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Monday 18 January 2021

DOCTOR WHO THE DALEKS THE DEAD PLANET  DOCTOR WHO THE DALEKS THE DEAD PLANET #Daleks#1StTime


 The Daleks

Original Airdate: 21 Dec, 1963

Episode One - The Dead Planet

[Tardis]

DOCTOR: Well, I suggest before we go outside and explore, let us clean ourselves up.
SUSAN: Oh, yes.
DOCTOR: Now what does the radiation read, Susan?
SUSAN: It's reading normal, Grandfather.
(But after they walk away, the needle goes up into the Danger Zone)

[Forest]

BARBARA: There's been a forest fire. Everything's sort of white and ashen.
IAN: Funny mist.
DOCTOR: The heat must have been indescribable. Look at this soil here. Look at it. It's all turn to sand and ashes. Extraordinary. How can shrubs or trees grow in soil like that, hmm?
IAN: Something else that's strange. There's quite a breeze blowing.
SUSAN: Well?
IAN: Well, look at the branches and things.
SUSAN: They don't seem to be moving.
BARBARA: They're not. They're absolutely still.
(Ian touches a twig, and it breaks easily)
IAN: Huh. Like stone, look. Very brittle stone. It crumbles when you touch it. Look.
DOCTOR: It's petrified. How fascinating, a petrified jungle. Hm. Extraordinary. Yes, I must really investigate that. Couldn't have been heat, then, and age would merely decay.
SUSAN: What could have caused it, Grandfather?
DOCTOR: I don't know, I don't know, but I intend to find out.
SUSAN: Well I'm coming too.
(The Doctor and Susan go exploring)
BARBARA: Ian, where are we?
IAN: I don't know.
BARBARA: Well why doesn't he take us back?
IAN: I'm not sure that he can.
BARBARA: What, ever?
IAN: I hate it as much as you. I'm just as afraid. But what can we do?
BARBARA: Well, we could at least stay near the ship.
IAN: The ship's no good without him. We'd better keep an eye on him. He seems to have a knack of getting himself into trouble.
BARBARA: You think there's any danger?
IAN: Not necessarily.
BARBARA: But don't be too complacent. No, you're right, I suppose. I just wish
IAN: We'll be all right.
BARBARA: Yes. Well, I suppose we'd better make sure he doesn't fall down and break a leg. Don't you ever think he deserves something to happen to him?
IAN: Yes.
(Further on, Susan has made a discovery)
SUSAN: Oh Grandfather, look! It's a flower. A perfect flower. Well, it's even kept some of it's colour.
DOCTOR: Yes, very pretty, very pretty. Hm.
SUSAN: Hey, look. Look what I've found.
IAN: Oh, that's beautiful.
SUSAN: Isn't it? I'm going to try and pick it and keep it all in one piece.
IAN: Oh, be careful. It'll be very fragile. There we are.
SUSAN: Beautiful. When I get it back to the ship I'm
BARBARA: Ian!
SUSAN: going to put it into a glass and
BARBARA: Ian!
IAN: Coming, coming.
(And he puts the flower in Susan's hands, and it breaks)
IAN: What is it? What's the matter?
(Barbara points at a lizard)
BARBARA: No!
IAN: It's all right. Like everything else in this place, solid stone.
BARBARA: It's hideous.
IAN: Yes, it is. It's also significant. Nothing on Earth could look like this.
BARBARA: It looks like some sculptor's nightmare.
DOCTOR: Yes, it's certainly alien to anything on your planet. But you're wrong about one thing, Chesterfield. This isn't like everything else. The animal is solidified, certainly, but it's not crumbly stone. It's metal. Yes, it always was.
IAN: What, even when it was alive? But that's impossible.
DOCTOR: Why? Can't you imagine an animal unless it's flesh, blood and bone, hmm? No, I tell you this is an entirely different formation. I should say originally it was some pliable metal held together by a magnetic field, or an inner magnetic field, rather, and it may have had the ability to attract it's victims towards it, if they were metal too.
BARBARA: We're not on Earth, then.
DOCTOR: No, certainly not.
IAN: Are you sure?
DOCTOR: Oh, certain. And you needn't look at me like that, young man. We started this journey far too hurriedly to make any calculations. You know that as well as I do. However, we're alive.
SUSAN: Hey, Grandfather, look. The jungle ends over there.
IAN: Try not to be too upset.
BARBARA: I counted so much on just going back to things I recognise and trust. But here there's nothing to rely on. Nothing.
IAN: Well, there's me. Barbara, all I ask you to do is believe, really believe, we'll go back. We will, you know.
BARBARA: I wish I was more like you. I'm afraid I'm a very unwilling adventurer.
IAN: I'm not exactly reveling in it myself.
SUSAN: Grandfather's talking about fixing our position by the stars.
IAN: Good. Where is he?
SUSAN: Just over there.
BARBARA: Susan. Don't you have anything in the ship that records the journeys?
SUSAN: Oh, yes. There's a meter fixed to a great big bank of computers. If you feed it with the right sort of information, it can take over the controls of the ship and deliver you to any place you want to go.
BARBARA: Then why don't we know where we are?
SUSAN: Well, it's a question of the right information, you see. I don't say that Grandfather doesn't know how to work the ship, but he's so forgetful, and then he will go off and. Well, he likes to work on his own.
BARBARA: So I've noticed.
SUSAN: Anyway, he's only got to do some computations back in the ship and we can move on.
BARBARA: Well, it can't be too soon for me.
DOCTOR: Well now, are we ready?
BARBARA: Oh, Doctor, have you worked out yet how all this happened?
DOCTOR: No, not really, not really. Whatever it was destroyed everything that was living, but the planet is dead, totally dead.
IAN: Barbara, Doctor. Over here.
DOCTOR: What is it, Chesterton? We really must get back to
(From the edge of the petrified jungle they can see across a plain to a city)
DOCTOR: Most fascinating.
BARBARA: A city, a huge city.
(The Doctor puts on a pair of binocular glasses)
IAN: Well, Doctor? Can you see anything? Any sign of life?
DOCTOR: No, no, no sign of life. No, just buildings. Magnificent buildings, I
SUSAN: Oh, let me have a look. It's fabulous. Here, you have a look.
(Barbara takes her turn)
IAN: What do you think, Doctor?
DOCTOR: I don't know, I don't know. Whatever it was destroyed the vegetation here certainly hasn't damaged the city. But there's no sign of life. No movement, no light, no. No, I shall know more about it when I've been down there.
BARBARA: Down there? Oh, no. We're going back to the ship.
DOCTOR: Now, don't be ridiculous. That city down there is a magnificent subject for study, and I don't intend to leave here until I've thoroughly investigated it.
IAN: Well it's too late to talk about it now. It's getting dark. We'll discuss it when we get back to the ship.
SUSAN: Yes. Whatever you decide, it's too late to get down there now.
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, yes, all right then. But I assure you I'm determined to study that place.
IAN: You can do what you like, as long as you don't endanger the rest of us.
DOCTOR: Very well then. I shall look at it myself, alone.
IAN: You're the only one who can operate the ship. I'm afraid I can't let you do that, Doctor. Your glasses.
(Walking back through the jungle)
IAN: I think this is the way we came.
(Susan stops to pick another flower, then gets frightened)
SUSAN: Who's there?
(Someone or something touches her shoulder. She screams and Ian goes back to find her)
IAN: All right, Susan, it's all right. You're safe now.

[Tardis]

BARBARA: Did Susan tell you what frightened her?
DOCTOR: Yes, yes. She's convinced that someone touched her, and I tried to make her see it wasn't possible but I'm afraid she wouldn't listen to me. I wonder, would you have a talk with her?
BARBARA: Yes, of course I will.
DOCTOR: Yes, you know, sometimes I find the gulf between Susan's age and mine makes difficult understanding between us.
BARBARA: I'll see what I can do.
DOCTOR: Oh, would you? Thank you, thank you very much. I'd be grateful.
(Susan is sitting at a table)
BARBARA: Hello.
SUSAN: Hello.
BARBARA: What are you doing?
SUSAN: Just drawing.
BARBARA: Well, can I see?
SUSAN: It's the flower I saw in the jungle.
BARBARA: What happened out there?
SUSAN: Nothing.
BARBARA: Well Ian said you were terrified. Well, something must have frightened you.
SUSAN: It's not that so much. It's just that I'm, I'm fed up no one believes me.
BARBARA: Believes what?
SUSAN: Oh, I don't know.
BARBARA: That there was someone out there and they touched you on the shoulder?
SUSAN: There was someone there.
BARBARA: But you didn't see who it was?
SUSAN: No. It was like that. A light touch on the shoulder. I couldn't have been mistaken.
BARBARA: Well, I believe you.
SUSAN: But Grandfather says that it's impossible for anyone to live out there.
BARBARA: Oh, Susan, it isn't that he doesn't believe you. It's just that he finds it difficult to go against his scientific facts.
SUSAN: I know.
BARBARA: Oh, look. Why don't you just try and forget it for the moment?
SUSAN: For the moment.
(By a bank of computers in the wall, the Doctor is noting the readings on the screens and dials)
IAN: What's this one for? I don't know how you make sense of any of this.
DOCTOR: You're quite right, quite right.
IAN: Can you find where we are? Well, Doctor?
DOCTOR: Hmm? Oh.
IAN: I was wondering if perhaps you
DOCTOR: My dear boy, these eternal questions of yours. Do I know where we are, I suppose?
IAN: Now listen, Doctor, I don't want to argue with you. We're fellow travellers whether we like it or not. But for heaven's sake try and see it from our point of view. You've uprooted us violently from our own lives. You
DOCTOR: You pushed your way into the ship, young man.
IAN: All right, all right, I admit it. A small part of the blame is ours.
DOCTOR: Oh, small?
IAN: But naturally we're anxious. What are we going to do? Can we live here? What do we eat? There are millions of questions.
DOCTOR: A very good idea. I'm hungry.
(Susan it putting drops into a glass of water. Barbara is holding her head)
DOCTOR: Oh, what's the matter?
BARBARA: Oh, I've suddenly got this terrible headache.
DOCTOR: Oh, dear, dear, how irksome for you. Oh, this stuff is very good. This should cure it. Now, not too much, dear, not too much.
SUSAN: No. Oh, Grandfather. I'm sorry I was so silly just now. Here, try this.
BARBARA: Thank you. Oh, it's very nice.
IAN: Let's hope it does you some good.
(The Doctor is nibbling at something from a machine nearby)
DOCTOR: Oh, did you want something to eat? What would you like?
BARBARA: I'd like some bacon and eggs.
IAN: All right, bacon and eggs.
DOCTOR: Bacon and eggs.
IAN: But
SUSAN: This is fully automatic.
DOCTOR: Yes, certainly, certainly. J62.
SUSAN: (turning dials) J62.
DOCTOR: L6.
SUSAN: L6.
IAN: I hope mine doesn't taste of engine grease.
DOCTOR: Now, now, now, don't be ridiculous.
BARBARA: Shall I get plates and things?
SUSAN: No, there's no need to.
(The Doctor takes two blocks out of the dispensing slot)
SUSAN: Eggs and bacon.
DOCTOR: Bacon and eggs.
IAN: What, this?
SUSAN: Go on, try it.
(They unwrap the blocks and take a small bite)
DOCTOR: Well?
IAN: Mm. Not bad. What do you think, Barbara?
BARBARA: I think it's delicious.
IAN: My bacon's a bit salty.
DOCTOR: It shouldn't be. It's English.
IAN: No, seriously, Doctor, this is remarkable. I mean, one bite and I taste the bacon, another and I taste the egg. How do you do it?
DOCTOR: Food has component parts, dear boy. Flavours are rather like primary colours, you know, you blend two to achieve a third, a fourth, etc, etc.
IAN: Well, I think it's wonderful.
SUSAN: How's your headache now?
BARBARA: Oh, it's much better. I don't usually get them at all.
DOCTOR: Susan, would you like something to eat?
SUSAN: No thanks, I'm not hungry.
DOCTOR: Oh, child, that's unusual. I do hope your affects outside the ship hasn't affected you too much.
SUSAN: No. I think I'll go to bed now, anyway.
DOCTOR: Right.
SUSAN: Do you want to know where you can sleep, Miss Wright?
BARBARA: Oh, yes.
(They hear a tapping sound)
IAN: What's that?
DOCTOR: The scanner.
SUSAN: There was somebody there.
(But the scanner just shows the trees)
IAN: Nothing. Not a thing.
SUSAN: But something must have made that noise.
BARBARA: Look, I've had enough of this. Please, can't we get out of here?
DOCTOR: Ah, but the city. I must see the city.
BARBARA: But why?
DOCTOR: I will not be questioned. Uninvited passengers. I didn't invite them to the ship. I shall do what I want to do.
IAN: Why endanger the rest of us by staying here?
SUSAN: Grandfather, please. Please.
(So the Doctor sets the Tardis going, and ducks under the console to remove something)
BARBARA: Stone trees are all very well, but the next forest I walk through I want them all to be made of wood.
(The Tardis starts shaking)
SUSAN: What's the matter?
DOCTOR: I don't know. The power take-up was rising normally and
IAN: What's wrong?
DOCTOR: Oh don't distract me, please.
SUSAN: Shall I trace it on the fault locator, Grandfather?
DOCTOR: Yes, I think you'd better, child.
SUSAN: (checking a printout) K7.
DOCTOR: K7? Ah, yes, of course, the fluid link. Yes, yes, yes. Yes.
(Goes under the console and comes up with the part he took off earlier)
DOCTOR: Yes, there we are, you see. The end of it's unscrewed itself and the fluid has run out.
IAN: Have you got a spare?
DOCTOR: Oh, no, no need for that. This is easily repaired. All we have to do is refill it.
IAN: What liquid do you need?
DOCTOR: Mercury.
IAN: Mercury. Can I get it for you?
DOCTOR: No, I'm afraid you can't. We haven't any at all.
IAN: What?
DOCTOR: No.
IAN: Don't you carry a supply?
DOCTOR: No, it hasn't been necessary. This hasn't happened before.
IAN: But you must have some somewhere, surely.
DOCTOR: No, no. We shall have to get some from outside.
BARBARA: But where? There isn't anything outside because
IAN: Yes. There's the city.
DOCTOR: Yes, the city, of course. Of course we're bound to get some mercury there. Yes, we're bound to. Well, I mean, what else can we do, hmm?
IAN: It seems we have no alternative. We have to go to the city.
DOCTOR: Yes, indeed. At first light, then?
(Next day)
IAN: Well, it's light enough and there doesn't seem to be anything out there. We might as well get started. Oh, and Doctor. Remember we're going to this city to find mercury, and once we've found it we're coming straight back here. Is that clear?
DOCTOR: Oh, quite so, quite so.

[Forest]

IAN: Well, shall I lead?
DOCTOR: Yes, by all means.
IAN: Look.
(There's a small curved metal object on the ground)
BARBARA: Don't touch it, it might go off.
SUSAN: Be careful.
DOCTOR: What is it, Chesterton?
IAN: I don't know. Stand back, all of you.
(He prods it with a long stick, then taps it. It sounds hollow)
IAN: I think it's all right. A metal box. It's a box of glass phials. Look.
DOCTOR: Let me see.
SUSAN: Then there was somebody here last night. They must have dropped them. I knew I was right.
IAN: Yes. Sorry, Susan.
DOCTOR: Yes, I'd like to run a few tests on those. Susan, would you take these into the ship, please?
SUSAN: Yes.
DOCTOR: Thank you. Oh, and by the way, did you remember the food supplies?
SUSAN: Yes. A day's supply for four. That's enough, isn't it?
DOCTOR: Yes, ample, ample.
IAN: I trust we won't be more than a couple of hours. You ready, Susan?
SUSAN: Yes.
IAN: Come on, then. Off we go.

[City]

(A very metallic, angular place)
DOCTOR: Do you mind if I sit down for a minute? I feel a bit exhausted.
IAN: You all right?
DOCTOR: Yes, I'm just a bit tired. It was a long journey and my legs are rather weak.
BARBARA: Why don't you rest here? Ian and I will look around and see if we can
DOCTOR: No, no, no, no, I want to look around too. I shall be all right, thank you.
IAN: I must say, I don't feel too good myself. Look, why don't we get this over with quickly. Look for instruments, gauges, anything like that. Ideally what we want is a laboratory.
(A door opens)
BARBARA: Ian, look.
IAN: Why don't we separate and go different ways and meet back here in say, ten minutes. All right?
BARBARA: Fine. I'll go this way. (through the door)
DOCTOR: Would you lend me your arm, would you, Susan? Thank you.
(Ian finds the sensor to open another door - it's the round things by the side of them)
(On her travels, Barbara has to duck in the odd-shaped corridor, and she is watched by a remote camera)
SUSAN: Let's try this one. (the door opens for her) There's no light.
(Barbara gets shut in by bulkheads closing behind her, but she only notices when she tries to retrace her steps)
IAN: Ah, there you are. Any luck?
SUSAN: No. How about you?
IAN: No, no luck. Barbara should be here by now. Barbara! Barbara! We'll give her a couple of minutes more, and then if she's not back we'll have to go and look for her.
(Barbara is finally trapped and disappears)
IAN: We've waited long enough for her. We must go and find her.
(In another level of the city, Barbara leaves the elevator, and is confronted by a vicious looking sink-plunger being waved by something. She screams)

Episode Two - The Survivors

[City]

(Ian, Susan and the Doctor have gone through the same door as Barbara did earlier)
IAN: Barbara? Barbara? Barbara?
(Susan opens another door. It's dark inside)
SUSAN: Miss Wright?
(Ian tries another)
IAN: Barbara?
SUSAN: Hey, there's a corridor over here.
IAN: We might as well see where it goes to. Come on.
DOCTOR: Wait.
IAN: What's the matter?
DOCTOR: Listen.
SUSAN: I can hear a ticking noise.
DOCTOR: Quiet, child. Now listen.
IAN: Yes. Over here somewhere.
DOCTOR: It's stopped now.
SUSAN: Hey, there it is again.
IAN: It's coming from in here.

[Room]

IAN Ah, this is more hopeful. We ought to find some mercury here.
DOCTOR: Measuring equipment. But measuring what? Look here. Look at this drum. The ink's still quite wet.
IAN: Yes. Hard to imagine what sort of people these are.
DOCTOR: They're intelligent, anyway. Very intelligent.
IAN: Yes, but how do they use their intelligence? What form does it take?
DOCTOR: Oh, as if that matters. What these instruments tell us is that we're in the midst of a very, very advanced civilised society.
SUSAN: Here it is. The thing that's ticking. It's over here. It's a Geiger counter.
IAN: But look at the needle! It's past the danger point.
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, that explains a lot of things, doesn't it. A jungle turned to stone, the barren soil and the fact that we're not feeling well.
IAN: Radiation sickness?
DOCTOR: Yes, I'm afraid so. The atmosphere here is polluted with a very high level of fallout, and we've been walking around in it completely unprotected.
IAN: What? But how do you explain the buildings? They're intact.
DOCTOR: A neutron bomb. Yes. It destroys all human tissue, but leaves the buildings and machinery intact. Yes.
IAN: What? But how much radiation, and how badly?
DOCTOR: We need, we need drugs to be treated.
IAN: But where are we going to find them?
SUSAN: The Tardis will have to take us to another time and place where we can be cured.
IAN: But don't you remember? We can't move the ship until we find the mercury for the fluid link!
DOCTOR: For the fluid link, yes. Yes, I'm afraid I cheated a little on that. I was determined to see the city, but everybody wanted to go on and, well, to avoid arguments, in short, there's nothing wrong with the fluid link.
SUSAN: What? Grandfather, do you mean to say that you risked leaving the ship just to see this place?
IAN: You fool. You old fool!
DOCTOR: Abuse me as much as you like, Chesterton. The point is we need an immediate return to the ship, and I suggest we leave at once.
IAN: We're not leaving until we've found Barbara.
DOCTOR: Very well. You may stay and search for her if you wish, but Susan and I are going back to the ship. Now, come along, child.
IAN: All right, carry on, fine. How far do you think you'll get without this? (the fluid link)
DOCTOR: Give that to me.
IAN: Not until we've found Barbara.
DOCTOR: Give it to me, I say.
IAN: No! It's time you faced up to your responsibilities. You got us here. Now I'm going to make sure that you get us back.
DOCTOR: Chesterton, this is
IAN: We're wasting time. We should be looking for Barbara.
SUSAN: He's right, Grandfather. We are wasting time.
DOCTOR: Child, if only you'd think as an adult sometimes. Oh, very well. Let's go then. Let's go.

[City]

(They walk out of the room to be met by a group of sink plungers wielded by evil four foot tall pepper pots)
DALEK: You will move ahead of us and follow my directions. This way. Immediately.
(Susan and the Doctor obey, but Ian hesitates)
DALEK: I said immediately!
(Ian runs down another corridor)
DALEK: Fire!
(A ray hits Ian, he turns from positive black and white to negative white and black, then collapses)
IAN: My legs! My legs!
(Susan runs back to help)
DALEK: Stop! Your legs are paralysed. You will recover shortly unless you force us to use our weapons again. In that case, the condition will be permanent. You two, help him.
(Susan and the Doctor help Ian up)
IAN: My legs, my legs. I can't use my legs.

[Detention cell]

DALEK [OC]: Stop here.
(The door opens and Ian is carried in by Susan and the Doctor)
BARBARA: Susan!
SUSAN: Miss Wright!
IAN: Barbara, thank heaven we've found you. Are you all right?
BARBARA: Yes. What's the matter? What's happened?
IAN: Oh, I'm all right.
SUSAN: He tried to get away and they hurt him.
BARBARA: Can't you stand up?
IAN: Not without help. The feeling's coming back, don't worry.
BARBARA: Come over here.
IAN: How about you, Barbara? We tried to look for you and then those machines caught us.
BARBARA: They trapped me in some sort of lift. It seemed to go down for ages.
IAN: They didn't hurt you?
BARBARA: No. Ian, what are they?
IAN: I don't know. Barbara, did you notice anything? I mean, when they were moving you about. Any little thing may help us.
BARBARA: No, nothing much. They moved me from floor to floor, always in lifts. Where we are now must be miles underground. Well, there wasn't any furniture now I come to think about it.
IAN: I'm afraid that's not very much help.
BARBARA: Ian, do you think they really are just machines?
IAN: What do you mean?
BARBARA: Well, I was going to say, do you think there's someone inside them?
(Susan laughs)
IAN: That's a point. We haven't any idea what's inside them.
BARBARA: I tried to think of how I could get away from them, but then I began to feel so weak and giddy. It's getting worse now. I think they must have drugged me in some way.
IAN: It's not that. Barbara, we've got radiation sickness. All of us. The Doctor's pretty badly hit.
BARBARA: Well, how do you know it's radiation?
SUSAN: We found a Geiger counter. It seems that all the time we've been in the open, we've been exposed to it.
BARBARA: Well, what's going to happen to us?
DOCTOR: Well, unless, unless we get treatment, we shall die. Yes, we shall die.

[Control room]

(The prisoners are being watched on a monitor)
DALEK 1: Bring in the old man Thal prisoner. Two hundred days ago the radiation count was ninety three.
DALEK 2: It is now fifty eight. An impressive reduction.
DALEK 1: It is still enough to destroy. Our prisoners are showing preliminary stages of sickness already.
DALEK 2: We know the Thals are able to live on the surface.
DALEK 1: And that they must have found immunity.
DALEK 2: Perhaps it is a drug. Is it failing them now? Why are these four showing signs of radiation sickness?
DALEK 1: A few questions will reduce the mystery.
(The Doctor staggers in)
DALEK 1: Do not move out of the light. Sit on the floor.
DALEK 2: You are one of the Thal people?
DOCTOR: I don't understand you.
DALEK 1: Why are you suffering from radiation?
DOCTOR: Why? Because we were not aware of it until it was too late, that's why.
DALEK 2: No, that is not true. We know the Thals have existed outside our city.
DALEK 1: The truth is your supply of drugs has failed, and you came into the city to see if you could find more.
DOCTOR: No, no. Thals? What are you talking about? We're not Thals, or whatever you may call them. Can't you see we're very ill.
DALEK 1: You and your companions need a drug to stay alive.
DOCTOR: We have no drugs. (softly) A drug? A drug. The drugs left outside the Tardis.
DALEK 2: Tardis? He is becoming delirious. I do not understand his words.
DOCTOR: Listen to me.
DALEK 1: Stay in the light.
DOCTOR: My friends and I are travellers. We did find something in the forest near our encampment. They may be the drugs you're referring to. Why not let one of us go and bring the phials here? And under guard, if necessary.
DALEK 1: We cannot move outside the city.
DOCTOR: Very well, then. Let one of us go and hold the others until he returns.
DALEK 1: Providing whoever you send understands the rest of you will be held responsible for his return.
DOCTOR: He will have our lives in his hands. That is enough.
DALEK 1: Then we agree.
DOCTOR: Tell me something about the people, the Thals.
DALEK 1: Over five hundred years ago there were two races on this planet. We, the Daleks, and the Thals. After the neutronic war, our Dalek forefathers retired into the city, protected my our machines.
DOCTOR: And the Thals?
DALEK 1: Most of them perished in the war, but we know that there are survivors. They must be disgustingly mutated, but the fact that they have survived tells us they must have a drug that preserves the life force.
DOCTOR: And knowing that these mutated creatures exist outside the city, you're willing to send one of us in amongst them?
DALEK 1: As you say yourself, all your lives depend on it.

[Detention cell]

(Susan and Barbara are helping Ian walk around. Only one leg is currently working)
BARBARA: Is it any easier?
IAN: Yes, I think it is. I'm going to try and stand on my own.
SUSAN: Be careful.
IAN: I'll be all right. Oh, that's not too bad, is it?
BARBARA: Why don't you sit down for a minute?
IAN: No, no, no. I'll be all right.
(He tries to walk, and falls)
IAN: No good.
BARBARA: Come on, sit down. It'll wear off in time.
IAN: How are you feeling, Barbara?
BARBARA: Not too good.
IAN: Susan?
SUSAN: Well, it doesn't seem to have affected me as much as the rest of you.
(The Doctor enters)
SUSAN: Grandfather!
IAN: Are you all right?
SUSAN: What happened?
DOCTOR: In a moment, child. The phial of drugs left outside the Tardis, remember?
BARBARA: Yes, what about them?
DOCTOR: It's possible that they may have been anti-radiation gloves. Drugs. I can't be certain, but it does give us a chance. The people here, whoever they may be, are very eager to get hold of them.
IAN: None of us are in very good shape to go and get them.
BARBARA: Oh, I could do it.
IAN: No, it must be me.
BARBARA: But you can't walk.
IAN: Oh, I'll be all right in a couple of hours.
DOCTOR: Whoever goes must be very careful. As far as I can ascertain, the creatures out there are the ones who dropped the box. They're called Thals. They're mutations.
IAN: So it wasn't our captors who left the drugs behind?
DOCTOR: No. If they were drugs. I've learnt quite a lot from the Daleks.
IAN: The who?
DOCTOR: The Daleks, our captors here. Oh, if I didn't feel so. Oh. But I was right about the neutron bomb. The Daleks built this underground city as a kind of huge shelter.
IAN: But what about the, what do you call them, the Thals? I mean, how did they survive out there? They
DOCTOR: I don't know.
IAN: Doctor. Doctor? I must get that drug quickly.
SUSAN: He's burning hot.
IAN: Yes. As soon as they take me to the surface, I'll ask for water. In the meantime you must keep him as cool as you possibly can. I think there's some life coming back into my toes.
SUSAN: You can't go alone, Ian. I have to go with you.
IAN: No, I want you to stay here, Susan.
SUSAN: But I can't. I must go with you.
IAN: Don't argue with me.
SUSAN: You can't get into the ship.
IAN: All right then, give me the key.
SUSAN: It's not just a question of turning the key. The whole lock comes away from the door.
IAN: Susan, supposing these Daleks insist that only one of us goes. Then I'll have to take the key and I'll have to go on trying until the door opens.
SUSAN: No, you'd jam the lock. Look, it's a defence mechanism. There are twenty one different holes inside the lock. There's one right place and twenty wrong ones. If you make a mistake, you'll. Well, the whole inside of the lock will melt.
IAN: There's nothing else for it, then. We must go together. Come on, let's see if I can walk. No, it's all right, Barbara. You take it easy. Rest. My right leg is better, you know. I've got feeling in this one, but the left is just pins and needles.
(A Dalek enters)
DALEK 1: You must leave now.
IAN: I'm not well enough yet.
DALEK 1: You must leave now.
IAN: My legs are still
DALEK 1: Which one of you is going?
(Ian tries to walk and falls)
IAN: You must give me more time.
SUSAN: Can't you see how weak he is?
DALEK 1: There are others.
BARBARA: Oh, Ian, I can't. The whole room's going round.
SUSAN: Must I? Alone?
BARBARA: You can't let her go alone. She's just a child. Plead with them. Anything!
IAN: Susan, you see how ill they both are. We can't afford to wait until I can walk. An hour might make all the difference.
SUSAN: I'm so afraid.
IAN: Go on.
SUSAN: Yes.
IAN: Don't stop for anything. Straight there, straight back.
DALEK 1: Are you ready?
IAN: Yes, all right.
SUSAN: I'm coming now.
(The Dalek and Susan leave)
BARBARA: Ian, the others in the forest. He said they were mutations.
IAN: But what else could I do?

[Control room]

DALEK 2: The child has set out.
DALEK 1: Her direction is being followed on the rangescopes?
DALEK 2: Yes.
DALEK 1: Mark her movements carefully. If there are more Thal people living in the jungle, she will try to contact them.
DALEK 2: I understand. If she returns with the drugs, am I to allow the prisoners to use it?
DALEK 1: No. They will die in time. There only value is in bringing us enough of the Thal drug to duplicate it for our own use.
ALL: Yes, at last we have a chance.

[Detention cell]

BARBARA: He's getting worse.
IAN: How long did the Doctor say we'd last without treatment? Forty eight hours?
BARBARA: I don't know. It's hit him so badly, Ian.
IAN: Yes. How are you feeling?
BARBARA: Oh, I ache all over. I have difficulty in keeping my eyes open.
IAN: Yes, I'm about the same. All his fault! Had to have his own way, see the city.
BARBARA: Oh, Ian, that doesn't help.
IAN: I know, I know.
BARBARA: We must wait. That's all we can do.
IAN: Wait. Yes. An hour ago I thought we might try and escape, watch their movements, make a plan. There's always a chance. Now we're too late. I think even if they left the doors wide open we wouldn't have the strength to crawl through them.
BARBARA: How long has she been gone?
IAN: About an hour. She should just be on the edge of the jungle by now.

[Forest]

(There's thunder, wind and lightning as Susan makes her way through the petrified jungle. Something else is moving too. She runs on, falls, and sees - what?)

[Detention cell]

BARBARA: He's so hot. It's like a fever.
IAN: Yes, his breathing's so bad. What do you think, Barbara?
BARBARA: I don't know. Even if Susan got back now, I don't know whether she'd be in time. Give me his coat.
IAN: Here you are.
(She uses it to make a pillow for the Doctor's head)
IAN: Barbara, come on now.
BARBARA: I'm all right.
IAN: Sit down. No, you rest. You can't do anything more for him.
BARBARA: It's so hot in here.
IAN: Yes. Now you try and sleep, Barbara. Try and sleep.
BARBARA: Yes, I'd like to sleep.
IAN: Yes.
BARBARA: It's so hot.
(Ian realises he can walk properly again, and goes to the door, but doubles over with pain)
IAN: Hurry, Susan. Hurry, Susan!
(Susan is running, terrified, through the jungle)

[Control room]

DALEK 2: I have just come from the prisoners. The old man is dying.
DALEK 1: Then he must die. There is no help we can give him. How are the others?
DALEK 2: The woman is sleeping very heavily. The young man fights against it.
DALEK 1: What of the girl? Has she reached the jungle?
DALEK 2: Yes, the rangerscopes tracked her that far. Now they have lost her.

[Tardis]

(Susan has made it, and picks up the box from the chair where she left it. She remembers what she was told)
IAN [OC]: Don't stop for anything. Straight there, straight back. An hour might make all the difference.
SUSAN: I must. I must.
(She opens the doors again and steps out into the storm)

Episode Three - The Escape

[Forest]

(Susan steps outside the Tardis and meets a tall blond man)
SUSAN: Who are you? What do you want?
ALYDON: Don't be afraid.
SUSAN: What do you want? But they said you were, but they called you. But you're not. You're perfect.
ALYDON: I tried to speak to you in the forest yesterday, but I frightened you. I'm sorry.
SUSAN: I was frightened. I was terrified.
ALYDON: Yes, I was very clumsy. I have come now to make certain you understand how to use the drugs I left for you.
SUSAN: You left? But we thought they had been dropped by accident.
ALYDON: No.
SUSAN: We didn't even know they were drugs.
MAN: You mean you haven't taken them yet? But you must.
SUSAN: That's why I came back, you see. My grandfather and two of my friends are prisoners in the city and
ALYDON: No, please, please, you're too quick for me. There are four of you, I know that. I've watched you. And what do you mean, prisoners?
SUSAN: Well, don't you know about the Daleks?
ALYDON: So the Dalek people have survived. But do they live in that dead city?
SUSAN: Well, underneath it, anyway. You see, the Daleks want the drugs too, and they won't let us go until I bring them back to them.
ALYDON: But why should they want the drugs? Surely they must have some themselves if they're still alive.
SUSAN: I don't know. Look, my grandfather and my friends are terribly ill. I must take the drug back to them.
ALYDON: No. No, no, wait. Are you sure the Daleks want the drugs for your friends and not for themselves?
SUSAN: I hadn't thought of that.
MAN: Do you trust them?
SUSAN: No. I'm not sure.
ALYDON: You still have the drugs I left for you. I shall give you a further supply which you must hide as best you can. Do you trust me?
SUSAN: Yes.
ALYDON: I am Alydon of the Thal race. I shall go with you through the forest to the outer wall of the city, if you will allow me.
SUSAN: Oh, thank you. I don't understand. They said you were. Well, they called you mutations.
ALYDON: Here, take my cloak. You're cold.
SUSAN: Thank you.
ALYDON: We are the survivors of a final war. But the radiation still persists and that is why your friends are ill. I wonder if the Daleks have seen us.
SUSAN: Seen you?
ALYDON: I mean, if they call us mutations, what must they be like?

[Control room]

DALEK 2: I have returned the girl to the cell.
DALEK 1: Very well.
DALEK 2: They are asking for water.
DALEK 1: Give them some. It is clear that the girl must have made contact with the Thals.
DALEK 2: Our prisoners could bring the Thals to us. 
DALEK 1: Precisely that.

[Detention cell]

SUSAN: The Thal said the drug would act quickly.
IAN: Don't give him any more water, Susan. His pulse is steady now anyway.
BARBARA: My arms are tingling.
SUSAN: Yes, Alydon said you'd feel that. It just means the drug's working, that's all.
IAN: This Alydon of yours seems to have kept his wits about him. Giving you that extra supply of drugs.
SUSAN: Yes. It was strange when the Daleks found it. I thought first of all they were going to keep both lots. Then they suddenly seemed to change their mind and gave the second lot back to me.
IAN: Yes. Still, the Thals seem more friendly.
SUSAN: Oh, yes. Alydon gave me this cloak to keep me warm.
BARBARA: Why do the Daleks think they're mutations?
SUSAN: I don't know. Judging by Alydon, they're magnificent people.
DOCTOR: Susan.
SUSAN: Grandfather? You'll feel better soon. I brought the drugs back.
DOCTOR: Give me a little while and then we must go back to the ship.
SUSAN: No, we're still prisoners.
DOCTOR: Oh, are we? Oh, yes. Well, we must leave here soon. We must, must leave. Yes.
SUSAN: As soon as grandfather's properly awake we must try and find a way of helping the Thals.
BARBARA: We can't even help ourselves, locked up in here like this.
SUSAN: We must try and talk to the Daleks. Alydon says the Thals are going to starve unless they can find new supplies of food. You see, after the war, the Thals that survived managed to cultivate small plots of land. Well, that's how they've survived ever since. But they've always had to be very, very careful, because the crops have always been in danger. But, you see, they rely on a great rainfall that only happens about every four or five years. Well, it's two years overdue now, and all their crops are ruined. Well, that's why the whole Thal race had to leave their plateau and go in search of food.

[Control room]

SUSAN [on monitor]: Alydon says, unless we can help them arrange some sort of treaty with the Daleks, they're all going to die.
IAN [on monitor]: But how can we, Susan?
SUSAN [on monitor]: Well, he wants to talk to the Daleks. He said if they agree to supply food for them, then one of us must take a message outside the city.
DALEK 2: We could let this catastrophe destroy the Thals.
DALEK 1: Will they let themselves starve to death? No. I feel preserving our prisoners was a good idea.
DALEK 2: And an arrangement to bring the Thals inside our city an even better one.
DALEK 1: We'll let our prisoners sleep and then give them food. After that, we can plan.
DALEK 2: Why not begin now?
DALEK 1: Because the lapse of time, the relaxation of sleep, the provision of food, all these things will give them a false sense of security.

[Detention cell]

(They are woken by the door opening, and a pepperpot enters bearing gifts.)
DALEK 1: We have brought you food and more water. (Barbara takes it) The girl is to come with me.
IAN: Why?
SUSAN: It's all right.
BARBARA: Well, what are they going to do to her?
DALEK 1: She will be returned. We are going to help the Thals, which is what you want us to do. Come now.
(The door closes)
DOCTOR: I can't understand. Why have they taken Susan?
IAN: How do they know we want to help the Thals?

[Jungle, outside the Tardis]

(A group of Thals arrive)
ALYDON: Ah, Ganatus.
GANATUS: Alydon.
ALYDON: You've been longer than I thought.
GANATUS: The path was rough.
ALYDON: The dead city lies over there.
TEMMOSUS: (a man with a headdress) Get the tent here, towards the west.
DYONI: (a young woman) What is it, Temmosus.
TEMMOSUS: This must be the craft in which the strangers arrived here. So, Alydon, we were right to believe the city inhabited.
ALYDON: Yes, Temmosus.
TEMMOSUS: I wonder what they'll be like. How they'll be disposed towards us.
GANATUS: They are Daleks.
TEMMOSUS: Yes, but we've changed over the centuries. Why shouldn't they? The once famous warrior race of Thals are now farmers.
DYONI: But the Daleks were teachers, weren't they, Temmosus?
TEMMOSUS: Yes, they were. And philosophers.
GANATUS: Perhaps they are the warriors now.
TEMMOSUS: From the distance, the city looks as if they make science and invention their profession. It's a magical architecture. Perhaps we can exchange ideas with them, learn from them.
GANATUS: Perhaps.
TEMMOSUS: And these others, they arrived here in this weird object?
ALYDON: Yes, Temmosus.
TEMMOSUS: And you trust them, Alydon?
ALYDON: I have only spoken with the young girl, but if the others are anything like her, I would trust them absolutely.
TEMMOSUS: I hope you're not too generous in your beliefs. What do you say, Dyoni?
DYONI: I have no opinions in the matter.
GANATUS: How unusual.
TEMMOSUS: Where is the girl now?
ALYDON: I have given her the drugs and she has returned to the city.
DYONI: It would have been better if you had given it to a man instead of a girl.
ALYDON: I had no chance. They're prisoners in the city.
GANATUS: Prisoners?
TEMMOSUS: Are you sure?
ALYDON: I'm afraid so. From everything the young girl said, the Daleks are certainly very suspicious of others.
TEMMOSUS: Tell me, Alydon. How old is this young girl?
ALYDON: No longer a child, not yet a woman.
TEMMOSUS: Ah, then perhaps it's safe for you to talk to her, if she's not yet a woman.
(Dyoni stalks off as Ganatus laughs)
ALYDON: I don't understand her. If we don't find a new food supply for next year, we're finished. Doesn't she understand that? We're all working towards the same end.
GANATUS: Now there's a double meaning for you.
TEMMOSUS: But don't you realise that Dyoni sees her personal future in you. You must remember that when we left our plateau and started on this journey, she was little more than a child. But that was four years ago.
ALYDON: I'm not quite so blind.
TEMMOSUS: Well, go on. What have you planned?
ALYDON: The young girl will speak with the Daleks, and a message will come from the city.
TEMMOSUS: Direct from the girl?
ALYDON: Yes.
TEMMOSUS: But how shall we know that it is not a trick?
ALYDON: Well, she told me her name> Susan. And that is how the message is to be signed. Otherwise, we shall know the Daleks are hostile to us.

[Control room]

(Susan is taking dictation from the Daleks)
DALEK 2: Have liquid foods, water in abundance. We can also supply unlimited quantities of fresh vegetables which are forced in artificial sunlight.
SUSAN: Just a minute. Artificial sunlight. All right, go on.
DALEK 2: In return, we shall expect the Thals to help us in the re-cultivation of the land surrounding the
DALEK 1: Why have you stopped writing?
SUSAN: Well, I can only ask them. I can't accept for them.
DALEK 1: Then put down that we expect them to help us.
SUSAN: Yes, I'm sure they will.
DALEK 1: Please sit still while we examine what you've written.
(Dalek 2 holds it up to Dalek 1's eyepiece)
DALEK 1: What is the last word here?
SUSAN: The last word?
DALEK 1: Su San. Stop that noise. (a giggle)
SUSAN: It's what I'm called. It's my name. Susan.
DALEK 1: Have you told the Thals that you would write this name on the message?
SUSAN: Yes. Look, there's no need to be frightened of them. They're very friendly people. All they want is food. Let me take the message to them.
DALEK 1: No.
SUSAN: Why not?
DALEK 1: We have planned otherwise.
IAN [on monitor]: But how long are they going to keep Susan, Doctor?
BARBARA [on monitor]: What do they want with her?
DOCTOR [on monitor]: Perhaps they're going to let us go. I don't know.
(The Dalek switches it off)
SUSAN: We knew you could hear us, 'cause you knew about the Thals and the food.
DALEK 1: It does not matter. We have the message now.

[Detention cell]

IAN: All set, Doctor? (loud) The whole pattern of things is suspicious. Just because the Daleks didn't kill us is no reason to trust them.
DOCTOR: Or suspect them either.
BARBARA: Or maybe they just have a different way of doing things.
IAN: The Thals have helped us. The Daleks put us in a cell. I know which of the two I prefer.
DOCTOR: I tell you, the Daleks are brilliant people. I think we ought to cooperate with them.
IAN: Ever since you talked alone to the Daleks, you've been on their side. What have they done, bribed you or something? Look, I want to know why. Why are you on their side and against the rest of us.
DOCTOR: Take your hands off me. How dare you shout
SUSAN: Leave my grandfather alone!
IAN: I want an answer.
BARBARA: Stop arguing.
IAN: Please give me space.
BARBARA: Ian.
DOCTOR: Keep away from me!
(Susan jumps on Ian's shoulders)
BARBARA: Susan, what are you doing?
(She's using the piggy-back ride to pull the spy camera out of the ceiling)
IAN: Did I hurt you?
SUSAN: No, of course you didn't.
DOCTOR: Don't waste time.
IAN: Fix you for a while.

[Control room]

DALEK 2: Do you think it was broken accidentally in their struggle?
DALEK 1: No, the cable is strong. They have broken it deliberately.
DALEK 3: They can be moved immediately to another room, the eye repaired.
DALEK 1: No.
DALEK 2: Extermination, then.
DALEK 1: There is no escape from the room that holds them. They may well be useful again. We shall deal with the Thals.

[Detention cell]

DOCTOR: The point is, how do we get out of here? Wait until the Daleks open the door, and force the issue?
BARBARA: But we'd never get near them.
SUSAN: We must try and trick them. We must all pretend to be dead. Then when they come in to investigate, we must rush down the corridor
IAN: Yes, and then what? No. We must find a way of putting these machines out of action.
BARBARA: Yes. Remember what they did to your legs.
IAN: Yes.
DOCTOR: The floors are metal. All the floors are metal.
BARBARA: Well, so are the streets of the city outside.
DOCTOR: Why?
BARBARA: I don't know.
DOCTOR: No, I know you don't know. I mean, why do they use metal? Is it because it lasts longer? Or because
IAN: Because it's essential to them. That's an idea.
BARBARA: Well how is that going to help us?
IAN: Well, if metal is essential
DOCTOR: No, no, no, now listen. Let's concentrate on the Daleks. Have you noticed, for example, that when they move about there's a sort of acrid smell?
SUSAN: Yes, yes, I've noticed that.
BARBARA: I know. A fairground.
IAN: That's it. Dodgems.
DOCTOR: It's electricity. I think they're powered that way.
IAN: Yes. But just a minute. They have no pick-up or anything. And only the base of the machine touches the floor. How do they complete the circuit?
SUSAN: Batteries?
DOCTOR: No, no. I believe the Daleks have discovered a way to exploit static electricity. Very ingenious, if I'm right.
BARBARA: What, drawing power from the floor?
DOCTOR: Precisely. If I'm right, of course. Now, what do we know apart from guessing how they are powered?
SUSAN: Well, they can see all round them.
BARBARA: Yes. Their eye is flexible, like a large camera lens.
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, yes, yes. Now, Chesterton, do you mind concentrating, young man?
IAN: Hmm? Susan. The cloak the Thals gave you.
SUSAN: Yes, it's just behind you.
IAN: Barbara, come here. What do you think this is made of?
BARBARA: I don't know. It isn't plastic, I don't think it's nylon either.
IAN: Whatever it is, it'll do for what we want.
DOCTOR: And what will it do, young man? Hmm?
IAN: Insulate. If you are right, Doctor, about the Daleks taking up power from the floor, this is a perfect way of putting them out of action.

[Thal camp (outside the Tardis)]

(A Thal returns with a metal lizard on his shoulder)
DYONI: Oh, look, Ganatus, they've found a Magneton under some bushes.
GANATUS: Dead, I hope.
DYONI: Well, of course it's dead. Oh, I never know when you're serious and when you're joking.
GANATUS: We'll be able to recharge the hand lights. I'll go and tell Antodus.
DYONI: Is he still afraid of the dark? I'm sorry, I
GANATUS: My brother isn't afraid of anything.
ALYDON: Temmosus, suppose the Daleks refuse to help us. What then?
TEMMOSUS: I believe the Daleks hold the key to our future. Whatever that future may be, we must accept it gracefully and without regret.
ALYDON: I wish I could be as objective as you. We've lived for so long a time.
TEMMOSUS: Perhaps we have lived too long. I've never struggled against the inevitable. It's a vain occupation. But I should always advise you to examine very closely what you think to be inevitable. It's surprising how often apparent defeat can be turned to victory.
GANATUS: This was found at the city gates.
ALYDON: What does it say?
(as if they could read Earth English....)
TEMMOSUS: They're going to help us! It's signed by the girl, Susan. She says the Dalek people have no malice towards us, and they hope that they can work with us to build a new and safe world, free from the fear of war. They have the ability to produce food by means of synthetic sunlight, and they have left a quantity of it in the entrance hall of their main building. We are to collect it tomorrow. So there is a future for us.

[Detention cell]

(Susan is listening at the door)
SUSAN: Shh. He's coming.
DOCTOR: Ready?
IAN: Yes.
DOCTOR: Now all of you watch very carefully. See that you notice every detail in that machine, right?
(The door opens. The Dalek is bringing a tray)
DALEK 1: Move back from the door.
(Susan and Ian move into the middle of the room)
DALEK 1: Take the food.
(Susan does, and gives it to the Doctor. The Dalek backs out and the door closes)
IAN: I'll be able to jam the door with a piece of this. (the spy camera)
SUSAN: He seemed to be able to cover all of us.
BARBARA: It's impossible to hide from it.
IAN: Yes. Perhaps we can throw a coat over the lens.
BARBARA: Surely it would see you.
IAN: Yes. Doctor, perhaps we can stage something. You know, a distraction. And when the lens looks the other way, throw something over it.
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
BARBARA: Now, wait a minute. Susan, throw me your shoes.
(Barbara picks the jungle soil off the soles)
IAN: What are you up to?
BARBARA: Making mud.
(Later)
DOCTOR: If he's on time, we have three minutes.
IAN: I'm ready.
DOCTOR: How's the mud?
BARBARA: It's very sticky and very nasty.
DOCTOR: Very good. Very good idea.
SUSAN: Shall I spread the cloak over?
DOCTOR: Yes, yes. Not too near the door. We don't want to make him suspicious.
SUSAN: Just down there?
DOCTOR: Yes, yes. Quickly. Good, child.
IAN: He's coming.
DOCTOR: Mind your head.
(Ian slides the camera under the edge of the door as it starts to open, and rolls into the middle of the room with everyone else)
DALEK 1: Take this.
(Susan takes the tray, and the Dalek backs out. The door fails to close and an alarm sounds. The Dalek comes back in)
DOCTOR: Now!
(Barbara slams the mud over the eyepiece)
DALEK 1: Keep away. Keep away from me.
(The Doctor and Ian try to drag it onto the cloak. It starts to flail around)
DALEK 1: Keep away from me! Keep away! Keep away!
IAN: That's a gun! That's a gun!
DALEK 1 : Keep away from me! Keep away from me! Keep away from me! Keep away from me! Keep away from me!
(Finally they get it onto the cloak)
SUSAN: Yes, I got it!
DOCTOR: Well done, Susan.
BARBARA: Ian, come on out of the way.
DOCTOR: Are you all right, Susan?
SUSAN: Yes, Grandfather.
DOCTOR: Splendid, splendid.
IAN: I think I'm all right. Swing it round. Keep out of the way, Susan.
SUSAN: Yes.
IAN: Now, I think it's worked. Take your hand off the gun. It has! It's worked! Now, there must be a catch here somewhere. I've found one.
(He lifts the Dalek lid, and puts it down again very quickly)
IAN: Susan, Barbara, go in the corridor and keep a lookout.
BARBARA: Yes.
IAN: You'll have to help me. (they lift the lid again) Let's roll it off the cloak. A bit more, all right?
DOCTOR: Yes.
IAN: Give me that cloak. That's it. All right. Now.
(They wrap the cloak around the contents of the Dalek)
IAN: Lift.
(The Doctor dumps it in the corner)
IAN: Now, see if I can get inside it. All clear in the corridor?
SUSAN + BARBARA: Yes.
SUSAN: I think there's a sentry down the other end of the corridor.
BARBARA: Well, they made such a terrible noise. Ian, hurry.
IAN: Not much room for my legs, but try the top.
DOCTOR: Barbara, Susan, give me a hand. Move it down gently. (they lower the lid) How is it?
IAN: (Dalek-like) It's very cramped indeed.
DOCTOR: Well, can't you sound more like a Dalek?
BARBARA: Yes, in a monotone. You've heard them.
IAN: Do you mean like this?
DOCTOR: That's it.
SUSAN: Can you see all right?
IAN: No. There's some sort of screen. No, it's the mud. Wipe the mud off the lens.
SUSAN: Oh, yes, all right. It's all clogged up. Is that better?
IAN: Yes, I can see now.
SUSAN: Good.
IAN: I can't make this thing move. It's full of controls.
DOCTOR: Don't worry, we'll push you.
IAN: It moves well enough.
SUSAN: Yes.
BARBARA: Surely they'll know that we're pushing you.
DOCTOR: No, no, no, it won't be suspicious at all.

[Corridor]

IAN: All right now, Susan, Barbara. You get in front and pretend I'm taking you for questioning.
SUSAN: Right.
BARBARA: Yes.
IAN: And Susan.
SUSAN: Yes?
IAN: You lead us. You know the way.
SUSAN: All right. This way, then.
(and a little clawed hand pokes out from under the cloak in the cell)

Episode Four - The Ambush

[Corridor]

(Barbara and Susan are still pulling Ian along by the sink-plunger)
IAN: Hey. Let go a minute. I think I've found out how to operate this thing. Yes, I can. Quick, Doctor, get in front. Ready? Off we go.
(A little further along)
SUSAN: Wait. This looks like the place. Stay there. (She looks around a corner and comes back) There's a great iron door with a Dalek on guard. And beyond the door there's a lift.
DOCTOR: It's up to you now, Chesterton. You have to do as little talking as possible.
IAN: All right.
DALEK: Stop.
IAN: The council wishes to question the prisoners.
DALEK: I have not been informed. Wait.
SUSAN: No! I'm not going! No!
DALEK: Hold her.
IAN: I have got her. Now hold still. Help me to get them inside.
(The Dalek pushes Susan into the lift)
IAN: You too.

[Room]

DALEK: Shall I help you to the fourth level with them?
IAN: No. Close the doors. The girl cannot run far inside.
(Once the door is closed, the Doctor pulls a lead from a sensor near it)
DOCTOR: That's fixed the door.
BARBARA: That was a very good idea, Susan.
IAN: He didn't hurt you?
SUSAN: No, not really.
IAN: Well, help me to get out of this thing. I'm suffocating.
BARBARA: The clasp is stuck.
DOCTOR: Here, let me help fix it.

[Corridor]

(The guard Dalek makes his report)
DALEK: I have just passed the prisoners through into lift shaft seven.
DALEK 1 [OC]: There are no orders to move the prisoners. Hold them.
(It tries to open the door, and fails)
DALEK: The door is locked. Emergency alarm.
DALEK 1 [OC]: Attention. Immobilise lift shaft seven floor area.

[Room]

IAN: They know. Come on, hurry up will you?
DOCTOR: Wait a minute. There, it's free. Lift it from the top.
SUSAN: Good. Hurry up.
BARBARA: I can't move it. It won't budge.
DOCTOR: Chesterton, try and force it up from the inside.
IAN: I'm trying. No, no, it's no good. There's something jammed inside here. Forcing it's only making it worse.
(There is banging on the door)
BARBARA: Ian, come on, hurry.
IAN: I, I can't move it!
SUSAN: Ow! That door's red hot.
DOCTOR: They're cutting through the door.
BARBARA: We'll have to move you into the lift.
DOCTOR: Yes, but hurry, hurry.
SUSAN: It's stuck.
BARBARA: I don't understand it. It moved easily enough before.
DOCTOR: They've magnetised the floor. You feel it?
BARBARA: Are you sure?
DOCTOR: Yes. Chesterton, we're not able to get you into the lift.
IAN: Yes, I realise that. Take the others away in the lift, Doctor.
BARBARA: We're not going without you.
IAN: Don't waste time. Go on.
DOCTOR: Well, come on. He's right.
BARBARA: No. I'm not leaving Ian.
DOCTOR: When we get to the top, we'll send the lift back down for you. All right?
SUSAN: No, Grandfather, we can't.
IAN: Go on, go on.
SUSAN: No!
IAN: Go on.
DOCTOR: Come on, Susan.
IAN: Barbara, for goodness sake, go.
SUSAN: Oh, look!
(The Daleks are cutting around the door. The three go up on the lift platform)
IAN: I must, must get out.

[Lift]

BARBARA: How long will it take them to cut through the door?
DOCTOR: Oh, maybe ten minutes. If we're lucky, longer.
SUSAN: But even if he does get out, he's stuck down there. His only way out is the lift. We must go back for him!
DOCTOR: Susan, it's no good. We cannot do anything for him now, child.

[Level One]

(Barbara, Susan and the Doctor get out of the lift and send it back down again)
BARBARA: We should never have left him. It's so slow. It'll never reach him in time.

[Corridor]

DALEK 1: It is nearly completed.

[Room]

(The Daleks enter the room and fire at the Dalek shell. It falls apart)
DALEK 1: It is empty.
DALEK 2: Lock the lift.
DALEK 1: The emergency switch. Bring it down.

[Level One]

BARBARA: Come on, Ian. Come on.
IAN [OC]: All right, I'm coming.
(He gets out just before the lift goes back down again)
IAN: They had about two inches of that door to cut through when I got out.
SUSAN: Are you all right?
IAN: Yes, thank you, Susan.
DOCTOR: Well never mind that now. We must try and find a way out of this room.
BARBARA: Daylight!
IAN: Yes, but where exactly are we?
DOCTOR: We're right at the top of the building. I can just see the surface of the city. See over there? There's the edge of the petrified jungle.
IAN: Yes. I'm trying to recognise the streets we came along.
BARBARA: Everything looks so different from above. Do you see anything at all that looks like
IAN: What is it?
BARBARA: Ian?
IAN: What's the matter?
BARBARA: There's someone down there. Look, by that sort of gateway thing beyond the low building. I saw someone cross that space.
DOCTOR: A Dalek?
BARBARA: No, it was a man. A human being.
SUSAN: The Thals! They've come for food supplies.
DOCTOR: They're walking into an ambush.

[Room]

(A Dalek enters the lift)
DALEK 2: Make no attempt to capture them. They are to be exterminated. You understand? Exterminated.
DALEK 1: I understand.

[Level One]

(As the Dalek ascends, the four are trying to attract the attention of the Thals outside)
IAN: Oh, it's no good. This room must be soundproof. We must find a way of getting down there.
DOCTOR: Yes, but how, dear boy?
BARBARA: Isn't this a door?
IAN: Yes! Doctor, open it.
DOCTOR: Well, yes.
SUSAN: What's the matter with it?
DOCTOR: They've magnetised it, too. Come on, let's try and force it open.
IAN: I can get my fingers in. Sorry. Yes, it's beginning to move.
BARBARA: Ian, the lift's coming back!
SUSAN: Oh, no.
IAN: Doctor, keep working the door. (he tries the lift controls) It's no good. Wait. Come over here and give me a hand. Quick, now. All push together.
(They slide a sculpture over to the lift shaft)
DOCTOR: It's open. I've done it.
SUSAN: Good.
IAN: Be right with you.
DOCTOR: Look, what are you doing?
IAN: Just cutting down the odds a bit. Are you ready? All together, one, two, three, push!
(The stone sculpture crashes down onto the lift, knocking it off it's tracks)
IAN: All right, Doctor, through you go. Yes, go on.

[City]

(A cautious Alydon is leading Ganatus, Temmosus and a few other Thals to the main entrance)
TEMMOSUS: You're much too suspicious.
ALYDON: Perhaps I am, Temmosus, but why should the Daleks help us?
TEMMOSUS: You've been saying that ever since their message arrived. Perhaps their offer was coldly worded, but friendship grows with time. These Daleks must have believed that they were the only survivors on this planet.
ALYDON: And are they relieved to find they aren't? Or are they shocked and horrified, perhaps insanely jealous?
TEMMOSUS: You've no reason to say that. I think you misjudge them.
ALYDON: Well, yes, I'm being illogical, unfair if you like, but I just have an instinct.
TEMMOSUS: Listen. We must find a new source of food. The Daleks have it. They've offered it to us. These are facts, Alydon, facts.
ALYDON: Yes, yes, I know, but let me talk to them.
TEMMOSUS: It's right that I should do so.
ALYDON: But supposing
TEMMOSUS: No, Alydon. And you must thrown off these suspicions. They're based on fear, and fear breeds hatred and war. I shall speak to them peacefully. They'll see that I'm unarmed. There's no better argument against war than that.
ALYDON: Yes, if they really want to listen.

[Food area]

(Four Daleks are in alcoves around the food supplies)
DALEK 1: They are approaching.
(The Daleks conceal themselves)

[Gateway]

(Ian, Barbara, Susan and the Doctor are running)
SUSAN: Oh, Grandfather, come on. Come on, hurry.
BARBARA: Where are we?
IAN: By the city wall, I think. Yes, there's a gateway about fifty yards away.
BARBARA: Are there any Daleks?
IAN: Wait there. No, no, I think we're all right.
DOCTOR: Well, lets get back to the ship.
SUSAN: No, no, I must warn the Thals.
DOCTOR: Susan.
SUSAN: We can't let them walk into a trap.
DOCTOR: The Thals are no concern of ours. We cannot jeopardise our lives getting involved in an affair which is none of our business.
BARBARA: Of course it's our business. The Thals gave us the anti-radiation drug. Without that, we'd be dead!
IAN: Yes, but the Doctor's got a point. There's no sense in risking our whole party. You go back to the ship and I'll stay and warn the Thals.
SUSAN: No, we're all in this together. We're all going to stay here.
IAN: Susan, you do as I say! You go back to the ship with Barbara and your grandfather.
SUSAN: But don't you understand
BARBARA: I know what Ian means. He stands a much better chance on his own if he doesn't have us to worry about. Now, come on. We'll wait for you.
IAN: I'll be there.
DOCTOR: Good luck, Chesterton.
IAN: Thank you. Go on.

[Food Area]

(Temmosus leads the Thals in, as Ian watches from his own hiding place)
TEMMOSUS: Daleks, can you hear me? Daleks, the Thal people wish to live in peace. If this is your wish too, then let us work together to rebuild our world. We need your help, and in return we'll make the soil live again, grow crops, build homes. The time for enmity is passed. If this is the kind of future that you want, then send for us and we shall talk.
(The Daleks come out of their concealment, behind him)
TEMMOSUS: You need not decide now. We've been waiting for centuries. We shall go on waiting.
(He finally notices the Daleks, and tells his companions)
TEMMOSUS: Take these things.
IAN: No! It's a trap! Get out of here! Run!
DALEK: Fire!
(Temmosus is killed. Ian gets away and Alydon hides as the Daleks go after the other Thals)

[Gateway]

IAN: Who are you?
ALYDON: I am Alydon. You are the man who warned us?
IAN: Yes. I'm sorry I was late.
ALYDON: Yes, our leader Temmosus is dead.
IAN: I know. I saw it.
ALYDON: Why? Why kill him? They didn't even know him.
IAN: We can't stand here discussing it. Get yourself and your men away from here. Come on.

[Thal camp]

(The Thals are waiting, and so are our travellers)
ELYON: No, not yet.
DOCTOR: Fascinating. Absolutely fascinating. You know, these records must go back nearly half a million years.
DYONI: The complete history of our planet Skaro is here. It seems now that no one will survive to read it.
DOCTOR: Oh, nonsense, young lady. Your survival is all here. What, er, is this a solar system?
DYONI: Yes. Skaro is the twelfth planet. Here.
DOCTOR: I see. And this? What is this planet?
DYONI: Each of these maps is a tiny section of another solar system, so the total picture can be built up.
DOCTOR: Total? Oh, you have records of other systems?
DYONI: Yes. Well, I say total. Of course, we were only able to map out as far as our electroscopes allowed.
DOCTOR: Yes, I see. I wonder if I could see the plans.
DYONI: Oh, yes.
DOCTOR: I might be able to fix our position. Oh, yes, yes. Absorbing, most absorbing.
SUSAN: Grandfather seems to be enjoying himself.
ALYDON: Some of the children have heard something moving in the forest.
IAN: It can't be the Daleks. They told us they couldn't come out of the city.
ALYDON: Nevertheless, I think we should all be on our guard.
ELYON: Here they are. Antodus has been wounded.
GANATUS: We had to go round the other side of the city.
ALYDON: Is he badly hurt?
GANATUS: It's his shoulder.
DYONI: I'll get some ointment, and something to cover the burns.
SUSAN: We've got some in the ship.
DYONI: There's some over here.
GANATUS: We tried to go back for Temmosus.
ELYON: Temmosus? What's happened to Temmosus?
GANATUS: It was hopeless.
ALYDON: These are the people the Daleks were holding prisoner. This is the man who shouted to warn us.
GANATUS: Thank you. Did the others get away, Alydon?
ALYDON: Tecanda was killed.
ALL: Tecanda?
ALYDON: The rest of us escaped.
BARBARA: The burns don't seem to be too bad.
DYONI: I'll get some water for him to drink. Can you manage?
BARBARA: Yes.
GANATUS: Have you decided what we're going to do, Alydon? You must take the place of Temmosus now.
ALYDON: Yes. Yes, I know. If only I knew why the Daleks hated us. If I knew that, I, I could alter our approach to them, perhaps.
IAN: Your leader, Temmosus.
ALYDON: Yes?
IAN: Well, he appealed very sensibly to them. Any reasonable human beings would have responded to him. The Daleks didn't. They obviously think and act and feel in an entirely different way. They just aren't human.
GANATUS: Yes, but why destroy without any apparent thought or reason? That's what I don't understand.
IAN: Oh, there's a reason. Explanation might be better. It's stupid and ridiculous, but it's the only one that fits.
ALYDON: What?
IAN: A dislike for the unlike.
ALYDON: I don't follow you.
IAN: They're afraid of you because you're different from them. So whatever you do, it doesn't matter.
DYONI: What would you have us do? Fight against them?
IAN: I didn't say that. But you must teach them to respect you. Show them some strength.
DYONI: But you really believe we ought to fight.
IAN: Yes, I think it may have to come to that.
DYONI: You understand as little about us as the Daleks do!
IAN: What would you do if the Daleks could leave their city? If they came up here and attacked you?
ALYDON: We would go away, back to our plateau where we came from.
BARBARA: You'd simply run away?
IAN: Alydon, you can't go on running away. There are some things worth preserving.
GANATUS: We're not afraid to die. Temmosus proved that.
IAN: I am not talking about dying. Look, you can't hand yourselves over to the Daleks. Sooner or later, they're going to try and destroy you if they can.
ALYDON: I can see you want to help us, but as Dyoni says, you don't understand. There can never be any question of the Thals fighting the Daleks. Come, Ganatus.
BARBARA: I don't understand them. They're not cowards, they don't seem to be afraid. Can pacifism become a human instinct?
IAN: Pacifism? Is that it? Pacifism only works when everybody feels the same.
BARBARA: Yes, but are they really pacifists? I mean, genuinely so. Or is it a belief that's become a reality because they've never had to prove it. DOCTOR: I say, I say, I think these'll interest you. (pictures) Look here. This is these people's ancestor, the original Thal male. There was a neutron war here. Most died and the survivors mutated. But in the case of the Thals, mutation came round in full circle then refined itself into what you see.
IAN: You mean this (humanoid) became
DOCTOR: Yes, yes. It took hundreds of years, of course. In the second example, our recent hosts, the mutation has not completed its full circle. Why, I don't know. But do you remember that monstrosity we took out of its machine?
IAN: Yes.
DOCTOR: This is its forebear.
IAN: The original Dalek.
DOCTOR: Yes. They called them Dals then. Oh, it's all there, every moment of it is Skaroene history. Minutely but brilliantly recorded. Priceless, absolutely priceless.
BARBARA: Is this a sword the Thal's holding?
DOCTOR: Yes. They were the warriors then.
BARBARA: Were they?
DOCTOR: Undoubtedly.
SUSAN: Antodus is feeling much better.
DOCTOR: I'm very glad to hear he's improving. Well, now, I'm sure you all agree with me, its time we went back to the ship. Now, come along.
SUSAN: Oh, Grandfather, couldn't we stay a bit longer? The Thals are such nice people.
DOCTOR: And the Daleks are not, which is more important, my child.
(A cortege walks past, carrying Temmosus' body)
IAN: I wonder if there's any point in reminding the Thals of what they used to be?
DOCTOR: Why?
BARBARA: Oh, they're opposed to fighting. We were trying to convince them that it was a necessity for their own survival.
DOCTOR: But our fate doesn't rest with the Thals, surely. Let's leave well alone. We have ourselves to worry about. Now, come along, come along. Wasting time.
IAN: Maybe the Doctor's right.
BARBARA: Yes. Let's get in the ship and get as far away from here as possible.
DOCTOR: Oh, please, come along. Oh, by the way, let me have the fluid link, will you? Oh, dear boy, now please, please, come along. You know I can't start the ship without it.
IAN: The fluid link.
SUSAN: You've lost it?
BARBARA: Ian, you can't have.
IAN: No. The Daleks took it from me when they searched me. It's down there somewhere. In the city.

Episode Five - The Expedition

IAN: The fluid link.
SUSAN: You've lost it?
BARBARA: Ian, you can't have.
IAN: No. The Daleks took it from me when they searched me. It must be down there somewhere. In the city.

[Control room]

DALEK 1: The drug has been duplicated.
DALEK 2: And the distribution?
DALEK 1: The drug is to be taken by sections of us so work will not be interrupted.
DALEK 2: Have you processed the pictures?
DALEK 1: Appearing now on frequency 6.
(A picture of the Doctor sitting outside the Tardis, looking at the Thal history)
DALEK 1: It is the elder prisoner.
DALEK 2: Show second picture.
DALEK 1: The girl and the young woman. Is that the body of the fourth prisoner? The young man?
DALEK 2: If so, he has been injured.
DALEK 1: Show third picture.
(Ian and Alydon)
DALEK 1: They have made contact with the Thals.
DALEK 2: It is logical that together they will attack us.

[Thal camp]

ALYDON: No. And that is my final word.
(Alydon leaves)
IAN: Be careful what you're doing up there, Susan.
SUSAN: (up a tree) Oh, it's all right, Mister Chesterton. I'm quite safe.
IAN: No good. I've tried everything I know. They just won't risk a fight with the Daleks. The trouble is, I can't go too far.
BARBARA: What do you mean?
IAN: Well, why should they help us? Some of them are bound to get killed. What argument can you use to make a man sacrifice himself for you?
BARBARA: Ian, you don't seem to understand. We'll be prisoners here unless we can think of some way of getting that fluid link back from the Daleks.
IAN: I am quite well aware of that, Barbara.
BARBARA: And you know very well they'll find a way out of their city.
IAN: I know nothing
BARBARA: Well, you know they will.
SUSAN: Well, they need metal to travel on.
BARBARA: Oh, they'll find a way. They're clever enough. They'll find us and kill us, you know that as well as I do.
IAN: Look, even supposing you're right, I will not ask the Thals to sacrifice themselves for us. I'm sorry, Barbara, I just can't do it.
BARBARA: Ian, why can't you see?
(at the Tardis door)
SUSAN: Any luck, Grandfather?
DOCTOR: Hmm?
SUSAN: Well, have you made another fluid link yet?
DOCTOR: No, I can't, my child. And I've looked through all my spares and I've really discovered we do need some mercury.
SUSAN: Oh, no.
DOCTOR: It's put us in a bit of a jam. I must get that fluid link back again. I'm afraid my little trick has rather rebounded on me. What you might call tempting providence, Chesserman.
IAN: Well, don't worry about it now, Doctor. It's happened.
DOCTOR: Yes, well, at least you're not vindictive.
IAN: Well I will be if you don't get my name right.
DOCTOR: Hmm?
IAN: It's Chesterton.
DOCTOR: Yes. Hey? I know that.
BARBARA: How you two can stand there wasting time with small talk beats me.
DOCTOR: I can assure you, young lady, I haven't been wasting my time. There's always a way.
SUSAN: You always think of something, Grandfather.
DOCTOR: Thank you, my dear. Your faith is something that I prize very highly. You all realise, of course, we cannot succeed against the Daleks alone?
BARBARA: Of course not.
DOCTOR: We have a ready-made army here. The Thals. They're strong, and they have one great advantage against the Daleks. They can move so much more quickly.
IAN: They have one great disadvantage. They have no arms or ammunition.
DOCTOR: Well, that's all right, young man. The mind will always triumph. With me to lead them, the Thals are bound to succeed.
SUSAN: But Grandfather, we've been talking and arguing about this all morning. The Thals won't fight. They're against war.
DOCTOR: My dear child, this is no time for morals. They must fight for us.
IAN: Why?
DOCTOR: Oh, my dear young man, I do hope you're not going to be difficult.
BARBARA: The Doctor's right. Ian, can't you see? If only we can get the Thals to attack the city, we could beat the Daleks and get the link back.
DOCTOR: It's just common sense. Young lady, I've been underestimating you.
IAN: I will not allow you to use the Thals to fight for us.
DOCTOR: Are you challenging me?
IAN: Yes, I am.
BARBARA: Do I have any say in this?
IAN: Of course you do.
BARBARA: Well I think the Doctor's right and I want to get out of here.
IAN: I am sorry, I'm not having anyone's death on my conscience.
BARBARA: Except mine and Susan's and the Doctor's?
DOCTOR: Quite so.
IAN: The only way the Thals can fight is if they themselves want to. It must have nothing whatsoever to do with us.
SUSAN: I know what you mean. We must help the Thals to save themselves and not just them help us.
IAN: Exactly.
BARBARA: All you're doing is playing with words.
DOCTOR: We need action, not arguments.
IAN: Now listen, you two. What victory are you going to show these people when most of them have been killed? A fluid link? Is this what you're going to hold up to them and say, 'Thank you very much. This is what you fought and died for'?
SUSAN: The thing is, can the Thals still fight?
IAN: Well that's what we've got to find out. Are they cowards, or are they just against fighting on principle?
BARBARA: Well, how can we find out?
IAN: Well, I've got an idea. But whatever I do, don't interfere. I'm not even sure that I'm right.
(He goes and picks up the container of all the Thal history)
IAN: Well, let's see what happens.
DOCTOR: Hmm, strange young man.
SUSAN: He's right, though.
BARBARA: Yes, he is.
DOCTOR: Yes, we'll see.
(Ian is talking to Alydon and the Thals)
IAN: to have self- respect. At this moment, anyone could come in here. They could rob, they could steal.
DOCTOR: Let's see what he's up to.
IAN: They could even kill you. And you wouldn't lift a finger to help yourselves.
ALYDON: We will not fight. There will be no more wars. Look at our planet. This was once a great world, full of ideas and art and invention. In one day it was destroyed. And you will never find one good reason why we should ever begin destroying everything again. I'm sorry.
IAN: You're not sorry. You stand here, mumbling a lot of words out of your history. But it means nothing, nothing at all. You carry this around with you. Your history records. Well, it must be valuable to you. Supposing I take it down to the city and try and trade with the Daleks? Perhaps they'd think it valuable enough to exchange for our fluid link.
ALYDON: I don't believe you'd do it.
IAN: I would.
ALYDON: None of us would stop you.
IAN: If I don't get the fluid link back, the four of us will die. Perhaps the Daleks are more interested in people? Maybe they were holding us to experiment on us? I could take them an alternative.
(Ian grabs Dyoni by the arm and starts to lead her off. Alydon grabs Ian then punches him)
IAN: So there is something you'll fight for.

[Experiment chamber]

(A Dalek is whirling round and round)
DALEK: Help. Cannot control. Cannot control. Help me. Help me. Help! Help! Help! Help! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah!

[Control room]

DALEK [OC]: Emergency. Emergency. All Daleks in section three are incapable of working.
DALEK 1: Section three? That was the first section to get the anti-radiation drug received from the Thals.
DALEK 2: Stand by for a general announcement. This is control. All distribution of the anti-radiation drug is to be stopped immediately. The Dalek race has become conditioned to radiation.
DALEK 1: But if you are right, we are in danger.
DALEK [OC]: All Daleks in section three are dying.
DALEK 2: They must be examined immediately.
DALEK 1: Look, the disease has reached us in here.
(A Dalek is spinning around on the spot)
DALEK 2: Then we cannot delay.
DALEK 1: But what are we to do? Is this the end of the Daleks?
DALEK 2: We need radiation to survive. So we must increase our supply of radiation.
DALEK 1: But there is only one way to do that.
DALEK 2: Exactly. We may have to explode another neutron bomb.

[Thal camp]

(Night has fallen, but Dyoni and Alydon cannot sleep)
DYONI: Why don't you sleep?
ALYDON: Presently.
DYONI: Are you angry with yourself for striking the young man?
ALYDON: No, I knew he was trying to make me do it. I still couldn't stop myself. Do you despise me for hitting him?
DYONI: If you hadn't fought him, I think I would have hated you.
ALYDON: I knew he wouldn't really take you and give you to the Daleks. But I fought him. Oh, I wish Temmosus were here. What would he have said, Dyoni? Which is the most important? To fight and live, or to die without fighting.
(Barbara and Ganatus have overheard this)
BARBARA: What will happen now?
GANATUS: I don't know. We always do what the leader of our race decides for us. He never decides anything without our full approval.
BARBARA: And if Alydon decides not to help us? Well, we'll have to wait till the morning. What's that light in the sky? It's a reflection from the city, I suppose.
GANATUS: No, the lake. Some sort of chemical in the water that makes it glow in the moonlight.
BARBARA: You've been down there?
GANATUS: Yes. There's horror down there in the swamp. Five of us went there in search of food, and only my brother and I came back.
BARBARA: What happened to the others?
GANATUS: Well, we found what was left of one of them. The lake is alive with mutations, bred and crossbred until the original has long been replaced by. I'm sorry, I'm being morbid.
BARBARA: Oh, I don't mind as long as we're this far away. But I wonder why the Daleks haven't cleaned it out? Killed everything?
GANATUS: Why should they? Isn't it the perfect defence for the back of a city? Only a fool would attack the city from the lake.

[Control room]

(We are looking through a Dalek eye-piece)
DALEK 2: Has the anti-radiation drug distribution been stopped?
DALEK 3: Yes. Only Daleks in section two and three received it. All Daleks in section three have now died.
DALEK 2: Daleks in section two are to be brought to the sonic chamber.
DALEK 3: We will direct the air polluted by radiation away from the nuclear reactors into the sonic chamber.
DALEK 2: And if they do not die, we shall have our answer.
DALEK 3: But if we need radiation, we can never rebuild the world outside.
DALEK 1: We do not have to adapt to the environment. We will change the environment to suit us.

[Thal camp]

ALYDON: I have one question to ask of you. If we do not help you, what will you do?
IAN: We'll find our way into the city, and take back our lost equipment.
ALYDON: You see, we cannot stand by and let these people die. If we do not help them, it would be the same as if we had killed them ourselves. Well, the way I have reasoned is this. The Daleks are strong and they hate us. And I am sure they will find a way to come out of their city and kill us. So it is not merely a question of whether we go off in a vain search for food and in all probability starve to death. We face death now. In the city is enough food for all of us and all of the Daleks, a hundred times over. My conclusion is this. There is no indignity in being afraid to die. But there is a terrible shame in being afraid to live. If none of you agree with my reasons, then let me go with these people, and I will help you elect a new chief.
GANATUS: I'll go with you, Alydon.
THAL: And I.
THAL 2: Let's start at once.  
ANTODUS: And I.
IAN: Thank you.
(Ganatus has got a map of the area)
ALYDON: You knew what my decision would be.
GANATUS: I could always have destroyed it if you'd decided differently.
DOCTOR: If we get this intelligent anticipation, we shall succeed. Let's see this. Now, what is this area here?
GANATUS: The swamp. Here are the mountains. This is the far side of the city. I've been into the swamp. It's surrounded by lakes, here, as you see. The lakes are inhabited by all sorts of strange creatures.
IAN: Can we get into the city this way?
ALYDON: Over the mountains?
IAN: Yes.
GANATUS: That means going through that swamp.
ALYDON: We can't go through the swamp. It's too dangerous.
GANATUS: It is dangerous, yes, but I realised last night when I was talking to Barbara that it is undefended.
ALYDON: Undefended? It's a perfect natural barrier. All those creatures, you know that yourself.
GANATUS: Yes, I know, but I mean the Daleks won't be on guard there. There's a chance to take them by surprise. Believe me, I'm not happy about this, but it's the best possible chance there is.
DOCTOR: Yes, yes. Well, now, I suggest we split into two groups. The one to distract the Daleks on the city wall side, and the others to try and force a way through the mountains.
IAN: Yes, I think that's the best plan.
DOCTOR: Are we all agreed?
ALYDON: Yes. Very well then. That is what we must do.

[Control room]

DALEK 2: The laser scope is transmitting. The quality is poor. What has happened? Has this group broken away? Is there a plan behind it? Why divide their forces?
DALEK 1: The figures are coming through on the radiation treatment.
DALEK 2: Discontinue laser scope.
DALEK 1: There is an improvement. Except for one serious case, all Daleks in section two have shown signs of recovery.
DALEK 2: Then our position is clear. For us, the drug is a poison.
DALEK 1: And radiation is still necessary to us.
DALEK 2: Essential. I want a complete survey of our stock of nuclear materials. I want an estimate of the amount of waste matter from the nuclear reactors.

[Swamp]

ANTODUS: We'll never get through.
GANATUS: Yes, we will.
ANTODUS: What makes you think it'll be any different to the first time.
GANATUS: At least we know what to expect.
ANTODUS: But the others don't.
GANATUS: We promised Alydon we'd find a way through the mountains, and that's what we're going to do.
ANTODUS: You'd never get the others to follow you if you told them what happened the first time. It's your duty to tell them. How we watched Amezus dragged beneath the waters of the lake, while you and I ran in terror when
GANATUS: That's enough. We're going on, Antodus. You keep your fears to yourself. I don't want you upsetting the others. Is that clear?
ANTODUS: Yes.
GANATUS: Well, is it?
ANTODUS: Yes!
(Antodus moves on, Ian arrives)
GANATUS: Well, this is the swamp. From now on it's going to be rather uncomfortable.
IAN: Yes, I see what you mean.
GANATUS: The ground's very uneven. Sometimes rock, sometimes thick mud. You'll have to watch how you walk. I think it'll be a wise plan to find a place to rest for the night.
IAN: Yes. We've made very good time. It's only taken four hours to get here from the edge of the forest. That leaves us with two and a half days to go through the mountains to the city.
GANATUS: If there is a way through.
IAN: We'll find a way. I'll go and give Barbara a hand.
GANATUS: I'm surprised you let her come.
IAN: I'd be more surprised if I could have stopped her. How are you doing?
(Barbara is wearing a pair of the Thal's leather trousers with cut outs on the outside of the legs, and sandals)
BARBARA: Fine. Oh, I'm glad the mountaineering's over.
IAN: There'll be some more once we get through this little lot.
BARBARA: We're going through there?
IAN: Well, we must. We've got a deadline with the Doctor in two and a half days, and we've got to make it.
BARBARA: Well I think we could all do with a rest.
IAN: No, we'll keep up with the others. They'll be breaking camp soon. Now take care. Watch where you put your feet. All right?
(A little further on)
GANATUS: This looks like a fairly dry section.
IAN: Yes, this'll do.
GANATUS: Right, we'll make camp here. See if we can gather up some dry branches.
IAN: All right.
GANATUS: It'll make it more comfortable to sleep on. Barbara, you see to the food. I'll get the fire going.
BARBARA: Right.
GANATUS: At least it might stop some of these, these things from bothering us.
(As they settle down for their meal, the swamp gets very noisy. Ian washes his face in the water. Something with glowing eyes rises up in front of him and he runs back to the camp)
BARBARA: What was it? Did you see anything?
IAN: Yes, it was a
GANATUS: Kristas, stand guard here, will you?
KRISTAS: Right.
GANATUS: We'll take the first watch between us.
IAN: I'm all right, really.
GANATUS: Yes, I know, but I think you two Earth people should get as much sleep as possible. We're more used to this kind of life. It's over a year since we left our own plateau in search of a new source of food. I'd almost forgotten what it was like to stay in one place and enjoy it. I suppose there'll be an end to it one day.
(Next morning)
GANATUS: Time to move, my friend.
IAN: You let me sleep.
GANATUS: Yes.
IAN: Why didn't you wake me?
ELYON: Ganatus.
GANATUS: What's the matter?
ELYON: Come and see what I found by the lake.
GANATUS: Right.
IAN: Hold on. I'll come with you. Morning.
BARBARA: Morning. Oh, for a feather pillow and a spring mattress.
(By the lake)
GANATUS: What did you see?
ELYON: Over there.
(Pipes running from the rocks into the lake)
IAN: We were right. The Daleks do get their water from the lake.
GANATUS: But how would it get to the city from there?
IAN: Well, there must be a way. I mean, the Daleks aren't very mobile. They must have cut a pathway through there to work on the pipeline.
GANATUS: How long do you think it will take us to reach there?
ELYON: Most of today. If we could cross the lake we could reach it much quicker.
IAN: I'm sorry, that's one way I'm not going.
ELYON: Well, it would be dangerous, certainly. The lake is full of mutations.
GANATUS: No, we must go round.
IAN: Yes, and we ought to try and get there before the sun goes down.
ELYON: Well I'll just go and fill the water bags. (a little away from Ian) There's no point in trying to cross the lake, you think?
GANATUS: No. No, he's right. Anyway, think how long it would take to build a light raft.
(Back at the camp)
IAN: Barbara, we saw some pipes going into the lake.
BARBARA: So we can go through?
IAN: Maybe. With a bit of luck, eh? Thanks. (for the hot drink) Mmm. Good.
BARBARA: Where's Elyon?
GANATUS: He's gone to fill the water bags. He won't be long.
(We see a maelstrom open up in the lake, and then everyone hears a scream)
GANATUS: Stay here.

Episode Six - The Ordeal

(At the lakeside, the water bags are floating and the maelstrom is diminishing)
ANTODUS: What is it? What's happened to Elyon?
IAN: There's nothing we can do here.
BARBARA: Ian?
ANTODUS: Did Elyon fall in? What happened?
GANATUS: It must have happened very quickly. Come on now. We must reach the cliffs by tonight.

[Forest edge]

(Susan is using the binocular glasses to look at the city. Dyoni updates the map with information. They are trying to hide behind a rock)
SUSAN: There are four roads that lead off from the main square, going north, south, east and west.
ALYDON: The main ventilators seem to be over in this section.
DOCTOR: Hmm.
SUSAN: Oh, that's wrong. It goes down there and up.
DOCTOR: Can you see any way in at all?
ALYDON: No.
DOCTOR: Oh, you'll allow me, will you?
(The Doctor takes the glasses)
SUSAN: Grandfather, get down.
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, yes. Now, the things we have to put out of action is the radio and television waves. They've obviously got complete coverage in and around the city.
ALYDON: They don't leave much to chance.
DOCTOR: We must presume they don't leave anything to chance.
DYONI: If they have pictures of the entrance to the city, how can we do anything?
DOCTOR: Then we must stop the pictures. Remember, the Daleks aren't very mobile.
SUSAN: Yes, we do have speed on our side.
DOCTOR: And there's always value in surprise. I know it looks difficult, but we must try it, my friends. Yes, we must.
ALYDON: Yes. I wish I knew what they were planning for us.

[Control room]

DALEK 2: The report for the neutron bomb is prepared.
DALEK 1: Let us hear it.
DALEK [OC]: Report on neutron bomb to cover five hundred square miles. Time to construct, twenty three days.
DALEK 1: Is that the shortest possible time?
DALEK [OC]: Yes.
DALEK 1: Very well. It is too long.
DALEK 2: We must abandon the idea of a neutron bomb.
DALEK 1: We must find another way of spreading radiation.

[Cave]

GANATUS: It's getting narrower.
BARBARA: Oh, it's like all the other caves. Just tails off into a dead end.
GANATUS: There's a gloomy thought for you.
BARBARA: I wonder if Ian's doing any better?
GANATUS: When did we arrange to meet him and the others?
BARBARA: Oh, we ought to be going back now.
GANATUS: Let's make sure this is impossible first. I must have had sixth sense. Look at that. Pity. Well, let's go back and try one of the other ways.
BARBARA: No, wait a minute.
GANATUS: Can you see something?
BARBARA: No, stand still for a minute. There, can you hear it? The sound of water.
GANATUS: Yes. Barbara, look! There's a passageway here.
BARBARA: Well, that won't be easy.
GANATUS: It's a good job we haven't been over-eating recently. It's going to be a long crawl. Well, we won't use one of the customs of your planet.
BARBARA: And what's that?
GANATUS: Ladies first.
BARBARA: I should hope not.
GANATUS: Pay the rope out as I move in, will you?
BARBARA: Yes, all right. But be careful. Remember what Ian said. We're not to take any chances.
GANATUS: Do you always do what Ian says?
BARBARA: No, I don't.
GANATUS: Well, let me have the torch then. Unless you think you
BARBARA: No, no. Your need is greater than mine.
(Ganatus crawls into the opening)
GANATUS [OC]: Barbara?
BARBARA: Yes?
GANATUS: There seems to be a drop of about thirty feet or so. I'm going down.
BARBARA: Well, be careful.
GANATUS [OC]: Tie your end of the rope around a rock or something, will you?
BARBARA: Yes, all right. (she uses a boulder by her feet) Ready.
GANATUS [OC]: Right.
(But as the rope plays out, the boulder drags and her foot gets thrown off the rope. Ganatus falls)
BARBARA: Ganatus? Ganatus!
IAN: What's happened?
BARBARA: I couldn't hold onto it.
IAN: Where's Ganatus?
BARBARA: It slipped through my fingers. He's down here, look.
GANATUS: (bottom of shaft) Barbara?
IAN [OC]: All right this end. Are you hurt?
GANATUS: No, I'm not.
ANTODUS: Is my brother hurt?
BARBARA: No, he isn't, but it was my fault. The rope slipped off the rock.
IAN: The rope, Antodus.
GANATUS: Barbara?
IAN: Are you sure you're all right?
GANATUS: Yes. What happened to Barbara?
IAN: She's okay. Don't worry. Hang on a minute. I'm bringing another rope down to you.

[Cavern]

GANATUS: It would be better if you came down here. There's a big cavern with lots of tunnels going off it. Unless you've found anything else, this seems a fair chance.
IAN [OC]: No, we haven't. Hang on, we'll be with you in a couple of minutes.
GANATUS: Good. It looks as though it may have been a lucky fall.

[Control room]

DALEK [OC]: Rangerscopes are recording great activity amongst the Thal people.
DALEK 1: Are there pictures?
DALEK [OC]: No, reception is bad.
DALEK 1: They are attacking our instruments.
DALEK 2: We must keep alert.
DALEK 1: Yes. Concentrate all power of rangerscopes and vibrascopes on all entrances to the city.
(The Thals are using metal to reflect the sunlight back to the city)

[City wall]

DOCTOR: It looks as if my plan has worked.
ALYDON: We can't keep up this light reflection for long.
DOCTOR: Never mind. It gives us a better chance to get into the city unnoticed.
SUSAN: We can't be sure of that, Grandfather.
DOCTOR: Oh, I know it's risky, but, well, we mustn't diddle about here. Now, I want to get to the east side of that antennae.
ALYDON: Doctor, look.
DOCTOR: Hmm?
ALYDON: According to the map, we should be moving further to our left, in that direction.
SUSAN: Yes.
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, I see. Well you go ahead, will you? Go along, child. Yes, we'll show them a thing or two.

[Cavern ledge]

IAN: So far, so good. It seems to be broadening out a bit.
GANATUS: Who knows, it may stop being impossible.
BARBARA: Just become unbearable.
IAN: Well, at least we can breathe in here.
GANATUS: We seem to be travelling more or less in a straight line.
IAN: Yes, I think we are.
KRISTAS: I'll take the fire.
IAN: Oh, thank you.
KRISTAS: Shall I lead on then?
IAN: Yes, I suppose you might as well. We'll have a rest in a minute.
ANTODUS: Ganatus. I want to go back.
GANATUS: What for?
ANTODUS: I can't go on any more.
GANATUS: You must.
ANTODUS: No. We're going deeper, deeper all the time. We'll be trapped in the mountain, I know we will. Please, Ganatus, let me go back.
GANATUS: You can't.
ANTODUS: But you don't really need me, not really. I could, well, I could go back and signal to the others that we've managed to get as far as we have.
GANATUS: Antodus, we go on together.
ANTODUS: Why? Why are you making me do all these things? Even if we do get through, we'll never defeat the Daleks. Ganatus, we're all going to be killed.
GANATUS: We can't turn back now.
ANTODUS: The others can't, but we could. Listen, they're going to die anyway. We could just go back and tell the others that the Daleks killed them.
GANATUS: What are you talking about? You must go back.
ANTODUS: I'm not going on.
GANATUS: You are. You must. (there's a scuffle, and Antodus bangs his head) Antodus? I'm sorry. Are you hurt? Ian!
(There is a rock fall behind the group)
IAN: Is he hurt?
GANATUS: A rock hit him. It would have hit me, but he pushed me aside. He was very brave.
IAN: Well, I hope he hasn't cut his head.
ANTODUS: I'm all right.
GANATUS: Ian, we can't go back the way we came. We must go on now.

[Control room]

DALEK [OC]: Emergency. Emergency. Reaction on the vibrascopes.
DALEK 1: Where?
DALEK [OC]: Section fifteen, city wall.
DALEK 2: Shall I redirect the rangerscopes?
DALEK 1: No. If we track them by their vibrations, we can take them by surprise.

[City wall]

(Susan has found a panel on a wall)
SUSAN: Hey, Grandfather, look.
DOCTOR: Yes?
SUSAN: Is this what you want?
DOCTOR: Ah, yes, a single cable. The whole city is powered by static electricity.
ALYDON: Well how do you know that?
DOCTOR: The single wire, you see. Round here, there, see? And there. That must be the answer.
SUSAN: Well it leads up to the antennae.
ALYDON: Well, it certainly goes in that direction, but I can't see it all.
SUSAN: I wonder if I can open this box. There aren't any hinges on it. Oh, that's it. Look, look, it slides up.
DOCTOR: Ah, good girl. Now, just take it over there. That's it. Now, look out.
(He breaks the internal glass panel)
SUSAN: The thing is, how are we going to cut the wire now it's exposed without getting a terrific shock?
ALYDON: Look, we can't wait around here too long.
DOCTOR: No, just a minute. Now, you go and tell your friends to stop flashing the light on the antennae. Because for all we know, the Daleks might have a beam to throw on them, paralyse them, kill them.
ALYDON: But I can't leave you two here.
DOCTOR: We shall be all right. Now, go along, and tell them to move their position from time to time. Now hurry, please.
ALYDON: Very well, then. But don't waste time here. I'll come back for you if I can.
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, yes, yes. We shall be back before then. Now go. Dear, dear, dear, that young man gets so agitated. Now, I'll tell you what we'll do. We'll short-circuit it to another conductor. Let me have the key of the ship, Susan, will you? The key of the ship, dear.
SUSAN: Oh, what a good idea. Yes.
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, yes. I can always make another one if necessary.
SUSAN: Of course.
(The key is on a chain around her neck. He drops it into the wall panel)
DOCTOR: Now, the power's running away. That'll teach the Daleks to meddle in our affairs.
SUSAN: What about this one?
(Another small panel with a revolving disc)
DOCTOR: Well, of course.
(He breaks the glass, and loops the chain up to connect to the panel)
DOCTOR: Watch it.
(A monitor goes out in the control room)
DOCTOR: Now, we've shorted it, you see. So something must have gone somewhere else. The extent of the damage, of course, we don't know yet.
SUSAN: Look, Grandfather, this is marvellous, but they must have a fault locator somewhere. We must get away from here.
DOCTOR: But, my dear child, don't you realise what I've done? A few simple tools
SUSAN: Yes, but we mustn't waste time.
DOCTOR: A superior brain.
SUSAN: We must go now!
DOCTOR: But, child, look
(He turns to see a phalanx of Daleks trapping them)

[Cavern ledge]

(They have come to a gap in the ledge)
IAN: Look out. No place for a quiet stroll, is it?
GANATUS: It looks pretty wide.
IAN: Yes, and deep. Well, you might as well take a rest while we sort this one out. No point in going that way, it widens out. There's no foothold at all on this side. There's a ledge over there, look. About two to three feet, would you say?
GANATUS: There seems to be some sort of cleft in the rock face there.
IAN: Yes, I think you're right. We'll have to get over there.
GANATUS: How about going down this side on a rope, and trying to climb the other?
IAN: Yes, well, see how deep it is. Hold the torch. A pebble.
(Five seconds until the splash)
GANATUS: How do we do it?
IAN: We jump.
GANATUS: There's not much space to land in.
IAN: No.
GANATUS: Ah, well, I'll go
IAN: I'll. You go and tell them we're going to jump.
GANATUS: We're going to jump it.
(Ian ties a rope around his waist)
IAN: Shine the torch on that ledge. Keep clear of me when I run, and give me plenty of rope.
BARBARA: Good luck.
(He makes it)
IAN: All right. Ganatus, you come over next and we'll explore that cleft in the rock.
GANATUS: Right.
IAN: Quite firm. I think there's just about enough room for two of us.
GANATUS: (throws another rope) Take up the slack, will you?
IAN: Right.
BARBARA: Good luck.
GANATUS: Ready?
IAN: Take a good long run. (he does) Good jump. You should have come first.
GANATUS: Now, I'll take a look at this cleft. The torch? Pay it out slowly.
IAN: Right.
GANATUS: It's all right. There's a handhold just here. (he disappears from sight) [OC] A little more rope. It goes wider. It seems to be some sort of a tunnel. I don't need the rope any more. Bring the others over.
IAN: Right. Rope coming over.

[Control room]

(The Doctor and Susan are sitting cross-legged on the floor)
DALEK 1: You have destroyed our videoscope and one of our lifts.
DOCTOR: And you in turn killed the Thal leader in your ambush. And you will be responsible for more deaths unless you help these people.
DALEK 1: The only interest we have in the Thals is their total extermination.
SUSAN: What do you mean?
DALEK 1: Tomorrow the atmosphere will be bombarded by the radiation from our nuclear reactors.
SUSAN: Why are you doing this?
DOCTOR: That's sheer murder.
DALEK 1: No, extermination.
DOCTOR: But you must listen to reason. Please, you must.
DALEK 1: Without radiation, the Dalek race is ended. We need it as you and the Thals need air.
ALL: Tomorrow, we will be the masters of planet Skaro.

[Cavern ledge]

(Barbara makes her leap into Ian's arms)
BARBARA: Oh, I thought I wouldn't make it.
IAN: You did well. Just get your breath back for a minute.
BARBARA: I'm all right. Ian?
IAN: Oh, no, not that way. Now stay still. Give me your other hand. You've got to come back. Now, swing. Now this time, face the rock. And reach round with that arm. Reach higher. Can you feel?
BARBARA: I, I can't reach.
IAN: Higher. Go on.
BARBARA: Yes.
IAN: Now, let go of my hand and swing yourself round. Go on. (she disappears into the cleft) All right?
BARBARA [OC[: Yes.
KRISTAS: I'll throw the fire.
IAN: Right. Rope coming over.
KRISTAS: Will you go next, Antodus?
ANTODUS: No, you go on.
KRISTAS: Very well.
(Kristas does his leap)
IAN: You made it look easy. Got the grip?
KRISTAS: Yes, I'm clear. Rope coming over.
(Antodus makes no attempt to catch it)
IAN: Sorry. Bad throw, my fault. Move back from the edge.
ANTODUS: I can't do it.
IAN: Move back from the edge and catch this rope. Ready? Coming now. Good. Now, tie it round yourself. Tight! Now give yourself a good long run and jump. I'm ready whenever you are.
(Antodus jumps, but doesn't get a good foot hold and slips back into the crevasse. Ian is pulled off his feet and is hanging onto a rock for dear life)
ANTODUS [OC]: Help me! Help me! I can't hold on. I can't hold on!

Episode Seven - The Rescue

[Cavern ledge]

(Ian is losing his grip when Ganatus comes to help)
GANATUS: I daren't let go with my other hand.
IAN: Antodus, get a grip on the rock face. Take the weight off the rope.
ANTODUS: It's too smooth.
IAN: Stop it, you fool!
GANATUS: I'm losing you.
IAN: Sweat on my hands.
GANATUS: It's no good, Ian.
IAN: Call the others.
GANATUS: Kristas! Kristas!
IAN: Kristas!
(So Antodus takes the weight off the rope by cutting it, and falling to his death)
GANATUS: Antodus.

[Control room]

(Susan and the Doctor are fastened hand and foot to the walls. The first lines of dialogue are overlapping)
DALEK: What we need for life means death for the Thals.
DOCTOR: You could live in the city and the others could. But why do you have to destroy? Can't you use your brains for right?
DALEK: Only one race can survive.
DOCTOR: What are you planning?
DALEK: We wish to escape captivity. Go out and rebuild the planet Skaro. Our oxygen distributors will be subjected to waste radiation by the ejector capsule.
DOCTOR: Nothing can live outside if you do that. Nothing.
DALEK: Except the Daleks.
DOCTOR: When do you intend to put this into operation?
DALEK: Now.
DOCTOR: This senseless, evil killing.

[Tunnel]

KRISTAS: There's been a fall of rock. The way is blocked.
IAN: Did you look all round it?
KRISTAS: Yes. There's no way through.
GANATUS: Then we'll have to go back. We came this far. We've done our best and more. First Elyon died, and now my brother. For what? Can't you see there isn't any sense in it anymore.
BARBARA: We can't give up now.
GANATUS: What is it that you want us to do?
IAN: We must go back and find another way.
GANATUS: Oh, why don't we just give up?
IAN: Because your brother died, for one thing. He gave us a chance.
GANATUS: My brother didn't want us to come. He said we'd all die.
(The fire in the storm lantern starts to fade)
BARBARA: What's the matter with it?
KRISTAS: I don't know. Dirt's got into it, I expect. And if we're going back, we'll have to go back now. We can't cross the chasm without light.
BARBARA: Well, we still have the torch.
KRISTAS: That's weak too.
IAN: Can we use it sparingly? Well, turn it off, Kristas.
KRISTAS: Right.
IAN: Wait a minute. There's a light coming in here. Where's it coming from? Where's the light coming from? Here. Give me a hand.
BARBARA: Can you see anything?
GANATUS: What is it?
(Ian removes a few rocks and sees - )
IAN: We're through. We must have been travelling under the pipes all the time. We're through.

[Forest edge]

DYONI: Alydon. The antenna hasn't moved for some time.
ALYDON: No. The Doctor must have succeeded in putting it out of action.
DYONI: But why haven't they returned?
ALYDON: The Daleks must have captured them. Now listen, everybody. The way to the city is clear. Now is the time to attack. We may be farmers, but have we forgotten how to fight?

[Control room]

DALEK 1: Power down to half.
DALEK 2: Down to half.
DALEK 1: Seal off nuclear waste disposer.
DALEK 2: Sealing complete.
DALEK 1: Begin radiation redirection to distribution capsule.
SUSAN: Can't we stop them? Can't we do anything?
DOCTOR: Just a moment. I haven't told you how we came to this planet.
DALEK 1: It does not matter now.
DOCTOR: But it does. I have a ship capable of crossing the barriers of space and time. Surely this would be invaluable to you?
DALEK 1: A ship? What do you mean?
DOCTOR: A machine.
DALEK 1: I do not believe you.
DOCTOR: But I have.
SUSAN: It's true. We have.
DALEK 1: You are not capable of creating such a machine.
DOCTOR: And you took a part of my ship away from one of my companions. The young man.
DALEK 1: What did it look like?
DOCTOR: A small rod with metal at either end. It belongs to my ship. A fluid link containing mercury. Examine it for yourselves. You will see it's part of a complicated machine.
DALEK 1: Yes, I have it here.
DOCTOR: What if we show you the ship? Explain it to you. Help you to build another?
DALEK 1: A bargain for your lives?
DOCTOR: Yes.
DALEK 1: Where is this machine?
DOCTOR: In the petrified forest outside the city.
DALEK 1: Good. When the neutron operation has been completed, we will find a way to travel outside the city limits.
DOCTOR: No.
DALEK 1: We will examine your machine.
DOCTOR: No. Not unless you stop what you're doing. Otherwise I won't explain its secrets to you and its philosophy of movement.
DALEK 1: Now we know of the machine, we can examine it for ourselves.
DOCTOR: But you can't operate it without me.
DALEK 1: Every problem has a solution.
DALEK [OC]: Vibration locator records movement inside the city wall.
DALEK 1: Details.
DALEK [OC]: Disturbance is too great.
DALEK 1: Alert Daleks in Section one. The Thals are entering the city.
SUSAN: Grandfather, they're coming.
DOCTOR: Can they get here in time?

[Corridor]

(Ian, Barbara, Ganatus and Kristas are making their way along a metal corridor)
IAN: Now where are we?
BARBARA: I have no idea. I have some experience in these corridors. They all look alike.
IAN: Yes, we could go back to the lift, but. Get back!
(A Dalek on patrol stops to listen to the announcement)
DALEK [OC]: Alert. The Thals are entering the city. All Daleks in section one to level one. Immediate. Immediate.
(It trundles off)
IAN: Alydon and the Thals must be in the city. We must find the control room.

[Control room]

DALEK 2: Interior videoscopes are recording movement on level eight.
SUSAN: Grandfather, look. Look, they found a way through.
DALEK 1: All Daleks on level eight. Urgent.
(Ian smashes the spy camera)
DALEK 1: The Thals have penetrated to level eight. Immediate action. Immediate action.
DALEK 2: How did they get into the city?
DALEK 3: Capsule ready to go critical.
DALEK 1: Stand by.
DALEK 3: Standing by, ready.
DALEK 1: The last stage of the operation is about to begin.
DOCTOR: Stop it, please.
DALEK 1: Nothing can stop the Daleks. Begin countdown. One hundred.
DALEK 3: Beginning now.

[Corridor]

GANATUS: Alydon.
ALYDON: Ganatus. Have you found the Doctor?
BARBARA: Well, isn't he with you?
ALYDON: No, he must have been captured by the Daleks. And Susan.
IAN: But the Daleks know you and the Thals are in the city.
ALYDON: We split ourselves into groups, but without the Doctor we didn't know what to look for.
IAN: We must find that control room.
BARBARA: We must find the Doctor and Susan.
IAN: Barbara, first and foremost we must find the control room and knock it out.
ALYDON: And Antodus?
GANATUS: Yes, he died bravely.
DALEK [OC]: Daleks go to control room immediately. All Daleks to level ten.
ALYDON: But this is level nine. We must be near.
KRISTAS: We've got to go on.
BARBARA: There's a lift back there. It's only one floor up.
DALEK [OC]: All Daleks to level ten immediately. Corridor intersections on all levels other than ten will be sealed now.
IAN: Get the door, quick! (but it closes) That one.
ALYDON: You first.
(Barbara scrambles through)
BARBARA: There's another one.
ALYDON: Quickly, Barbara, get to it.
GANATUS: Barbara!

[Control room]

DALEK 3: Fifty two.
DALEK 2: The Thals are blocking the intersections from sealing on level nine.
DALEK 3: Fifty one.
DALEK 1: Increase power. Emergency. Increase power.
DALEK 3: Forty nine. Forty eight.

[Corridor]

(Barbara is caught under a closing door)
IAN: Quick. Wait a minute, I'll take the strain. Barbara, try and slide yourself out.
BARBARA: I can't move.
GANATUS: (who has also wedged himself under the door) They're pressing down harder.
IAN: They're increasing the pressure. Barbara, you must try and roll out. Try and free yourself.
KRISTAS: Just get my hands under.
BARBARA: I'm through.
IAN: Alydon. Right. You go next.

[Control room]

DALEK: Forty six. Forty five. Forty four. Forty three. Forty two.
(They shoot a young Thal who breaks in)

[Corridor]

(Ian is the last to crawl under the door)
GANATUS: Try, Ian. It's crushing us both. Come on.

[Control room]

DALEK: Forty. Thirty nine. Thirty eight. Thirty seven. Thirty six. Thirty five. Thirty four. Thirty three.
(Ian is leading his group up the corridor, dodging Daleks as they come)
DALEK: Thirty two. Thirty one. Thirty. Twenty nine. Twenty eight. Twenty seven. Twenty six. Twenty five. Twenty four. Twenty three. Twenty two. Twenty one. Twenty.
(Ian and Alydon see Susan and the Doctor)
DALEK: Nineteen. Eighteen. Seventeen.
(They dash over to the alcove where they are shackled to the wall)
DALEK: Sixteen. Fifteen. Fourteen.
(Barbara throws a rock at a Dalek then gets away)
DALEK: Thirteen.
DALEK 1: Follow and kill her.
DALEK: Twelve. Eleven. Ten.
(The Dalek gets blindfolded and grabbed by the group)
DALEK 2: Trapped. Help me. Trapped.
(Ian and Alydon free the Doctor and Susan, and they make a run for it as Thals pounce the Daleks and get shot for it)
DALEK: Nine. Eight. Seven. Six. Five. Four.
DALEK 3: Reinforcements. Overpowered. Reinforcements. Quickly. Quickly.
(A Dalek gets rammed into a control panel, with satisfactory results)
DOCTOR: Chesterton, come here.
IAN: Doctor! Doctor, I think they're dying.
DALEK 1: Power going.
DOCTOR: They were about to spread radiation into the air.
IAN: We've knocked out their source of power, I tell you. Look!
(And he kicks one across the room)
SUSAN: Barbara, is he all right?
BARBARA: Yes. He's very badly hurt, but he's alive.
DALEK 1: Listen to me.
DOCTOR: Yes.
DALEK 1: (very slowly) Stop our power from wasting or it will be the end of the Daleks.
DOCTOR: Even if I wanted to, I don't know how.
ALYDON: It's finished. The final war. Five hundred years of destruction end in this.
DOCTOR: No doubt you will have other wars to fight. Chesterton, come along, my boy. We've got work to do. I want to look at the reactors and see if there's any radiation leakage.
IAN: Yes, and get the ship working again, Doctor.
(holds up the fluid link)
DOCTOR: Hmm? Oh, yes, yes, yes, of course. Come along. Come along.
ALYDON: Kristas, you all right? Here, let's get him up to the air. All this machinery. What good is it to us? None of us knows the first thing about it.
BARBARA: Well, you must experiment. These Dalek inventions should be of some use to you.
SUSAN: The Daleks have developed food by artificial sunlight. You've got everything you need now.
GANATUS: Yes. If only there'd been some other way.

[Thal camp]

(Alydon is examining a piece of machinery)
DOCTOR: This is what they call a compensator, my friend.
ALYDON: Which is?
DOCTOR: The whole of it. It's useless. Throw it away. Forget it. Unless you want to live in a shell like our dead friends.
ALYDON: Where do you get your knowledge, Doctor? You know, there never seems to have been time to ask, but we don't really know where you come from, or why.
DOCTOR: To rebuild a whole new world. How I envy you.
ALYDON: But you must stay and help us. We could learn from you.
DOCTOR: Oh, no, no. I'm afraid I'm much too old to be a pioneer. Although I was once amongst my own people.
ALYDON: Well then, stay and advise us. Please.
DOCTOR: No, no, thank you. We're much too far away from home, my granddaughter and I. Thank you all the same. It's a nice gesture on your part. You know, this soil is not quite so barren as you think. I've been making tests, and even you might live to see and hear the birds amongst the trees. You wanted advice you said. I never give it. Never. But I might just say this to you. Always search for truth. My truth is in the stars and yours is here.
DYONI: Won't you rest with us?
DOCTOR: No, I'm afraid it's out of the question. But I might visit your grandchildren to find if they've learned the secrets, and if they have, well, who knows, I might live with them.
(Susan runs in, wearing a Thal cape)
SUSAN: Ta-da! Look, Grandfather, isn't it terrific? Thank you, Dyoni.
IAN: What are you up to, Susan?
SUSAN: It's a present from Dyoni. Isn't it gorgeous?
IAN: It's lovely. By the way, Doctor, have you fitted the fluid link?
DOCTOR: Not yet, but I have it safely here. And there's no need to worry about mercury, young man.
IAN: Good. Well, goodbye, Dyoni.
DYONI Goodbye.
IAN: Goodbye, Alydon.
ALYDON: Goodbye, Ian.
DOCTOR: Come along, my child. I'm hungry.
SUSAN: Goodbye, Dyoni.
DYONI: Goodbye.
SUSAN: Thank you. (hugs Alydon) Goodbye.
IAN: Goodbye, Ganatus.
GANATUS: Goodbye, Ian.
IAN: Barbara.
BARBARA: Right.
DOCTOR: Oh, how stupid of me. I very nearly forgot my specimens. Oh, your hand, sir. (shakes it) Goodbye.
ALYDON: Goodbye, Doctor.
BARBARA: Well, Ganatus?
GANATUS: Well, Barbara. (hands over material) The dress you make from this won't be suitable for swamps and caverns.
BARBARA: Well, that's a good thing.
GANATUS: Yes.
BARBARA: It's beautiful. Thank you very much. Thank you for everything.
GANATUS: I wish
SUSAN [OC]: Barbara, we're waiting.
(Ganatus kisses Barbara's hand. She kisses him on the lips and goes into the Tardis)
ALYDON: Come along, Ganatus.
DYONI: Don't be sad, Ganatus.
GANATUS: I won't be. But I don't think I'll ever forget her.
(The Tardis dematerialises)

[Tardis]

(The Doctor is adjusting controls, when suddenly the Tardis judders. Everyone is knocked off their feet and it goes dark)

Next episode - The Edge of Destruction.

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DR WHO THE UNEARTHLY CHILD  DR WHO THE UNEARTHLY CHILD_Doctor who Frist episode aired in 1963


 An Unearthly Child

Original Airdate: 23 Nov, 1963

(A foggy night, and a policeman is patrolling his beat past I M Foreman's Scrap Merchants at 76 Totter's Lane. Inside is an assortment of items, including a police telephone box.)

[Coal Hill School corridor]

(The bell is ringing for end of classes.)
GIRL: Night, Miss Wright.
BARBARA: Wait in here, please, Susan. I won't be long.
BOY: Goodnight, Miss Wright.

[Laboratory]

(A man is tidying up after the class)
IAN: Oh? Not gone yet?
BARBARA: Obviously not.
IAN: Right, ask a silly question.
BARBARA: I'm sorry.
IAN: That's all right. I'll forgive you this time.
BARBARA: Oh, I had a terrible day. I don't know what to make of it.
IAN: Oh, what's the trouble? Can I help?
BARBARA: Oh, it's one of the girls, Susan Foreman.
IAN: Susan Foreman? She your problem too?
BARBARA: Yes.
IAN: You don't know what to make of her?
BARBARA: No.
IAN: How old is she, Barbara?
BARBARA: Fifteen.
IAN: Fifteen. She lets her knowledge out a bit at a time so as not to embarrass me. That's what I feel about her. She knows more science than I'll ever know. She's a genius. Is that what she's doing with history?
BARBARA: Something like that.
IAN: So your problem is whether to stay in business or to hand over the class to her.
BARBARA: No, not quite.
IAN: What, then?
BARBARA: Ian, I must talk to someone about this, but I don't want to get the girl into trouble. And I know you're going to tell me I'm imagining things.
IAN: No, I'm not.
BARBARA: Well, I told you how good she is at history. I had a talk with her and told her she ought to specialise. Well, she seemed quite interested until I said I'd be willing to work with her at her home. Then she said that would be absolutely impossible as her grandfather didn't like strangers.
IAN: He's a doctor, isn't he? That's a bit of a lame excuse.
BARBARA: Well, I didn't pursue the point but then recently her homework's been so bad.
IAN: Yes, I know.
BARBARA: Finally I got so irritated with all her excuses I decided to have a talk with this grandfather of hers and tell him to take some interest in her.
IAN: Did you indeed? And what's the old boy like?
BARBARA: Well, that's just it. I got her address from the secretary, 76 Totter's Lane, and I went along there one evening. Oh Ian, do pay attention.
IAN: Sorry. You went along there one evening?
BARBARA: There isn't anything there. It's just an old junkyard.
IAN: You must have gone to the wrong place.
BARBARA: Well, that was the address the secretary gave me.
IAN: The secretary got it wrong, then.
BARBARA: No. I checked. There's a big wall on one side, houses on the other and nothing in the middle. And this nothing in the middle is number 76 Totter's Lane.
IAN: Hmm. That's a bit of a mystery. Well, there must be a simple answer somewhere.
BARBARA: Well, what?
IAN: Well, we'll have to find out for ourselves, won't we?
BARBARA: Thank you for the we. She's waiting in one of the classrooms. I'm lending her a book on the French Revolution.
IAN: What's she going to do, rewrite it? Oh, all right. What do we do? Ask her point-blank?
BARBARA: No, I thought we could drive there, wait till she arrives and see where she goes.
IAN: Oh, all right.
BARBARA: That is, if you're not doing anything.
IAN: No, I'm not. After you.

[Classroom]

(Susan is listening to guitar rock music on her transistor radio. I'm thinking The Shadows. She looks a little elfin, like Audrey Hepburn)
BARBARA: Susan?
SUSAN: Oh, I'm sorry, Miss Wright. I didn't hear you coming in. Aren't they fabulous?
BARBARA: Who?
SUSAN: It's John Smith and the Common Men. They've gone from nineteen to two.
IAN: John Smith is the stage name of the Honourable Aubrey Waites. He started his career as Chris Waites and the Carollers, didn't he, Susan?
SUSAN: You are surprising, Mister Chesterton. I wouldn't expect you to know things like that.
IAN: I have an enquiring mind. And a very sensitive ear.
SUSAN: Oh, I'm sorry.
(She turns the radio off.)
IAN: Thank you.
SUSAN: Is that the book you promised me?
BARBARA: Yes.
SUSAN: Thank you very much. It will be interesting. I'll return it tomorrow.
BARBARA: Oh, that's not necessary. Keep it until you've finished it.
SUSAN: I'll have finished it.
IAN: Oh, where do you live, Susan? I'm giving Miss Wright a lift, I've got room for one more.
SUSAN: No, thank you, Mister Chesterton. I like walking through the dark. It's mysterious.
BARBARA: Be careful, Susan, there'll probably be fog again tonight.
SUSAN: Mmm.
BARBARA: See you in the morning.
SUSAN: I expect so. Good night.
BARBARA: Good night.
IAN: Good night, Susan.
(They leave. Susan sits on a desk and starts reading.)
SUSAN: But that's not right.

[Totter's Lane]

(Ian and Barbara are parked up.)
BARBARA: Over there.
IAN: We're lucky there was no fog. I'd never have found this.
BARBARA: Well, she doesn't seem to have arrived yet. I suppose we are doing the right thing, aren't we?
IAN: You can't justify curiosity.
BARBARA: But her homework?
IAN: A bit of an excuse, really, isn't it? I've seen far worse. The truth is, we're both curious about Susan and we won't be happy until we know some of the answers.
BARBARA: You can't just pass it off like that. If I thought I was just being a busybody, I'd go straight home. I thought you agreed she was a bit of a mystery.
IAN: Yes, but I think you'll find there's a very simple explanation to all this.
BARBARA: Well, I don't know how you explain the fact that a fifteen year old girl does not know how many shillings there are in a pound.
IAN: Really?
BARBARA: Really. She said she thought we were on the decimal system.
IAN: Decimal system?

[Memory - classroom]

(The other pupils are laughing.)
SUSAN: I'm sorry, Miss Wright.
BARBARA: Don't be silly, Susan. The United States has a decimal system. You know perfectly well that we do not.
SUSAN: Of course, the decimal system hasn't started yet.

[Totter's Lane]

IAN: I suppose she couldn't be a foreigner? No, doesn't make sense. Nothing about this girl makes sense. For instance, the other day I talking about chemical changes. I'd given out the litmus paper to show cause and effect
BARBARA: And she knew the answer before you'd started.
IAN: Well, not quite. The answer simply didn't interest her.

[Memory - laboratory]

SUSAN: Yes, I can see red turns to blue, Mister Chesterton, but that's because we're dealing with two inactive chemicals. They only act in relation to each other.
IAN: But that's the whole point of the experiment, Susan.
SUSAN: Yes, it's a bit obvious, isn't it? Well, I'm not trying to be rude, but couldn't we deal with two active chemicals? Then red could turn blue all by itself and get on with something else? I'm sorry, it was just an idea.

[Totter's Lane]

IAN: She means it. These simple experiments are child's play to her.
BARBARA: You know, it's almost got to the point where I deliberately want to trip her up.
IAN: Yes. Something like that happened the other day. I'd set the class a problem with A, B and C as the three dimensions.

[Memory - classroom]

SUSAN: It's impossible unless you use D and E.
IAN: D and E? Whatever for? Do the problem that's set, Susan.
SUSAN: I can't, Mister Chesterton. You can't simply work on three of the dimensions.
IAN: Three of them? Oh, time being the fourth dimension, I suppose? Then what do you need E for? What do you make the fifth dimension?
SUSAN: Space.

[Totter's Lane]

BARBARA: Too many questions and not enough answers.
IAN: Stupid? Or just doesn't know. So we have a fifteen year old girl who is absolutely brilliant at some things, and excruciatingly bad at others.
BARBARA: There she is.
(Susan looks around then goes into the scrap yard.)
BARBARA: Look, can we go in now? I hate to think of her alone in that place.
IAN: If she is alone. Look, she is fifteen. She might be meeting a boy. Didn't that occur to you?
BARBARA: I almost hope she is.
IAN: What do you mean?
BARBARA: Well, it would be so wonderfully normal. It's silly, isn't it? I feel frightened. As if we're about to interfere in something that is best left alone.
IAN: Come on, let's get it over with.
(They get out of the car.)
BARBARA: Well, don't you feel it?
IAN: I take things as they come. Come on.

[Junk yard]

(Ian has a small torch in his hand. There is no sign of Susan.)
IAN: What a mess. We're not turning over any of this stuff to find her..
BARBARA: Over there?
(Ian falls over a bucket or something.)
IAN: Blast. I've dropped it.
BARBARA: What?
IAN: The torch.
BARBARA: Well, use a match.
IAN: I haven't got any. Oh, never mind.
BARBARA: Susan?
IAN: Susan? Susan? Susan! Susan. Mister Chesterton and Miss Wright. She can't have got out without us seeing her.
BARBARA: Ian, look at this.
(She's found the police telephone box.)
IAN: It's a police box! What on earth's it doing here? These things are usually on the street. Feel it. Feel it. Do you feel it?
BARBARA: It's a faint vibration.
IAN: It's alive!
(He walks around it.)
IAN: It's not connected to anything, unless it's through the floor.
BARBARA: Look, I've had enough. Let's go and find a policeman.
IAN: Yes, all right.
(Someone coughs.)
BARBARA: Is that her?
IAN: That's not her. Quick.
(They hide as an old man in Astrakhan hat and a long scarf enters the yard. He goes to the police box and puts a key in the lock.)
SUSAN [OC]: There you are, Grandfather.
BARBARA: It's Susan.
IAN: Shush!
(Ian comes out from the hiding place.)
IAN: Excuse me.
DOCTOR: What are you doing here?
IAN: We're looking for a young girl.
DOCTOR: We?
BARBARA: Good evening.
DOCTOR: What do you want?
IAN: One of our pupils, Susan Foreman, came into this yard.
DOCTOR: Really? In here? Are you sure?
BARBARA: Yes, we saw her from across the street.
DOCTOR: (aside) One of their pupils, not the police, then.
IAN: I beg your pardon?
DOCTOR: Why were you were spying on her? Who are you?
IAN: We heard a young girl's voice call out to you.
DOCTOR: Your hearing must be very acute. I didn't hear anything.
BARBARA: It came from in here.
DOCTOR: You imagined it.
BARBARA: I certainly did not imagine it.
DOCTOR: Young man, is it reasonable to suppose that anybody would be inside a cupboard like that, hmm?
IAN: Would it therefore be unreasonable to ask you to let us have a look inside?
(The Doctor goes to an ornate picture frame.)
DOCTOR: I wonder why I've never seen that before. Now isn't that strange. Very damp and dirty.
BARBARA: Won't you help us? We're two of her teachers from the Coal Hill School. We saw her come in and we haven't seen her leave. Naturally, we're worried.
DOCTOR: Have to be cleaned. Hmm? Oh, I'm afraid it's none of my business. I suggest you leave here.
IAN: Not until we're satisfied that Susan isn't in there. And frankly, I don't understand your attitude.
DOCTOR: Yours leaves a lot to be desired.
IAN: Will you open the door?
DOCTOR: There's nothing in there.
IAN: Then what are you afraid to show us?
DOCTOR: Afraid? Oh, go away.
IAN: I think we'd better go and fetch a policeman.
DOCTOR: Very well.
IAN: And you're coming with us.
DOCTOR: Oh, am I? I don't think so, young man. No, I don't think so.
BARBARA: We can't force him.
IAN: But we can't leave him here. Doesn't it seem obvious to you he's got her locked up in there? Look at it. There's no door handle. There must be a secret lock somewhere.
BARBARA: That was Susan's voice.
IAN: But of course it was. Susan! Susan! Susan, are you in there? It's Mister Chesterton and Miss Wright, Susan.
DOCTOR: Don't you think you're being rather high-handed, young man? You thought you saw a young girl enter the yard. You imagine you heard her voice. You believe she might be inside there. It's not very substantial, is it?
BARBARA: But why won't you help us?
DOCTOR: I'm not hindering you. If you both want to make fools of yourselves, I suggest you do what you said you'd do. Go and find a policeman.
IAN: While you nip off quietly in the other direction.
DOCTOR: Insulting. There's only one way in and out of this yard. I shall be here when you get back. I want to see your faces when you try to explain away your behaviour to a policeman.
IAN: Nevertheless, we're going to find one. Come on, Barbara.
SUSAN [OC]: What are you doing out there?
IAN: She is in there!
DOCTOR: Close the door!
IAN: Barbara!
(Barbara goes inside the box as Ian briefly struggles with the Doctor before following her.)

[Tardis]

(Barbara finds herself in a very big room, with chair, hat stand, various other pieces of furniture, and Susan standing at a six-sided console in the centre.)
DOCTOR: Close the door, Susan. I believe these people are known to you.
SUSAN: They're two of my schoolteachers. What are you doing here?
BARBARA: Where are we?
DOCTOR: They must have followed you. That ridiculous school. I knew something like this would happen if we stayed in one place too long.
SUSAN: But why should they follow me?
BARBARA: Is this really where you live, Susan?
SUSAN: Yes.
DOCTOR: And what's wrong with it?
IAN: But it was just a telephone box.
DOCTOR: Perhaps.
BARBARA: And this is your grandfather?
SUSAN: Yes.
BARBARA: But why didn't you tell us that?
DOCTOR: I don't discuss my private life with strangers.
IAN: But it was a police telephone box. I walked all around it. Barbara, you saw me.
DOCTOR: You don't deserve any explanations. You pushed your way in here uninvited and unwelcome.
BARBARA: I think we ought to leave.
IAN: No, just a minute. I know this is absurd, but I feel
(The Doctor is examining an ornate clock.)
DOCTOR: Oh dear, dear, dear dear. This is very
IAN: I walked all round it.
DOCTOR: It's stopped again, you know, and I've tried hmm? Oh, you wouldn't understand.
IAN: But I want to understand.
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. By the way, Susan, I managed to find a replacement for that faulty filament. It's an amateur job, but I think it'll serve.
IAN: It's an illusion. It must be.
DOCTOR: What is he talking about now?
SUSAN: What are you doing here?
DOCTOR: You don't understand, so you find excuses. Illusions, indeed? You say you can't fit an enormous building into one of your smaller sitting rooms.
IAN: No.
DOCTOR: But you've discovered television, haven't you?
IAN: Yes.
DOCTOR: Then by showing an enormous building on your television screen, you can do what seemed impossible, couldn't you?
IAN: Well, yes, but I still don't know
DOCTOR: Not quite clear, is it. I can see by your face that you're not certain. You don't understand. And I knew you wouldn't. Never mind. Now then, which switch was it? No. No, no. Ah yes, that is it. The point is not whether you understand. What is going to happen to you, hmm? They'll tell everybody about the ship now.
IAN: Ship?
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, ship. This doesn't roll along on wheels, you know.
BARBARA: You mean it moves?
SUSAN: The Tardis can go anywhere.
BARBARA: Tardis? I don't understand you, Susan.
SUSAN: Well, I made up the name Tardis from the initials, Time And Relative Dimension In Space. I thought you'd both understand when you saw the different dimensions inside from those outside.
IAN: Just let me get this straight. A thing that looks like a police box, standing in a junkyard, it can move anywhere in time and space?
SUSAN: Yes.
DOCTOR: Quite so.
IAN: But that's ridiculous.
SUSAN: Why won't they believe us?
BARBARA: How can we?
DOCTOR: Now, now, don't get exasperated, Susan. Remember the Red Indian. When he saw the first steam train, his savage mind thought it an illusion, too.
IAN: You're treating us like children.
DOCTOR: Am I? The children of my civilisation would be insulted.
IAN: Your civilisation?
DOCTOR: Yes, my civilisation. I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it. Have you ever thought what it's like to be wanderers in the fourth dimension? Have you? To be exiles? Susan and I are cut off from our own planet, without friends or protection. But one day we shall get back. Yes, one day. One day.
SUSAN: It's true. Every word of it's true. You don't know what you've done coming in here. Grandfather, let them go now, please. Look, if they don't understand, they can't, they can't hurt us at all. I understand these people better than you. Their minds reject things they don't understand.
DOCTOR: No.
IAN: He can't keep us here.
BARBARA: Susan, listen to me. Can't you see that all this is an illusion? It's a game that you and your grandfather are playing, if you like, but you can't expect us to believe it.
SUSAN: It's not a game!
BARBARA: But Susan, it's
SUSAN: It's not! Look, I love your school. I loved England in the twentieth century. The last five months have been the happiest of my life.
BARBARA: But you are one of us. You look like us, you sound like us.
SUSAN: I was born in another time, another world.
IAN: Now look here, Susan, you. Oh, come on, Barbara, let's get out of here.
SUSAN: It's no use, you can't get out. He won't let you go.
IAN: He closed the doors from over there. I saw him. Now, which is it? Which is it? Which control operates the door?
DOCTOR: You still think it's all an illusion?
IAN: I know that free movement time and space is a scientific dream I don't expect to find solved in a junkyard.
DOCTOR: Your arrogance is nearly as great as your ignorance.
IAN: Will you open the door? Open the door! Susan, will you help us?
SUSAN: I mustn't. 
IAN: Very well, then. I'll have to risk it myself.
DOCTOR: I can't stop you.
SUSAN: Don't touch it! It's live!
(Ian gets an electric shock from the console.)
BARBARA: Ian! What on earth do you think you're doing?
SUSAN: Grandfather, let them go now, please.
DOCTOR: And by tomorrow we shall be a public spectacle, a subject for news and idle gossip.
SUSAN: But they won't say anything.
DOCTOR: My dear child, of course they will. Put yourself in their place. They are bound to make some sort of a complaint to the authorities, or at the very least talk to their friends. If I do let them go, Susan, you realise of course we must go, too.
SUSAN: No, Grandfather, we've had all this out before.
DOCTOR: There's no alternative, child.
SUSAN: I want to stay! But they're both kind people. Why won't you trust them? All you've got to do is ask them to promise to keep our secret
DOCTOR: It's out of the question.
SUSAN: I won't go, Grandfather. I won't leave the twentieth century. I'd rather leave the Tardis and you.
DOCTOR: Now you're being sentimental and childish.
SUSAN: No, I mean it.
DOCTOR: Very well. Then you must go with them. I'll open the door.
BARBARA: Are you coming, Susan?
(But instead of flipping the switch to open the doors, the Doctor starts the time rotor moving.)
SUSAN: Oh, no, Grandfather! No!
DOCTOR: Let me go.
SUSAN: No!
DOCTOR: Get back to the ship, child. Hold it.
(Ian and Barbara are thrown from side to side. The Doctor and Susan hang on to the console. Eventually Barbara lands in the chair and Ian on the floor. The Tardis heads into the vortex with a lot of noise and the opening title effects superimposed over the Doctor and Susan's faces. Later, it is peaceful and quiet. On the scanner is a view of a desolate, scrubby land. The shadow of a scruffy figure in animals skins is looking at the Tardis)

Episode two - The Cave of Skulls

[Cave]

(A group of unkempt people in furs are gathered around a man rubbing a bone with his hands)
MOTHER: Where is the fire Za makes?
HUR: (a woman) In his hands. We are not going to the wood.
ZA: My father made fire.
MOTHER: They killed him for it. It is better that we live as we have always done.
ZA: He showed me how to sharpen the stones and trap the bear and the tiger. He should have shown me this, too.
MOTHER: So that everyone would bow to you as they did to him?
ZA: Tell me what my father did to make fire.
MOTHER: I never saw him make it. That is all I know.
ZA: Out of my sight, old woman. You should have died with him.
MOTHER: Za will never make fire.
ZA: Put on more of the dead fire.
(Hur adds ash, and Za rubs the bone between his hands again.
HUR: The old men are talking against you, Za. They say it would be better for the stranger Kal to lead us.
ZA: Kal?
HUR: They say you sit all day rubbing your hands together while he brings us meat.
ZA: Without meat, we go hungry. Without fire, we die.
HUR: Old men see no further than tomorrow's meat. They will make Kal the leader. My father will give me to him.
ZA: Kal is no leader.
HUR: The leader is the one who makes fire.
ZA: Where has the fire gone? Where? Where?

[Tardis]

(Barbara wakes up)
BARBARA: Ian? Ian.
IAN: I'm all right. I must have hit my head. The movement's stopped.
SUSAN: The base is steady.
DOCTOR: Layer of sand, rock formation. Good.
SUSAN: We've left 1963.
DOCTOR: Oh, yes, undoubtedly. I'll be able to tell you where presently. Zero? That's not right. I'm afraid this yearometer is not calculating properly. Hm! Well, anyway, the journey's finished. (to Ian) What are you doing down there?
BARBARA: What have you done?
IAN: Barbara, you don't believe all this nonsense.
SUSAN: Well, look at the scanner screen.
DOCTOR: Yes, look up there. They don't understand and I suspect they don't want to. Well, there you are. A new world for you.
IAN: Sand and rock?
DOCTOR: Yes, that's the immediate view outside the ship.
BARBARA: But where are we?
IAN: You mean that's what we'll see when we go outside?
SUSAN: Yes, you'll see it for yourself.
IAN: I don't believe it.
DOCTOR: You really are a stubborn young man, aren't you?
IAN: All right, show me some proof. Give me some concrete evidence. I'm sorry, Susan, I don't want to hurt you, but it's time you were brought back to reality.
SUSAN: But you're wrong, Mister Chesterton.
DOCTOR: They are saying I'm a charlatan. What concrete evidence would satisfy you?
IAN: Just open the doors, Doctor Foreman.
DOCTOR: Eh? Doctor who? What's he talking about?
BARBARA: They're so sure, Ian.
IAN: Yes, I know.
BARBARA: And remember the difference between the outside of the police box and the inside.
IAN: Yes, I know, but. Are you going to open the doors or aren't you?
DOCTOR: No.
IAN: You see?
DOCTOR: Not until I'm quite sure it's safe to do so. Well, yes, good. Yes, it is, it's good. Excellent, excellent. You've got the radiation counter there. What's it read?
SUSAN: It's reading normal, Grandfather.
DOCTOR: Splendid, splendid. Well, I think I'll take my Geiger counter with me in any case. So, you still challenge me, young man?
IAN: Well, just open the doors and prove your point.
DOCTOR: You're so narrow-minded, aren't you? Don't be so insular.
SUSAN: Grandfather, do you know where we are?
DOCTOR: Yes, we've gone back in time, all right. One or two samples and I shall be able to make an estimate. With rock pieces and a few plants. But I do wish this wouldn't keep letting me down. However, we can go out now.
IAN: Just a minute. You say we've gone back in time?
DOCTOR: Yes, quite so.
IAN: So that when we go out of that door, we won't be in a junkyard in London in England in the year 1963?
DOCTOR: That is quite correct. But your tone suggests ridicule.
IAN: But it is ridiculous. Time doesn't go round and round in circles. You can't get on and off whenever you like in the past or the future.
DOCTOR: Really? Where does time go, then?
IAN: It doesn't go anywhere. It just happens and then it's finished.
DOCTOR: (to Barbara) You're not as doubtful as your friend, I hope?
BARBARA: No.
IAN: Barbara, you can't
BARBARA: I can't help it. I just believe them, that's all.
DOCTOR: If you could touch the alien sand and hear the cries of strange birds and watch them wheel in another sky, would that satisfy you?
IAN: Yes.
(The Doctor opens the doors)
DOCTOR: Now, see for yourself.
IAN: It's not true. It can't be.
SUSAN: That's not on the screen.
DOCTOR: Well I've no more time to argue with you. I must get some samples, Susan.
SUSAN: Be careful, Grandfather.
DOCTOR: (exiting, muttering) Oh, dear, it's disgusting really.
(Barbara leaves the Tardis)
BARBARA: Ian, come out and look.
(Ian stumbles and clutches his head)
SUSAN: Oh here, lean on me.
IAN: No, thank you. I'm all right, thanks.
(Ian and Susan step outside, and the doors close behind them)

[Wasteland]

BARBARA: Well?
IAN: But there must be some explanation.
DOCTOR: It's still a police box. Why hasn't it changed? Dear, dear, how very disturbing.
(The Doctor collects his rock samples, watched by the primitive man. Barbara comes across an animal skull in the sand)
BARBARA: What do you think it could be? Ian, look at this.
IAN: I don't know. It hasn't got any horns or antlers. Could be a horse. Could be anything. Incredible. A police box in the midst of. Oh, it just doesn't make sense.
SUSAN: It should have changed. Wonder why it hasn't happened this time.
BARBARA: The ship, you mean?
SUSAN: Yes, it's been an Ionic column and a sedan chair.
BARBARA: Disguising itself wherever it goes.
SUSAN: Yes, that's right. But it hasn't happened this time. I wonder why not. I wonder if this old head would help Grandfather. Where is he?
BARBARA: You're very quiet.
IAN: I was wrong, wasn't I.
BARBARA: Oh, look, I don't understand it any more than you do. The inside of the ship, suddenly finding ourselves here. Even some of the things Doctor Foreman says
IAN: That's not his name. Who is he? Doctor who? Perhaps if we knew his name we might have a clue to all this.
BARBARA: Look, Ian, the point is, it's happened.
IAN: Yes, it has. But it's impossible to accept. I know I'm here
SUSAN: I can't see him anywhere.
BARBARA: He can't be far away. I had a feeling just now as if we were being watched. Grandfather.
(The Doctor is lighting his pipe when the primitive man attacks. The Doctor cries out)
SUSAN: Grandfather!
IAN: Come on!
(They run to where the Doctor was gathering his samples, and find his bag on the ground)
IAN: Look.
SUSAN: What is it?
BARBARA: Some of his things.
SUSAN: Grandfather, where are you?
IAN: Susan, don't panic.
SUSAN: I must find him.
IAN: Susan.
SUSAN: I must see.
IAN: Well, be careful then.
BARBARA: Ian, look.
IAN: (broken Geiger counter) It's not much good any more.
BARBARA: Well, maybe he saw something and went off to investigate.
IAN: Leaving this? (his hat)
BARBARA: Well, what do you think happened?
IAN: I don't know. Perhaps he was excited and went off to investigate something as you suggest, but. He may have been taken.
SUSAN: I can't see him. I can't find him anywhere. There's not a sign of him.
IAN: Calm down, Susan.
BARBARA: Susan, don't worry. What's the matter?
SUSAN: It's his notes. He'd never leave his notebook. It's too important to him. It's got the key codes of all the machines in the ship. It's got notes of everywhere we've been to. Something terrible has happened to him, I know it has. We must find him.
BARBARA: Susan, Susan. We'll find him, I promise you. He can't be far away.
IAN: What's on the other side of those rocks?
SUSAN: There's a line of trees. There's a gap in them. There might be a path on the other side.
IAN: (gathering up the Doctor's things) All right, we'll try there first. Come on. Strange.
BARBARA: What?
IAN: This sand. It's cold. It's nearly freezing.

[Cave]

(The children are playing hunting, with one of them under a leopard's skin)
HORG: Kal says, where he comes from, he's often seen men make fire.
ZA: Kal is a liar.
HORG: He says Orb will soon show him how it is done.
ZA: All his tribe died in the last cold. If he had not found us, he would have died too.
HUR: What else did he say?
HORG: He says Orb only shows the secret to the leader.
ZA: I am leader. Orb will show me. I am the son of the great firemaker, but he does not show me how to put flames into the sticks. Kal comes. I do not kill him. I let him eat with us and sleep in our caves. I will have to spill some blood and make people bow to me.
(There's a commotion as the Doctor is brought in and laid across a large rock)
ZA: This is a strange creature.
KAL: Is Za, son of the firemaker, afraid of an old man? When will Za make fire come from his hands?
ZA: When Orb decides it.
KAL: Orb is for strong men. Orb has sent me this creature to make fire come from his fingers. I have seen it. Inside, he's full of fire. The smoke comes from his mouth.
ZA: As lies come out of yours. He wears strange skins.
KAL: Za is afraid. There was a strange tree. The creature was in it. Za would have run away had he seen it.
ZA: Silence!
KAL: When I saw fire come from his fingers I remembered Za, son of the firemaker. And when the cold comes, you will all die if you wait for Za to make fire for you. I, Kal, am a true leader. We fought like the tiger and the bear. My strength was too much for him. He lay down to sleep. And I, Kal, carried him here to make fire for you.
ZA: Why do you listen to Kal?
HORG: Za has many good skins. He has forgotten what the cold is like.
ZA: Tomorrow, I kill many bears. You all have warm skins.
HORG: I say tomorrow you will rub your hands together and hold them to the dry sticks and ask Orb to send you fire. And the bears will stay warm in their own skins.
ZA: What I say I will do, I will do.
KAL: The firemaker is dead. You all carry dry sticks with you. But tonight, I make them burn. I am leader.
HUR: The creature has opened its eyes.
DOCTOR: Where's my, where.
KAL: Do you want fire, or do you want to die in the cold?
ALL: Fire! Fire!
KAL: When it's cold, the tiger comes to our caves again at night. Za will give you to the tiger. Za will give you to the cold. Za rubs his hands and waits for Orb to remember him. My creature can make fire come from his fingers. I have seen it. But I, Kal, brought him here. The creature is mine.
ZA: He's just an old man in strange skins. Kal has been with us too long. It is time he died.
HORG: I say there is truth in both of you. Za speaks truth, but fire cannot live in men. And Kal speaks the truth that we die without fire.
HUR: Will my father listen to a woman? If this old man can make fire come from his fingers, let us see it now.
ZA: I say what is to be done here, not old men and women.
KAL: Za tries to talk like his father, the firemaker. Za does not want to see fire made. But I, Kal, am not afraid of fire. I will make my creature make fire.
(The Doctor sits up)
ZA: I will take him to the Cave of Skulls and he will tell me the secret!
DOCTOR: I can make fire for you. Let me go and I'll make all the fire you want. You don't have to be afraid of me. I'm an old man. How can an old man like me harm any of you?
ZA: What does he say?
HORG: Fire? He says he can make fire for us.
KAL: He makes it for me and I give you fire. I am firemaker.
ZA: He will make it for me.
DOCTOR: (searching his pockets) My matches. Where are they? I must get back. Must get back to the ship.
KAL: Kal's creature, he makes fire only for Kal.
DOCTOR: Take me back to my ship and I will make fire for you. All the fire you want.
ZA: This is more of your lies. The old man cannot make fire.
KAL: There was a tree and the creature came from in it. And the fire, it came out of his fingers.
ZA: You want to be strong like Za, son of the great firemaker. You all heard him say that there would be fire. There is no fire. Za does not tell you lies. He does not say, I will do this thing, and then not do it. He does not say, I will make you warm, and then leave you to the dark. He does not say, I will fight away the tiger with fire, and then let him come to you in the dark. Do you want a liar for your chief?
ALL: No!
KAL: Make fire. Make fire.
HUR: You are trapped in your own lies, Kal.
ZA: Great chief who is afraid of nothing. Oh great Kal, save us from the cold. Save us from the tiger.
KAL: Make fire. Make fire come from your fingers as I saw you.
DOCTOR: I have no matches. I cannot make fire. I cannot make fire!
ZA: Let the old man die. And we'll watch the great Kal as he kills his strong enemy.
KAL: Make fire! Make fire! Or I kill you now!
ZA: Or we'll keep them and make them hunt for us. It's good to have someone to laugh at!
SUSAN: Grandfather!
(Susan, Ian and Barbara are quickly overpowered)
DOCTOR: If he dies, there will be no fire.
(Kal is fascinated by Barbara)
MOTHER: Kill her. Kill her.
ZA: Wait. You cannot kill all our enemies. When Orb gives fire back to the sky, let him look down on them. Then that is when they die, and Orb will give us fire again. Take them to the Cave of Skulls.
SUSAN: No! Grandfather!
DOCTOR: All right.
(Hur goes to Za, and her father tries to pull her back)
ZA: The woman is mine.
HORG: My daughter is for the leader of the tribe.
ZA: Yes, the woman is mine.
HORG: I do not like what has happened.
ZA: Old men never like new things to happen.
HORG: I was a great leader of many men.
ZA: Many men, yes. They all dies when Orb left the sky and the great cold was on the ground. And Orb will give me fire again. To me. Not to you. Just as you will give me her.
HUR: Za will be a strong leader of many men. If you give me to him, he will remember and always give you meat.
MOTHER: There were leaders before there was fire. Fire will kill us all in the end. You should have killed the four strangers. Kill them.
ZA: I have said we will wait until Orb shines again. Then they die.

[Cave of Skulls]

(so named because of the large number of skeletons scattered around)
(The four are bound hand and foot)
IAN: Are you all right? Did they hurt you?
BARBARA: No. Ian, I'm frightened.
IAN: Try and hang on.
BARBARA: But how are we going to get out of this?
DOCTOR: We should use our cunning. I hope you can get yourself free, Chesterton. I can't. The stench in here. The stench. I'm sorry. It's all my fault. I'm desperately sorry.
SUSAN: Don't blame yourself, Grandfather.
DOCTOR: Look at that. Look at it. (skulls)
IAN: They're all the same. They've been split open.

Episode Three - The Forest Of Fear

DOCTOR: Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry, it's all my fault. I'm desperately sorry.
SUSAN: Oh, don't blame yourself, Grandfather.
DOCTOR: Look at those. Look at them. (the skulls)
IAN: Yes, they're all the same. They've been split wide open.
(In the main cave, the tribe sleep. The old woman gets up and takes a flint hand axe. Meanwhile, in the cave of skulls, the group are trying to free themselves)
SUSAN: I've found another piece with a rough edge.
IAN: Thank you.
(Ian is sawing at Barbara's bindings with pieces of flint)
IAN: It's no good, it keeps crumbling.
DOCTOR: Oh, it's hopeless, hopeless. Even if we do get free, we shall never move that stone.
IAN: There's air coming in here from somewhere.
BARBARA: Yes, there is. I can feel it on my face.
IAN: It may only be a small opening. Don't count on it.
DOCTOR: Well you obviously are.
IAN: Of course I am. Any hope is better than none. Don't just lie there criticising us. Do something. Help us all to get out of here. Oh, this stone's no good.
BARBARA: Well, don't give up, Ian. Please.
IAN: Oh, all right.
DOCTOR: No, no, don't waste time. Try those bones, they may be. They're sharper, perhaps.
IAN: That's a good idea.
SUSAN: Grandfather, I knew you'd think of something.
DOCTOR: We must all take it in turns and try and cut his hands free.
IAN: Surely we should get the girls free?
DOCTOR: No, no, we've got to free you first. You're the strongest, and you may have to defend us.
IAN: All right.
(later)
DOCTOR: Susan, you have a go. My arms are tired.
SUSAN: All right.
DOCTOR: And don't think of failing.
BARBARA: What?
DOCTOR: Well, try and remember, if you can, how you and the others found your way here. Concentrate on that please.
BARBARA: Yes, yes, I'll try. You're trying to help me.
DOCTOR: Fear makes companions of all of us. That's right.
BARBARA: I never thought once you were afraid.
DOCTOR: Fear is with all of us, and always will be. Just like that other sensation that lives with it.
BARBARA: What's that?
DOCTOR: Your companion referred to it. Hope. Hope, that's right.
(In the main cave, Hur wakes Za and mimes that the old woman has gone with his weapon. They go after her with an axe)
(The old woman breaks through some brush into the cave of skulls. Susan screams)
MOTHER: You will not make fire.

[Outside the cave]

ZA: Now tell me.
HUR: I saw the old woman take your knife.
ZA: Why did you let her? She's old, you could have held her.
HUR: Why did she take it?
ZA: She has gone into the forest.
HUR: No. She's going to kill the strangers.
ZA: Did she say this?
HUR: No, but she took your knife. She is afraid of fire.
ZA: You should have stopped her.
HUR: Kal was in the cave. Leaders are awake when others sleep. The strange tribe will not be able to show you how to make fire if the old woman kills them.
ZA: If I stop her from killing them, they will give fire to me. And not to Kal. The woman could not have got into the cave. The great stone is still there. Why do you tell me this?
(He pushes Hur over and threatens her with his axe)
HUR: No! No!
(Then they hear voices)
ZA: The old woman is talking to them.

[Cave of Skulls]

MOTHER: I will set you free if you will go away and not make fire. Fire will bring trouble and death to the tribe.
DOCTOR: There will be no fire.

[Outside the cave]

(Za and Hur strain at the big stone)
HUR: No, we cannot move the great stone.
ZA: The old woman is talking to them. I will move it.

[Cave of Skulls]

(The old woman has freed our travellers)
MOTHER: Hurry, hurry. You must go across the tuft and into the trees.
IAN: Yes.
(They get away, but the old woman is too slow. Za grabs her from the opening)
HUR: She set them free!
MOTHER: They would have made fire. They would have made fire! No.
(The old woman tries to stop Za from going after them. He knocks her down)
ZA: They have gone into the night.
HUR: They have taken fire with them.
ZA: The beasts will kill them. They will kill us if we follow.
HUR: Now, you are leader. You are as strong as the beasts. You will be stronger still when you know how fire is made. Stronger than Kal.

[Forest]

(Barbara leads the way, with Susan, Ian then the Doctor trying to keep up)
DOCTOR: Stop. Just a minute, let me get my
IAN: We can't stop here.
DOCTOR: Just a moment.
IAN: Look, we've got to go further on.
DOCTOR: I know. I know that. But I must get. Breathe. I must breathe.
IAN: Try. Try. I shall have to carry you.
DOCTOR: There's no need for that. Don't be so childish. I'm not senile. Just let me get my breath for a moment.
SUSAN: Oh, Grandfather, come on.
DOCTOR: Yes. I'm not so young, you know.
BARBARA: Are you sure this is the right way?
IAN: Yes, I think so.
BARBARA: I can't remember. I simply can't remember.
IAN: We're free, Barbara. Think about that. Free.
BARBARA: Yes. Yes.
(But the sounds of nocturnal hunters and prey alarm them. Further on, Susan is helping the Doctor)
SUSAN: I'm sure I remember this place. But we didn't come round it, we went across it.
BARBARA: Yes, there was a sort of trail.
IAN: If that's true, we must be quite near the ship. How are you feeling?
DOCTOR: I'm all right. Don't keep on looking upon me as the weakest link of the party.
(Barbara sees something scary)
IAN: What's the matter?
BARBARA: I don't know. I saw something. Over there in the bushes.
DOCTOR: What nonsense.
BARBARA: The bushes moved. I saw them. I saw them! Oh, we're never going to get out of this awful place! Never! Never! Never!
IAN: Barbara.
SUSAN: What do you think it could have been, Grandfather?
DOCTOR: Oh, sheer nonsense, child. Imagination.
BARBARA: We'll die in this place.
IAN: Barbara, no we won't. We're going to get back to the ship and then we'll be safe.
BARBARA: Oh, Ian, what's happening to us?
IAN: Look, Barbara, we got out of the cave, didn't we?
SUSAN: I'm so cold.
DOCTOR: I'm hot with all this exertion.
IAN: We'll rest for a couple of minutes.
SUSAN: Oh, good. Is there any chance of them following us?
DOCTOR: I expect so.
IAN: Yes, that's why I don't want to stop here too long.
DOCTOR: Do you think I want to?
IAN: No. We'll change the order. You and Susan go in front, Barbara and I'll bring up the rear. Susan seems to remember the way better than any of us.
DOCTOR: You seem to have elected yourself leader of this little party.
IAN: There isn't time to vote on it.
DOCTOR: Just so long as you understand I won't follow your orders blindly.
IAN: If there were only two of us, you could find your own way back to the ship.
DOCTOR: Aren't you a tiresome young man!
IAN: And you're a stubborn old man. But you will lead, the girls in between, and I'll bring up the rear. Because that's the safest way. Barbara was probably right. I thought we heard something when we stopped back there.
DOCTOR: Oh, sheer imagination.
IAN: Why are you so confident about it?
DOCTOR: I won't allow myself to be frightened out of my wits by mere shadows, that's all.
IAN: All right.
(Hur and Za are tracking them)
HUR: Look, there is a branch broken.
ZA: They have strange feet.
HUR: They wear skins on their feet.
ZA: There are marks here.
HUR: They've gone this way.
(Animals call)
ZA: It was wrong to do this. We should not have followed them.
HUR: We cannot turn back now.
(Further on, at the resting place)
IAN: I think we'd better get going. Doctor, will you lead?
DOCTOR: Yes, yes, yes, yes.
IAN: Come on, Barbara.
(But almost immediately, she falls over a dead boar, and screams. Za hears it.)
IAN [OC]: Barbara, Barbara.
ZA: Down here. That was one of the women.
SUSAN: A dead animal.
DOCTOR: It must have just been killed. By a larger animal, too.
IAN: Shush. Shush. That must be them. They followed us. Quick, quick. Over there.
(The four hide, and Hur and Za enter)
IAN: Keep down, and not a sound.
ZA: Wait. There is danger. I will go.
(We don't actually see it, of course, but Za gets attacked by whatever killed the boar)
IAN: Quick, now's our chance. Let's get away. Run!
BARBARA: Look at them. We can't just leave them! I don't care what they've done.
IAN: Barbara. Barbara, come on.
BARBARA: I think he's dead. There isn't any danger.
IAN: Barbara, for heaven's sake.
BARBARA: No.
SUSAN: I'm going too.
DOCTOR: Susan! You stay here with me.
SUSAN: No, Grandfather. We can't leave them.
DOCTOR: Silence! We're going back to the ship.
SUSAN: No!
DOCTOR: What are you doing? They must be out of their minds.
(Za is badly wounded, and Hur is crying)
HUR: No, keep away.
IAN: Let me look at him.
HUR: No.
IAN: I am your friend. You understand? Friend. I want to help him.
HUR: Friend?
IAN: I want water.
HUR: Water.
IAN: Go and fetch some water for his wounds.
HUR: Water is there.
BARBARA: Please, show me. Give me your handkerchief.
IAN: Here you are.
SUSAN: Is he all right?
IAN: I think so. He must have buried his axe head in the animal. Thank you.
(Barbara and Ian bathe his wounds)
HUR: Water comes out of the skin!
IAN: Yes. I think most of this is the animal's blood.
SUSAN: Good.
BARBARA: There's a scar on the side of his head.
IAN: Well, we've lost our chance of getting away. Your flat must be littered with stray cats and dogs.
BARBARA: These are human beings, Ian.
IAN: Yes, I know.
DOCTOR: What exactly do you think you're doing?
IAN: Have you got any antiseptic in the ship?
SUSAN: Yes, lots.
DOCTOR: One minute ago we were trying desperately to get away from these savages.
IAN: All right, now we're helping them. You're a doctor, do something.
DOCTOR: I'm not a doctor of medicine.
SUSAN: Grandfather, we can make friends with them.
DOCTOR: Oh, don't be ridiculous, child.
BARBARA: Why? You treat everybody and everything as something less important than yourself.
DOCTOR: You're trying to say that everything you do is reasonable, and everything I do is inhuman. Well, I'm afraid your judgement's at fault, Miss Wright, not mine. Haven't you realised if these two people can follow us, any of these people can follow us? The whole tribe might descend upon us at any moment.
HUR: The tribe is asleep.
DOCTOR: And what about the old woman who cut our bonds? You understand?
IAN: He's right. We're too exposed here. We'll make a stretcher and carry him.
DOCTOR: You're not going to take him back to the ship?
IAN: Take your coat off, Barbara. Susan, try and find me two poles. Long ones, fairly straight.
BARBARA: The old woman won't give us away. She helped.
DOCTOR: Do you think so? These people have logic and reason, have they? Can't you see their minds change as rapidly as night and day? She's probably telling the whole tribe at this very moment.

[Cave of Skulls]

KAL: The creatures. Where? Where?
MOTHER: Gone.
KAL: The great stone. They could not move it.
MOTHER: Za moved it.
KAL: Za has gone with them?
MOTHER: Za and Hur went after them.
KAL: There were skins around their hands and their feet. They could not move. Za helped them to get free? They're gone with Za to show him fire?
MOTHER: They won't make fire. There won't be fire any more.
KAL: Old woman, you helped them.

[Forest]

IAN: It's not going to work like this. What can we do?
HUR: No! He's mine.
SUSAN: I was only trying to help.
IAN: She doesn't understand, Susan. She's jealous of you.
HUR: I don't understand what you are doing. You are like a mother with a child. Why do you not kill?
IAN: How can we explain to her? She doesn't understand kindness, friendship.
BARBARA: We will make him well again. We will teach you how to make fire. In return, you show us the way back to our cave.
ZA: Listen to them. They do not kill.
IAN: Come on. Let's get on with this stretcher. Let's try the sleeves inside. That's it.
ZA: Water.
HUR: Water.
IAN: How about giving us a hand, Doctor?
SUSAN: He's always like this if he doesn't get his own way.
BARBARA: The old woman won't give us away. And now that we've got these two on our side, we should get back to the ship.
SUSAN: Yes.
(The Doctor picks up a stone, and Ian grabs his arm)
DOCTOR: Get your hand off me.
IAN: What are you doing?
DOCTOR: Well, I, I was going to get him to draw our way back to the Tardis.
IAN: We've been too long as it is. Is the stretcher ready?
BARBARA: Yes.
IAN: Right, you take one end of it.
DOCTOR: You don't expect me to carry him, do you?
IAN: Do you want the women to do the job for you?
DOCTOR: Oh, very well.
IAN: Right, now move him over very carefully. Now, back again, gently.
(Za ends up on the stretcher, groaning)
IAN: Good. Right, now, Susan, you get in front with her.

[Cave]

KAL: They have gone. Za and Hur have gone with them and we must go after them.
HORG: Hur would not help them to get away.
KAL: She has gone with them.
HORG: The old woman sleeps in the cave too, and she has gone.
KAL: The old woman is in the Cave of Skulls.
HORG: Hur would not go with them!
KAL: Ask the old woman. She will tell what is done.

[Cave of Skulls]

KAL: She will tell.
(But the old woman is dead)
KAL: My eyes tell me what has happened. As they do when I sleep and I see things. Za and Hur came to free them, and find a way to make fire. The old woman saw them. Za killed old woman.
HORG: The old woman is dead. It must have been as your eyes said it was.
KAL: Za has gone with them, taking them to their cave. Za takes away fire. Now I, Kal, lead. Go!

[Forest]

IAN: Hold the branches back, Susan.
SUSAN: The Tardis! There's the Tardis!
(And there's the tribes people with spears too)
IAN: Back! Back! Go back.
(But Kal blocks their retreat)

Episode Four - The Firemaker

[Forest]

IAN: Back. Get back.

[Cave]

HORG: They are coming.
(The stretcher is put down and the travellers dragged away)
KAL: Za and the woman went with them. I, Kal, stop them.
HUR: They saved Za from death near the stream.
KAL: They set them free from the Cave of Skulls and went with them.
HUR: The old woman cut them free.
KAL: Za is so weak a woman speaks for him.
HUR: It was the old woman. She showed them a new way out of the Cave of Skulls.
KAL: The old woman does not speak. She does not say she did this or did that. The old woman is dead. Za killed the old woman.
HUR: No!
KAL: Za killed the old woman with his knife.
HUR: No.
KAL: Here. Here is the knife he killed her with.
DOCTOR: This knife has no blood on it. I said, this knife has no blood on it.
KAL: It is a bad knife. It does not show the things it does.
DOCTOR: It is a finer knife than yours.
KAL: I, Kal, say it is a bad knife.
DOCTOR: This knife can cut and stab. I have never seen a better knife.
KAL: I will show you one.
(Kal pulls out his flint knife)
DOCTOR: This knife shows what it has done. There is blood on it. (to Za) Who killed the old woman?
ZA: I did not kill her.
DOCTOR: (to Kal) You killed the old woman.
KAL: Yes! She set them free. She set them free. She did this. I, Kal, killed her.
DOCTOR: Is this your strong leader? One who kills your old women? He is a bad leader. He will kill you all. Yes, all. (to Ian) Follow my example.
(The Doctor picks up some stones and throws them at Kal)
DOCTOR: Drive him out. Out.
IAN: Yes, drive him out. He killed the old woman.
(The tribe start pelting him with stones)
TRIBE: Drive him out.
(Kal leaves, and Za is on his feet again)
IAN: Remember, Kal is not stronger than the whole tribe.
ZA: Kal is no longer one of this tribe. We will watch for him. We will all fight Kal if he comes back. We will watch for him. Take them to the Cave of Skulls.
IAN: Take us back to the desert and we will make fire for you.
ZA: The great stone will close one place, and you will stand by another I will show you. Take them.
DOCTOR: Don't struggle.
ZA: They are inside the cave. You see them come out, kill them.

[Cave of Skulls]

(They are not tied up this time)
DOCTOR: This place is evil.

[Cave]

ZA: Tell me what happened after I fought the beast in the forest.
HUR: You were stronger than the beast. It took away your axe in its head. You lay on the earth. I believed you were dead.
ZA: Tell me what they did.
HUR: The young man of their tribe came towards you, but he did not kill. He told me his name.
ZA: Name?
HUR: His name is Friend.
ZA: They come from the other side of the mountains.
HUR: Nothing lives there.
ZA: There are other tribes there. This new tribe must come from there. Tell me more of what happened.
HUR: I did not understand them. Their hands moved slowly and their faces were not fierce. It was like a mother guarding her baby.
ZA: They are a new tribe. Not like us. Not like Kal. The young one, whose name is Friend, spoke to me.
HUR: Do you remember it?
ZA: He said, Kal is not stronger than the whole tribe.
HUR: I do not understand.
ZA: The whole tribe drove Kal away with the stones. The whole tribe can collect more fruit than one. The whole tribe can kill a beast where one of the tribe would die.
HUR: Do you think they come from Orb?
ZA: No. They are a tribe who know how fire is made, but they do not want to tell us.
HUR: Then you will not kill them?
ZA: Horg says the leader must know how fire is made. I do not want to be driven into the forest like Kal. I must make fire, or they must die, as the old men say. I will speak with him. I must hear more things to remember. The leader would have things to remember.

[Cave of Skulls]

(Ian is putting together the ingredients of a camp fire. Susan finds a stone)
SUSAN: I think this is what you want, Mister Chesterton.
IAN: Thank you.
BARBARA: Here are some leaves, and some dead grass.
IAN: Yes, well spread them around the hole. Don't put them inside. I hope this is going to work. Now, spread them around a bit more. Yes, that's it.
(He's got twine around one twig, to twist another twig between two flat stones for friction)

[Outside the second exit]

ZA: (to guard) I will speak with them. You wait here.
(Kal is watching, hidden)

[Cave of Skulls]

SUSAN: I can smell something.
BARBARA: Yes, so can I.
SUSAN: It's burning! It's burning!
IAN: It's a long way off yet.
ZA: What is this?
DOCTOR: We are making fire.
ZA: You are called Friend?
IAN: Yes.
DOCTOR: Don't stop.
ZA: Hur said you were called Friend. I am called Za. You are the leader of your tribe?
IAN: No. He is our leader.
SUSAN: Are you going to set us free?
ZA: The tribe say you are from Orb and when you are returned to him on the stone of death, we will have fire again.
BARBARA: But that's not true.
ZA: I think you are from the other side of the mountains. If you show me how to make fire, I will take you back to the foot of the mountains. If you do not show me, I cannot stop you dying on the old stone.
IAN: Put some more leaves and grass round it. I think it's beginning to work.
DOCTOR: Do you understand? We are making fire for you.
ZA: I am watching.
IAN: The whole tribe should be watching. Everyone should know how to make fire.
ZA: Everyone cannot be leader.
IAN: No, that's perfectly true. But in our tribe, the firemaker is the least important man.
ZA: Ha! I do not believe this.
DOCTOR: He is the least important because we can all make fire.
SUSAN: I hope he doesn't make Grandfather prove that.
IAN: Look, I think it's beginning to work. Susan, Barbara, blow gently. That's it!
SUSAN: We've done it.
IAN: Yes.
ZA: Fire. Fire.

[Cave]

HORG: Orb strikes the old stone and Za does not bring them out. We have no meat, and no fruit from the trees, and no roots. Za is no leader.
HUR: Za would kill you if he could hear you. He's talking now with them in the Cave of Skulls. You should lie on the old stone until your blood runs into the earth.
HORG: Za is letting them go away, just as the old woman set them free.
HUR: Za told one of them to watch and guard them until he came out of the Cave of Skulls.

[Cave of Skulls]

(Kal kills the guard and goes in. He sees the fire, and starts swinging at Za with his axe. Za uses a thick branch to defend himself and breaks Kal's axe with it. Finally, Za gets the upper hand and ends it by smashing Kal's head with a big stone.)

[Cave]

HORG: Orb is above us and there is no fire. Bring them out from the Cave of Skulls and Za as well. Come on.

[Cave of Skulls]

(Ian lights a branch from the fire)
IAN: Take this, and show it to your tribe.
ZA: You, stay here.
IAN: We will come with you.
ZA: No, you'll stay here.
IAN: I will come with you.
DOCTOR: Give him a chance. Give him a chance. Let him show the tribe fire, establish himself as leader, then he'll let us go.
IAN: But we ought to go with him now.

[Cave]

ZA: Fire.
TRIBE: Fire.
ZA: Kal is dead. I give you fire. I am leader. We will give food and water to the new tribe in the Cave of Skulls.
HORG: There is no meat.
ZA: I will go into the forest and get meat.
HORG: Yes. I remember how the meat and fire joined together.
ZA: Good. Watch the new tribe. They must be here when I return.

[Cave of Skulls]

IAN: It didn't work. They're going to keep us here.
(Hur enters with some food)
IAN: Why are you keeping us here?
HUR: Za has gone into the forest to find meat. There will be more food later.
BARBARA: But why can't we go outside?
SUSAN: Please let us go. It's terrible in here.
HUR: Za is leader.
SUSAN: But we helped you. We gave you fire.
HUR: We have fire now.
(Hur leaves)
IAN: Yes. And I was the fool who gave it to you. Why didn't I wait?
BARBARA: Well at least we're alive. We wouldn't be if we hadn't given them fire.
(Later, Ian is sleeping)
BARBARA: Ian.
SUSAN: They brought us some meat.
BARBARA: And the Doctor found a stone with a hole in it, and they filled it with water.
IAN: All the comforts of home.
(Za enters)
ZA: The animal was hard to kill. The meat on it is good. They have brought you fruit and water has been put into a stone. Is this the stone? Has anyone hurt you?
DOCTOR: When are you going to let us go, hmm?
ZA: You will stay here. I have the meat and I have the stick, and a piece of skin. I can make fire now. Your tribe and my tribe will join together.
IAN: We don't want to stay here.
ZA: Why? There is no better place the other side of the mountains. Do not try to leave here.
(Za leaves with their water)
DOCTOR: Quench the fire. Take the fire away from them. Scaring them, somehow.
SUSAN: (putting a skull on top of a burning brand) Hey, Grandfather, look! It's almost alive.
IAN: Not alive, Susan. Almost dead. We're going to make four torches. We'll find the sticks. And we'll use the fat from the meat. And then
SUSAN: And then?
IAN: And then, to all intents and purposes, we're going to die.
(The tribe continue to feast)
IAN: When I give the sign.
(Hur enters with more meat, sees the lit skulls and screams. The rest of the tribe come in and cower too)
SUSAN: What are they?
(With the tribe distracted, our travellers make a run for it through the forest. Finally one of the sticks falls over)
ZA: Look. It is nothing but fire and the bones of the dead. They have gone! While we look at their fire, they have gone!
HUR: Into the night. The dark will hide them.
ZA: With fire, it is day.
(So the men get themselves torches and the chase is on)

[Desert]

(Our intrepid time travellers get inside the Tardis before the tribe arrive.)

[Tardis]

IAN: Come on, Doctor, get us off! Get us off!
DOCTOR: Yes.
(The Tardis takes off as the spears fly towards it)
DOCTOR: Yes, it's matching up.
SUSAN: We're beginning to land.
DOCTOR: Oh, how I wish.
IAN: Have you taken us back to our own time?
DOCTOR: You know I can't do that. Please be reasonable.
IAN: What?
BARBARA: Please, you must take us back. You must.
DOCTOR: You see, this isn't operating properly. Or rather, the code is still a secret. When you put the right data, precise information to a second of the beginning of a journey, then we can fix a destination, but I had no data at my disposal.
BARBARA: Are you saying that you don't know how to work this thing?
DOCTOR: Well of course I can't. I'm not a miracle worker.
SUSAN: You can't blame Grandfather. We left the other place too quickly, that's all.
IAN: Just a minute. Did you try and take us back to our own time?
DOCTOR: Well, I got you away from that other time, didn't I?
IAN: That isn't what I asked you.
DOCTOR: It's the only way I can answer you, young man. Now. Now we shall see.
(The monitor shows strange trees)
DOCTOR: It could be anywhere. Dear, dear, dear, dear. It's no help to us at all. Well, I suggest before we go outside and explore, let us clean ourselves up.
SUSAN: Oh, yes.
DOCTOR: Now what does the radiation read, Susan?
SUSAN: It's reading normal, Grandfather.
(But after they walk away, the needle goes up into the Danger Zone)

Next episode - The Dead Planet

<Back to the episode listing

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Sunday 17 January 2021

Superman: The Mechanical Monsters

 





Superman: The Mechanical Monsters

1941

A mad scientist unleashes robots to rob banks and loot museums. Superman saves the day. Animation by Steve Muffati and George Germanetti. Music by Sammy Timberg. Produced in 1941.


The Mechanical Monsters is the second of the seventeen animated Technicolor short films based upon the DC Comics character Superman. Produced by Fleischer Studios, the story features Superman battling a mad scientist with a small army of robots at his command. It was originally released by Paramount Pictures on November 28, 1941.

Popeye the Sailor meets Sinbad the Sailor

 





Popeye the Sailor meets Sinbad the Sailor

1936

The classic tale of Sinbad the Sailor, adapted for Popeye and Olive. Featuring memorable appearances by Wimpy, Olive, and the singing two-headed monster. You can find more information regarding this film on its IMDb page







Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor is a two-reel animated cartoon short subject in the Popeye series, produced in Technicolor and released to theatres on November 27, 1936 by Paramount Pictures. It was produced by Max Fleischer for Fleischer Studios, Inc. and directed by Dave Fleischer, with musical supervision by Sammy Timberg. The voice of Popeye is performed by Jack Mercer, with Mae Questel, as Olive Oyl, with Lou Fleischer as J. Wellington Wimpy and Gus Wickie as Sindbad the Sailor.

Plot

In this short, Sindbad the Sailor (presumably Bluto playing a "role") proclaims himself, in song, to be the greatest sailor, adventurer and lover in the world and "the most remarkable, extraordinary fellow," a claim which is challenged by Popeye's arrival on his island with Olive Oyl and J. Wellington Wimpy in tow. Sindbad orders his huge Roc (mythology), Rokh, to kidnap Popeye's girlfriend, Olive Oyl, and wreck Popeye's ship, forcing him and Wimpy to swim to shore. Sinbad relishes making Olive his trophy wife, which is interrupted by Popeye's arrival. Sinbad then challenges the one-eyed sailor to a series of obstacles to prove his greatness, including fighting Rokh, a two-headed giant (mythology) named Boola (an apparent parody erence to The Three Stooges), and Sindbad himself. Popeye makes short work of the bird and the giant, but Sindbad almost gets the best of him until Popeye produces his can of spinach, which gives him the power to soundly defeat Sindbad and proclaim himself "the most remarkable, extraordinary fella."
A subtly dark running gag features the hamburger-loving Wimpy chasing after a duck on the island with a meat grinder, with the intention of grinding it up so that he can fry it into his favorite dish, but the duck not only escapes, but also snatches away Wimpy's last burger in retaliation when he gives up. Many of the scenes in this short feature make use of the Fleischer's Multiplane camera process, which used modeled sets to create 3D backgrounds for the cartoon.

Release and reception

This short was the first of the three Popeye Color Specials, which were, at over sixteen minutes each, three times as long as a regular Popeye cartoon, and were often billed in theatres alongside or above the main feature. Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor was nominated for the 1936 Academy Award for Animated Short Film, which it lost to Walt Disney's Silly Symphony The Country Cousin. Footage from this short was later used in the 1952 Famous Studios Popeye cartoon Big Bad Sindbad, in which Popeye relates the story of his encounter with Sindbad to his 3 nephews.
Today, this short and the other two Popeye Color SpecialsPopeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves, and Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp (both of which were also adapted from a story featured in One Thousand and One Nights) are in the public domain, and are widely available on home video and DVD. A fully restored version with the original Paramount Pictures mountain logo opening and closing titles is available on the Popeye the Sailor: 1933-1938, Volume 1 DVD set from Warner Bros.

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