Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)

Synopsis
to be added

Plot
The Seventh Doctor and his companion Ace land the TARDIS in London, 1963, where the Doctor has unfinished business: The Hand of Omega, an ancient relic of the Time Lord civilization that the Doctor hid on Earth on a previous visit to 1963.

Unfortunately, the Daleks have also heard about the Hand of Omega, and are trying to find it before the Doctor does. To complicate matters, there are two groups of Daleks at work — the Daleks are currently in the midst of a civil war between those that accept and those that reject the leadership of their creator Davros, and each side wants the Hand for itself. The Imperial Daleks have set up an outpost at the Coal Hill School.

In the meantime, the alien activity around the Coal Hill area has attracted the attention of the military. Group Captain Gilmore and his unit engage a Renegade Dalek at the junkyard, destroying it with the help of the Doctor and Ace. The Doctor tries to convince Gilmore and his scientific advisor, Dr Rachel Jensen, that human weapons are no match for the Daleks and the best thing they can do is just stay out of the crossfire. The Doctor, however, is playing a deeper game — he wants the "right" Daleks to take possession of the Hand.

The Renegade Daleks enlist the help of a local fascist, Ratcliffe, in first obtaining the Hand, but they are soon attacked by the Imperial Daleks, who retrieve the Hand. Determining that the Imperial Daleks are from Skaro, the Dalek homeworld, the Doctor allows them to return to their mothership with it. The Imperial Daleks plan to use the Hand to create a power source that will give them mastery of time travel, a technology that the Daleks only have in the crudest sense.

However, when the Dalek Emperor, a much deteriorated Davros, activates the Hand, he also triggers a booby-trap that the Doctor has programmed into it. The Hand transports itself to the future which the Imperial Daleks have come from and turns Skaro's sun into a supernova, destroying the star system and Dalek homeworld, and then returns itself to Gallifrey. The resulting feedback blows up the Imperial Dalek mothership, but Davros manages to flee in an escape pod before its destruction. The Dalek Supreme, the last Renegade Dalek on Earth, destroys itself when told by the Doctor that it is the last of its kind.

Cast
The Doctor - Sylvester McCoy

Ace - Sophie Aldred

Davros - Terry Molloy
 * Also credited as 'Roy Tromelly' in Part 3 to preserve the surprise at Davros's return.


 * Group Captain Gilmore - Simon Williams
 * Professor Rachel Jensen - Pamela Salem
 * Mike Smith - Dursley McLinden
 * Allison - Karen Gledhill
 * Ratcliffe - George Sewell
 * Headmaster - Michael Sheard
 * Harry - Harry Fowler
 * The Girl - Jasmine Breaks
 * Embery - Peter Hamilton Dyer
 * Voice - John Leeson
 * Vicar - Peter Halliday
 * John - Joseph Marcell
 * Martin - William Thomas
 * Kaufman - Derek Keller
 * Dalek Operatord - Hugh Spight, John Scott Martin, Tony Starr, Cy Town
 * Dalek Voices - Roy Skelton, Brian Miller, Royce Mills

Crew
to be added

Story Notes

 * This is the first instance of a Dalek levitating up a stair case on screen.


 * This was the first story to be broadcast in NICAM stereo sound.

Ratings
to be added

Myths
to be added

Location Filming
to be added

Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors

 * The gates to the junkyard bear the label "I.M FORMAN", as a nod to the junkyard seen in the first ever episode (An Unearthly Child), and as a continuity link. (The Doctor also has knowledge of the geography of the junkyard). The junkyard in Unearthly Child however, is advertised as "I.M Foreman"


 * When the Doctor is counting ten seconds until the Nitro-9 he obtained from Ace explodes, you can clearly see where the re-dubbed audio doesn't quite match the original footage.

Continuity

 * The Doctor constructs a device to disorientate the Imperial Daleks in order to rescue Ace replying when asked "I constructed something like it on Spiridon", a reference to a Third Doctor story Planet of the Daleks.


 * War of the Daleks offers an alternative explanation (or a 'retcon') to many of the events of this story.


 * Terror Firma follows up on Davros' fate.


 * Lungbarrow explains the detailed history of the Hand of Omega and how the Doctor obtained it.


 * Interference explains the some of history behind IM Forman's junkyard.

DVD, Video, and Other Releases
DVD Releases

Released as Doctor Who: Remembrance of the Daleks, this release was the second release of 2001.

Released:
 * Region 2 26th February 2001
 * PAL - BBC DVD BBCDVD1040


 * Region 4 13th May 2002
 * Region 1 2nd April 2002
 * NTSC - Warner Video E1183

Contents:
 * Delted Scenes/Out-takes
 * Multi-Angle Sequences
 * Trailers
 * Music-only Option
 * Photo Gallery
 * Production Subtitles
 * Commentary: Sylvester McCoy and Sophie Aldred

Rear Credits:
 * By Ben Aaronovitch
 * Produced by John Nathan-Turner
 * Directed by Andrew Morgan
 * Incidental Music by Keff McCulloch

Notes: An error was made and the Region 2 DVD is missing some SFX from certain shots. The Australia/NZ release is in NTSC format, not the standard PAL format, due to an inability to clear the music and the SFX problem which had been corrected for the US DVD.

Video Releases

Released as Doctor Who: Rememberance of the Daleks.

Released:
 * First Release:
 * UK September 1993
 * PAL - BBC Video BBCV5005
 * Australia/NZ September 1993
 * US October 1993
 * NTSC - Warner Video E1145

Notes: Released in a special edition Dalek Tin along with The Chase and a book entitled The Daleks. The US release featured no book or tin, both stories packaged in one box without individual artwork.


 * Second Release:
 * UK September 2001
 * PAL - BBC Video BBCV7255

Notes: W.H. Smith exclusive as part of the The Davros Collection box set.

Target Novelisations
Remembrance of the Daleks Target Novelisation