The Doctor and his companions have been ushered into a black void by the Clockwork Soldiers. They hear the whinnying of a horse and Jamie recalls the nightmare he experienced in the TARDIS just before it broke up. They see a unicorn, which charges towards them...
The Doctor urges his companions to concentrate and believe that the animal is not real. Unicorns do not exist. Despite their fears, they accept what he says - and the creature turns into a statue.
The Doctor points out that things only appear real if you believe them to be so.
He states that he admires the mind behind this world and, in his control centre, the Master accepts the compliment.
The Clockwork Soldiers appear once more and so they head off, finding themselves in another forest. They come across a house, but the Redcoat soldier suddenly reappears. Jamie attacks him and the man opens fire - rendering him once more a faceless cardboard cut-out. This time Zoe helps to ensure that he gets his real face back.
They enter the house, but the door leads instead to a set of rocky tunnels, lit by candlelight. They have a choice of four tunnels, and find a large ball of twine. The door is now locked behind them. Recalling the story of Theseus, the Doctor has Jamie tie one end of the twine to the door, and they set off into the maze of passages.
The Master can see their progress on his monitor. They are heading through a circular labyrinth towards a central chamber.
The twine runs out, so the Doctor has Jamie wait where he is whilst he and Zoe scout further ahead. She has worked out their route mathematically.
They find themselves in the central chamber, where the ground is littered with bones. They hear a roar - and see the shadow of a huge horned beast on the opposite wall. It is the Minotaur.
Jamie is about to follow when he is confronted by a Clockwork Soldier. He realises that whoever controls this place can see them through the light in their hats, and so throws his sheepskin waistcoat over its head. The Soldier works it free and pursues him.
The Doctor, meanwhile, convinces Zoe that the Minotaur is not real and so cannot harm them, prompting it to vanish when she accepts what he says.
They head back to find Jamie - finding only his discarded waistcoat. They meet the 18th Century traveller once more. When he begins to tell them his family history, the Doctor realises that he is Lemuel Gulliver, from the novel by Dean Jonathan Swift. He leaves, and the Doctor explains his odd language by telling Zoe that he could only say the words written for him by Swift. The Doctor gives her Jamie's waistcoat to look after, and they move on.
He, meanwhile, has been pursued out of the labyrinth to an area of huge rocks. Knowing that the Soldier will have limited mobility, he begins to climb. It is unable to follow.
He wishes aloud for a rope - and one suddenly drops into view. It has emerged from the window of a medieval style turret atop the rocky crags.
Clambering up, he is surprised to find that it is not a rope at all, but the long hair of a young woman.
She is the Princess Rapunzel, and tells him he can only enter if he is a prince - or a wood-cutter's son. Jamie apologises for being neither, but she relents and gives him admittance. By the time he climbs through the window, she has vanished.
He follows some stairs down to a lower floor, where he finds a chamber full of advanced technology.
A large screen shows images of pages from books, the text being narrated. All round the walls are panels labelled with other book titles. There is also a ticker-tape machine, and when Jamie looks at the print-out he finds that it is describing what is happening at that moment to the Doctor and Zoe.
They have returned to the central chamber, and this time there is a statue - of a robed woman with snakes entwined in her hair.
The Doctor points out to Zoe that, previously, the unicorn had appeared to be alive and then became a statue - so this time the process may be reversed. Sure enough, the snakes begin to writhe.
Jamie reads about this - the ticker-tape machine currently linked to a book about the legends of ancient Greece. The statue is that of Medusa, the Gorgon - a look from whom could turn a man to stone.
She begins to approach the pair, and the Doctor frantically urges Zoe not to look into her eyes. He tries to shield her as Medusa reaches out and touches her face, but she struggles to accept that the creature is only a myth.
She feels compelled to look...
Written by Peter Ling
Recorded: Friday 5th July 1968 - Lime Grove Studio D
First broadcast: 5.20pm, Saturday 28th September 1968
Ratings: 7.2 million / AI 53
VFX: Jack Kine & Bernard Wilkie
Designer: Evan Hercules
Director: David Maloney
Additional cast: Christine Pirie (Rapunzel), Sue Pulford (Medusa), Richard Ireson (Minotaur)
Critique:
It was Derrick Sherwin who proposed that the mysterious traveller - revealed in this instalment to be Gulliver of Gulliver's Travels - should only speak lines from the novel, written by Irish clergyman Jonathan Swift and first published in 1726. It's from these that the Doctor recognises him.
However, anyone familiar with the book will spot that his dialogue is actually more paraphrase than direct quote at times.
In his original script, Peter Ling described the Master's base as "the Citadel", composed of fairy tale towers and turrets, and set under a starry sky.
Ling had intended for another fictional character to appear in this episode - the master swordsman Zorro. He was created by pulp author Johnston McCulley in 1919, and was best known at the time through screen incarnations - Guy Williams (Lost in Space) on TV, and Tyrone Power in a classic 1940 movie. His inclusion was abandoned due to copyright issues.
Whether this would have been an entirely new incident within the episode, or he was to be the character who would have pursued Jamie outside to the base of the cliff, we don't know. It does look odd that a lone Clockwork Soldier turns up in a labyrinth full of new fictional figures.
Clearance issues also had an impact on dialogue. Right up until the week of rehearsals, attempts were being made to clear the use of part of Walter de la Mare's 1912 poem The Listeners.
It opens:
"Is there anybody there?" said the Traveller,
Unfortunately, the clearance couldn't be obtained.
Filming for this episode took place on Sunday 9th June at Harrison's Rocks - a series of sandstone crags to be found near Groombridge in East Sussex. Of the regular cast only Frazer Hines was required, as this was for the sequence where Jamie is forced to climb a cliff-face after being pursued by one of the Clockwork Soldiers (played by Ian Hines).
Model filming then took place on Monday 10th and Tuesday 11th at Television Centre's puppet theatre, which included the animation of the snakes on the Gorgon's head. Actress Sue Pulford had been expected to attend this session, but in the end it was all achieved through the laborious technique of stop-motion photography (see Trivia below). The model head was the work of John Friedlander, who would go on to create some iconic masks for the programme including that of the original Davros.
Frazer Hines rejoined rehearsals on Monday 1st July after recovering from the chicken pox he had contracted from his nephews.
After two weeks at Television Centre, due to the need for extensive studio space for black and white void sequences, the programme returned to its ancestral home of Lime Grove Studio D.
As we mentioned last time, the opening scenes with the unicorn in the black void were recorded at the end of the previous week's episode - to save on having to reuse the set. A photographic blow-up of pony Goldy as the unicorn was used. (It is clearly a flat hardboard cut-out, though the Doctor states in dialogue that it has become a statue).
A recording break allowed for the repeat of the photo-fit trick, with Philip Ryan once again playing the Redcoat soldier, uncredited. This time it was Hamish Wilson's turn to be transformed into a cardboard cut-out - to have Jamie's features recreated to match those of Hines.
Ian Hines also played the lone Clockwork Soldier in studio, whilst the Minotaur was an uncredited Richard Ireson (See Episode 2). The Minotaur head was from stock and was only seen very briefly due to its static nature - the beast being realised mainly through sound and shadow.
Sue Pulford wore a rigid half-mask, again the work of Friedlander, which matched his animation model.
In his control centre, the Master viewed a map of the labyrinth - a translucent graphic with moving lights behind.
Unfortunately the plan clearly does not match the arithmetic progression of turns which Zoe claims for the maze.
Hines threw his sheepskin waistcoat over the camera lens when Jamie temporarily blinds the Clockwork Soldier. Wendy Padbury would wear it over her catsuit for the remainder of the recording, after the Doctor and Zoe return and find it.
In the high-tech book room - described as the Apparatus Room in the script - the lights were dimmed so that images of pages from novels could be seen on a large circular screen. These were Treasure Island and Little Women. Christine Pirie, playing Rapunzel in the episode, provided the narration for the latter. This set also featured a number of futuristic props, some of which appear in other stories.
His contribution to the series concluded, Peter Bryant would write to Wilson to thank him for helping out, crediting his performance as Jamie as "first-class".
Please take note that Zoe knows what candles are. I'm not going to be setting a test, but this will have some significance for the nature of this story later...
A number of new fictional characters are introduced this week, though they will only appear briefly and two are used merely as one-off threats as the Doctor and Zoe make their way through the subterranean labyrinth. Both derive from Ancient Greek legends, and this is one of the books we see in the Apparatus Room.
The Minotaur is mercifully kept to the shadows, with just a quick glimpse of its less-than-scary face, but the Medusa is particularly effective and provides a very scary cliffhanger.
It is a very creepy image we are presented with, of the ghostly white statue standing in the darkness, its head and shoulders spot-lit from above. They could have gone for some bouncy rubber snakes in her hair, but instead Maloney opts to use stop-motion animation - a painstaking and time-consuming process, so usually prohibitively expensive. He will employ the technique again in the penultimate episode of The War Games, for the Doctor's message cube. All three of his Season 6 stories have some visual experimentation.
It's something worth considering: could this have worked as a six-parter? You have the whole of literature to play with - characters from novels, plays, fairy tales and mythology, so was there another episode's worth of material they could have employed, to prolong the journey to the Citadel? Possibly, if they had chosen interesting figures. Jamie fighting a duel with Macbeth, or Zoe tangling with the White Witch whilst the Doctor faced Dr. No. It might not necessarily have come across as treading water if handled well.
The imagination may have stretched, but the budget probably couldn't.
If the money had been there, this might have been an option for plugging the gap created by the shortening of The Dominators - but then we would have been deprived of that remarkable opening episode, so we ought to be grateful there wasn't any money available.
Other books we can see in the Apparatus Room include Vanity Fair, Swallows and Amazons, Don Quixote and The Pit and the Pendulum - all specified by Ling in his script. (It's very lucky for the Doctor and his companions that the Edgar Allan Poe work wasn't brought into play against them...).
Jamie, meanwhile, encounters a fairy tale figure - one who just happens to have what he needs to get into the citadel. The Master is clearly intending that they reach him unharmed - or at least that the Doctor will - despite all the hazards they are being forced to confront. (We'll shortly find out that this is all a test by him, specifically on the Doctor whom he needs in one piece).
Oddly, the Doctor claims that he's looking forward to having a nice long chat with Gulliver - even though he knows the man can only speak lines from the book he features in.
Frazer Hines returns to the programme and, no offence to him, but it might have been nice to have let him have a wee holiday and allowed Hamish Wilson a little longer in the role - perhaps with Jamie only getting his face back at the end of the story when the Land of Fiction collapses.
Splitting Jamie up from the others to do some physical stuff, whilst pairing Zoe with the Doctor to do the working out, is something we've seen before and it will be the pattern for much of Season 6.
- The ratings see a big improvement this week, both in terms of audience and the appreciation figure, which gets back above the 50 mark.
- This is the first episode to run under 20 minutes. The next pair will also be of similar duration.
- Harrison's Rocks are now owned by the British Mountaineering Council, and looked after by a team of volunteers. There's an associated campsite, set up as a memorial to a former climbing club member who died on K2. The location will appear in Doctor Who again in 1982, being climbed by the Doctor, Tegan and Nyssa in Castrovalva.
- Coincidentally, in both stories, the Rocks are pictured with a fairy tale castle on their summit.
- The story of Rapunzel was popularised by the Brothers Grimm in their 1812 collection Children's and Household Tales. A pregnant woman desires rapunzel (a herb) to eat, so her husband steals some from a walled garden. This belongs to a sorceress who catches him. She agrees not to punish him so long as she is given the child as soon as it is born. The baby girl is named after the herb her mother craved. When she is 12 years old, the sorceress locks her away in a tall tower, its only opening being a high window. The only way to get in is when Rapunzel lowers down her very long hair to be used like a rope. There's a lot more to the fairy tale, but this is the relevant part of the story here.
- Medusa was one of three sisters, daughters of the sea god Phorcys and his sister Ceto. She was also known as Gorgo, and was the only one of the trio who was mortal. If a man looked into her eyes, they were turned to stone. Perseus was able to kill her by using the polished inner surface of his shield to view her and so guide his sword. Her image was popular on shields and armour in ancient times as it was said to ward off evil. The best known movie interpretation is the stop-motion creation by Ray Harryhausen for Clash of the Titans (1981). (The 2010 remake offers only an awful CGI version). Hammer's The Gorgon (1964) is well worth seeing. It deals with another of the creatures named Maegera, has an early 20th Century Germany setting, and is interesting in that Christopher Lee plays hero to Peter Cushing's villain. Patrick Troughton is the local Chief of Police. In The Mind Robber, as the Doctor suspects, Ling elects to invert the usual story by having Medusa herself made of stone.
- The Minotaur came into being when King Minos prayed to Poseidon to give him a snow-white bull as a sign of his favour. Instead of sacrificing it to the deity, Minos kept it for himself. An enraged Poseidon then had Minos' wife Pasiphae bewitched into having sex with the bull - an act which produced a child which was half-man, half-bull. We'll return to this myth later, as there's a whole story based around it (The Horns of Nimon) as well as an appearance in The Time Monster.
- Hamish Wilson would go on to become an announcer with Scottish Television, as well as a radio producer with the BBC. Sadly, he was one of the many casualties of the Covid pandemic. He died in March 2020, aged 77.































