Frontios

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133—Frontios
Doctor Peter Davison (Fifth Doctor)
Writer Christopher H. Bidmead
Director Ron Jones
Script editor Eric Saward
Producer John Nathan-Turner
Executive producer(s) None
Production code 6N
Series Season 21
Length 4 episodes, 25 mins each
Transmission date January 26February 3, 1984
Preceded by The Awakening
Followed by Resurrection of the Daleks

Frontios is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in four twice-weekly parts from January 26 to February 3, 1984.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

The planet Frontios is mankind’s last colony, its inhabitants having fled a dying Earth. However, the planet itself holds hidden dangers.

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
The Fifth Doctor and the Gravis
The Fifth Doctor and the Gravis

The TARDIS lands in the far future, on the planet Frontios, where some of the last vestiges of humanity are struggling for survival. The planet is being attacked by meteorite showers orchestrated by a group of unknown enemies who are also responsible for the disappearance of several prominent colonists, including the colony’s leader, Captain Revere. After witnessing Revere being “eaten by the ground,” Security Chief Brazen engages in a cover up. To the public, Captain Revere died of natural causes. After a state funeral, Revere’s son, Plantaganet, assumes the leadership of the colony.

The TARDIS is mysteriously affected by a meteorite storm and dragged down to the planet by gravity. The Doctor, Tegan and Turlough emerge, in the middle of the bombardment, to investigate. Despite his earlier reservations about getting involved, the Doctor violates the cardinal rule of the Time Lords by helping the colonists who were injured by the meteorite bombardment and by providing medical assistance.

Needing better light in the medical facility, the Doctor sends Tegan and Turlough to fetch a portable mu-field activator and five argon discharge globes from the TARDIS. However, once they arrive, they find that the ship’s inner door is stuck, preventing them from getting beyond the console room. Norna, Tegan and Turlough obtain an acid-battery from the research room to power the lights. On their way back, however, they are forced to knock the Warnsman unconscious to avoid capture. Another bombardment occurs and, in the Warnsman’s absence, catches the colony unawares. When the skies clear, the TARDIS has gone and all that is left is the Doctor’s hat stand.

Plantaganet orders the execution of the Doctor, but Turlough intercedes, using a surviving hat stand from the TARDIS as a weapon. Plantaganet tries to attack the Doctor with a crowbar but suffers a heart attack. The Time Lord manages to save his life using the battery, but he is later dragged into the ground by some mysterious force.

The Doctor, Tegan and Turlough discover that the culprits are the Gravis and his Tractators, giant insects with incredible powers over gravity. The disappearing colonists where being used by the Tractators because they need human minds and bodies to run their mining machines. Plantaganet was kidnapped to replace Captain Revere, the current driver whose is now brain dead. The Gravis intends to transform Frontios into an enormous spaceship; once successful, he would be able to spread the terror of the Tractators across the galaxy. The Doctor, Turlough, Brazen and his guards rescue Plantaganet by knocking out the Gravis. However, Brazen gets caught by one of the mining machines and is killed while the others escape.

Tegan wanders around in the tunnels and comes across bits of the TARDIS’s inner walls. She is chased by the Gravis, who has now regained consciousness, and two of his Tractators. She inadvertently comes upon one of the TARDIS’s inner doors and she opens it to find herself in the TARDIS console room, which has bits of rock wall mixed in with its normal walls. She also finds the Doctor, Turlough and Plantaganet hovering around the console. The Doctor ushers the Gravis in and then tricks him into reassembling the TARDIS by using his power over gravity. The Gravis pulls the TARDIS back into its normal dimension. Once fully assembled, the Gravis is effectively cut off from his fellow Tractators, which revert to a harmless state.

The Doctor and Tegan drop the Gravis off on the uninhabited planet of Kolkokron. Returning to Frontios, the Doctor gives Plantaganet the hat stand as a farewell token and asks that his own involvement in the affair not be mentioned to anyone especially the Time Lords. Once the TARDIS has left Frontios, its engines start making a worrying noise. The Doctor appears to be helpless as the ship is being pulled towards the centre of the universe.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Cast notes

  • The part of Mr. Range was originally to be played by actor Peter Arne, but he was murdered at his home prior to the start of recording.

[edit] In print

The story was novelised by Bidmead and published by Target Books in September 1984.

[edit] Tractators

Tractators are insect-like burrowers resembling biped woodlouse creatures which curl into balls when dormant. They are a species of universal outcasts who formed a collective intelligence, though without the guiding will of their leader they are only mindless animals. They have a considerable natural power of gravity control and once attacked Trion. Tractators are mute, though the Gravis has the power of voice (in the novelisation of Frontios it has a specially constructed gruesome translating machine).

Frontios remains, to date, the sole appearance of the Tractators in the television series. However, on March 6, 1984, then Doctor Who script editor Eric Saward wrote to Bidmead a request that he write a sequel to Frontios which would have featured the return of the Tractators and the Doctor’s arch nemesis, the Master. Bidmead did not produce a script. The Tractators are featured in the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel Genocide by Paul Leonard.

[edit] Production

  • The story’s working title was The Wanderers.
  • This story was the final televised story written by former Doctor Who script editor, Christopher H. Bidmead.
  • The actors who played the Tractators were all trained dancers, as the script called for the actors to curl around their victims like woodlice. In the event, the Tractator costumes produced were too inflexible for this to be done.
  • It is unstated what happens to Kamelion, who has been inside the TARDIS since The King's Demons. The writers of The Discontinuity Guide theorise that he is disguised as the hatstand.
  • The final episode ends on a cliffhanger, with the TARDIS dragged into a time corridor. The episode was followed by a trailer of clips for the following serial, Resurrection of the Daleks, which continued the story. This was the first time since the 1960s that a story ended with a cliffhanger directly leading into the next story.

[edit] External links

[edit] Reviews

[edit] Target novelisation