State of Decay
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113 State of Decay | |
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Doctor | Tom Baker (Fourth Doctor) |
Writer | Terrance Dicks |
Director | Peter Moffatt |
Script editor | Christopher H. Bidmead |
Producer | John Nathan-Turner |
Executive producer(s) | Barry Letts |
Production code | 5P |
Series | Season 18 |
Length | 4 episodes, 25 mins each |
Transmission date | November 22– December 13, 1980 |
Preceded by | Full Circle |
Followed by | Warriors' Gate |
State of Decay is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in four weekly parts from November 22 to 13 December 1980. The serial was the second of three loosely connected serials known as the E-Space Trilogy.
Contents |
[edit] Synopsis
The Doctor and his companions arrive at a planet ruled by three Lords named Zargo, Camilla and Aukon, vampire servants to the last of the Great Vampires.
[edit] Plot
Continuing the Doctor's adventures in E-Space, the Doctor, Romana, K-9, and their newest companion/stowaway, Adric, arrive on a planet experiencing what appears to be a feudal period. The population scratches out a living as subsistence farmers under the thrall of three local lords, Zargo, Camilla, and Aukon, who dwell in a shadowy, bat-filled tower. Adding further fear to their lives, they experience a yearly ritual called "the Wasting," in which a sample of young villagers are taken to the tower, never to be seen again. This selection process is enforced by a thuggish band of guards led by Habris.
The Doctor and Romana venture out into the village (not knowing that Adric is following them), and it doesn't take long for the Doctor to realize that something is very wrong when he discovers evidence of technology considerably more advanced than what this medieval society seems capable of producing. With such technology, the Doctor and Romana wonder what happened in the course of the planet's development to cause it to evolve "backward" from a presumably advanced culture to its current rustic condition -- to be in a "state of decay." The arrival and then departure of the Doctor and Romana from the village hall is reported by the headman, Ivo, via an electronic communications device to an unseen figure called Kalmar. As the two head out of the village they are seized by cloaked figures who convey them to a secret base filled with illegal computers and other technology. Kalmar is a scientist - a heretical role in their society - and is very grateful for the Doctor's help in repairing a computer which proceeds to reveal the names of the original chief officers of the spaceship Hydrax. The faces of three senior officers are revealed as those of the Lords of the Tower.
The lords too have learnt of Romana and the Doctor, and Aukon sends a flock of his winged servants, bats, to menace them as they travel a clearing near the village.
The Doctor and Romana are now seized by Habris and his guards and taken to an audience in the Tower. Zargo and Camilla entertain them for a while, then are called away to deal with a situation called the Arising. The Doctor and Romana start to snoop around and discover that in fact, the great Tower in which the lords dwell is itself a spaceship originally from Earth, which also somehow was pulled into E-Space long ago.
Adric has meanwhile wandered into the village and finds himself looked after by Ivo and his wife Marta, both of whom are grieving for their late son who has caught in the Wasting.
In the Hydrax the Doctor and Romana discover rows of corpses drained of blood, while the craft's fuel stores are full of blood. Talk turns to vampires. They head downwards and find a veritable lake of blood under the tower. It is there that the lord Aukon greets them, welcoming them to his domain.
Aukon invites the Doctor to join the Lords who Rule, but he refuses. When they refuse they are imprisoned. The Doctor deduces by applying principles of consonant shifting that the current lords' names are a corruption of the original crew names (e.g. "Sharky" becomes "Zargo"). Thus the Doctor realizes that the three lords might not be descendants of the original crew, but members of the original crew themselves. He is reminded of ancient Time Lord stories of the Great Vampires, a race of rapacious, destructive, and powerful creatures that were ancient enemies of the Time Lords themselves. He deduces that the Great Vampire escaped destruction at the hands of the Time Lords by somehow retreating into E-Space, and it managed eventually to gather enough power to pull the old Earth ship into this universe and corrupt the crew. Over time, it licked its wounds and gathered power so that it could once again feast on worlds.
Meanwhile, Adric's attempts to mingle with the natives have led to him getting caught up getting caught in the Wasting. He is put under a hypnotic trance by Aukon and accompanies him to the tower. Normally, the sacrifices contribute to the lake of blood, but Aukon has other plans for Adric when he finds, to his surprise, some rudimentary psychic shields that keep Aukon from knowing too much about what's inside Adric's head. Aukon decides not to let this talent go to waste, and plots to change Adric into one of them.
An associate of Kalmar, named Tarak, makes a solo attack on the Tower in the hope of freeing the Doctor and Romana. The Doctor gets out and returns to the TARDIS, while Romana stays with Tarak to search for Adric, whom she knows now is in the Tower. When they find him Aukon is there too and kills Tarak before advancing menacingly on Romana and Adric.
Romana and Adric are spared death for the moment but taken to the lake of blood, where Romana will be sacrificed at the time of Arising and Adric will indeed become a Chosen One.
In the TARDIS the Doctor and K-9 review the old stories about vampires. The lore that the Doctor and K-9 uncovers determines that the Great Vampires could only be defeated by metal bowships driven through their chests (rather like the wooden stakes that work on lesser vampires). He takes the craft to Kalmar's base and there uses scanning equipment to scan the Tower. Under the lake of blood he finds a restless, demonic presence, whom he determines to be the last Great Vampire. He warns it is about to be revived. Kalmar, Ivo and many other villagers agree to help him fight back. This rebel army and K9 make an assault on the Tower itself, killing collaborator guards like Habris. The Doctor heads off to the peak of the Tower and, in a burst of characteristic ingenuity, the Doctor manages to rig one of the old shuttlecraft still attached to the spaceship/tower to launch and achieve a trajectory that caused it to point back toward the ground and drive itself into the heart of the subterranean Great Vampire, thus duplicating the effect of the "metal bowships" of Time Lord history.
With the Great Vampire so dispatched, the three vampire lords crumble to dust without the power of their master to sustain them. The Doctor finds Romana and Adric. Together with K9 they leave the planet to its own fate, hoping that, now freed from the corruptive effect of the vampires, it will change direction and develop once again toward its former advanced state and even perhaps surpass it. He leaves the planet in Kalmar's hands, while hoping the next journeys in the TARDIS will take Adric home and lead the craft back out of E-Space.
[edit] Cast
- Doctor Who — Tom Baker
- Romana — Lalla Ward
- Voice of K-9 — John Leeson
- Adric — Matthew Waterhouse
- Zargo — William Lindsay
- Camilla — Rachel Davies
- Aukon — Emrys James
- Ivo — Clinton Greyn
- Marta — Rhoda Lewis
- Karl — Dean Allen
- Tarak — Thane Bettany
- Habris — Ian Rattray
- Kalmar — Arthur Hewlett
- Veros — Stacy Davies
- Roga — Stuart Fell
- Zoldaz — Stuart Blake
[edit] In print
Doctor Who book | |
Doctor Who and the State of Decay | |
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Series | Target novelisations |
Release number | 58 |
Writer | Terrance Dicks |
Cover artist | Andrew Skilleter |
ISBN | 0 426 20133 7 |
Release date | 14 January 1982 |
Preceded by | An Unearthly Child |
Followed by | Doctor Who and Warriors' Gate |
A novelisation of this serial, written by Terrance Dicks, was published by Target Books in September 1981. A condensed version of the book was read by Tom Baker and released on cassette.
[edit] Continuity
- This serial comprises the second leg of an extended adventure generally known as the "The E-Space Trilogy"; the trilogy began in the previous serial, Full Circle, and concludes in Warriors' Gate.
- In this story, the Doctor tells Romana of a hermit who lived on the mountainside behind his house when he was a boy, and who used to tell him ghost stories. This is the first reference since the Jon Pertwee years to the Doctor's Time Lord mentor (see also Planet of the Spiders).
- The Virgin New Adventures spin-off novel Blood Harvest by Terrance Dicks and the Missing Adventure Goth Opera by Paul Cornell are sequels to this serial. Many of the novels feature references to the war between the Time Lords and the Vampires. Another anti-Vampire weapon, the N-Forms, were introduced by Russell T. Davies in his New Adventures novel Damaged Goods. Bowships are mentioned in the Doctor Who Annual 2006 as one of the weapons used in the Time War against the Daleks, along with N-Forms and Black Hole Carriers.
- The Big Finish Productions audio drama Project: Twilight refers to the vampires and to their history with the Time Lords. However, the canonicity of the audio dramas is unclear.
- This was one of two serials to feature a highly improved K-9 prop. The other was Warriors' Gate.
[edit] Production
- Working titles for this story included The Wasting and The Vampire Mutations.
- The serial was a re-written version of a story called The Witch Lords which Dicks had submitted to the series in 1977, but which had been pulled just before production and replaced with Horror of Fang Rock.
[edit] External links
- State of Decay episode guide on the BBC website
- State of Decay at Doctor Who: A Brief History Of Time (Travel)
- State of Decay at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
[edit] Reviews
- State of Decay reviews at Outpost Gallifrey
- State of Decay reviews at The Doctor Who Ratings Guide