The Monster of Peladon

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073 – The Monster of Peladon
Doctor Who serial
File:The Monster of Peladon.jpg
The Ice Warrior leader, Commander Azaxyr, demands the trisilicate the Galactic Federation needs, expressing no concern for the situation on Peladon.
Cast
Others
Production
Directed byLennie Mayne
Written byBrian Hayles
Script editorTerrance Dicks
Produced byBarry Letts
Executive producer(s)None
Production codeYYY
SeriesSeason 11
Running time6 episodes, 25 minutes each
First broadcastMarch 23April 27, 1974
Chronology
← Preceded by
Death to the Daleks
Followed by →
Planet of the Spiders
List of episodes (1963–1989)

The Monster of Peladon is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in six weekly parts from March 23 to April 27, 1974.

Synopsis

The Third Doctor returns, this time with Sarah, to the planet Peladon, where once again the sacred beast Aggedor casts its shadow.

Plot

On the planet Peladon a power struggle is in place between the trisilicate miners and the ruling class, with miners under the leadership of Gebek and hot-headed Ettis calling for improved conditions. The planet’s ruler Queen Thalira, daughter of the late King Peladon, is sympathetic, but knows her planet is vital to supply the war effort of the Galactic Federation of which it is a member. The Federation is in conflict with the warlike Galaxy Five confederation. The Pels become concerned when a vision of Aggedor, the royal beast, starts appearing in the mines and killing miners, including the alien engineer Vega Nexos. Chancellor Ortron tries to convince the Queen this is a sign of displeasure at the alien presence on the planet, but she remain unconvinced.

Another alien presence reaches the Citadel: the TARDIS, bearing the Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith. He recalls his visit to Peladon fifty years earlier when the planet joined the Galactic Federation, and is pleased to find a familiar face in Alpha Centauri, the Federation Ambassador. The Queen knows of the Doctor from her father and enlists his support in trying to find the cause of the manifestations of Aggedor. He guesses someone is deliberately trying to interrupt trisilicate production, and they seem to have succeeded when the miners decide to strike. Ettis then leads an attack on the Federation armoury and gets weapons for the striking miners. This looks like damaging trisilicate supplies even further, so Engineer Eckersley, a human in charge of the refinery, sends for Federation troops to help restore order.

Both the miners and the Pel leaders are unhappy with the notion of Federation occupation, especially when the Ice Warrior force displays its ruthlessness in shooting down Pels. The sole concern of the force leader, Commander Azaxyr as shown in the picture, is to maintain trisilicate production. There is now a realignment in Pel politics: Ortron and Gebek join forces in seeking to rid the planet of the Martians. Ettis, however, has become crazed and is killed trying to blow up the Citadel. The Ice Warriors now impose martial law on the capital, imprisoning the Queen and his courtiers, and even killing Ortron when he tries to flee.

The truth is now revealed: Azaxyr and Eckersley are both Galaxy Five agents and have engineered the crisis and occupation as a means to control the trisilicate supply. The Aggedor apparition was just an image created to support the panic. Gebek now leads the Pels in a final assault on the Ice Warriors, and Azaxyr and the other invaders are killed. Eckersley himself is killed by the real Aggedor when he attacks the Queen, though sadly the beast dies in the process. News now reaches Peladon that Galaxy Five has capitulated, its Peladon strategem exhausted, and Queen Thalira seeks to repair Pel society when she appoints Gebek her new Chancellor. As ever, the Doctor and Sarah slip away quietly.

Cast notes

The character played by Roy Evans is credited as 'Miner' on-screen, but is named as Rima in dialogue – and is also credited as such in Radio Times.

Production

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Continuity

This story is a sequel to The Curse of Peladon, and features some of the same characters and themes. This marked the second time Doctor Who returned to an alien planet previously shown on the programme: the first was in The Evil of the Daleks, when the Doctor returned to the Daleks' home planet of Skaro, although that journey was via the Daleks' time cabinet. The Monster of Peladon is the first time the TARDIS returns to a previously visited planet other than Earth.

In print

Template:Doctorwhobook A novelisation of this serial, written by Terrance Dicks, was published by Target Books in December 1980.

Broadcast and VHS release

References

External links

Reviews

Target novelisation

Template:Doctor Who (season 11)