Timelash (TV story)

Timelash was the fifth story of season 22 of Doctor Who. It was notably the last story of the classic era to revolve around an adventure with an historical figure, H.G. Wells, and kept his identity a secret until the very end. Previously, his presence in the Doctor Who universe had been alluded to when one his books, The War of the Worlds, was seen being read by in Frontier in Space, and would later be acknowledged again when the Seventh Doctor and post-regenerative Eighth Doctor read The Time Machine, another of his works, in the 1996 TV movie.

The story also gave a nod to the Doctor's past adventures back when he was travelling with Jo Grant in his third incarnation, and retroactively addressed that they had been in an adventure off-screen involving the main antagonist of this story, and the viewers were witnessing a sequel to this as-of-yet unseen conflict; thus, the Doctor could conveniently and reasonably demonstrate a history and knowledge of the alien species and the planet central to the story, and the writers relied heavily on exposition to carry the serial forward.

Coincidentally, this story aired right after a multi-Doctor story where the Sixth Doctor and Peri Brown had an adventure with his second incarnation and his then-companion Jamie McCrimmon, resulting in two consecutive retrospective looks of bygone Doctor Who eras over the course of the same season.

Synopsis
On the planet Karfel and in 1885 Scotland, the Sixth Doctor and Peri, together with a young man named Herbert, become entangled with the machinations of the despotic Borad.

Part one
The Doctor and Peri are arguing over their next destination when the TARDIS is ensnared by a Kontron tunnel, a time corridor in space. After the Doctor fails to free the ship, he and Peri strap themselves in. The TARDIS approaches the corridor and is nearly torn apart by the impact, but stabilises once it has entered the corridor. It is navigated to the source of the disturbance, the planet Karfel, a world the Doctor has visited before. Before they get there, the translucent image of a woman glides through the console room.

On Karfel the small population is ruled in a rigid hierarchy. At the apex is the Borad, a sadistic and despotic ruler. The Borad has never shown himself in person, only via security monitors which show a dignified old man, but something in his manner does not ring true. Fear is enforced rigidly through the policing of androids. Rebels such as Aram, Gazak and Tyheer are dealt with either by summary execution or despatch and death via the Timelash - a permanent, and ultimately fatal, exile down a corridor of time and space. Below the Borad is the Maylin, in effect a proxy mayor figure, the most senior of the five Councilors of Karfel. These Councillors are more cyphers than people of true council. One of them, Mykros, has grown unhappy with the rule of the Borad. Since the Borad came to power, their people have become disillusioned, rebellious and miserable. Their former allies, the Bandrils, are poised to invade. The Bandrils threaten war after the Borad rescinds the grain supply treaty, which underpinned the relationship between the two civilisations.

Mykros determines to discover the truth and follows the Maylin, Renis, into the Borad’s power chamber. The unhappy Maylin is transferring the power supplies of the Karfelons into the Borad’s personal system, despite the danger to his own wife, who is recovering from hospital surgery. Renis finds Mykros and gives him his blessing in rebellion. However, the Borad finds out and metes out the usual punishment: the Maylin is aged to death in a deadly beam while Mykros is sentenced to the Timelash. Before he can be sent in, however, Vena, Renis’ daughter and Mykros’ lover, intervenes to plead for his life. When this fails, she steals an amulet conferring the power to pervert the energy supply from the new Maylin, the sycophantic Tekker, and accidentally falls into the web of the Timelash herself.

The arrival of the TARDIS presents Tekker with an opportunity to retrieve the amulet. The clever Maylin greets the Doctor and Peri as favoured guests, but the Doctor is suspicious of a Karfelon society that has made huge scientific leaps in a short time and that does not permit mirrors. When the Doctor refuses to venture into the Timelash again, Tekker explains that Peri has been taken hostage to ensure his co-operation in retrieving the amulet. She has been taken to the caves of the Morlox, large lizards indigenous to Karfel, where her captors hope she will die. Yet luck is as ever on her side — as well as some Karfelon rebels, Katz and Sezon, who kill one of the creatures threatening her and take her into their company. However, they are soon attacked and captured by a patrol of guards.

To protect Peri, the Doctor returns the TARDIS into the Timelash. He calculates the normal path of the Timelash would send Vena to 1179 on Earth, but the interference of the TARDIS (which she passed through and the Doctor and Peri had seen earlier) caused her to end up in Scotland in 1885. When the Doctor arrives he finds Vena, the amulet and a justifiably agitated young man named Herbert. All three depart on their return journey to return the amulet – which is all Tekker cares about when the TARDIS arrives back in the Council Chamber. The Doctor, Vena and Herbert are rounded up with the rebels Mykros, Sezon and Katz and condemned to the Timelash. Brunner reports the Timelash is ready, and Tekker tells the Doctor to save his breath for the Timelash. The android grabs the Doctor and forces him to move towards the Timelash. Laughing, Tekker tells the Doctor goodbye as the android forces the Doctor closer to the Timelash...

Part two
bandril.jpg They fight back, killing the toadying Councillor Brunner and sealing the chamber doors, determined to hold out in a siege. This buys the Doctor enough time to hoist into the Timelash on a rope and take two Kontron crystals from the wall of the time corridor. He uses this to create a time ruse, allowing him to slip out of the chamber. Herbert follows.

Tekker has fled to the Borad. He blames the setback on the last remaining loyal Councillor, Kendron, whom the Borad executes. Tekker remains at the side of the Borad, now revealed as a hideous amalgam of human and Morlox. Together they watch on a screen as Peri is brought into a cave and strapped down while Morlox gather to feed. A canister of the chemical Mustakozene-80 is placed nearby. This can fuse together different tissue as one creature. It seems the Borad has taken a liking to Peri and wishes to mutate her like himself. The Doctor arrives to confront Tekker and the Borad, recognising the latter as Megelen, a crazed scientist he encountered on his previous visit to Karfel and exposed to the Counsel for unethical experiments on Morloxes. It seems one of those experiments has now gone wrong and Megelen wishes to replicate its effect to create a partner. His plan has been to provoke a war with the Bandrils with bendalypse warheads, which will wipe out all the Karfelons — but leave the Morlox and himself alive, allowing him to repopulate the world in his own image. This revelation prompts Tekker to rebel, but he is swiftly aged to death. The Doctor uses a Kontron crystal to deflect Megelen’s beam back at him, killing the mutant in his wheelchair.

Herbert helps the Doctor rescue Peri from the Morlox. They return to the Council Chamber where Mykros and Vena have identified a Bandril invasion fleet armed with bendalypse warheads. It is close to Karfel. The Bandrils are suspicious of the Doctor’s attempts to intervene and prevent a missile strike. He takes drastic action. He materialises the TARDIS in the path of the incoming warhead, risking his own life to save Karfel. He succeeds and returns to Karfel to find Megelen returned from the dead and threatening the Council Chamber — or, rather, the other one was a clone of this original. Megelen is unbalanced by the image of himself in a boarded up mirror, revealing the reason he hid himself away. He is thrown into the Timelash by the Doctor, who says the Borad was sent to Loch Ness.

In the TARDIS, the Doctor and Peri prepare to depart Karfel to return Herbert to his own time. Herbert is still outside and the Doctor calls to him to hurry up, before showing Peri Herbert's calling card, which identifies the young man as "Herbert George Wells".

Cast

 * The Doctor - Colin Baker
 * Peri - Nicola Bryant
 * The Borad / Megelen - Robert Ashby
 * Old Man - Denis Carey
 * Tekker - Paul Darrow
 * Mykros - Eric Deacon
 * Maylin Renis - Neil Hallett
 * Vena - Jeananne Crowley
 * Kendron - David Ashton
 * Herbert - David Chandler
 * Katz - Tracy Louise Ward
 * Brunner - Peter Robert Scott
 * Sezon - Dicken Ashworth
 * Gazak - Steven Mackintosh
 * Aram - Christine Kavanagh
 * Tyheer - Martin Gower
 * Android - Dean Hollingsworth
 * Guardolier - James Richardson
 * Bandril Ambassador - Martin Gower

Production crew

 * Assistant Floor Manager - Abigail Sharp
 * Costumes - Alun Hughes
 * Designer - Bob Cove
 * Incidental Music - Liz Parker
 * Make-Up - Vanessa Poulton
 * Producer - John Nathan-Turner
 * Production Assistant - Jane Whittaker
 * Production Associate - Sue Anstruther
 * Script Editor - Eric Saward
 * Special Sounds - Dick Mills
 * Studio Lighting - Henry Barber
 * Studio Sound - Andy Stacey
 * Theme Arrangement - Peter Howell
 * Title Music - Ron Grainer
 * Visual Effects - Kevin Molloy
 * Script Editor - Eric Saward
 * Writer - Glen McCoy
 * Producer - John Nathan-Turner
 * Director - Pennant Roberts

Story notes

 * This serial makes several references to Wells's novels The Time Machine, The War of the Worlds, The Invisible Man and The Island of Doctor Moreau.
 * The music for this story was provided by Elizabeth Parker, who had formerly contributed special sound for Blake's 7. A selection of this music is on track 64 of the CD 30 Years at the Radiophonic Workshop. The DVD release from 2007 features 8-minutes of her music in stereo (wheres the DVD audio track is mono).
 * This story was broadcast in four twenty-five-minute episodes in the USA and in Australia and New Zealand.
 * This story was originally submitted as a Dalek adventure; it was rejected, but Eric Saward asked author Glen McCoy to resubmit it without them.
 * In the original script, it was the First Doctor, along with Ian, Barbara and Susan, who visited Karfel. Some vestige of this remains in the final version, as Tekker inquires about the Doctor having only one companion with him.
 * In viewer polls, this story has not garnered much interest as a fan favourite:
 * The serial was voted into the 199 position by readers of Doctor Who Magazine in its 2009 poll, the Mighty 200. It landed in the second lowest spot of the final results, just above The Twin Dilemma.
 * Doing slightly better in the polls five years later, it was voted number 238 (previously 199 in 2009) in Doctor Who Magazine's 2014 "The first 50 years" poll. It was fourth lowest.
 * No date is given for the scenes set on Karfel. A History of the Universe and AHistory arbitrarily place it in the year 802701, the same year in which H.G. Wells' The Time Machine is set.
 * When playing the role of Tekker, Paul Darrow purposely exaggerated his performance as a way of retaliating against Colin Baker's similar portrayal of Bayban the Butcher in Blake's Seven, on which Darrow starred as Kerr Avon (Darrow stated that he felt undermined by Baker's bombastic acting on Blake's Seven).

Ratings

 * Part one - 6.7 million viewers
 * Part two - 7.4 million viewers

Filming locations

 * BBC Television Centre (TC4 &amp; TC8), Shepherd's Bush, London

Production errors
to be added

Continuity

 * In part one, the Doctor says that he was contemplating taking Peri to the constellation of Andromeda, which shouldn't be confused with either the planet or the galaxy.
 * In PROSE: Speed of Flight it is mentioned that the Doctor and Jo are on their way to Karfel, with the reference to the Doctor only having one companion here explained as Captain Mike Yates was joining them on their trip.
 * The never-before-seen safety belts attached to the Doctor's TARDIS console would not be used again, though similar belts were used on the console of the Junk TARDIS in TV: The Doctor's Wife.
 * The Doctor tells the captain of the Bandril ship that he is Lord President of Gallifrey. (TV: The Five Doctors)
 * The Borad is implied to be the Loch Ness monster, conflicting with the Skarasen in TV: Terror of the Zygons; the contradiction is explained when the Borad is killed by agents of the Celestis in The Taking of Planet 5.
 * To smother the Borad's delusion that Peri will accept him as the monster he is, the Doctor tells him, "You can't change the brain in her head". Ironically, Peri did get her brain replaced with the Mentor Kiv's in TV: Mindwarp.
 * Before the Borad's cloned body is destroyed, he accuses the Doctor "You have tricked me!", to which the Doctor counters "You tricked yourself." This exchange would be repeated between the Seventh Doctor and Davros when the latter faced the destruction of his mothership by the Hand of Omega which he had launched. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks)

DVD releases
This story was released as Doctor Who: Timelash. It was a "Super Value Edition" DVD.

It was released:
 * Region 2 - 9 July 2007.
 * PAL - BBCDVD2333.


 * Region 4 - 31 July 2007
 * PAL -

Contents:
 * Commentary by Colin Baker, Nicola Bryant and Paul Darrow.
 * The Good, the Bad and the Ugly - A new documentary looking at the making of Timelash. Featuring contributions from Colin Baker, Nicola Bryant, Paul Darrow, David Chandler, Robert Ashby, script editor Eric Saward, writer Glen McCoy and Paul Lang from the Doctor Who New Adventures novels. Narrated by Terry Molloy.
 * Radio Times Listings.
 * Programme Subtitles.
 * Production Subtitles.
 * Photo Gallery with 8-minutes of Elizabeth Parker's music in 24bit 48hz stereo.
 * Easter Egg - Go down to Special Features on the Main Menu and click left; the Doctor Who Logo will turn green, click it and Continuity Announcements for Timelash can be seen.

Notes:
 * Editing for the DVD release was completed by the Doctor Who Restoration Team.

VHS Releases
The story was released on VHS on 5 January 1998.