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Thursday 23 January 2014

006 - The Aztecs

Doctor Who: The Aztecs
Broadcast:
23rd May - 13th June 1964
Doctor:
William Hartnell
Companions:
Ian, Barbara, Susan
Adversary:
Aztec Heigh Priest
Written by:
John Lucarotti
Director:
John Crockett
Music:
Richard Rodney Bennett
Script Editor:
David Whitaker
Producer:
Verity Lambert
Average Viewers:
7.53m (7.4, 7.4, 7.9, 7.4)
Summary: Landing amongst an ancient civilisation that demands human sacrifice leads Barbara to try and change history - the very subject which she teaches!

Following the quality of his scripts for Marco Polo, John Lucarotti was asked to write another. He drew on his experience of living in Mexico and his fascination with Aztec culture to write what would be Doctor Who's third dip into history.

At the time of broadcast, viewers could also become familiar with the First World War as the BBC started to show their 26 part documentary series The Great War or watch such films as Night Must Fall and The Evil of Frankenstein (the former featured Sheila Hancock who would later appear in The Happiness Patrol as Helen A, and the latter starred Peter Cushing who would play the Doctor in the two Dalek movies in 1965 and 1966). In the charts, Four Pennies spent a week at number one with "Juliet" followed by four weeks of Cilla Black's "You're My World". Meanwhile the Rolling Stones crossed the Atlantic for their first American tour. In the news, South Korean President Park Chung Hee declared martial law in Seoul, after 10,000 student demonstrators overpowered police in anti-government protests, a referee's decision during the Tokyo Olympics football qualifiers in Peru lead to riots which killed 319 people and left 500 injured, the first Soviet communications satellite was launched, and Nelson Mandela was sentenced to life imprisonment (though political changes would eventually result in his release in 1990 and pave the way for his presidency of South Africa 30 years and one month after his sentencing).

As for The Aztecs, Carole-Anne Ford would be taking her two week holiday so arrangements were made to give Susan a minor sub-plot that could be filmed in advance at Ealing and take her away from the main action, indeed all four regulars would be apart from each other for much of the story which gives it a sense of scale but also a slight emptiness...

Sunday 19 January 2014

005 - The Keys Of Marinus

The Keys Of Marinus
Broadcast:
11th April - 16th May 1964
Doctor:
William Hartnell
Companions:
Ian, Barbara, Susan
Adversary:
Voord
Written by:
Terry Nation
Director:
John Gorrie
Music:
Norman Kay
Script Editor:
David Whitaker
Producer:
Verity Lambert
Average Viewers:
9.07m (9.9, 9.4, 9.9, 10.4, 7.9, 6.9)
Summary: In a search spread across the land, the travellers face hallucinations, fast growing vines and booby traps, frozen knights, and an accusation of murder

Doctor Who was fast becoming a Saturday afternoon staple and The Keys Of Marinus was the first adventure commissioned after broadcasts had begun. Circumstances and shifts in thinking meant that existing commissions either weren't working or were no longer suitable and a replacement six parter was needed quickly. As a reliable writer and following the immense success of The Daleks, the job went to Terry Nation who completed the scripts in just four weeks, creating a different scenario for nearly all episodes.

In the news during the broadcast period of The Keys Of Marinus, Nelson Mandela made his influential "I Am Prepared to Die" speech at the opening of the Rivonia Trial, seven of the eleven Great Train Robbers were sentenced to 30 years in prison and the head of the Little Mermaid statue in Copenhagen went missing (Henrik Bruun apparently confessed to friends in 1997 claiming it to have been a protest). West Ham won the FA cup for the first time, ITV broadcast the very first Seven Up! documentary and Terence Conran opened the first Habitat. Meanwhile, in America masses of students staged protests against the war in Vietnam and the Beatles continued to dominate the with a record breaking 14 singles on the Billboard 100 and their second album was at number one. In the UK charts, their "Can't Buy Me Love" eventually gave up the top spot to "World Without Love" (Peter And Gordon) followed by "Don't Throw Your Love Away" (The Searchers) and the Rolling Stones released their first album. Play School became the first program broadcast on BBC2, following the channel's aborted launch the night before due to power cuts (and would go on to be the first program broadcast in colour three years later), while cinema releases included Nightmare, Woman Of Straw and The Bargee.

Tuesday 7 January 2014

004 - Marco Polo

Doctor Who: Marco Polo
Broadcast:
22nd February - 4th April 1964
Doctor:
William Hartnell
Companions:
Ian, Barbara, Susan
Adversary:
Mongol Bandits
Written by:
John Lucarotti
Director:
Waris Hussein, John Crockett (ep4)
Music:
Tristram Cary
Script Editor:
David Whitaker
Producer:
Verity Lambert
Average Viewers:
9.47m (9.4, 9.4, 9.4, 9.9, 9.4, 8.4, 10.4)
Summary: The TARDIS is captured by a great explorer and the travellers are forced to travel through Cathay with him, facing bandits and dehydration along the way

I initially thought this would be an easy review. All episodes of Marco Polo are missing from the archive but the audio is presented on the The Edge Of Destruction DVD in an edited form with telesnaps which I remembered watching a few years ago and not enjoying a great deal. They have condensed seven episodes into 30 minutes so it feels very fast, choppy and a little incomprehensible. There are sections of voice over narrating a journey animated on a map and an explanation of condensation that feels very shoe-horned in just to fulfil the educational remit.

I then remembered that Loose Canon have created full telesnap reconstructions of every missing episode (Marco Polo had a fresh make over just a year ago) and while they make a point of only distributing them on VHS (you provide the tape and prepaid postage) the modern computer age has made it easier for others to convert these videos and upload them to sites like YouTube. At the time of writing, only 5 parts are not available (one complete episode and the first half of three others) which is a mere 2.8% of missing material. Once I watched their version of Marco Polo, it was clear that the 30 minute edit on the DVD did not do it justice and I hold great hope for the remaining stories.

And so to the main review...