is nearby and he frees his boss - and spots seaweed tentacles and foam emerging from the vent just before he slams shut the door. Robson runs off.
The Doctor and his companions return to the Harris home and find it once again full of gas. The Doctor and Victoria go to the bedroom and find it full of foam, with a seaweed tentacle lashing around in its midst. Victoria screams and it retreats. They notice that the bed is empty, and assume that Maggie has been taken to the medical bay already.
They then hear a shout from Jamie, who had gone to the kitchen to check for the gas source. He has been forced to climb up onto a table as the room is filling up with foam. Another tentacle is reaching for him. The Doctor and Victoria mount an external set of stairs to the roof and open the kitchen skylight. They are able to pull Jamie to safety.
Harris takes Van Lutyens to Robson's room, but there is no trace now of gas or the creature responsible for it. The Dutchman still accepts his story, however.
He orders Harris to take charge and suggests Robson be found before he harms himself or causes any damage.
Harris notifies the Chief and Price that he is taking control, and instructs the latter to contact Megan Jones in London, British director of ESGO.
As they head back to the compound, Victoria expresses her disquiet about their lifestyle to the Doctor - how they are seemingly always being put in danger.
Harris announces that Jones will be here in a few hours, but worries how he is going to justify taking over. Robson was placed in charge here at Jones' insistence and she regards him highly.
The Doctor arrives and informs them of his findings regarding the seaweed creature. It is a parasite, which latches onto other organisms - including people - and produces the toxic gas as a means of defence.
Harris is then shocked to learn that his wife wasn't brought to the medical bay after all - and the Doctor tells him she wasn't at their home.
She is on the beach with Robson, her hands and face now covered in weed-like fronds. She confirms with him that he knows what he must do, before calmly walking out into the sea.
Robson watches silently from the shoreline, until she disappears beneath the waves...

Data:
Written by Victor Pemberton
Recorded: Saturday 9th March 1968 - Lime Grove Studio D
First broadcast: 5.15pm, Saturday 30th March 1968
Ratings: 7.7 million / AI 56
VFX: Peter Day
Designer: Peter Kindred
Director: Hugh David


Critique:
In the third of his scripts Victor Pemberton outlined the fact that seaweed was feeding on natural gas, which it then converted to a toxic form. Maggie was said to be transforming into a weed creature at the conclusion. Her infection was described as a "frond-like weed formation growing down her exposed arm", and later "a small formation of hair-like weed on her neck and face".
When the Doctor examined the weed sample in the TARDIS - "its tendrils hanging menacingly over the side of the edge of the tank, covered in foam" - he pressed a button and "the lights dimmed to near darkness as a flap on the wall reveals a projector screen. He presses another button and the microscope slide appears on the screen".
In his radio drama The Slide, the scientist Gomez (Roger Delgado) had examined some of the sentient mud in similar fashion using the local school's aquarium.
Derrick Sherwin rewrote a number of sequences including the rescue of Jamie from the kitchen, Robson's near breakdown in the impeller room, and Van Lutyens urging Harris to take charge.

This episode included more filming than the previous week.
On Tuesday 5th February the sequence was filmed at Botany Bay of Maggie (June Murphy) walking out into the sea, watched by Robson (Victor Maddern) which would form the cliff-hanger to the episode. Murphy, wearing latex seaweed make-up, did not realise that the shallows were so extensive and so had to go quite a way out into the freezing waters. She eventually had to go down on her knees and duck down under the water to fully submerge. She was then unable to hear the crew calling the end of the action, and someone had to wade out and fetch her.
Later that week filming moved to Ealing and the scene with the foam retreating from Victoria's scream at the Harris home was recorded - the film being reversed to show it withdrawing.
Use of the BBC foam machine in the TV studio would be difficult to manage (and dangerous, as the foam was water-based) so any scene involving it was mounted at Ealing where conditions could be better controlled. This included the sequence where Jamie is threatened by the foam in the Harris' kitchen, and his rescue by the Doctor and Victoria through the skylight. Putting ceilings on sets was a problem in studio as well, due to the need to light sets from overhead rigs and get microphones into position.
During the period of rehearsals for this instalment, additional filming took place at Ealing on Monday 4th - Wednesday 6th March for scenes which would go towards the climax to the final episode.

Doctor Who's 200th episode went into studio on the evening of Saturday 9th March. The session began with a re-enactment of the ending to the previous instalment, but then the episode proceeded with recording out of order. All of the scenes in the Harris' living quarters were recorded first.
The weed emerging from the vent in Robson's cabin as seen by Harris had been filmed earlier at Ealing along with the similar shot seen at the cliff-hanger to part one.
A new set this week was the TARDIS laboratory, seen for the first time. This was simply a small set with a television monitor on which the microscope slide could be shown - actually the same footage which had represented the fungus in The Web of Fear - plus a fish tank in which the latex weed prop could be held. Sherwin had reworked this scene just before recording.


Shortly after completing this episode Patrick Troughton accompanied Frazer Hines and Debbie Watling to a pub and told them about his wish to leave the series. However, he needed the regular income due to having two families to support, plus a large tax bill to pay. He already knew that Watling was leaving, and learned that Hines was also looking to go soon. Troughton then decided that he would stay in the role for one more year, by which time he would be financially stable. With his contract up for renewal that week, he asked for some better conditions such as an extra week for filming, to avoid giving up days off, and hopefully a reduction in the number of episodes each year. These were some of the things he had previously discussed with director Barry Letts during the making of The Enemy of the World
In the end he would be granted an extra week's holiday, and be excused location filming on two of the stories planned for Season 6.

Another famous scene from the story, noted for its creepiness, is when Maggie Harris calmly walks out into the sea as Robson watches from the beach. It's certainly a striking image and the viewers of the day would have assumed that Maggie might be committing suicide. You'll recall last time that the script had been amended to ensure that the audience knew that she wasn't killed by the toxic gas - for fear they would assume she was some sort of zombie in this episode.
Considering that they cut one short scene where you saw the seaweed fronds on someone's arm later in the story, I'm surprised that the Australian censors did not eliminate this sequence, or at least trim it down a bit.
The suggestion in the dialogue is that the creature isn't actually the seaweed itself - Victoria talks of microscopic things wriggling on its surface - and the Doctor claims he hasn't worked out the relationship between the creature and the weed yet. This implies that the real threat comprises millions of tiny organisms which simply use the seaweed as a host and manipulate it.

It is unusual at this time to feature a TARDIS scene in the middle of a story. Some recent stories such as The Ice Warriors and The Web of Fear didn't have a TARDIS interior scene at all, whilst the console room only featured at the beginning of The Abominable Snowmen, or at the conclusion of The Enemy of the World. In the first Yeti story, the Doctor does return to the TARDIS mid-story to fetch some equipment, but there wasn't an interior scene accompanying this. Usually, if the TARDIS interior is going to appear, it is only at the start of the opening instalment, designed to introduce viewers to the new storyline and deliver the regulars to their latest destination.
The reason for this is generally the desire not to have to erect the TARDIS console room set for an episode, freeing up studio space for that week's sets.
This week we are actually being treated to a brand new room in the TARDIS - the Doctor's laboratory. The only time we had seen anything similar was in The Web Planet, when an alcove off the main console room seemed to be used as a work area for the Doctor.

As mentioned previously, one of the main rewrites Sherwin carried out on Pemberton's story was to pave the way for Victoria's departure. In the opening episode she was unhappy at having to go and wait in the crew cabin whilst the Doctor and Jamie went off investigating - leading to her coming under attack by the weed creature. 
In this instalment she begins to voice her desire for a quieter life:
Victoria: "Doctor, why is it that we always land up in trouble?"
Doctor: "Well Victoria, it's the spice of life, my dear".
Victoria: "Oh well, I'm not so sure. I don't really like being scared out of my wits every second".
Doctor: "Is something wrong?"
Victoria: "Well I just wish that once... Oh, never mind".

Trivia:
  • The ratings continue their gradual slide - but the appreciation figure actually improves.
  • In interviews Frazer Hines would always claim that his reason for leaving was due to pressure from his agent to return to higher profile - and more lucrative - movie work. He had appeared in films as a child actor - including Hammer's X... The Unknown (1956) and A King In New York (1957), starring Charlie Chaplin.
  • Watling, on the other hand, hoped to do more theatre work - though her agent stated that they were working on a film role for her.
  • The animated Episode 3 includes a little visual in-joke. In the Doctor's laboratory is a test tube labelled RR-200 - "RR" being the production code for Fury From The Deep and this being the 200th episode.

Friday, 13 March 2026

The Master Plan Find


The finding of the two missing episodes was announced by the Film is Fabulous team. They were in the collection of someone who has recently died, and who is said to have mostly collected transport material - dealing with trains and canals. His family wished the collection catalogued and preserved. Some films were water damaged, but the collector seems to have looked after The Nightmare Begins and Devil's Planet.
How they came into his possession, no-one knows.
We already have the second episode of The Daleks' Master Plan, so these now give us the whole first quarter of the story.
As well as having more Daleks material, and more of William Hartnell's performance as the original Doctor, these episodes are significant for being among the very few to feature companion Katarina, as played by Adrienne Hill. She joins Peter Purves as Steven. The Nightmare Begins also provides us with the very first appearance by Nicholas Courtney in the series, as he plays space security agent Bret Vyon throughout.
We can also look forward to more of Kevin Stoney as Mavic Chen, and the alien Planetarians.
Devil's Planet, meanwhile, introduces the criminal inhabitants of Desperus, including Kirksen.
If you're familiar with the soundtrack then there'll be a lot of sequences to look forward to actually seeing, be they the Doctor's magnetic chair in action, the Dalek spaceport or the execution of Zephon.
What will the Screamers look like, if they are seen at all, and are there any spaceship model shots other than at the spaceport?
With five episodes now in the archive, it would be nice to see this story animated for completion and released, as Season 3 is likely to be the last to be added to The Collection due to the amount of missing material and absence of telesnaps.

Update: Apparently the episodes will be available from Saturday 4th April on the BBC iPlayer.

More Master Plan!


It's been announced this morning that two more episodes of The Daleks' Master Plan have been found, and will be released on the BBC iPlayer at Easter. The episodes are the first and third of the adventure - The Nightmare Begins and Devil's Planet. 
This brings the missing episodes total down to 95.

Thursday, 12 March 2026

What's Wrong With... Silver Nemesis


When you've only got four stories to produce in a season, you would think that the producer and script editor could at least make them different...
The first thing that strikes you about Silver Nemesis is its similarity to the season 25 opener, Remembrance of the Daleks
Once again we have the Doctor revisiting something he did a long time ago - though we never got to see it - which is going to have an impact on the present. It's the Earth which will be affected once again. The threat revolves around some ancient Gallifreyan device which can be used as a super-weapon, which the Doctor was somehow able to take away with him when he left the planet with Susan.
The Doctor basically tricks the villains into using said device, so that it destroys them instead.
By screening the Dalek story first, this looks like a weak imitation.

Remembrance of the Daleks featured the junkyard at 76 Totters Lane and Coal Hill School and other references to An Unearthly Child - yet Silver Nemesis is supposed to be the anniversary story?
There's cameo appearances by a number of people associated with the show - actors, writers and directors, including Nicholas Courtney - but they all appear in group shots with their backs to us, so what was the point? If you hadn't read about this somewhere, you'd never know they were there - just a bunch of extras.
The story really isn't very good, and certainly isn't well regarded - so why give it to someone who had never written for the show before and was relatively new to the business anyway?

As for the plot, we're told that the Doctor sent the Nemesis statue into space to stop it falling into the hands of Lady Peinforte in 1638 - though she clearly must have possessed it at some point for her to have fashioned the living metal into a likeness of herself. Did the Doctor deliberately put it into an orbit which meant it passed the Earth every quarter century?
As each orbit results in some major upheaval on Earth, then isn't the Doctor responsible for centuries of death and destruction? If launching it into space was just to get it out of Peinforte's hands, then why not simply move it somewhere else afterwards - like parking it on the dark side of the Moon or in orbit around Pluto? Why leave it going round the Earth for 350 years?
And why have it land in 1988? It can't have been in a decaying orbit as its passing was too regular. It must have been programmed to come back in November 1988 - but the question is why.

How could the Doctor have known that Lady Peinforte would be able to time travel to her home in that year, or that the Cybermen were going to turn up looking for the statue? Or that a bunch of mercenaries led by an old Nazi war criminal would come looking for it. Is it all just coincidence? A very big one if it is.
If it's been going round and round for 350 years, why did the Cybermen not simply hijack it in space?
And one everyone knows - the mathematician employed by Lady Peinforte couldn't possibly have known that the calendar was going to be amended, losing 11 days on the adoption of the Gregorian calendar by Great Britain in 1752. His calculations ought to be out.
Do we know if major upheavals actually occurred every 25 years between 1663 - its first pass - and 1963 - it's last pass? JFK was assassinated in '63, but the world was much closer to disaster two years before that with the Cuban Missile Crisis.
If the statue only reaches critical mass when complete, you also have to ask why the Doctor didn't do anything sooner about the bow and the arrow.

There's mention of Roundheads being about when the Doctor first launched the statue into space, and it's the Doctor who says this early in Episode 2. But the Roundheads weren't founded until 1641. (It refers to their haircuts, not their helmets, and was initially a term of abuse).
When the Doctor first visits Lady Peinforte's home with Ace he states that it has been months since he was last there - so it has to already be 1639. But all the dialogue, and even captions, state it's 1638.
Another timing issue is the speed with which De Flores and his mercenaries manage to get from South America to Windsor - managing it in a matter of hours when they've only just worked out the date and location of the landing.
And did they book into their hotel and hire the van dressed like that?
It's looking unseasonably warm for late November in England, and an awful lot seems to happen in broad daylight, which would only be about 8 hours maximum at that time of year.

As for the Cybermen - they are at their weakest here (until their heads start exploding due to the power of Love). Their spaceship manages to land and move around without the military swarming the area - considering they're next door to Heathrow Airport and Windsor Castle, and the Queen in is residence.
(Talking of which, the Doctor and Ace manage to get extremely close to the monarch before security bother doing anything about it).
The Cybermen are actually scared just to be in the vicinity of gold now, and are easily despatched by gold coins fired from a catapult - despite having armoured bodies.
Why do the Cybermen bother capturing De Flores and Karl - why not just shoot them? De Flores is given the earmuff-like devices, presumably to mentally condition him, yet they don't appear to have any effect on him.
The silvered coating on the new helmets of the Cybermen oxidised and turned a golden colour, rather defeating the whole "silver" theme of the story.
The Cybermen falling from the gantry are all too obviously dummies.

Another big problem for me is that there are far too many incidental characters in what is only a three part story - and yet it still feels padded. The skinheads are utterly pointless and add nothing to the story, as does Dorothea Remington. Dolores Gray was only cast in this so that JNT could have a big Broadway / West End star in the show for publicity value - even though she wasn't terribly well known to the general public. The peak of her career was in the 1950's. Her scenes with Lady Peinforte are at least funny.

Tuesday, 10 March 2026

P is for... Pritchard, Mrs


Stern, cold-hearted housekeeper of Gabriel Chase, a gloomy mansion in Perivale. The Doctor and Ace visited here in 1883 when it was in the possession of a man named Josiah Samuel Smith. Pritchard only assumed her role at night, after the day staff had left - unwilling to remain there after dark. Smith lived in the house with his ward Gwendoline, a guest named Redvers Fenn-Cooper, and a butler named Nimrod - identified by the Doctor as a Neanderthal. Fenn-Cooper had been an adventurer who had explored Africa, but now appeared to be mentally unstable.
Mrs Pritchard treated him cruelly and disliked Nimrod, but was kinder towards Gwendoline. She resented Ace's influence over the girl.
Hidden beneath the house was a spaceship belonging to an entity known as Light, which was hibernating after conducting a survey of life throughout the galaxy. It had been contact with Light's energies which had deranged Fenn-Cooper. Nimrod had been a specimen collected by it during its survey. Locked up in the ship was another creature called Control. She and Smith had been agents of Light. One would interact with the environment, allowed to be influenced by it, whilst the other remained behind as an experimental control subject.
Smith had assumed the role of an English gentleman but he sought even greater status - by having Fenn-Cooper assassinate Queen Victoria. 
It transpired that the housekeeper was actually Lady Margaret Pritchard, wife of the house's owner Sir George, and Gwendoline's mother. Smith had killed Sir George and hypnotised his wife and daughter. They recalled their true identity and were reunited, just before Light turned them both to stone to prevent them evolving. 

Played by: Sylvia Syms. Appearances: Ghost Light (1989)
  • Syms was a huge star of British cinema throughout the 1950's and '60's, appearing in such classics as Ice Cold In Alex (1958) and Victim (1961). She guested in many TV series in the 1960's including The Saint (multiple times in different roles), The Baron, Danger Man, Paul Temple and The Strange Report. Latterly (she died in 2023) she was a regular in EastEnders.
  • William Hartnell played her father in the drama The World Ten Times Over (1963).

P is for... Prisoner Zero


In its natural form, a huge snake-like creature with jagged fangs, it had the ability to shape-shift and take on the appearance of other beings with whom it had formed a psychic link. It derived its name from its captivity by the Atraxi in their maximum security jail. The explosion of the Doctor's TARDIS caused a crack to appear randomly across the universe, and one of these occurred in its cell - linking it to the bedroom on Earth of a girl named Amelia Pond, who lived in the village of Leadworth with her aunt. The Doctor met her there in 1996 as a child when the TARDIS crash-landed in her garden just after he had regenerated.
Prisoner Zero escaped through the crack and lived undetected in Amelia's home for 12 years, concealing itself in a bedroom whose door it hid behind a perception filter.
It was discovered by the Doctor and an adult Amelia - now Amy - in 2008. It had caused several inhabitants of the village to fall into comatose states, using their likenesses to move around unnoticed. When the Doctor opened the crack in the bedroom wall, it alerted the Atraxi to Prisoner Zero's location. They lay siege to the Earth, threatening to destroy it if their captive was not handed over. Prisoner Zero knew that this would mean certain execution.
The creature could not only assume the form of an individual but multiple beings - even of different species. The effort to maintain the illusion was great and it often revealed itself through the appearance of its fangs or by speaking through the wrong body - such as when it impersonated a man and his dog, and a mother with two children.
The Doctor eventually lured the creature to the local hospital, where Amy's fiancé Rory worked as a nurse. Here, the Atraxi recaptured it before they could destroy the Earth. Before it was taken away, it cryptically warned the Doctor to beware "the Silence"...


Voiced by: William Wilde. Played by: Olivia Colman, Edin and Merin Monteath, Marcello Magni.
Appearances: The Eleventh Hour (2010).
  • William Wilde had previously played a Draconian captain in Frontier in Space (credited as Bill Wilde).
  • Now one of Britain's most popular actors, Colman would go on to win an Academy Award for her portrayal of Queen Anne in The Favourite
  • She would also play Queen Elizabeth II, in the third and fourth seasons of The Crown.
  • She first came to prominence in a number of comedic roles, in Peep Show, Green Wing and the film Hot Fuzz.
  • A breakout role was opposite David Tennant in Chris Chibnall's Broadchurch.
  • She appears, as herself, in The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot, made for the 50th Anniversary.
  • Marcello Magni was the voice of Pingu the Penguin in the CBBC series.

P is for... Primords


When human beings came into physical contact with a strange green slime, released from deep within the Earth's crust, a genetic mutation took place. They reverted to a primordial state - hirsute and savage. With some individuals, the process took time. First the skin would begin to turn green and they would experience a crippling ringing sound in their heads. They would crave increasing levels of heat. 
The Doctor and UNIT encountered these creatures at a drilling project - nicknamed "Inferno" - in central England. Professor Stahlman believed that a gas found only deep underground could be exploited as a new source of cheap energy and he refused to heed scientific advice in his pursuit of it. A technician named Slocum was the first to be infected by the slime, and he became homicidal. Anyone attacked who survived became infected and would begin to mutate. It took multiple bullet wounds to kill a Primord, though they were susceptible to cold temperatures.
Stahlman recklessly handled some of the slime and became infected as well, though he was able to keep the mutation in check for a time due to his obsessive nature.
As the animalistic behaviour took over and they mutated fully, victims felt compelled to make others like themselves as well as kill - deliberately exposing them to the slime. This fate befell the Sergeant Benton from an alternative Earth. Here, the professor's project was much more advanced and the Doctor encountered several fully mutated Primords.
They perished along with the planet - destroyed by the natural forces unleashed by the drilling.
The Doctor was able to return to the normal universe where only one person fully mutated - Professor Stahlman. Stunned by CO2 fire extinguishers, he was shot dead by the Brigadier.


Played by: Olaf Pooley (Stahlman), Walter Randall (Slocum), Derek Ware (Private Wyatt), Ian Fairbairn (Bromley), Dave Carter, Pat Gorman, Walter Henry, Philip Ryan, Peter Thompson. 
Appearances: Inferno (1970)
  • The Primords are never named on screen. The name was given to them by producer Barry Letts - derived from "primordial".
  • The script suggested ape-like creatures - a devolved version of humanity - but director Douglas Camfield opted to make them more like werewolves.
  • Olaf Pooley was resistant to wearing the full Primord make-up.
  • Walter Randall was one of Camfield's stock repertory of actors. After playing the priest Tonila in The Aztecs he was El Akir in The Crusade, and then Egyptian warrior Hyksos in The Daleks' Master Plan. He was also an IE guard in The Invasion, and finally one of the human overseers in Planet of the Spiders.
  • Ian Fairbairn was another of the Camfield rep company - appearing in The Invasion as Gregory and The Seeds of Doom as Dr Chester. He had earlier played Questa in The Macra Terror.
  • Dave Carter was, like Pat Gorman, a regular extra / monster performer in the series. He had already played the Old Silurian in Season 7, as well as a plague-infected ambulance driver in the same story.