Theory:Doctor Who television discontinuity and plot holes/Remembrance of the Daleks


 * The gates to the junkyard bear the label "I.M FORMAN", but An Unearthly Child establishes the surname as "FOREMAN".
 * According to later novels, this is due to a time blip. (PDA: The Algebra of Ice, EDA: Interference - Book Two). As the BBC DVD makes clear, however, it was also a genuine production error.


 * Various details, such as the "French Revolution" book in the science lab, match up with The Pilot Episode but not with An Unearthly Child.
 * We never see the book leave the school in An Unearthly Child, so its presence (if it is indeed the same book) there is not inconsistent.


 * The Doctor says that the Daleks are dependent on rationality and logic, whereas Daleks are actually driven by xenophobia and race hatred (it seems an especially odd statement as one of the story's core themes is racial purity).
 * The Doctor is most likely referring to their battle strategies, not to their psychology.


 * It is strongly suggested that the events of this story take place on or about 23rd November, 1963], to coincide with the first broadcast of Doctor Who in real life, yet no reference occurs to the assassination of [[John F. Kennedy the day prior, or the subsequent death of Lee Harvey Oswald, both of which would have been dominant topics of conversation even in London.
 * Although strongly suggested, it's not definitively stated that this takes place on 23 November 1963; all is known is it takes place soon after the events of An Unearthly Child which could have taken place at an earlier or later date. According to the DVD production notes commentary, however, a calendar is visible in one scene establishing November 1963 as the setting. The killing of Oswald didn't occur until the 24th, in any event.


 * Also left unmentioned is the absence of teachers Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright and student Susan Foreman; if this story takes place within a few days of the events of An Unearthly Child (as suggested by the presence of the "French Revolution" book), their absence should be noted by the police and the school undertaking investigations and news reports of a missing teenager and her teachers.
 * This could all still be occurring "off screen", or once again the story might take place at a later point in time after things had "died down".
 * Bearing in mind that the head teacher of their school has been under Dalek remote control for an indeterminate period of time, it is possible he is not performing his duties as well as he might.


 * The Doctor implies that he took the Hand of Omega to 1963 to hide it from the Daleks, but during the events of DW: The Daleks, the First Doctor seemed unfamiliar with them.
 * There are two solutions: the Doctor was apparently feigning ignorance of the Daleks during his first visit to Skaro (possibly providing a rationale for why he sabotaged the TARDIS in order to stay there in the first story), or he hid it for other reasons and factored it into his plan to destroy the Daleks. It's also possible he hid the Hand of Omega at a later time in his personal timeline.
 * He may also have been following orders from the Celestial Intervention Agency when he concealed the Hand of Omega, not yet knowing their full Time War-ish agenda. This could have been revealed to him later.


 * The Doctor proclaiming himself as "President Elect of the High Council" contradicts DW: The Five Doctors in which he was named full president and The Trial of a Time Lord in which it was stated that he was deposed.
 * He was named President again at the end of Trial of a Time Lord by The Inquisitor.


 * Rachel Jensen uses the name Dalek without having heard it.
 * The Doctor shouts at the Dalek in the junkyard yelling among other things "Oi, Dalek..." it is possible Jensen heard him along with the other characters.


 * Ace is wearing a patch on her jacket of the Soviet sickle and hammer, and yet no one says anything, despite 1963 being the height of the Cold War.
 * They have quite a lot of other pressing matters to worry about. In any case, socialist sympathies have rarely attracted as much disapproval in Britain as they have in America.


 * On Earth, the Doctor tells the Supreme Dalek that its home is a trillion miles away. The Milky Way galaxy is approximately 100 quadrillion miles in diameter and over 5 trillion miles thick, and it seems likely from DW: The Daleks' Master Plan (in which the Daleks enlist the aid of civilisations in the Fifth Galaxy in order to invade the Sol system) that Skaro is not in the Milky Way. Therefore, either the Doctor is wrong, or Skaro is in the Milky Way.
 * It is possible that the Doctor is not exactly wrong, but is being poetic - "a trillion miles away", while untrue, flows better than "a hundred quadrillion miles away". If the Doctor is in the business of being economical with the truth, it is possible that his placing of Skaro's destruction 1000 years in the past or future (i.e. around 963 or 2963) is also inaccurate. This would mean that Skaro could still exist by the time of The Daleks' Master Plan in the year 4000, as well as during any stories set after Master Plan. Of course, things change if you believe the Dalek Prime in War of the Daleks that it was in fact Antalin which was destroyed in Remembrance, as Antalin could have been destroyed in 2963 (or 963, but that date seems less likely) with Skaro surviving beyond 4000. However, it could also be an expression of a large amount of time, like if someone says "it has been like a thousand years since I saw you" they are just using it as a vast measurement of time.


 * One of Radcliffe's work-crew is dark-skinned and clearly a member of an ethnic minority group — just the sort of person you would imagine Radcliffe would not want to employ, given his political views.


 * In the Dalek fight on the streets, they keep missing each other? Why don't they re-aim their guns?
 * Since it is Daleks fighting Daleks, they know where each other is likely to fire and have developed some defences against the weaponry of the other side.) They may predict where one will shoot and try to fire in a manner that will stop that.


 * Since when were Daleks so cowardly that they retreated when one Dalek gets killed?
 * Firstly, two Imperial Daleks were killed. Second, as one said, there firepower was too great. Greater than theirs maybe.


 * Why don't the other group of Daleks follow them instead of waiting in the streets for them to return?
 * They probably think they will not return.


 * Why didn't the Imperial Daleks just take the Special Weapons Dalek with them in the first place?
 * The novelisation states that the Special Weapons Dalek is only used in extreme situations, presumably the Imperials thought it was an "extreme situation" when they were losing against the renegades.


 * The Doctor deplores violence, commenting that weapons are 'useless in the end'. Yet he has no compunction about destroying an entire planet, especially considering that Skaro is not only the Dalek homeworld, but home to the Thals as well.
 * He himself does not fire the weapon, the Daleks do. He has simply set it to be used defensively so that if they do indeed fire it, it will essentially backfire and destroy their own homeworld instead of the intended target.
 * At any rate, it's blatantly false to say he has "no compunction" about this; he spends half the story fretting about it, and explicitly says he's unsure if he did the right thing at the end (also powerfully symbolised by his declining to enter the church.


 * If Skaro was destroyed, how come they put the Master on trial there in the TV Movie?
 * It is never specified when these two events take place relative to each other, the destruction of Skaro could have happened after the Master's trial.


 * If Skaro was destroyed in the Earth year 1963, shouldn't that prevent the Doctor's future landings on Skaro?
 * This may not be not true as when the Imperial Daleks were sending the Hand of Omega to Skaro, one of the lines stated is "Entering Skaro time zone." this seems to imply that the Imperials sent the Hand of Omega to a different time period.


 * The soldier on guard outside the school doesn't seem to be that alarmed when the Doctor (who he does not know) runs out of a locked-down school which should be empty. Also, when the Doctor asks for a heavy-weapon,& he just gives him an RPG from the truck with no questions asked.


 * As noted in the Production Notes on the DVD, the destruction of Skaro opens the question as to the fate of the peace-loving Thals the Doctor had helped in the past. In Destiny of the Daleks the Doctor says the Daleks left Skaro 'for dead', implying that at some time the Thals were either exterminated or they escaped Skaro.The audio plays suggest that the Thals survive as a minor thorn in the Daleks' side. But if Skaro was destroyed in Remembrance it must have been inhabited again at some time. This of course sheds no light on the fate of the Thals.
 * We know that this story occurs long after Destiny in the timeline of Davros/the Daleks. The line "Entering Skaro time zone" indicates that the Hand travels to a different time before destroying Skaro, presumably the relative timezone to these Daleks. There's no reason to assume any Thals would be on Skaro at this point.


 * When asked if the device he built on Spiridon to disorientate the Daleks worked, the Doctor says it did 'absolutely nothing'. But in Planet of the Daleks it did work, though it was smashed in the process.
 * The "absolutely nothing" comment is just his answer to what the worst case scenario is. He merely mentions that he built something similar on Spiridon (without saying whether or not it worked).


 * If Skaro is very conservatively "a trillion miles away" according to the Doctor, then it would take the Hand of Omega approximately one light year to reach, yet it takes only seconds for it to obliterate its target after being launched from Earth orbit and just seconds for it to boomerang back and destroy the Dalek ship from which it was launched.


 * If the Daleks have a vast empire, how can the destruction of Skaro and the Mothership mean their destruction?
 * Quite probably, the "Imperial Daleks" have been optimistically named by Davros in expectation of one day having a vast empire, but the fact that Davros is so keen to capture a new super-weapon could imply that their own forces are, at present, limited.