Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks
was written by Terrance Dicks, based on the television story Planet of the
Daleks by Terry Nation. It was the 26th
story to be novelized by Target Books.
Terry Nation is a writer who has a very specific formula
which can easily be seen in The Daleks.
Mysterious planet, two factions of Daleks and enemies, forest setting, capture
early on, escape, ambush, harrowing sequence near the end, and a finale. This is especially apparent in longer serials
by nation with the most infamous being Planet of the Daleks. Planet of the Daleks is the Pertwee Dalek
story that is perhaps most well remembered by fans, however, in an age where you
can watch any episode of Doctor Who at any time it becomes very apparent
that it is a retread of The Daleks beat by beat. Nation even lampshades this by mentioning the
events of the Daleks early on. It is
actually the novelization which I’m looking at today that helped contribute to
this perception simply through the fact that Terrance Dicks makes it a
breeze. The page count and audiobook
length is short, even for a Target novelization, only coming to about three
hours read out and approximately 120 pages.
Split into twelve chapters, every two chapters equals an episode and
scenes just fly by because Terrance Dicks’ prose is endlessly readable. There are plenty of phrases which find their way
here such as the wheezing, groaning noise and descriptions of the Doctor’s
nose. There is also a genuine attempt to
make the Dalek forces terrifying and moving through a serial with ease. The six episodes condensed down cuts out a
lot of the Terry Nation padding to a bare minimum and the descriptions make the
planet of Spiradon feel even more dangerous.
There are some pieces of old-fashioned writing, especially with how Jo
is described, it is made up for in explanations about how Jo wanted to enter
UNIT and pulled strings to do so while the Doctor’s travels have put her in
danger. Because this was released after Doctor
Who and the Green Death I can’t imagine Dicks not drawing on Jo’s exit
being the next story chronologically. A
lot of her backstory is actually explained here and expanded upon from Terror
of the Autons putting a lot of the ideas of her uncle pulling strings to
get her with UNIT and the development of the Doctor and Jo’s relationship. Even some of the Thal’s get a few moments in
the spotlight to expand upon Thal society and the idea of the scientist being
the only scientist hits more in the novel because Dicks’ prose makes it intimate.
Overall, Doctor Who and the Planet of the Daleks
manages to improve on the television story, even if it is a bit out of date and
doesn’t necessarily do enough to rectify the fact that the story is a retread of
The Daleks. Dicks is brilliant as
a writer and it’s clear this is the version of the story that is in people’s
minds when they think about it. 7/10.
So what would you rate it out of 10?
ReplyDeleteLike a 7. Don’t know why that didn’t transfer over when I posted
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