User:Lilduff90/The Power of the Daleks

The Power of the Daleks is the completely missing third serial of the fourth season in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in six weekly parts from 5 November to 10 December 1966. It is the first full story to feature Patrick Troughton as the Second Doctor. Although audio recordings, still photographs, and clips of the story exist, no episodes of this serial are known to have survived. In 2016, in celebration of its 50th anniversary, the serial was recreated using animation alongside the original audio track, making it the sixth Doctor Who-serial to be completed using animation, and the first to be fully animated.

Plot
Ben and Polly have just watched the First Doctor collapse to the floor of the TARDIS and have witnessed his change of appearance into a younger man. Polly knows that the man is the Doctor, but Ben believes he is an impostor, because the Doctor neglects to confirm nor deny his identity. The TARDIS brings the "renewed" Doctor, Ben and Polly to the planet Vulcan where, on arrival, the Doctor witnesses the murder of the examiner, a man sent from Earth to check on the human colony located on the planet. After checking the body, the Doctor discovers a badge.

A security team, led by Bragen, escorts the Doctor, Ben and Polly (pretending to be, as the security team assumes, the examiner and his party) back to the colony. The examiner was summoned by Quinn, the deputy governor, to investigate a group of rebels. The governor regards the problem with the rebels as insignificant.

Meanwhile, Lesterson, the colony’s scientist, has discovered a crashed space capsule. The Doctor goes to investigate the capsule, and after having a quick look inside, he says that is enough for one night and goes off to bed.

Later that night, Ben and Polly see the Doctor heading towards Lesterson’s laboratory and go inside the capsule. They follow, and he opens an inner compartment to find two Daleks inside. He deduces that the third Dalek is missing from the capsule. Polly, who had joined the Doctor in the capsule, along with Ben, spots a small mutant crawling across the floor which disappears into a small opening. Polly screams.

The Doctor, Ben and Polly leave the capsule to find Lesterson, who immediately starts questioning them on why they are in his lab. The Doctor says that his badge (the examiner’s badge) says that he can go anywhere in the colony. The Doctor questions Lesterson on where he has put the third Dalek; he is afraid that Lesterson might be trying to reactivate it.

Once the Doctor, Ben and Polly have left, Lesterson opens a secret compartment where he has hidden the third Dalek. He gets his helpers, Resno and Janley, to help try to reactivate the Dalek. He is successful, but in the process, the Dalek shoots Resno dead. Janley assures Lesterson that Resno will be fine, although she knows he is dead. At that point, Lesterson removes the gun stick from the Dalek.

Meanwhile, Quinn has been accused of sabotaging the communication console and summoning the examiner. Quinn is put on trial and the governor gives Quinn’s old job to Bragen. The Doctor, Ben and Polly attend Quinn’s trial, during which Lesterson arrives with the reactivated Dalek, which claims to be the colony’s servant. It is subjected to intelligence tests, the results of which astound the colonists. When the Dalek creates a computer which can detect meteorites, it is accepted without further hesitation. The Doctor remains extremely suspicious, however. When he approaches it the Dalek recognises him as the Doctor, which convinces Ben regarding who he really is.

Lesterson then reactivates the other two Daleks and removes their guns. They also claim to be the colony’s servants. The Doctor notices that there are more than three Daleks in the colony, and warns that they are breeding. This is met with incredulity as the colonists believe that the Daleks are machines.

The Doctor, Polly and Ben are imprisoned. The Doctor is seen rolling pieces of fruit along the floor, and Polly says this is the sort of behaviour that makes them wonder if he really is the Doctor. It turns out that the Doctor is checking if the fruit contains a bugging device. They manage to escape when the Doctor generates the correct tone to open the prison cell by making a partly filled wine glass chime.

One night, Lesterson goes inside the Dalek capsule and discovers that Daleks are being manufactured there. He sees an inert mutant being placed on a stand and then suddenly come to life. It is then lifted off the stand by a Dalek and placed into a Dalek base, with the top fitted to the base.

A long Dalek production line creates hundreds of Daleks; they attack the humans, and a great battle ensues. The Daleks exterminate half the colonists, but several dozens of Daleks are destroyed by laser guns. The Doctor, Ben and Polly escape imprisonment and help the humans fight what appears to be a losing battle. Governor Hensell is killed by Bragen. The Doctor finally destroys the Daleks by turning their own power source against them. Bragen is revealed to have sabotaged the communication console, and killed the real examiner. Quinn has the charges against the Doctor dropped, and Bragen is shot by Valmar after attempting to kill Quinn, who is made governor. The Doctor, Ben and Polly return to the TARDIS. An inert Dalek stands next to the TARDIS. Ben kicks it and exclaims that they will not be having any trouble with Daleks from now on. As the TARDIS dematerialises, however, the eyestalk of the nearby Dalek rises upwards.

Continuity
The process of regeneration goes unnamed in this serial. Instead, the newly regenerated Doctor calls it a 'renewal'. This change of actors was retrospectively labelled 'regeneration' following the use of the term by the production team of the final Jon Pertwee story, Planet of the Spiders.

The Doctor finds a dagger in the TARDIS that he claims to have picked up during the events of The Crusade.

In Episode Two, The Doctor refers to Marco Polo as a friend, having met him in the eponymous First Doctor story.

In Episode One, The Doctor looks into a mirror and sees the First Doctor

David Whitaker first lists Vulcan as a planet of the Solar System in the 1964 spin-off publication The Dalek Book.

The Dalek pod seen here, like the Dalek time-travel capsule seen previously in The Chase, is, like the TARDIS, bigger on the inside than the outside. In spin-off media, it is later revealed to have been sent to this location by the Eighth Doctor after ejecting it from a Thal ship in the spin-off novel War of the Daleks.

Production
Working titles for this story included The Destiny of Doctor Who and Servants of Masters. Anneke Wills was on holiday and therefore absent from episode four. Similarly, Michael Craze was absent for episode five.

The Doctor's regeneration was meant to be a "horrifying" metaphysical change. The producers compared it to the hallucinogenic drug LSD, which had the side-effect of "hell and dank horror".

Episode 6 was filmed using the 625-line system before the official switchover, although it was telerecorded onto 35mm film, instead of videotape.

Cast notes
Bernard Archard returned in Pyramids of Mars. Peter Bathurst returned in The Claws of Axos. Robert James returned in The Masque of Mandragora. Edward Kelsey had previously appeared in The Romans and would return in The Creature from the Pit.

Missing episodes
The master tapes of all six episodes were erased in the late 1960's, while the BBC Enterprise copies on 16mm for foreign sales were destroyed in 1974. The additional 35mm film negative of episode 6 was junked some time prior to 1970. Some clips survive from various other programmes, mainly focusing upon the Daleks. In addition some footage filmed off-air by an Australian fan onto 8mm cine film exists, showing brief moments of the new Doctor's first moves in the TARDIS.

The Australian copies of Power were returned and junked in June 1975. Only two other countries purchased the story due to the restriction on Dalek sales by the Nation estate in 1968, these were New Zealand which sent its copy to Singapore in 1972. Singapore say they do not possess any copies, and what happened to this set is currently unknown.

Animated reconstruction
In August 2016, a two-minute teaser of an animated reconstruction of the serial was leaked unto Twitter, YouTube and Facebook. It was taken down by the BBC within 48 hours, leading to speculation that the animation was indeed official. A week later, the Daily Mirror ran an article stating that a full animation of the serial had been commissioned, with no official response from the BBC. On November 7, at midnight, the BBC announced that the serial had been reconstucted using animation and the original audio track. The team responsible for the animation had used production photos, surviving clips and original shooting scripts to make the animation as similar to the original episodes as possible. It is schedueled for release on the BBC Store on November 5, with a DVD release to follow on November 21.

In print
A novelisation of this serial, written by John Peel, was published by Virgin Books in July 1993. Although still published under the Target Books banner, this was the first novelisation to be published under the new format introduced by Virgin for the Virgin New Adventures/Virgin Missing Adventures series. The most notable difference is the increased page count.

The script of this serial, edited by John McElroy, was published by Titan Books in March 1993.

Home media
The audio soundtrack survives. The BBC has given it three commercial releases: first, on cassette release with narration by Tom Baker; second, on CD with narration by Anneke Wills; third, on MP3-CD for the 'Doctor Who: Reconstructed' range, again narrated by Anneke Wills. This release also includes a bonus slideshow for PC/Apple Mac users, merging the soundtrack with tele-snaps. The Anneke Wills-narrated soundtrack was also released in a collector's tin called Doctor Who: Daleks, along with the soundtrack to The Evil of the Daleks and a bonus disc featuring My Life as a Dalek, a story presented by Mark Gatiss discussing the history of the Daleks.

In 2004, all known surviving clips were released on the Lost in Time DVD. Following the DVD's release, two further short clips&mdash;along with a higher-quality version of one of the extant scenes&mdash;were discovered in a 1966 episode of the BBC science series Tomorrow's World. The clips only came to light on 11 September 2005, when the relevant section was broadcast as part of an edition of the clip-based nostalgia show Sunday Past Times on BBC Two. These clips were subsequently included in the documentaries "The Dalek Tapes", on the Genesis of the Daleks DVD release, and "Now Get out of That", on the Terror of the Vervoids disc in The Trial of a Time Lord box set.

Target novelisation

 * On Target — The Power of the Daleks

Category:Second Doctor serials Category:Dalek television stories Category:Doctor Who missing episodes Category:1966 television episodes