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


 * The gun-carrying, near-murderous Doctor of this episode seems wildly out of character.
 * This is examined as a key point of the story, as is later repeated in Dalek. Davros is responsible for death and destruction of billions of people and worlds due to the creation of the Daleks. The Doctor wants to destroy the Daleks and stop any more destruction. He ultimately cannot bring himself to pull the trigger.
 * This conflict within the Doctor, especially s regards the Daleks, has already been explored in Genesis of the Daleks. The Fourth Doctor faces the choice between genociding the Daleks and preventing billions of deaths and unmaginable misery, or taking the moral high ground and permitting he evil to continue. This is referenced by the Fifth Doctor in his dialogue with Tegan before he goes to kill Davros.
 * Call it hypocrisy or not, but the Doctor has never had many moral qualms about killing Daleks, even when not strictly necessary to survival (such as when he plants a bomb for one in "The Chase", and blows up two after making his escape in "Destiny...", though it is possible Davros was the intended target). While he balks at taking responsibity for actual genocide in "Genesis...", his general attitude to the Daleks, ever since their first story, is that they have become too inextricably identified with their machines to be considered as redeemable individuals.


 * Why do the Daleks allow Turlough to wander freely? This is not necessary in order to use him as bait.
 * Neither do they need to contain him. They see him as no threat.


 * Davros, although aware of the Movellan War, is surprised and fascinated by the problem of the impasse, and even says he wished he had been there. Yet he was there - in DW: Destiny of the Daleks he was aware of the problem and even actively worked on solving it.


 * Despite having spent his time in suspended animation he has been able to make his mind control device and has learnt enough about Time Lords to deduce that they're 'all soft'.
 * Davros' primary contact with Time Lords has been the Doctor. To the creator of the Daleks, anyone who shows compassion or mercy is soft. Taking the Doctor to represent Time Lords, he would undoubtedly consider them soft. The Daleks, based on their knowledge of and interaction with Time Lords, would undoubtedly agree. As for the mind control device, it is safe to assume that at some point Davros had to be transferred from the holding cell on the Movellan ship to the permanent cell on the space station, not to mention was presumably unfrozen for the duration of his trial. During that period, the modifications to his life-support chair were carried out, and he took advantage of the time to construct his concealable injector device, but did not find an opportune moment to use it.


 * Davros appears to distrust the Daleks, and declares that they will not abuse him again. Yet in Destiny they were slave-like in their obedience.
 * The Daleks in Destiny of the Daleks were desperate and manipulative, Davros has had time to reflect on and learn to distrust their suspicious reversal of loyalties.


 * Who are the prisoners who escape at the start? Duplicates? The originals of duplicates?
 * Their flight might suggest they are originals attempting to escape.They are referred to as 'specimens', which may imply they were captured for experimentation or for duplication. But if so, why is Stein with them? Perhaps, like Stein, they are unstable duplicates rebelling against their conditioning, which would explain why Stein returns to the Daleks. But I think it's more likely that they were allowed to escape, along with Stein, as part of the trap for the Doctor. If so, an over-elaborate and wasteful one I(as the commander of the troopers comments)! I get the feeling from watching the story again that the original script explained these and other events, but the final production bared it down, creating obscurity.


 * Why use duplicates as soldiers, rather than to infiltrate?
 * They are simply a resource the Daleks have available and are willing to expend.


 * Why are the cylinders of Movellan virus left on 1984 Earth, a planet that the Daleks want to invade? It's a bit like the Allies hiding an atom bomb in Berlin.
 * Put another way, hiding an atom bomb in Berlin would be a brilliant idea, as long as you had the ability (through spies, a remote control, whatever) to detonate it. Much better than bombers that can be shot down or can miss their targets…


 * When Tegan handles a cylinder she remarks on how light is. But later it takes two Dalek agents to lift one.
 * It's not a matter of weight, it's a need to be very careful as the contents of the cylinder will kill their employers.


 * How do the Daleks have duplicates of Tegan and Turlough? The 1984 Earth soldiers appear to be duplicated in an extraordinarily short time. And why do the Daleks make such a fuss to keep the Doctor alive to clone him, when they can clone dead people as well?
 * Davros needed him alive to copy his memories, which he explicitly mentions wanting to do.


 * How are the Daleks able to view what's going on inside the station from their own ship?
 * Being a prison ship, they would have to have video cameras.


 * Why does Davros immediately assume correctly that Lytton and his troopers are working for the Daleks after they unfreeze him?
 * The Daleks are likely the only creatures in the universe that would want Davros free. The obviously Dalek-inspired design of Lytton's headgear probably also helped convince Davros that his creations were behind the attack.


 * Why do the duplicated Earth soldiers attack Davros's Daleks with weapons they know will not harm them?
 * Their weapons actually do work against the Daleks, as is seen when they managed to disable a Dalek earlier in the story by shooting out its eye stalk.


 * When the Doctor is captured by the Daleks he asks where Davros is. But he does not know that the Dalek ship is docked onto the prison ship where Davros was held, let alone that he has been released.
 * It's a plausible assumption that Davros is involved, particularly as the last time the Doctor saw the Daleks they were trying to find Davros. Had he been wrong on the assumption, he probably would have simply turned it into a humourous quip.


 * The Dalek plan to infiltrate Earth with their duplicates is never really explained. At the end of the story the Dalek Supreme tells the Doctor that the duplicates have infiltrated Earth. The Doctor explains to Tegan and Turlough that these duplicates will become unstable like Stien. Does this mean they will die, or that they will lose their Dalek conditioning? In the meantime, could they not they create chaos on Earth?
 * At the end, Turlough suggests they inform Earth's authorities, and the Doctor agrees, so that is what they most likely do after leaving Tegan.


 * When the Daleks discover the Doctor they mean to exterminate him. Lytton appears and tells them that the Supreme Dalek wants him alive. One of the Daleks electronically confers with the Dalek Supreme and confirms this. Why would the Dalek Supreme give this command to Lytton, who is not entirely trustworthy, but not to the party of Daleks sent to the Doctor?
 * The Dalek Supreme believes that they have enough control over Lytton's actions that they have put him in charge of the mission. Logically, he would have more information form the Dalek Supreme than the Dalek soldiers.


 * Later, when the survivors of the ship's crew are killed in the self-destruct chamber, a Dalek tells Lytton it must inform the Dalek Supreme. But it physically leaves.
 * The camera just switches to focus on Lytton. You can actually hear the Dalek electronically communicating with the Supreme Dalek in the background. It just doesn't appear in the shot itself.


 * Why does Davros look so different to when we last saw him in DW: Destiny of the Daleks?
 * A new mask was created with a 'sagging' effect to simulate the years spent in cryo-stasis


 * How does does the Dalek Supreme survive the contagion or the destruction of the prison ship?
 * The Supreme Dalek was on the Dalek ship; the Movellan virus likely never got a chance to spread there before Stien set off the self-destruct. Odds are the Supreme didn't survive the events of the story, as it is never seen again after the prison and the Dalek ship are destroyed.


 * Leela doesn't appear on the scanner.
 * The Doctor has an inkling of the Daleks' plans, so tries his hardest to hide his memories of the one person he knows the clone will encounter on Gallifrey, and the one person he knows will kill the clone if she thinks it's dangerous.
 * What about Romana?


 * Romana is assumably still in E-Space.


 * Why wasn't Stein killed when he was shot with the Dalek death ray?
 * His survival for several seconds may be due to a quality given by the duplication process or the Dalek conditioning. As agents of the Daleks the duplicates might be expected to be stronger than the originals.
 * Additionally, Dalek guns are generally known for delivering a slow and painful death: especially the blue-ray post "Genesis" version. Note that everyone shot with them in "Genesis" dies screaming in agony, and often only after several seconds, as is also the case with most Dalek-caused deaths in "Resurrection" and "Revelation". Admittedly, the "death ray" casualties in "Destiny" were seemingly quick and painless, but that is probably symptomatic of the toned-down, horror-light nature of the Graham Williams era. Stien is also not the first Dalek victim to survive long enough to fight back: Kristas in "The Daleks" also withstands a single "death ray" blast, manages to get back on his feet again, and destroys the Dalek power controls.


 * Why, towards the end, does the erstwhile ruthless but level-headed Lytton suddenly become randomly trigger-happy? Having been betrayed by the Daleks, he has nothing to gain from shooting at the Doctor, and since he allows his "policemen" to survive and assist him in escaping from Earth, why not the other trooper whom he casually blows away?
 * The title of the story seems odd, given that the Daleks revive Davros because they are dying, not resurrecting. And the effect of reviving Davros is their near total destruction.
 * Yes, the Daleks are dying--so they revive Davros in hopes that it will lead to their resurrection. Unfortunately for them, it doesn't, but you don't change the name retroactively. People still talk about The Crusades, The Mongol Invasion of Europe, Vitalian's Rebellion, The Arab Revolt of 1916, The War for Southern Independence, etc., even though the end result was the Christians losing all remaining territory in Asia Minor, the Mongols being pushed out of everything west of Russia, Vitalian being sold out by his officers and retreating without a fight, the Arabs losing and having to wait for the post-War Ottoman partition, the Southern US being forcibly reintegrated with the North and subject to Reconstruction, etc.
 * The title could also mean the Davros's resurrection by the Daleks.