Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The Sensorites

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Written by
  
Peter R. Newman

Executive producer(s)
  
None

Script editor
  
David Whitaker

Incidental music composer
  
Norman Kay

Directed by
  
Mervyn Pinfield (episodes 1-4) Frank Cox (episodes 5-6)

Produced by
  
Verity Lambert Mervyn Pinfield (associate producer)

The Sensorites is the seventh serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was first broadcast in six weekly parts from 20 June to 1 August 1964. The story is notable for its demonstration of Susan's telepathy and its references to the Doctor's and her home planet.

Contents

Plot

The TARDIS travellers land on a moving spaceship and find the crew apparently dead. However, one of the crew members, Captain Maitland, regains consciousness and Ian Chesterton fully revives him and another woman, Carol Richmond. These two tell the travellers that they are on an exploration mission from Earth and are orbiting Sense-Sphere. However, its inhabitants, the Sensorites, refuse to let them leave orbit. The Sensorites visit and stop the travellers from leaving, while sending them on a collision course, which the Doctor diverts. The travellers then meet John (whose mind has been broken by the Sensorites) and find out that he is Carol's fiancé.

Returning to plague the crew, the Sensorites freeze Carol and Maitland once more. The Doctor breaks Maitland's mental conditioning, but cannot help John. Susan's telepathic mind is flooded with the many voices of the Sensorites who remain scared of the humans and are trying to communicate with her. Meanwhile, the Doctor works out that the Sensorites attacked the human craft because John, a mineralogist, had discovered a vast supply of molybdenum on Sense-Sphere. Susan reports that the Sensorites want to make contact with travellers, asking the crew to go aboard Sense-Sphere and reveal that a previous Earth expedition caused them great misery. The Doctor refuses but Susan, under duress, agrees and begins to leave the ship.

The Doctor deduces that the Sensorites need plenty of light, so Ian reduces the lighting on the ship, rendering the Sensorites helpless and rescuing Susan. The Doctor then asks the Sensorites to return his lock, and is invited to go to Sense-Sphere to speak with the leader. Susan, Ian, Carol and John join him, while Barbara and Maitland stay behind. John is promised that his condition will be reversed. On their journey to Sense-Sphere, the party learn that the previous visitors from Earth exploited Sense-Sphere for its wealth, then argued. Half of them stole the spacecraft, which exploded on take-off.

The Sensorite Council is divided over the issue of inviting the party to Sense-Sphere: some members plot to kill them on arrival, but others believe that the humans can help with the disease that is currently killing many Sensorites. Their first plot is foiled by the other Sensorites, but they continue to plot in secret. The humans are not told of the first plot, and John and Carol are cured. In the main conference room, Ian starts coughing violently and collapses. Suffering from the disease that has blighted the Sensorites, he is told that he will soon die.

It turns out that he was actually poisoned by drinking water from the general aqueduct. The Doctor finds the problematic aqueduct and starts work with the Sensorite scientists. The plotting Sensorites capture and then impersonate a Sensorite leader, the Second Elder and steal the new cure, before it is given to Ian, but a new one is made easily and Ian is cured.

Meanwhile, investigating the aqueduct, the Doctor finds strange noises and darkness. He finds and removes deadly nightshade (the cause of the poisoning), but on going back, meets an unseen monster. Susan and Ian find him unconscious with his coat torn, but otherwise unharmed. On being recovered, he tells of his suspicion that some Sensorites are plotting to kill them. The plotting Sensorites kill the Second Elder and one of them replaces him in his position.

John tells the others that he knows the lead plotter, but he is now too powerful, so the Doctor and Ian go down to the aqueduct to find the poisoners. Their weapons and map were tampered with and are useless.

Elsewhere, a mysterious assailant abducts Carol and forces her to write saying she has left for the ship. Neither Susan, John nor Barbara believe this so they go to investigate and find her imprisoned. They overpower the guard and release Carol. On finding out about the tampered tools, they go into the aqueduct to rescue the Doctor and Ian. The leader discovers the plotters a little while later.

Ian and the Doctor discover that the monsters were actually the survivors of the previous Earth mission, and they had been poisoning the Sensorites. Their deranged Commander leads them to the surface, where they are arrested by the Sensorites. The Doctor and his party return to the city, pleading clemency for the poisoners. The leader of the Sensorites agrees and sends them back with Maitland, John and Carol to Earth, for treatment for madness.

Continuity

In the opening scene of episode 1, the characters recap the adventures they've had since joining the Doctor. "It all started out as a mild curiosity in a junk yard" and "taken us back to prehistoric times [An Unearthly Child], The Daleks, Marco Polo, Marinus [The Keys of Marinus], and The Aztecs".

Production

Jacqueline Hill does not appear in episodes 4 and 5, though she is still credited on-screen.

Designer Raymond Cusick avoided the use of straight lines and right angles in his sets for the Sense Sphere, in a deliberate contrast to the "alien" buildings of other stories.

Peter R. Newman based the story on time he spent in a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp in World War II.

Cast notes

Stephen Dartnell appears as John. He had previously appeared as Yartek in The Keys of Marinus. John Bailey, who plays the Commander, returned to the series to play Edward Waterfield in The Evil of the Daleks and Sezom in The Horns of Nimon.

Broadcast and reception

The third episode was postponed by one week following the overrun of sports programme Grandstand, owing to extended coverage of the Wimbledon tennis championships and the third Ashes Test match on 4 July 1964.

In 2008, Radio Times reviewer Mark Braxton wrote that the Sensorites were "a triumph of realisation, in their appearance ... and in their hierarchy, culture and customs" but felt they were developed to the detriment of the humans, despite Stephen Dartnell being "upsettingly good as the psychologically damaged John". Despite this, he noted that it was a good story for the Doctor and Susan. IGN's Arnold T. Blumburg gave the serial a score of 7 out of 10, writing that "the story builds some nice suspense in the first two episodes and features some great set design and lighting, as well as a willingness to fall almost entirely silent and let the slow burn roll" and that later on, the Sensorites were "rather appropriately portrayed in shades of gray" instead of black and white monsters like the Daleks. Nick Setchfield of SFX gave The Sensorites three out of five stars, feeling that the story was "ambitious" and the slow pace "actually works in episode one's favour", though the Sensorites' "chill-factor" was gone after the first episode. DVD Talk's John Sinnott also gave the serial a score of three out of five stars, writing that the story structure was "well constructed" with impressive set design and an expanded role for Susan. However, he felt that the story was not remembered that fondly because there was "nothing special about the aliens or the situation".

In print

The serial was novelised for Target Books by Nigel Robinson in February 1987 as Doctor Who: The Sensorites. In May 2012 the novel was released as an unabridged audiobook, read by William Russell.

Home media

A restored and VidFIREd version of this story was released on VHS in November 2002. In July 2008 the original soundtrack was released on CD in the UK, with linking narration provided by William Russell. The Sensorites was released on DVD in the UK on 23 January 2012.

References

The Sensorites Wikipedia