The Mutants (TV story)


 * This article is about the Third Doctor serial The Mutants. For the First Doctor serial of the same name, see The Daleks.

Synopsis
The Time Lords send the Doctor and Jo on a mission to deliver a sealed message pod to an unknown party aboard a Skybase orbiting the planet Solos in the 30th century. They are quickly caught in a power struggle between the cruel Marshal of Solos and the young Solonian Ky over the future of Solos - a future that hinges on the contents of the message.

Part 1
On the polluted world of Solos, an old man flees through the desolate remains of a forest. Screaming "Mutt! MUTT!", the Marshal of Solos chases the old man, followed grudgingly by Stubbs and Cotton. Stopping to pick the Marshal's dropped breathing mask, essential in the toxic Solonian air, Stubbs and Cotton briefly lose their commanding officer in the thick mist. They find him standing over the corpse of the old man; the late Solonian has jagged deformities coming out of his back. The Marshal orders his men to log it: another dead Mutt.

Back on 20th century Earth, the Doctor and Jo are interrupted by the sudden appearance of a message pod from the Time Lords. The TARDIS is already programmed with its destination, and, despite his objections, Jo joins the Doctor in the TARDIS as it sets off for Skybase One, in orbit of Solos. Arriving in the Skybase's broom cupboard, the Doctor explains to Jo that they are at the end of the Earth Empire's reign.

At the Skybase's Transmat facility, Solonians are beaming up from the planet to attend a conference with the Overlords, the planet's colonizers from Earth. Ky arrives and is greeted by Varan. The greeting is aything but friendly, as Ky makes it clear he considers Varan to be the lackey of the Overlords. They argue over the status of the Mutts; while Varan considers them a disease to be weeded out, Ky considers it murder of his people. The argument escalates; when Ky accuses the Overlords of polluting his world and enslaving his people, he and Varan nearly come to blows.

The fracas is only prevented by the group being shepherded of to Decontamination (save Varan, who is sent to see the Marshal). Only one guard and one Solonian, Varan's bodyguard, are left in the Transmat lobby. The guard notices the Solonian is hiding his hand. Grabbing the hidden limb, the guard sees it is green and scaled; he screams for help, only to be killed by the mutated Solonian.

In their private conference, Varan is furious with the Marshal that Ky has been allowed to attend the conference. Wiser than his native representative, the Marshal insists that Ky not become a martyr. But he does have a plan for Ky, and needs a trustworthy Solonian from Varan...

Exploring the Skybase, the Doctor and Jo are attacked by the Solonian, and only escape when the Doctor cracks a door lock with his Sonic screwdriver. Stubbs and Cotton are dispatched to investigate the door failure. Finding the Doctor and Jo under attack, they shoot and kill the Solonian. They take the Doctor and Jo into custody.

With Varan's bodyguard shot dead and two trespassers found, the Marshal finds himself being dressed down by his superior, an Administrator from Earth. The Administrator has a bombshell to be dropped at the conference: the Empire is pulling out of Solos. Earth is at the point of economic, political, and environmental collapse, and an empire is a luxury they can ill afford at this point. The Marshal is livid, and believes this to be all the more reason their colonization of Solos is imperative; the Administrator scoffs, as this would require genocide of the already mistreated Solonians. The decision has been made; Ky will be getting all he demands. As the Administrator leaves the room, the Marshal summons Varan once more.

Before heading to the conference, the Marshal and Administrator stop to interrogate Jo and the Doctor. The Marshal believes them to be spies from Earth, sent to check up on him; the Administrator is more sanguine, concluding that whomever they are, it can wait until after the conference with the Solonians.

As the representatives of Solos assemble, the Marshal passes a small device to Varan; Varan passes it to his son.

The conference is being telecast throughout the Skybase, and the Administrator begins his speech to the Solonians. Watching the telecast together, the Doctor uses the distraction to overpower Stubbs and make his way to the conference with the message pod.

The Administrator's speech, though intended to be conciliatory, comes off as condescending and bombastic, and Ky disrupts it several times. As they shout at each other, Varan's son launches a dart from the device, striking the Administrator in the neck. The conference erupts into chaos, and the Marshal orders Ky's arrest. He flees the conference chamber, nearly colliding with the Doctor just outside the door. The momentary contact has an immediate effect on the message pod; it begins to open for Ky, its intended recipient.

But despite the Doctor's protestations, Ky continues to run, grabbing Jo as a human shield. He pulls her into the Transmat, as the Marshal orders his men to open fire. Their blasters turn the Transmat into a shower of sparks...

Part 2
The smoke clears, and the Transmat chamber is empty. Jo's safety may be shortlived, as the Marshal points out; she has no oxymask, and will not survive long on Solos without one.

At the Transmat's ground station, Ky and Jo materialise amidst klaxons. Dodging fire from the ground station's lone guard, they escape through an airlock into the polluted world. They are pursued by more troops, but this ultimately is to their advantage; Ky overpowers one and takes his oxymask.

High above in the Skybase, the Marshal has assumed command in the wake of the Administrator's death. He strikes a bargain with the Doctor; open the message pod, and the Marshal's men will attempt to save Jo. The Doctor reluctantly agrees, and is escorted to the Skybase's lab. The Marshal assigns his own scientist, Jaeger, to assist. Jaeger is put out by the distraction from his own work on the Solosian atmosphere, but complies.

The Marshal now turns to the loose ends of the assassination. He kills Varan's son with the same dart-gun, and then attempts to do the same to Varan himself. Varan escape, but the Marshal declares him a Mutt and orders him captured and executed.

With Jaeger's reluctant help, the Doctor builds a particle reversal device to see the contents of the message pod. Stunned to see the process work, Jaeger realizes that particle reversal could convert the Solosian atmosphere to a more habitable one in days.

Seeking shelter in a cave, Ky explains his people's suffering to Jo. Meanwhile, Stubbs is joined by the Doctor in the search for Varan; when they think they have him cornered, Varan disarms Stubbs and nearly kills him. The Doctor's crack shot with a blaster takes the blade out of Varan's hand.

Having learned the truth about the assassination from Varan, Stubbs is now the Doctor's ally, albeit clandestinely. They lie to the Marshal, claiming Varan is dead; the Marshal, meanwhile, has coaxed Cotton into lying as well, corroborating the Marshal's claim that Jo has been found, and is in a hospital on Solos.

Their deceptions at an impasse, the Marshal shuffles the Doctor off to Jaeger's project on altering the Solosian atmosphere. Jaeger uses the Doctor's outrage at the proposed method - rockets launched into the atmosphere, killing all the Solonians as a "side effect" - to manipulate him into offering his particle reversal method as alternative.

Cotton speaks to the Doctor discreetly, explaining that Stubbs has brought him in on their side, and tells him the truth about Jo. The Doctor and Cotton devise a method to get the Doctor off the Skybase, then the Doctor turns the tables on Jaeger, using his enthusiasm for access to particle reversal to make him a patsy for the escape.

Stubbs informs Varan of the plan to get off the Skybase; though suspicious, he appears to agree. The Doctor overloads the Skybase power, stunning Jaeger in the process. He makes his his way to the Transmat, only to be grabbed by Varan. With his blade and the Doctor's throat, he growls, "Die, overlord!"

Part 3
To be added.

Part 4
To be added.

Part 5
To be added.

Part 6
To be added.

Cast

 * The Doctor - Jon Pertwee
 * Jo Grant - Katy Manning
 * The Marshal - Paul Whitsun-Jones
 * Varan - James Mellor
 * Ky - Garrick Hagon
 * Administrator - Geoffrey Palmer
 * Jaeger - George Pravda
 * Sondergaard - John Hollis
 * Stubbs - Christopher Coll
 * Cotton - Rick James
 * Varan's Son - Jonathan Sherwood
 * Old Man - Sidney Johnson
 * Warrior Guard - David Arlen
 * Solos Guards - Roy Pearce, Damon Sanders
 * Skybase Guard - Martin Taylor
 * Investigator - Peter Howell
 * Mutt - John Scott Martin

Crew

 * Assistant Floor Manager - Sue Hedden
 * Costumes - James Acheson
 * Designer - Jeremy Bear
 * Fight Arranger - Terry Walsh
 * Film Cameraman - Fred Hamilton
 * Film Editor - Dave King
 * Incidental Music - Tristram Cary
 * Make-Up - Joan Barrett
 * Producer - Barry Letts
 * Production Assistant - Fiona Cumming
 * Production Assistant - Chris D'Oyly-John
 * Script Editor - Terrance Dicks
 * Special Sounds - Dick Mills
 * Studio Lighting - Frank Cresswell
 * Studio Sound - Tony Millier
 * Theme Arrangement - Delia Derbyshire
 * Title Music - Ron Grainer
 * Visual Effects - John Horton

Story Notes

 * This story had working titles of; Independence and The Emergents.
 * This is not the only Doctor Who story with the title The Mutants - the first episode of the first Dalek serial was also entitled The Mutants by some, until the broadcast of this one.
 * Episode Six of this story is the first in the series' history to bear an on-screen copyright date.
 * This is the Geoffrey Palmer's second appearance in Doctor Who; he had previously appeared in DW: Doctor Who and the Silurians. He would go on later to appeared in the revived Series episode DW: Voyage of the Damned
 * Probably coincidentally, the opening scene of the story bears an uncanny resemblance to the Monty Python "It's..." openings.
 * The Skybase has a segregated Transmat, with one chamber for Humans and one for Solonians.

Ratings

 * Episode 1 - 9.1 million viewers
 * Episode 2 - 7.8 million viewers
 * Episode 3 - 7.9 million viewers
 * Episode 4 - 7.5 million viewers
 * Episode 5 - 7.9 million viewers
 * Episode 6 - 6.5 million viewers

Myths

 * Author Salman Rushdie refers to The Mutants in his controversial book "The Satanic Verses" and implies that the programme's characterisation of mutations as evil just because they look different from human beings encourages racist attitudes. He thereby completely misses the point of the story, which in fact has an anti-racist message. This is a widespread misinterpretation of Rushdie's words, which instead refer to the treatment of the mutants as evil by some characters in the story. The story is clearly anti-racism and anti-colonialism.

Filming Locations

 * Western Quarry, St. Clements Way, Northfleet, Kent
 * Chislehurst Caves, Old Hill, Chisleshurst
 * Stone House Farm (caves), Lower Rochester Road, Frindsbury, Kent
 * Lime Grove Studios (Studios E), Lime Grove, London
 * BBC Television Centre (Studio 3, 4, 4a), Shepherd's Bush, London

Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors

 * In his first scene in the story, Jon Pertwee says "I couldn't open it even if I wanted to" twice in rapid succession.

Continuity

 * A mutt briefly appears in one of Jo's flashbacks in DW: Frontier in Space.
 * A mutt also appears amongst the space wreckage on Karn in DW: The Brain of Morbius.

DVD, Video and Other Releases
Video Releases

Released as Doctor Who: The Mutants''

Released:


 * UK February 2003
 * Australia May 2003
 * US October 2003 (Part of the End of the Universe Collection also available separately)

Novelisation

 * Main article: Doctor Who and the Mutants


 * Novelised in 1986 as Doctor Who and the Mutants by Terrance Dicks.