PETER DAVISON's FINAL SEASON ARRIVES MARCH 2026

Showing posts with label FIFTH DOCTOR ERA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FIFTH DOCTOR ERA. Show all posts

Saturday, May 16, 2026

MYRKA MAYHEM!


The Sea Devils and Silurians have begin their attack on the troubled Sea Base Four of 2084, firstly by unleashing the aquatic terror they possess that is the Myrka, of which The Doctor and an injured Tegan are now isolated and trapped in its fierce company, during the Part Two cliffhanger to Warriors of the Deep.


"That thing's gonna kill us!"


The rushed to production story, and its 'pantomime horse' operated creature (which I originally thought looked good in close-up and some front side shots), proved a disappointment to many fans on its original transmission, and was most likely the story that initiated the ever malignant Michael Grade into wanting to cancel the show for good beyond 1985. Now, with the remastered, re-edited story as part of The Collection - Season 21 Blu-ray set, with its now more fearsome Myrka, we hope fans minds are more positively directed towards the story. And we hope Michael Grade has received a viewing copy too!


The all-new fearsome Mykra of the Warriors of the Deep - Special Edition, from 2026.

Great work by Chris Stephens Creations and the BBC team.



Get The Collection - Season 21 here:

Doctor Who: The Collection Season 21 Limited Edition [Blu-ray] [Region B]: Amazon.co.uk: Peter Davison, Janet Fielding, Mark Strickson, Nicola Bryant, Peter Davison, Janet Fielding





Saturday, March 28, 2026

'ANDROIDS!'


They'd been prior accused of being spies and gunrunners for the deranged Sharaz Jek, now the bodies of the mysterious strangers known as the Doctor and Peri lay clothed in red after have been murdered by military execution firing squad. Or have they? A surprise is soon revealed to the gruff General Chellak and his Andrizani Minor soldiers in the second superb episode of The Caves of Androzani.


I hope fans are thoroughly enjoying the new effects sequences for this All-Time Classic, and other stories, within the recently released The Collection - Season 21 set, from BBC Studios.

Get it here:

Doctor Who: The Collection Season 21 Limited Edition [Blu-ray] [Region B]: Amazon.co.uk: Peter Davison, Janet Fielding, Mark Strickson, Nicola Bryant, Peter Davison, Janet Fielding


Thursday, March 19, 2026

ORIGINAL FICTION: 'CYBERSHOCK'





DOCTOR WHO: 'CYBERSHOCK'


By Scott Weller


Inside the once benign, heavenly white interior of the TARDIS Console Room, an atmosphere of tragedy now permeates for the blonde haired, open-faced fifth regeneration of that mysterious time/space travelling figure known only as The Doctor, and his two young female companions, Tegan and Nyssa. The danger, terror, fear, and sadness of the last forty-eight hours exploding into a singular cascade that will affect the three of them - Time Lord, Earth human, Trakenite - now and forever. The loss of a friend, a companion, a hero. Adric, young genius mathematician and former Outler thief Adric of Alzarius, the cheeky but resourceful Adric, is gone. A victim of the deadly Cyber menace once more threatening planet Earth and the universe in general with their latest emotion-less, brutal oncoming... and a menace not yet defeated despite their three's best efforts. Two mangled silver Cybermen corpses now lay dead at their feet nearby the TARDIS's central console control column - one of them being the dark piped-ridged Cyber-Leader, who had so taunted and bullied them prior, all to observe their emotional responses with sadistic guile, and ultimately, fatefully. destroyed by the gold edge lining of Adric's now destroyed former badge for mathematical excellence, alongside multiple blasts from its own weapon bravely trained against him/it by the Doctor as he tried but failed in his race against time to save Adric, stranded on a prior Cybermen captured Earth freighter now destroyed whilst entering its mother world's orbit, the ship primed to explode via an all-controlling Cyber device. As ever, the Cybermen, despite their emotionless state, had brought much violence with them, not just physically but emotionally to their victims. And in practical terms too, as could currently be seen with the six-sided console of the TARDIS now laden with Cyber blaster detonation scars, blackened control panels and the near dwindled smoke emanating from such destruction as the Doctor and his companions fight to come to grip with the loss of Adric and whatever unseen actions he had bravely initiated to stop the fixed coordinates freighter from smashing into an Earth back at the time of the Dinosaurs, the Cybermen's horrific plan near completed yet thwarted in one respect, if at the cost of the successful cold-blooded reptilian life forms that had once dominated its vast lands, oceans and skies so successfully for Millennia rather than the humanity race of the far-off future...

"Adric..." Tegan's tears flooded the frontage of her mining fatigues frontage as she and Nyssa so tightly gripped each other in emotional security against the shock of their former friend's explosive demise, their own tears now fused as one, the grief so very palpable on their faces. The look of shock and loss was never more so on the Doctor, either, at this never to be foreseen time for his newly regenerated self, when he had needed all three of his friends so vitally early one. And as he went to approach his comrades-in-loss to share in their sorrow, a rude awakening would bring all three back to the ongoing reality, and still danger...



"Scott to TARDIS, Scott to TARDIS." A male voice, caught amidst static and barely audible, suddenly took the trio by surprise. What was a maturely gruff yet vulnerable tone belonging to Earth solider Lt. Scott was now shouting out in a bizarre muffled and squelched voice from the near Cyber-Leader-crushed communicator device prior left to Nyssa by the small group of Earth soldiers that had accompanied them in the TARDIS, during events following the Cybermen's defeated attempt to destroy the future Earth from an ancient underground cave system. A dark and dangerous system guarded by servantile sentinel androids that would go on to kill so many of Scott's squad, so swiftly, prior to the Doctor and company's unexpected arrival on the doomed Earth freighter.

The still static-struggling voice continued..."Doctor? Nyssa? Tegan? Is anybody out there?"  

The Doctor, flanked by his friends, rushed to the small black/white lined communicator device, quickly flicked away its back panel, rammed his left middle finger into a batch of wires then turned its broken middle dial clockwise to reply. "We're here, Lieutenant Scott," he replied breathlessly - for a short time he had completely forgotten his former comrades with the demise of Adric. Now the Doctor's voice sounded a pitch higher than normal - a sign to Nyssa and Tegan that they were all still in big trouble! Tegan worriedly yet excitedly came forward wanting to contribute to the conversation, especially after recently physically fighting the Cybermen opposite the human leader soldier, but the Doctor's left hand soon came defiantly up to stop her, whilst Nyssa came further forward to subtly hold her friend's arm. The Doctor continued, still breathlessly, "What's your situation?"

"Desperate!" was the unforgettable response from Scott, his voice more audible"Our escape pod was hit by the blast reach from the freighter." It was clear that Scott and his female colleagues voices, working in the background to frantically stabilise the vessel and alter course, were being violently lurched about. "We've taken severe damage, Doctor." There was a pause, as, controlled panic in his voice, he was clearly looking at the small escape pod's turbulence-damaged control panels. "We're out of control and heading towards the atmosphere. We have only minutes." An older woman's voice could now be heard in the background to Scott, imploring, "Please help us, Doctor." It was Briggs, the striking seasoned redhead captain of the once Earth freighter. Briggs who'd once dominated the ship and its small but loyal crew with her blunt, forceful personality, before the Cybermen were uncovered aboard it, and who'd now lost everything. Not just her ship, but her command, her career, her bonuses and her crew. And now her life was at the edge of non-existence! 

On the TARDIS viewscreen, their doomsday plight was more than evident as the small escape pod approached the Earth's upper atmosphere. "We're coming!" the Doctor's blue eyes, which were once of confident steel when he destroyed the Cyber-Leader, now showing mild fear and panic as his neural peptides worked quickly to override such feelings - his breathless energy, authority and spirit returning as his tall, Edwardian-coated frame leapt across the control consoles clicking buttons, turning switches whilst guiding Tegan and Nyssa to join him for emergency duties across the six-sided console room, swiftly sweeping dust and debris away from control damage with his coat collars, adjusting and rerouting the damaged systems as his companions worked quicky to his orders and advice like never before, operating various switches indicated by their whirlwind-at-work guide. There was no way they'd let anyone else die today! The various sounds of the damaged TARDIS came back to life, beeping and blooping until a whole new series of noises from its power systems flooded the room. As the Doctor switched his two middle fingers into a cross for luck, he shouted the final instructions to his equally breathless companions as they coordinated their efforts in rescuing the freighter's stricken escape pod, now seen even more rapidly approaching the Earth's Van Allan Belt, of which its sides and small under carriage were now starting to turn orange and dispatch shards of burning heat animatedly outwards, followed by radiation contamination.

Almost grasping the escape pod, it was then that a sudden explosion knocked our trio almost off their feet within the seeming trans-dimensional safety of the Console Room. The TARDIS now attacked by a circular spinning wheel vessel coming into view as the Doctor adjusted the screen settings. He remembered: "The escaped Cyber troops!" They'd previously seen a wheel-like craft with some kind of weapon appendages departing the vessel before the planned doomsday - a vessel with a crew which had nowhere else to go to in this time period millions of years in the past, long before Mondas, the Cybermen's original home planet, evolved and its people began Cyber conversion of themselves. With only the now shattered realms of Prehistoric Earth beneath them, where they would surely die out, and with no way of communicating with their other selves millions of years into the future, it was clear that the lone Cyber vessel had logically decided that it had no choice but to attack.Their plan to try and damage the TARDIS and attempt some way of boarding her, their only way back to the future and the security of the massive Cyber space force that had been heading towards future Earth in the wake of the Freighter plot - the deceased Cyber Leader's ongoing communications to the Doctor and his companions before its demise clearly relayed on to them via the once existing Cyber Matrix that had operated at close range to the TARDIS. The Cyber ship may not be a massive craft, but its potent missiles could do some damage, especially with the TARDIS systems so vulnerable right now...

Despite the attacks, of which a further shudder almost launched them all side ways from the console and its ever moving time rotor, the Doctor was pressing on as his companions grasped what he was doing with certain instruments. "You're doing what the Master did!" shouted Tegan in remembered excitement as the freighter escape pod exterior now ablaze, and its see-through interior within, suddenly took shape, the sound of the TARDIS rematerializing heard with the pod's entry into the Console Room: the Doctor having re-channeled its ability to work on an outside frame. "Get them out of there on my signal," the Doctor once more shouted hurriedly to his attentive companions, as they saw the gaining shape solidity of the vulnerable and near-exhausted physical forms of the four survivors inside the pod, all desperate to survive: the grumpy-looking moustached Scott (his now bewildered-by-it-all frame and facial attitude greatly reminding the Doctor of his old friend Brigadier Lethbridge Stewart!), his only surviving battle comrade (the TARDIS crew were never quite able to pin down his name) bruised and bloodied from Cyber conflict, the grey/blonde haired navigator and second-in-command of the now destroyed freighter, the once cool and collected Berger, and the face of the small framed but mighty Captain Briggs, all showing as much surprise as the aforementioned Scott, mixed with pure time running out panic on their faces, as too were the Doctor's companions with the materialisation- the outer shell and escape hatch barely visible over the fully realised frames. "Now!" shouted the Doctor, stabilizing a control switch then racing with his companions began to pull the foursome out of the now rapidly disappearing, dying escape pod, of which flames in and out of materialisation had manifested around it. Tegan was soon to describe the experience of pulling them through the materialisation vortex grip as being like wading through invisible treacle, a weird sensation as Lt. Scott was finally retrieved into the solid roundel-filled environment around them, joining his friends as their desperate to escape bewilderment proved successful. Tegan and Nyssa were tending to the foursome when once more the Cyber attacks continued on the TARDIS, the Console Room shuddering as one of the rear console panels started crying out sparks, with Nyssa running to obtain a nearby fire extinguisher.  

Just as soon as it had arrived, the pod frame had vanished completely. Departing from the others, Briggs was soon with the Doctor, now back to the console whilst she intently gazed at the viewscreen. The escape pod re-appeared in the Earth's atmosphere, afire from the Van Allen Belt, reacting like a spinning top with its approaching demise. With only seconds to spare, the Doctor and his new passengers, still winded from their experience, were speechless as the pod finally disintegrated. And as the Cyber ship continued its attack, the white interior light of the Console Room around them briefly turned an eerie orange, the Doctor, holding onto the nearest console side, swerved the TARDIS away from the Van Allen Belt with such speed that the Cyber vessel was suddenly unable to pursue and attack any further, its fiery fate within it also awaited! Physically floored by the fast motion of the TARDIS, its occupants picked themselves up to watch the consumption and destruction of their Cyber foes with intense satisfaction, especially Tegan, murmuring with satiated revenge, "That one's for you, Adric," her once immaculate make-up once more damaged around her watery eyes. The Doctor soon put a consoling arm around her shoulders. "Brave Heart, Tegan!" he said subtly, watching the last quick remnants of the Cyberman's fiery demise.

As the new quartet of visitors got used to their incredible surroundings, notably Berger and Briggs, and with things settling down, Scott asked the Doctor where Adric was, presuming him to have been rescued earlier, and wanting to thank him for all his efforts on the freighter. It's then that the crestfallen escape pod survivors hear the shocking news of the young boy's demise and how the TARDIS crew were not able to rescue their friend in time, of which Tegan has a sudden impulse, a look on her face as an idea builds in her mind, a 'what if?' moment ready to form. 

At the last point of contact with the Cyber fleet assembling in space behind the freighter before its disappearance into the past, the Doctor concludes that the threat to the future of Earth remains. Scott has bargained that in the time that the freighter had been first detected on collision course with the Peace Conference, the important gathering would surely have been suspended, with time brought to them with its disappearance into the past. Even now a force of vessels will likely have been mobilized against the returned Cybermen threat. If only they could help. "No sooner said than done, Lt.!" said the Doctor determinedly, almost fused to the console, adjusting, overriding and re-locking coordinates, followed by a swift banging of the bottom of his right fist into the console, with a resultant twanging noise from the bowels of the colourful centre Time Rotor beginning anew from its former stationery position above the past Earth, its time traversing mechanism rising and falling with better efficiency than a few hours back. The vessel and its owner in synch with each other like never before, thinks Nyssa, as she and Tegan bring chairs and water to their almost killed friends. A vigilant, eager to return home yet battle ready Scott remaining close by the Doctor, gun slung over his shoulder, watching him, ready to assist in the unlikely event that the alien traveller might need it.

Soon enough, the coordinate backtracking TARDIS materialised at its next space/time coordinates, finding itself as an outside observer to a space war of multi-coloured laser blasts and exploding ships, as a small force of Earth/Alien delegates vessels courageously fought the pristine silver Cyber warships, vessels that looked as coldly logical and efficient in construction as their builders, with help helpfully on the way against such a powerful, emotionless enemy. 

The Cyber warships have already taken lots of damage, a state which intensifies as ships' literally break apart unleashing dying Cybermen into the chaos of space brutality, but they seem to be holding their ground despite several more unified alliance vessels joining the conflict against them. The view leaves Tegan horrified, having never seen or been involved in a war before, let alone a space war, and witnessing the huge loss of life with each destroyed human/alien vessel. With prior warning about to be given to the human/alien forces to move away from their oncoming co-ordinates (helped by a a special coded communications channel set up by Nyssa and Scott), the Doctor began readying his new coordinates to help the protector group, planning to use his TARDISes shield energy as a directed force against the attacking silver foes, the vessel so-far seemingly insignificant to the aligned Cyber ships they'd be approaching. 

Even Briggs and Berger, monitoring the TARDIS power and control systems graphics readouts, proved able to help the Doctor around the six-sided console. As ever in her nature, Briggs tried to dominate and tell the Doctor what to do, of which he'd firmly remind her: "On your ship you gave the orders, but now you're on mine..." which generates some small humour between the heroes and the briefly flustered Briggs, a moment temporarily breaking the tenseness of their ongoing situation. Scott and Tegan, taking over from Nyssa, who was now working alongside the Doctor, with the surviving guards (Seaton or Foster? It was hard to follow) were further coordinating the attack plan with the human forces as the Doctor broke off briefly from his work and surveyed them all at their own unique tasks. "Do you know," he tells his comrades-in-battle. "This is the first time that this ship has ever had a full crew!" Though proud of this moment, only Tegan can bring the Time Lord back to the reality of their situation with that familiar subtle scowl of hers...



Now slowly pulling out in reverse from the battle, the human ships had not given the game away as to their plan as the Cyber force pressed on. With Nyssa working on the power convergence circuits, having gained more experience with the TARDISes overall controls in the last few weeks, the time was now. "Here we go," said the Doctor, once more relying on what Tegan called "his rackety old TARDIS" within a point in Earth's history that would prove significant.

As the TARDIS disappeared and the familiar groaning sound of the Time Rotor began again, the Doctor was readying the power distribution as the vessel suddenly appeared directly in the path of the enemy fleet, its weapons swiftly locking on at the blue box, as Nyssa soon declared. It was then that the Doctor turned a switch with flippant ease as the TARDIS environment went into low power, its primary energy fully channeled as its outside frame suddenly spun like a whirling dervish as its temporal shield power, combined with other re-routed internal energies, lashed out at the attacking Cyber force, literally tearing through their dozen remaining ships like a knife through butter, as explosions large and small sent the silver ships into oblivion, though some of the Cyber vessels behind the main force had managed to regroup, their systems and heavy weaponry still incredibly damaged by the intensity of the blast as the spent out TARDIS slowly came to a dead halt in space and the vengeance-fulled human/alien vessels began to chase the retreating enemy, later dispersed into the darkness of space like ethereal ghosts. As Nyssa, opposite the Doctor, kept an eye on the various console readings, she couldn't help but turn to the viewscreen to see the powerful carnage being wrought from the TARDIS, and as she turned back to her work she was sure she'd witnessed a hint of revenge and darkness in the Doctor's face, albeit briefly, with the demise of one of his oldest enemies, a plague throughout the universe, as he would later call them.As brief but colourful explosions brightened from the screen, Scott had further news that more re-enforcements had arrived from space warp to begin their pursuit. The Cyber threat was surely finished as the Doctor walked up to Tegan, who was now looking towards the blue green world that was forever home. An Earth once more safe thanks to them, and thanks to the bravery of their lost friend. 

Despite the shock truly brought to the fled Cybermen, where there should have been further congratulatory cheers from the TARDIS occupants, the atmosphere remained generally solemn once the vessel materialised inside the hold of one of the command freighters, and further so when the body of the Cyber murdered Dr. Kyle had been removed from the isolation of the girls' bedroom area, her departing body bag carried gently and respectfully by two Earth soldiers whilst watched by a teary-eyed Nyssa, who had oh-so-briefly gotten to know the young archaeologist who'd wanted to help her friends so much. And then there were the two destroyed Cybermen, whose massive, technologically-augmented bodies the military scientific teams were eager to get to work in analysing - these particular Cybermen being unlike anything they'd encountered previously. Tegan looked at the removal with distaste in her mouth, feeling nauseous as a strange smell emanated from their decayed bodies, the mouth chins within their helmets, the only indications of their once humanoid selves, now corroding in a strange form of rigour mortis.  

Now ready to return to more familiar surroundings, Scott, his fellow soldier, Briggs and Berger would part company from the travellers. Never one to forget the heavy losses of this day, Scott nodded his head in thanks to Tegan and Nyssa, then told the Time Lord, "I'm truly sorry about Adric, Doctor. He disobeyed my order. We couldn't stop him." There was a pause as the Doctor looked slightly away from Scott. "We owe him," the tall. confident leader continued, now looking to Tegan and Nyssa, "And you all, so much," before saluting the trio and determinedly leaving the vessel with his battle comrade. Then came a tender shaking of hands from a relieved Berger and Briggs, as well as an unexpected peck on the cheek of 'thanks' to the Doctor from the former, her face equally serious and sad. 

"An intriguing space vehicle you have, Doctor," said Briggs, trying to lighten the mood somewhat, taking one last look at the environment around her, before reaching the open doors of the console room with Berger in tow. "I'll be fighting my way back to get a commission, have no fear. But with the Company it wont be easy. If thing's don't work out... perhaps you could put in a word? A partnership, perhaps? Your technology could make us all rich, y'know," she said semi-seriously. The Doctor frowned, giving a polite smile once again as he shook goodbye with her. It was a case she was never going to win."Come on, Berger," Briggs said with her matronly air. "We have lots to do!" Almost through the doors they both gave a final parting wave to their former war colleagues.

Letting a release of de-stressed air from his lungs, the Doctor grabbed hold of his nearby bulky tool kit, informing his friends quietly, respectfully - the aftermath air still cold, "I won't be long, there's a couple of final things to do with the authorities, help them disable the Cyber Matrix in those bodies. And I have to check the outer plasmic shell of the TARDIS after those Cyber missile volleys." The solemn look had returned to his friends as the fierce and emotional events they'd endured had come to a head. Not knowing what more he could say at present, he passed through the double doors, his trainers squelching on the floor with the rapid movement, not looking back as he departed. With Nyssa starting to pull away power cords so as to take them back to their original shelter, Tegan suddenly found herself all alone in the TARDIS, amongst the blinking lights and subtle humming instruments of the ever-impressive Console Room. She was about to join in and help Nyssa, after changing back from the late Dr. Kyle's overalls to her regular and comforting 1981 air stewardess outfit, when the tip of her boot dislodged something on the dirtied white floor surface. She knelt down and saw what was left of Adric's badge for mathematical excellence, given to him so long ago before his journeys in the TARDIS, and which had been prior used by the Doctor for its unique gold lining to defeat the evil Cyber-Leader. 

Gently, delicately trying to rescue the lone pieces in her hands, what was left to gather soon slipped through her fingers, disintegrating further into near nothingness. And as that happened, amidst a near silent cry of  "Oh, no...", the memories of her now-gone friend came through - of the dangers they'd traversed, the heavy rows that had been ultimately made-up between them, and the often fun and wonder that they had all shared alongside the still mysterious, eccentrically amused Doctor in the TARDIS.

It was then that Tegan Jovanka, the seemingly indomitable 'mouth on legs', wept once more...




The End


This story is dedicated to the 1982 cast and crew who made Earthshock such a memorable and All-Time Classic Doctor Who adventure.


Saturday, February 7, 2026

WARHEAD!

Art composition by Sean Longmore.

The Daleks' plan of war and revenge against the Time Lords via the trapping of the Doctor and his companions, finding the solution to the Movellan virus affecting them via the return of their creator, Davros, and the conquering of Earth via Robot Duplicates - all in a day's work for the evil, scheming creatures of Skaro in the classic Resurrection of the Daleks.



I'm looking forward to seeing the all-new CGI effects replacements for the story within the upcoming  The Collection - Season 21 box set, available in the Spring.

Get it here:

Doctor Who: The Collection Season 21 Limited Edition [Blu-ray] [Region B]: Amazon.co.uk: Peter Davison, Janet Fielding, Mark Strickson, Nicola Bryant, Peter Davison, Janet Fielding

 

Saturday, November 29, 2025

TO CAUSE A POISONED REALM...


With the help of the eons-old android Bigon (Philip Locke), The Doctor has now discovered the truth of the evil Monarch and the Urbankan race's ultimate plans to take over the Earth with their final visitation, of which a lethal poison to be unleashed on humanity must be stopped...

A great image from the underrated and enjoyable Season 19 adventure, Four to Doomsday.



Saturday, September 27, 2025

LENDING A HELPING HAND...


As the planet is bombarded by an incredible swarm of asteroids, the Doctor and his companions have no choice but to come to the aid of the troubled last survivors of Frontios, now facing near extinction from mysterious alien invaders... 

A classic scene showcasing Peter Davison at his best as the Fifth Doctor, making the most of the splendid idea conceived by former series script editor Christopher H. Bidmead that his incarnation should have the air of an old man trapped in a young man's body about him.


I was very sad to hear of the recent passing of Christopher H. Bidmead, who devised such a great and memorable final Season Eighteen for Tom Baker (including his own unique drama/regeneration epic in Logopolis), brought hard scientific concepts back into the series, fused within the show's unique storytelling, and gave Peter Davison two intriguing adventures with Castrovalva and Frontios. R.I.P.


Saturday, August 9, 2025

A FIFTH FOR THE STATES!


Peter Davison's first season as the Doctor was a veritable triumph with the press and the public in the UK, the show feeling fresher and more exciting than it had been in ages, and now it was time for the mighty realms of US TV to see and enjoy the cricket-loving, celery stick wearing Fifth Doctor's all-new adventures, as publicised in this great media publicity poster circa 1983.

Art by Wielgus for the States-side Spirit of Life events.


Saturday, June 14, 2025

A TIME OF FIRE AND VISITATIONS!


Hi-jacked in the TARDIS and taken to the mysterious volcanic world of Sarn, young American student Peri Brown soon falls into the hands of the manipulated Kamelion/Master, as the renegade Time Lord begins his plans to beguile the planet's fire god worshipping brethren to his own devices, in this scene from Planet of Fire, a story in which Anthony Ainley shines in his dual roles.

Writer Peter Grimwade's brisk novel makes its way to BBC Audio adaptation, read by the Peter Davison era's memorable Cyber leader, David Banks. It arrives online and in stores from 5th June, 2025.


Cover art by Andrew Skilleter.

Get it here:

Saturday, April 26, 2025

DRILLER KILLER!


The underground realms of the distant world of Frontios are disturbing and terrifying enough for the last survivors of the human race stranded there, now being aided in their fight for survival by the Fifth Doctor, Tegan and Turlough. But even worse discoveries lay ahead for all of them as the disgusting alien Tractator beings are revealed, alongside their gruesome plans for the dying breed of colonists, as seen above with some of their kidnapped, at-the-point-of-death prey being used for unique mining purposes inside their hideous drilling machines.

An unseen angle from Christopher H. Bidmead's memorable tale Frontios, showing one of the human compartments of the soon sabotaged drilling machine.


Saturday, November 30, 2024

CLASSIC ART: THE GREAT SPACE RACE!


It's winner takes all for the competing aliens known as the Eternals, in their competitive sailing race across the stars to win the ultimate prize of Enlightenment. And now the Doctor and his companions have been caught up in the intriguing but deadly affair, as the Black Guardian lays his final trap against his Time Lord adversary.

Terrific poster art and cover for Doctor Who Magazine, celebrating Barbara Clegg's imaginative tale, by Pete Wallbank.

Wednesday, October 9, 2024

SEASON TWENTY-ONE AT FORTY: THE COLLECTED LINKS...

Davison, Fielding and Strickson pose for a memorable Radio Times photo shoot taken Summer, 1983, promoting the upcoming Season Twenty-One.

A time of action, adventure, of sadness and parting, as well as the beginning of change for our resident Time Lord. The at-first seemingly insignificant Androzani Minor would await the arrival of the Doctor and recently joined TARDIS-travelling companion Peri, starting an unforgettable, breathless adventure closing the Davison era and seeing-in the colourful, boisterous era of the enthused Colin Baker as Doctor Who Number Six...

Goodbye, Peter Davison's Fifth incarnation...

We hope you've enjoyed the major coverage and personal nostalgia linked to this site's overview of not just a hugely successful season of eighties Doctor Who, but also a great finale to Peter Davison's all too brief tenure on the show.

Here are the season's collected links. Enjoy!







In-Vision magazine art by Steve Caldwell.


Saturday, September 28, 2024

SEASON TWENTY-ONE AT FORTY: 'THE CAVES OF ANDROZANI'

Tragedy and danger lurk within The Caves of Androzani, the series' finest adventure. Art by Phil Bevan exclusively for DWB magazine.

"Curiosity's always been my downfall."

Captured for arms-running on the mining planet of Androzani Minor, the Doctor and Perry (SIC) are under sentence of death. Then, a mysterious masked intruder comes to their aid. But is Sharaz Jek, master android creator, really their saviour? The rulers of the planet are certainly desperate for his head. But then, he does control Andozani's supply of spectrox and it's a substance men are prepared to die for...

Original VHS release sleeve synopsis - 1992

The darkest, dangerous, most thrilling story conceived not just for Peter Davison's satisfying era of Doctor Who but all its eras, and featuring the greatest regeneration sequence ever created for the series, much has been said about Robert Holmes' genuinely stunning and breath-taking The Caves of Androzani over forty years by fandom worldwide, and it has become rightly regarded, literally from its original transmission in March 1984, as one of the finest, if not THE finest, Classic Who series adventure ever made. Such an accolade doesn't come lightly within the show's original twenty-six year duration and its many all-time greats, but I firmly believe it is thoroughly deserved and well earned.






Caves
is damned near perfect in my opinion, even overcoming its sometimes obvious low budget and the infamous 'Magma monster'. The great script of world-building, tragedy and greed, the superb cast, the evocative music score and dynamite direction from Graeme Harper (it's like he was destined to do this particular story) transcend everything to make it a true masterpiece of TV production, and one that really blew my near fourteen-year old self away on original transmission. With the totally intriguing first episode, it was clear that the direction was outstanding from the start, but when the macabre face mask of Christopher Gable's tragic and frightening Sharaz Jek was fully revealed with its near cliffhanger, I knew that something special was really beginning to take shape here. And as the story developed, the quality of the scripting (so strikingly depthful) and its intense characters (the majority of them totally unlikeable but compelling to watch nonetheless) made this a joy, if a sad one. As with all departing Doctor stories, but even more so with Davison, now at the peak of his powers in the role (even more so through the talents of Holmes, giving the Fifth Doctor more attitude and wit), I was genuinely not wanting to let go of seeing the Fifth incarnation after a run which I felt had been far too short, especially with his episodes all having been transmitted twice weekly. And time was running out now with the never-to-be-forgotten third episode cliffhanger, followed by the finale's pure edge-of-your-seat race against time qualities, as the wounded, near-death Doctor saves Peri (Nicola Bryant, shining brightly in that all too rare great second script for a companion back in the day) and ultimately sacrifices the last remnants of his life, and the small amount of vital bat's milk acquired, to save her. And as his previous companions urge him to survive, and the spiteful Master demands that he perished, I genuinely wept for Davison's departing incarnation, and was further gob-smacked watching the spectacular video effects regeneration that exploded around him. 


Peter Davison and Nicola Bryant proved a well-matched onscreen team.

A story that gets better and better with every viewing, the return of Robert Holmes prolific name to the series with Caves was a genuine crowd pleaser to me (at a point in my Who-dom when I was starting to fully discover or re-discover much of his work for the series at that point), whilst the late, great director Douglas Camfield was surely looking down from heaven with pride at his former protege of sorts in newcomer director Graham Harper and his stellar accomplishments, whose creative instincts on Who proved acutely sharp and never less than perfect. Despite disappointment that he wouldn't have an entire season run - imagine if we'd had Philip Martin's original version of Vengeance of Varos (originally titled Domain), or the ultimately much-troubled Song of the Space Whale added to the impressive twenty-first year story mix - all-in-all, Peter Davison couldn't have had a better adventure to depart on, but everything after this was never going to be quite the same again for me as both a fan and regular viewer, despite my curiosity on Colin Baker's upcoming Doctor. Looking back, if Doctor Who as a series had ended there with Caves, though with a potential resurrection for more someday in the future, I actually would have been content.



The Caves of Androzani ★★★★★ | Radio Times


Newly arrived on the barren world of Androzani Minor, the Doctor and Peri soon go off to explore some blow hole caves.

They encounter a lethal Spectrox Nest in the cave, unaware of its doom laden properties. Writer Robert Holmes was pleased with the idea of literally killing the Doctor off in the opening minutes of the story.

Gun runner Stotz (Maurice Roeves) is supplying arms for refined age sustaining Spectrox through the Android rebel Sharaz Jek.

General Chellak (Martin Cochrane) and his trusty second-in-command Salateen (Robert Glenister) assess the situation in their seemingly fruitless ongoing cave war with the Android scientist Sharaz Jek.

Arrested as gunrunners, our now ill heroes are brought before Chellak, pending declared execution.

The cunning businessman leader of the Sirius Conglomerate, Trau Morgus (John Normington).

Morgus with his trusty assistant Krau Timmin (Barbara Kinghorn) .

The Doctor and Peri, seemingly ready for the firing squad. 

But their slain bodies are soon revealed to be android replicas.

Sharaz Jek (the impressive Christopher Gable) reveals his visage to the Doctor and Peri.

Jek reveals his tragic past to the pair.

Jek and the Doctor face off.



The best of companions to Jek!

The darkness within Jek is a constant factor in his thirst for revenge on the duplicitous Morgus.

The Doctor confused Jek's android with his non-human biological diffrencies, which allows him, Peri and the captured Salateen time to escape.

Peri must help the army capture Jek's base, but the real Salateen is later killed in a violent and unexpected way.

Once again captured, the dying Doctor is in the hands of Stotz and his men, but soon manages to escape and get control of the ship to fly back to Androzani Minor.

"I'm not gonna let you stop me now!"

Stotz has comrade Krelper (Roy Holder) and his colleague pursue the weakening Doctor across the desert regions.

The Doctor comes under fire!

As the terrifying mud bursts begin on the planet, the Doctor will return to the cave to save Peri.

Before killing Krelper, Stotz enters into a new business arrangement with the now exiled Morgus.


The Doctor and Jek work to save Peri's life.

The Doctor gets the information needed to save Peri...

... and soon travels to the lowest cave levels to retrieve the vitally needed Queen Bat's milk. The ominous use of a death bell in this sequence adds to the race against time sequence.

Morgus and Stotz confront Jek...

... who reveals his disfigured face before going to attack them.

Make-up reference photo for Gable as the disfigured Jek.

With Stotz killed by the android Salateen, Jek murders Morgus with a laser drill.


"Salateen, hold me..." Jek dies in the android's arms in the fiery lair, as the Doctor returns to retrieves Peri.


The Doctor and Peri escape the planet's violent mud burst discharge. But only just...

The dying Doctor, with no bats milk cure for himself, is cradled by Peri.

"Feels different this time." Surrounded by his companions and the Master, the Doctor's regeneration is thankfully assured.

Enter the Sixth Doctor, Colin Baker!


The memorable cover to Doctor Who Magazine issue 90, July 1984.

The magnificent cover for the DWB magazine's winter special 1985-86. Art by Phil Bevan.

The classic In-Vision magazine cover art by Steve Caldwell.

Original VHS release sleeve - art by Andrew Skilleter.

Unused 1991 art by Alister Pearson, presumably for the first VHS release.

First UK DVD release cover photo composition.

First US DVD release photo montage cover.

Back cover for the first US release.

Sharaz Jek makes cover status to Doctor Who Magazine's issue 304 in May 2001.


As part of a memorable special cover series for Doctor Who Magazine, issue 413, from October, 2009.


DVD Special edition art composition by Clayton Hickman, also used for the official soundtrack release LP.

The UK DVD files cover.

Artwork by Rafe Wallbank celebrating the Riverside Studios DWAS event for the story's 40th Anniversary event.


Get the BBC Audiobook of the original Target novel here:

Doctor Who and the Caves of Androzani: 5th Doctor Novelisation (Audio Download): Terrance Dicks, Peter Davison, BBC Audio: Amazon.co.uk: Books