Devious (home video)

Devious is the title of an as-yet-unfinished fan-made film starring Tony Garner as an interim incarnation, the "Second-and-a-Halfth Doctor". Production began not long before Jon Pertwee's death in 1996 and constituted his final known performance as the Third Doctor (and possibly his final acting performance altogether, though he may have filmed his final widely-seen performance – a TV commercial – afterwards). Pertwee's scenes were videotaped in April 1995.

According to the official website of the production, the film is near completion, with editing and special effects left to be done. The footage has been divided into six episodes, presumably in the classic series' 25-minute length.

Plot summary
To be added

Cast

 * "Second-and-a-Halfth Doctor" - Tony Garner
 * Second Doctor - Patrick Troughton (via archive footage)
 * Third Doctor - Jon Pertwee
 * Polly Wright - Anneke Wills

Background
During the 1990s a large number of fan-made audio, film, and video productions were undertaken to keep the Doctor Who brand alive following its cancellation in 1989. Many of these productions featured either characters who were effectively the Doctor is all but name (see The Stranger and The Time Travellers, for example), or non-BBC-owned characters and monsters from the TV series that had been licensed direct from their creators (see P.R.O.B.E., Downtime, and Shakedown: Return of the Sontarans, for examples).

Although with the exception of Tom Baker all surviving Doctor actors, including Pertwee, had participated in at least one of these productions, Devious is notable as being the only production to feature one of these actors playing his incarnation of the Doctor, although there is no indication that the character had been licensed from the BBC.

Release
Following Pertwee's death, Big Finish Productions utilized audio of him from Devious in the 40th-anniversary audio drama, Zagreus.

In 2009, BBC Video released a 12-minute excerpt from Devious as a bonus feature on the UK and North American DVD releases of the final Troughton serial, DW: The War Games (the storyline of Devious takes place between it and Pertwee's first televised story, DW: Spearhead from Space). This marked the first time the BBC has released a fan film of this nature, although it is uncertain whether its inclusion on the DVD means it is accepted as canon (and, if so, what it overrides of Season 6B).

The film also includes several other cameos, including Anneke Wills reprising her role as Polly, although she does not appear in the excerpt released to DVD.

Story notes

 * Anneke Wills does not appear in the excerpt featured on the 2009 DVD release, as rights could not be secured to show the Cybermen (which appear in Wills' scenes). Similarly, the Daleks (which also feature in the production) are not seen.
 * The TARDIS console and walls, plus the Dalek props, were borrowed in 1999 for use in The Curse of Fatal Death. In 2004, the TARDIS set was borrowed for use in a four-part news report on Doctor Who's past. The TARDIS exterior (not seen in Curse), complete with Yale key-and-lock, has also appeared in a few retrospectives.
 * When Jon Pertwee agreed to reprise his role in 1995, the console room was overhauled – the walls were upgraded from simply having photocopied roundels on cardboard to using cut-out roundels on hardboard, while the console itself was upgraded from a small foot-long model to a full-sized one. Most scenes that had been filmed up to that point using the old console room were reshot using the new console/walls, however a few brief shots using the original walls can be seen in the 2009 DVD excerpt.

Continuity

 * This story takes place immediately after DW: The War Games and immediately before DW: Spearhead from Space, which is at odds with the Season 6B put forth primarily by DW: The Two Doctors and TVC: Action in Exile. (The group may be unknowingly viewing a recording of the Second Doctor's trial while in fact he was undergoing a forced regeneration in his TARDIS on 20th-Century Earth {TVC: The Night Walkers}, and the Time Lords simply altered the retrieval coordinates.)
 * Although not addressed, the Third Doctor looking considerably older at the start of his lifetime than seen in Spearhead from Space is not necessarily an error. In DW: The Christmas Invasion, it is established that a Time Lord can alter his or her body immediately after the regeneration (and is supported by Romana's regeneration in DW: Destiny of the Daleks). DW: Time Crash also establishes that if two incarnations of the same Time Lord interact, it can cause one of them to appear older.
 * The Third Doctor would hear the final words he spoke to the Second-and-a-Halfth Doctor at the end of his own life, uttered by K'anpo Rimpoche to Sarah Jane Smith and Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart in DW: Planet of the Spiders.