The Lost Boy (TV story)

The Lost Boy was the sixth and final story of Series 1 of The Sarah Jane Adventures. It was comprised of episodes 9 & 10 of the regular series and saw the reappearance of the Slitheen.

Synopsis
A missing child turns out to be, both visually and genetically, Luke. Sarah Jane is forced to hand him over to the 'parents', only to find that they are not what they seem.

Part 1
Having discovered what Sarah Jane, Maria, Clyde and Luke do together, Alan Jackson threatens to move house again, only to have a change of heart when he sees how upset Maria is. His condition for not moving away, however, is that he is kept up to date with their battles against aliens. A BBC news report on a family searching for their son, Ashley, who has been missing for five months, brings a shock, for Ashley looks exactly like Luke. Mr Smith compares their DNA, and confirms that Luke and Ashley are genetic matches. Apparently Luke was not 'grown' by the Bane, but was a kidnapped boy. His lack of a navel is explained as the result of its removal by the Bane, who are eggborn and find navels offensive. Chrissie Jackson calls the police and reports Sarah Jane as a child abductor. Sarah Jane is arrested and the police put Luke into the charge of Ashley's parents, Jay and Heidi. Sarah Jane is detained by the police, only for UNIT to intervene and have her released. Depressed, Sarah Jane decides she was wrong to involve children and tells Maria to stay away from her. Mr. Smith suggests she take on a case to take her mind off things, and she visits the Pharos Institute, a research centre where alien technology is being used to conduct experiments into telekinesis. Here she meets the annoying child prodigy Nathan Goss. That night, Luke's new parents watch television and switch over to a channel that glows green. They announce to the Xylok that they have the boy in their possession.

Luke's new parents are extremely abusive towards him, keeping him locked up in his room at all times. Clyde Langer cuts school to visit Luke, but Heidi does not let them see each other. Heidi claims that her son is a keen skateboarder, which worries Clyde; he knows Luke has a poor sense of balance and is a dreadful skateboarder. He decides to bring a photo of Jay and Heidi to Mr Smith. Luke becomes frantic upon seeing Clyde leave the house, and desperately attempts to escape. Mr. Smith, meanwhile, sends Sarah Jane back to the lab to steal one of the headsets there, which he needs to analyse to work out Nathan's plans. Clyde gets to the house only seconds after Sarah Jane has left, but takes the photo to Mr Smith anyway, only for Mr Smith to confess that he faked the photo. It turns out that Mr. Smith is the Xylok, and he fires a bolt of energy at Clyde, causing him to vanish.

Back at Luke's new home, his 'parents' are meeting with Nathan, just as Luke is breaking out of his room. He fails to escape, but finds his parents are actually Slitheen using improved compression technology, and Nathan Goss is in fact Korst Gogg Thek Lutiven-Day Slitheen, a child Slitheen Luke met before, now in a new disguise and looking for revenge.

Part 2
Clyde wakes to find himself inside Mr. Smith as Sarah Jane Smith returns from the Pharos Institute, having stolen a telekinetic headset. Elsewhere, Maria and Alan go to Ashley's house, where they find a skinsuit. Maria realises the Slitheen have Luke. Alan gets a message on his computer from Clyde, who states Mr. Smith has turned evil. The Jacksons and Sarah Jane confront Mr. Smith and are nearly killed as it fires a bolt of energy from a built-in gun.

The Slitheen take Luke to the Pharos Institute where they test his abilities. Luke overcomes the Slitheen and escapes, as Maria, Alan and Sarah Jane arrive. Working together, they discover Mr. Smith's intentions and Alan adapts a computer virus to destroy Mr. Smith. Using the Slitheen teleporter, Sarah Jane arrives in her attic, where Mr. Smith is using Luke to awaken other Xylok from the Earth's core. He plans to crash the moon into the planet, cracking it open like an egg and freeing the other Xylok. Clyde returns when Mr. Smith states he is merciful, but threatens the humans with its gun. Sarah Jane unlocks a safe and calls on K9. The robots battle and Sarah Jane inserts the virus, which makes Mr. Smith forget its purpose. As the Moon grows closer to the Earth, Sarah Jane tells Mr. Smith it has a new purpose: to safeguard planet Earth.

The Moon returns to its original position, K9 goes back to the safe to safeguard the black hole and the Slitheen return to Raxacoricofallapatorius. As Sarah Jane, Maria, Luke, Clyde, Alan and Chrissie watch the ship leave, Sarah Jane reflects how she never thought she could be part of a family...

Cast

 * Sarah Jane Smith — Elisabeth Sladen
 * Maria Jackson — Yasmin Paige
 * Luke Smith — Tommy Knight
 * Clyde Langer — Daniel Anthony
 * Voice of Mr Smith/Xylok - Alexander Armstrong
 * Alan Jackson — Joseph Millson
 * Chrissie Jackson — Juliet Cowan
 * Professor Rivers — Floella Benjamin
 * Jay Stafford — Jay Simpson
 * Heidi Stafford — Holly Atkins
 * Nathan Goss — Ryan Watson
 * Chief Inspector - Julian Dutton
 * Jay Slitheen — Paul Kasey
 * Nathan Slitheen — Jimmy Vee
 * Heidi Slitheen — Ruari Mears
 * Newsreader - Jason Mohammad
 * Voice ofK9 — John Leeson

Story notes

 * This episode ends with Sarah Jane narrating. This closes the first series, just as a narration by her opened the series in Invasion of the Bane.
 * Both episodes were aired on the CBBC channel, and were broadcast a week later on BBC 1.

Ratings

 * Episode 1 - 465,000 (CBBC)
 * 1.3 million (BBC 1)
 * Episode 2- 659,000 (CBBC)
 * 1.2 million (BBC 1)

Myths
To be added

Filming locations
To be added

Production errors
At one point, it says 21 on Sarah Jane's door.

''That's because the house they film at is 21 Clinton Road, Penarth, Cardiff. That's why the number on the door changes at times''

Continuity

 * The Slitheen previously appeared in DW: Aliens of London, World War Three, and Boom Town, SJA: Revenge of the Slitheen, NSA: The Monsters Inside, and in Attack of the Graske and the family have had many references in other episodes.
 * When the inspector questions Sarah Jane, a page of her confidential UNIT file is visible on screen. The text is taken from the BBC's UNIT website and includes the in-joke that UNIT's activities span "the sixties, the seventies, and some would say the eighties." This is the first on-screen reference in SJA (and indeed the entire Doctor Who TV franchise) to the UNIT dating controversy and was followed by a similar in-joke spoken by the Tenth Doctor in DW: The Sontaran Stratagem where he reminisces about working for UNIT in the '70s, "or was it the 80s?"
 * K9 returns briefly and reference is made to his work on containing the black hole. Clyde does not know of him as he was not present when K9 met Maria and Luke. As such, K9 calls him "young master", SJA: Invasion of the Bane)
 * The Slitheen are now using an improved version of their skin suit, which allows them to pass for skinnier humans and no longer causes the gas exchange problem which caused inconvenience in Revenge of the Slitheen et al.
 * The Pharos Institute may have some connection to the Pharos Project, last seen in DW: Logopolis
 * Sarah Jane says she never thought she could be part of a family. She would later tell the Tenth Doctor that he had the biggest family on Earth, herself being a part of it. (DW: Journey's End)
 * Professor Rivers says that all humans have the ability to perform telekinesis. The Doctor would later use telekinesis whilst using the thoughts of the human race psychically linked together. (DW: Last of the Time Lords)
 * When Sarah Jane arrives in the attic using the Slitheen teleporting device, the light produced looks similar to a vortex manipulator. (DW: The Big Bang et al.)

Home video releases
The Lost Boy, along with Invasion of the Bane, Revenge of the Slitheen, Eye of the Gorgon, Warriors of Kudlak and Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?, is available in the Series 1 box set.

Novelisation

 * Main article: The Lost Boy (novelisation)


 * A novelisation written by Gary Russell, was published on 3 November 2008, marking the first time since the early 1990s that a complete season of a Doctor Who-related series has been completely novelised.