Number: | 080 |
Serial Name: | Terror of the Zygons |
Show: | DW |
Type: | serial |
Doctor: | Tom Baker – Fourth Doctor |
Companions: | |
Guests: |
|
Director: | Douglas Camfield |
Script Editor: | Robert Holmes |
Producer: | Philip Hinchcliffe |
Composer: | Geoffrey Burgon |
Production Code: | 4F |
Series: | Season 13 |
Length: | 4 episodes, 25 minutes each |
Preceding: | Revenge of the Cybermen |
Following: | Planet of Evil |
Terror of the Zygons is the first serial of the thirteenth season of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was the first broadcast in four weekly parts on BBC1 from 30 August to 20 September 1975. The serial was written by Robert Banks Stewart and directed by Douglas Camfield.
The serial stars Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor alongside Elizabeth Sladen and Ian Marter as companions Sarah Jane Smith and Harry Sullivan. It featured the final regular appearance by Marter and Nicholas Courtney as Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart. The serial is the first appearance of the Zygons.The serial is set in and around Loch Ness and in London. In the serial, the alien shapeshifters the Zygons plot to use their cyborg sea monster the Skarasen to take over the Earth, after they discover their home planet was destroyed.
The serial received a novelisation written by Terrance Dicks, and several DVD releases. Terror of the Zygons was met with generally positive reviews, though the design of the episodes' monsters, the Zygons, was criticised. The episodes soundtrack was composed by Geoffrey Burgon and released on 24 January 2000.
The Fourth Doctor, Sarah Jane Smith and Harry Sullivan arrive in Scotland, where Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart and UNIT are investigating the destruction of oil rigs. The survivors' assertion that the rigs were destroyed by a huge sea creature is corroborated by giant tooth marks in the wreckage.
Harry is captured by the Zygons, a shapeshifting alien race hiding in their submerged spacecraft. Their leader, Broton, tells Harry that their spaceship had sustained damage and landed on Earth centuries ago to await rescue, but when they discovered that their home planet had been destroyed in a stellar explosion, they decided instead to conquer the Earth and terraform it to suit their physiology. To achieve this goal, they have captured several humans to use as "body prints" to infiltrate key leadership positions, including the influential Duke of Forgill who serves as head of the Scotland Energy Commission. They had also brought an embryonic sea creature called the Skarasen to Earth and augmented it with cyborg technology until it has reached giant proportions. The Zygons are directing it with a signalling device to attack the rigs as part of their larger plan.
Whilst investigating the Skarasen and the Loch Ness Monster, Sarah Jane stumbles upon a secret passageway at the Duke of Forgill's mansion, which leads her to the Zygons' spacecraft. Whilst searching the ship she locates and frees Harry, who reveals the Zygon stratagem.
With their presence discovered, Broton accelerates the Zygons' plan. He takes the Duke's form and leaves for London, while the remaining Zygons fly their ship to a nearby quarry. Once there, the Zygons use reactors to convert the Earth's atmosphere to one hospitable to Zygons, but poisonous to humans. The Doctor sneaks aboard the ship, frees the remaining humans and self-destruct the ship, killing the Zygon crew.
Among the rescued humans, the Duke warns that he was scheduled to attend the first international energy conference in London that day, at which several high-level dignitaries will be in attendance. With the conference located in a building near the Thames, the Doctor fears that Broton will lure the Skarasen to attack the conference. Before the Doctor can stop him, Broton activates the signalling device but is killed by the Brigadier the Doctor recovers the device just as the Skarasen surfaces. The Doctor throws the device into the Thames, the creature eats it and returns to Loch Ness.
The group returns to Scotland to close up the investigation, and the Brigadier reports that the Cabinet will cover up the incident. The Doctor offers them all a return trip back to London via the TARDIS, but the Brigadier and Harry decline.
Terror of the Zygons was commissioned in April of 1975 under the working title The Loch, and later The Secrets of the Loch. The serial was the first serial that Robert Banks Stewart wrote for the programme. He set the serial in his native country Scotland, and adapted elements of the Loch Ness Monster myth.[1] Stewart subsequently wrote the finale of the season, The Seeds of Doom (1976).[2] The serial is set 10 years after its release in 1985.
The serial was originally intended as the finale for season 12, ending the TARDIS crew's continuous adventures and delivering Harry Sullivan back to Earth. However, the serial was held back as the first story of season 13, with a reduced order of four episodes instead of the original six.[3]
The episode was directed by Douglas Camfield. Location filming took place in March 1975. According to Tom Baker, due to rain the filming of the episode was delayed by two days. Baker also stated that due to budgetary constraints, location filming in Scotland was not possible.[4] Instead, location filming for Terror of the Zygons was shot in West Sussex, including at Climping beach, South Ambersham in the South Downs, and at the Hall Aggregates Quarry in Storrington. Studio filming took place the following month.
John Woodnutt had previously appeared alongside Jon Pertwee's Third Doctor as Hibbert in Spearhead from Space (1970) and the Draconian Emperor in Frontier in Space (1973).[5] [6] He would go on to play Consul Seron in penultimate Fourth Doctor serial, The Keeper of Traken (1981).[7] Angus Lennie previously played Storr in The Ice Warriors (1967).[8]
This was Nicholas Courtney's last regular appearance in the series. The Brigadier would next be seen in Mawdryn Undead (1983), almost eight years later.[9] The Zygons would not return until the 50th anniversary special, "The Day of the Doctor" (2013).[10]
In The Television Companion (1998), David J. Howe and Stephen James Walker wrote that Terror of the Zygons gave a stereotypical portrayal of the Scottish and showed how much the show had changed since abandoning its regular UNIT premise. They felt that the story gave UNIT its "dignity and believability" and praised the conception of the Zygons, though they noted that the shapeshifting concept was not original. Despite classifying the Skarasen as the "major weakness", they wrote that "the story remains a strong one".[11] In 2010, Mark Braxton of the Radio Times praised the "exquisitely horrible" design of the Zygons and the cliffhanger of the first episode where a Zygon attacks Sarah. He also was positive towards guest actor John Woodnutt and the incidental music, calling the whole production "a class act", aside from the Loch Ness Monster.[12] DVD Talk's John Sinnott gave the story four-and-a-half out of five stars, praising the cast and the design of the Zygons.[13]
Ian Berriman of SFX felt that it was "churlish" to criticise the Loch Ness Monster effect when the story "gets so much right, including first-class direction, pitch-perfect performances and a hauntingly eerie, folky score". He also was positive towards the design of the Zygons and their spaceship, though he found their scheme farfetched.[14] Christopher Bahn, reviewing the story for The A.V. Club, described it as "fun" but noted that it could be formulaic instead of trying to be "ground-breaking"; he criticised the scene in the second episode in which Broton tells Harry everything about the Zygons, which did not leave much surprise for the later episodes. Nevertheless, he praised the cast, the action sequences, and the Zygons, which he described as "wonderfully surreal triumph of Doctor Who visual design", though otherwise they functioned as a typical monster-of-the-week.[15]
Reviewing the serial in 1999, literary critic John Kenneth Muir acclaimed Terror of the Zygons as "a riveting and horrifying adventure", singling out the fleshy Zygon costumes for particular praise. He drew parallels with a number of historic Doctor Who serials, noting that the Zygon story drew on some familiar Doctor Who ingredients, including alien invasion (The Invasion (1968)), "body snatchers" (The Faceless Ones (1967)), an oil rig setting (Fury from the Deep (1968)), biomechanical technology (The Claws of Axos (1971)) and the revelation of an ancient Earth legend to be alien in origin (The Dæmons (1971)). However, he was disparaging of the use of a glove puppet to represent the Loch Ness Monster, comparing it to "the Invasion of the Dinosaurs (1974) debacle".[16]
Doctor Who and the Loch Ness Monster | |
Border: | yes |
Author: | Terrance Dicks |
Cover Artist: | Chris Achilleos |
Series: | Doctor Who book: Target novelisations |
Release Number: | 40 |
Release Date: | 15 January 1976 |
Publisher: | Target Books |
Isbn: | 0-426-11041-2 |
A novelisation of this serial, written by Terrance Dicks, was published by Target Books in January 1976 under the title Doctor Who and the Loch Ness Monster.
Terror of the Zygons was first released in Australia on VHS in April 1987. It was later released in the United Kingdom on VHS in November 1988. It was first released in complete and unedited episodic format on LaserDisc in 1997. A new VHS release, also in episodic format, was released in August 1999 in the United Kingdom, and released in 2000 in the United States and Canada.
The serial was released on DVD on 30 September 2013.[17] It features a director's cut version of Part One, with a previously unseen and newly restored 1 min 40-second opening scene featuring the Doctor, Sarah and Harry arriving in the TARDIS, which has materialised invisibly due to a faulty fusion plate. The restored scene was recoloured by Stuart Humphryes.[18] A single-disc version (with no extras) of the DVD formed part of the Fourth Doctor Time Capsule, released on 29 July 2013.[19]
A cut scene from the serial was released as an extra along side the DVD release of series 8.[20]
Doctor Who: Terror of the Zygons | |
Type: | Soundtrack |
Artist: | Geoffrey Burgon |
Released: | 24 January 2000 |
Genre: | Soundtrack |
Length: | 78:25 |
Label: | BBC Music |
Producer: | Mark Ayres |
Chronology: | Doctor Who soundtrack |
Prev Title: | Doctor Who: Original Soundtrack Recording |
Prev Year: | 1997 |
Next Year: | 2000 |
Geoffrey Burgon's music for his Doctor Who serials Terror of the Zygons and The Seeds of Doom were released on CD by BBC Music on 24 January 2000. The CD was sourced from the composer's own copies of the score, recorded at a low speed, resulting in lower fidelity.[21]