The Talons of Weng-Chiang: Difference between revisions
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#Professor Litefoot is a similar character to Sherlock Holmes' colleague [[Doctor Watson|Dr Watson]] and he has a housekeeper called Mrs Hudson (the same name as the housekeeper at 221b Baker Street in the Sherlock Holmes novels). |
#Professor Litefoot is a similar character to Sherlock Holmes' colleague [[Doctor Watson|Dr Watson]] and he has a housekeeper called Mrs Hudson (the same name as the housekeeper at 221b Baker Street in the Sherlock Holmes novels). |
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#At one point the Doctor says to Litefoot "...elementary my dear Litefoot". |
#At one point the Doctor says to Litefoot "...elementary my dear Litefoot". |
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#The giant rat in the story may be a reference to [[The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire]], which has [[Sherlock Holmes]] declare, as an aside, to Dr. Watson: |
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:''Matilda Briggs was not the name of a young woman, Watson, ... It was a ship which is associated with the giant rat of [[Sumatra]], a story for which the world is not yet prepared.'' |
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*In so far as Magnus Greel is a hideously deformed character living beneath a 19th century theatre who convinces a performer that he is a spirit rather than a man, the story is also reminiscent of ''[[The Phantom of the Opera]]''. |
*In so far as Magnus Greel is a hideously deformed character living beneath a 19th century theatre who convinces a performer that he is a spirit rather than a man, the story is also reminiscent of ''[[The Phantom of the Opera]]''. |
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*When Chang calls the Doctor to the stage, there is a short musical excerpt from [[Gilbert and Sullivan]]'s ''[[The Mikado]]''. |
*When Chang calls the Doctor to the stage, there is a short musical excerpt from [[Gilbert and Sullivan]]'s ''[[The Mikado]]''. |
Revision as of 22:26, 19 March 2012
091 – The Talons of Weng-Chiang | |||
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Doctor Who serial | |||
File:Talons of Weng Chiang.jpg | |||
Cast | |||
Others
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Production | |||
Directed by | David Maloney | ||
Written by | Robert Holmes | ||
Script editor | Robert Holmes | ||
Produced by | Philip Hinchcliffe | ||
Executive producer(s) | None | ||
Production code | 4S | ||
Series | Season 14 | ||
Running time | 6 episodes, 25 minutes each | ||
First broadcast | 26 February – 2 April 1977 | ||
Chronology | |||
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The Talons of Weng-Chiang is the sixth and final serial of the 14th season of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in six weekly parts from 26 February to 2 April 1977.
Plot
The Doctor and Leela arrive in London so that Leela can learn about the customs of her ancestors, specifically the musical theatre of Victorian England. Performing at the Palace Theatre on an extended run is the stage magician Li H'sen Chang, although the Doctor did hope to catch Little Tich. On their way to the Palace Theatre, the Doctor and Leela encounter a group of Chinese men who have apparently killed a cab driver. They attempt to silence the Doctor and Leela but are frightened away by the distant whistle of an approaching peeler (British slang for policeman). All but one escape, and he, the Doctor and Leela are taken to the local police station.
At the station, Li H'sen Chang is called in to act as an interpreter, but unbeknownst to everyone else he is the leader of the group and he secretly gives the captive henchman a pill of concentrated scorpion venom, which the henchman takes immediately and dies. The Doctor, upon a brief examination of the body finds a scorpion tattoo – the symbol of the Tong of the Black Scorpion, devout followers of an ancient god Weng-Chiang.
The body is taken to the local mortuary, along with the body of the cabbie which had just been found floating in the river. There they meet Professor Litefoot, who is performing the autopsies. The cabbie is Joseph Buller, who had been looking for his wife Emma, the latest in a string of missing women in the area. Buller had gone down to the Palace Theatre where he had confronted Chang about his wife's disappearance, threatening to report Chang to the police if she was not returned to him. Chang, fearful of discovery, had sent his men, including the diminutive Mr Sin, to kill Buller. Chang is in the service of Magnus Greel, a despot from the 51st century who had fled from the authorities in a time cabinet. (However, for most of the story Chang believes he serves the god Weng-Chiang, not Magnus Greel.) The technology of the cabinet is based on "zygma energy," which is unstable and has disrupted Greel's own DNA, deforming him horribly. This forces him to drain the life essences from young women to keep himself alive. At the same time, Greel is in search of his cabinet, taken from him by Chinese Imperial soldiers, and which in turn had been given by the Imperial Court to Professor Litefoot's parents as a gift. Mr Sin is also from the future but is a robotic toy constructed with the cerebral cortex of a pig. It is better known as the Peking Homunculus, a vile thing that almost caused World War Six when its organic pig part took over the toy's functions.
Greel tracks down the time cabinet and steals it, whilst concurrently the Doctor tracks Greel to the sewers underneath the Palace Theatre, aided (rather clumsily) by the theatre's owner, Henry Gordon Jago. However, Greel has already fled his lair, abandoning Chang to the police. Chang escapes but only to be mauled by one of the giant rats – products of Greel's experiments, which were then used to guard his sewer hideout.
While the Doctor and Leela try to find Greel's new hideout, Jago comes across a bag of future technological artefacts, among which is the key to the time cabinet. He takes it to Professor Litefoot's house, and there, after leaving the artefacts and a note for the Doctor, the Professor and Jago set out to follow anyone coming around the Palace Theatre in search of the bag. However, they are captured for their efforts. Meanwhile, the Doctor and Leela happen upon Chang in an opium den, already half dead from his injuries and the narcotic; there, he tells them that Greel can be found in the House of the Dragon but falls into rambling and dies before telling them its exact location. He does leave them a Chinese puzzle that tells the Doctor that Greel's lair is in a Boot Court somewhere.
The Doctor and Leela return to Professor Litefoot's house. There they find the note and the key to the time cabinet. They decide to wait for Greel and his henchmen. When they arrive, the Doctor uses the key, a fragile crystal known as a Trionic Lattice, as a bargaining chip. He asks to be taken to the House of the Dragon, offering the key in exchange for Lightfoot and Jago's release. Instead, Greel overpowers the Doctor and locks him in with the two amateur sleuths.
Leela, who had been left at Litefoot's house at the Doctor's behest, has followed them and confronts Greel. She is captured and set in his life-essence extraction machine, a catalytic extraction chamber, but before her life essence is drained in order to feed Greel, the Doctor, Jago and Litefoot escape and rescue her. In a final confrontation, Mr Sin turns on Greel as the Doctor convinces it that Greel escaping in his time cabinet will create a catastrophic implosion. The Doctor defeats Greel by forcibly pushing him into his own catalytic extraction chamber, thus damaging it and causing it to overload. Having fallen victim to his own machine, Greel suffers Cellular Collapse and disintegrates. Enraged by the events, the Peking Homunculus attacks Leela, but the Doctor manages to remove its prime fuse and damage it beyond repair before bringing the Zygma Experiment to a permanent end by destroying the lattice.
As the Doctor prepares the TARDIS, Litefoot attempts to explain tea to Leela, only to baffle her further. The Doctor and Leela bid farewell to Jago and Litefoot as they enter the TARDIS. Confused by the police box, Litefoot is astonished by its de-materialisation, a stunt which Jago remarks that even Li H'sen Chang could have appreciated.
Continuity
- The Virgin Missing Adventures spin off novel The Shadow of Weng-Chiang by David A. McIntee is a sequel to this story, and again features Mr Sin, this time under the control of Li H'sen Chang's daughter Hsien-Ko.
- The Doctor encounters Professor Litefoot again in the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel The Bodysnatchers by Mark Morris, although the Eighth Doctor claims to merely be an 'associate' of the Fourth Doctor rather than revealing that he is the same man.
- The Time Agents who pursue Greel are featured in the Eighth Doctor Adventures Eater of Wasps and Emotional Chemistry. The Ninth and Tenth Doctor's former companion and leader of Torchwood, Jack Harkness identified himself as an ex-Time Agent also from the 51st century.
- This is the only story from the Tom Baker era in which he is not seen wearing one of his trademark scarves, his attire instead resembling that of Sherlock Holmes.
- This is also one of two stories in which Leela is not shown wearing her leathers. According to the textual information track on the DVD release, this change in costume was supposed to be permanent as the Doctor and Leela established a Professor Higgins/Eliza Doolittle-style relationship, but the idea was soon dropped.
- At one point, the Doctor empties his pockets, revealing a number of odds and ends, including a bag of his trademark jelly baby sweets and a toy Batmobile[1]
- The Mahogany Murderers is a Big Finish Productions audio drama in which Jago & Litefoot (played by the original actors) relate another adventure they shared, but without the Doctor's help. There have been further audio dramas of "Jago & Litefoot".
- This story alludes to the First Doctor serial Marco Polo, when the Doctor remarks, "I haven't been in China for 400 years".
Production
Template:Doctor Who episode head
- Robert Banks Stewart's story outline ("The Foe from the Future") inspired elements of this serial. "The Foe from the Future" is due to be adapted by Big Finish Productions as an audio play in 2012.
- Working titles for this story included The Talons of Greel.
- This was the final Doctor Who story produced by Philip Hinchcliffe. Hinchcliffe was succeeded by Graham Williams as the series producer, who sat in on this story's production.
- This story featured the first Doctor Who work by John Nathan-Turner as series production unit manager. Nathan-Turner would succeed Williams as the show's producer from 1980 to 1989.
- Filming for the serial took place in Wapping, London. The interior shots of the theatre were recorded using outside broadcasting cameras during four days spent at the Royal Theatre, Northampton.
- A large pile of straw seen in one scene was placed there to cover a modern car that had not been moved off the street.
- The production team briefly considered giving Jago and Litefoot their own spin-off series.
- The production of this serial featured in a BBC Two documentary, Whose Doctor Who, presented by Melvyn Bragg, which was part of the arts series The Lively Arts. Including interviews with Tom Baker, Philip Hinchcliffe and fans of the series, it was the first in-depth documentary made by the BBC on the series and was transmitted on the day following the final episode. The programme is included as an extra on the DVD releases of The Talons of Weng-Chiang.
Cast notes
- Deep Roy, who played Mr. Sin, had an uncredited role as an unnamed alien trade delegate in The Trial of a Time Lord: Mindwarp.[2]
- Dudley Simpson – who composed much of the music for Doctor Who in the 1960s, and '70s – has a cameo as the conductor of Jago's theatre orchestra.
- Michael Spice appears in this story as the main villain, Magnus Greel. He also provided the voice of Morbius in the previous season's The Brain of Morbius.
- John Bennett had previously appeared in Doctor Who as General Finch in Invasion of the Dinosaurs.
- Christopher Benjamin had previously appeared in Inferno as Sir Keith Gold and would return to play Colonel Hugh in "The Unicorn and the Wasp".
Outside references
- There are a number of references to the Sherlock Holmes novels by Arthur Conan Doyle:
- The Doctor is dressed in a similar way as the stereotype Sherlock Holmes caricature (although the Holmes of Doyle's stories would never have worn a deerstalker and Inverness cape in town) and uses sayings and mannerisms similar to Holmes'.
- The episode is set in late Victorian London.
- Professor Litefoot is a similar character to Sherlock Holmes' colleague Dr Watson and he has a housekeeper called Mrs Hudson (the same name as the housekeeper at 221b Baker Street in the Sherlock Holmes novels).
- At one point the Doctor says to Litefoot "...elementary my dear Litefoot".
- The giant rat in the story may be a reference to The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire, which has Sherlock Holmes declare, as an aside, to Dr. Watson:
- Matilda Briggs was not the name of a young woman, Watson, ... It was a ship which is associated with the giant rat of Sumatra, a story for which the world is not yet prepared.
- In so far as Magnus Greel is a hideously deformed character living beneath a 19th century theatre who convinces a performer that he is a spirit rather than a man, the story is also reminiscent of The Phantom of the Opera.
- When Chang calls the Doctor to the stage, there is a short musical excerpt from Gilbert and Sullivan's The Mikado.
Reception
This story has aroused some controversy because of its alleged racism. Some of the English characters display racist attitudes towards the Chinese characters, while the Chinese immigrants themselves are portrayed in a stereotypical fashion – other than Li H'sen Chang (a major villain who is himself akin to Fu Manchu, but portrayed by a white actor – another source of criticism[citation needed]), all of the Chinese characters are coolies or members of Tong gangs. As a result of a complaint to TVOntario following the initial broadcast of the story the Canadian channel chose not to rebroadcast it when that year's season was rerun.[citation needed] A number of other stations across North America refused to screen the serial.[citation needed]
This story was voted the best Doctor Who story ever in the 2003 Outpost Gallifrey poll to mark the series' 40th anniversary.[3]
Russell T Davies, writer/producer for Doctor Who's 21st-century revival, praised this serial, saying, "Take The Talons of Weng-Chiang, for example. Watch episode one. It's the best dialogue ever written. It's up there with Dennis Potter. By a man called Robert Holmes. When the history of television drama comes to be written, Robert Holmes won't be remembered at all because he only wrote genre stuff. And that, I reckon, is a real tragedy."[4]
In print
A novelisation of this serial, written by Terrance Dicks, was published by Target Books in November 1977, entitled Doctor Who and The Talons of Weng-Chiang.
The script was published by Titan Books in November 1989, entitled "Doctor Who The Scripts The Talons of Weng-Chiang" and edited by John McElroy. Template:Doctor Who book
VHS, DVD and other releases
- The serial was released in omnibus format on VHS in the UK in 1988. In order to obtain a "PG" rating from the BBFC, shots involving the use of nunchukas – which were then classed as illegal weapons and unable to be shown on-screen – were removed from the fight scene involving the Doctor and the Tong of the Black Scorpion. (Over the next decade and a half the BBFC's guidelines were relaxed).
- The story was released complete and unedited on DVD in April 2003 in a two-disc set as part of the Doctor Who 40th Anniversary Celebration releases, representing the Tom Baker years.
- On 2 September 2008 this serial was released for sale on iTunes.
- A special edition version of the story was released on DVD as part of the "Revisitations" set in October 2010.
References
- ^ DVD textual information track
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0746989/
- ^ Outpost Gallifrey 2003 Reader Poll
- ^ Johnson, Richard (2007-03-11). "Master of the universe". The Sunday Telegraph. p. 1. Archived from the original on 2007-03-13. Retrieved 2007-03-12.
External links
- The Talons of Weng-Chiang at BBC Online
- The Talons of Weng-Chiang on Tardis Wiki, the Doctor Who Wiki
- Template:Brief
- Template:Doctor Who RG
- Fan reviews
- Target novelisation