The Five Doctors was
written by Terrence Dicks, based on his story of the same name. It was the 81st story to be
novelized by Target Books.
When I took a look at Doctor
Who and the Giant Robot, I noted that Terrance Dicks only had two months to
novelize his scripts after the television story had finished its broadcast and
the book was published. Somehow there is
a novelization that has even less time between broadcast and
publication. The Five Doctors,
once again Terrance Dicks adapting his own script for the 20th
anniversary special, released officially on November 24, 1983, one day before
the premiere of the television special on November 25, 1983 on the BBC and one
day after the world premiere on US television on the actual 20th
anniversary of Doctor Who. This
means that the novelization would have had to have been written shortly after
the episode wrapped initial filming at the end of March of that year. This means that things that were added in
post-production, like the archival footage of William Hartnell in The Dalek
Invasion of Earth, is not present in the novelization while there are
scenes that were never filmed or were filmed differently like the abduction of
the Second Doctor and Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart being in an alley between
UNIT buildings instead of just out in the open.
It is honestly a miracle The
Five Doctors isn’t a total mess of a novelization. This is at least partially because Terrance
Dicks is adapting his own scripts, so he has the knowledge of what his script
was intending on television. It also
helps that Dicks adapts it to be breezy and quick, something that works for a
novelization of an anniversary special that on television was already a
celebration for the fans. It’s The
Five Doctors and it follows that plot incredibly well, converting almost
everything that makes the story work in the new medium. The conversion of the characters allows Dicks
to add a couple nice little bits of extra characterization when necessary, like
the decision to have much of the scene at the Tomb of Rassilon to be told
between Sarah Jane and Tegan, allowing the two companions to comment on the
action while sidelined. There is also
this nice added scene to see what Susan actually has been doing since The
Dalek Invasion of Earth, though her characterization through the portion
adapting the episode itself doesn’t always allow her to act as the character,
something Carole Ann Ford had more input in when filming. The same with the First Doctor who it seems
in television appearances not played by William Hartnell has this weird added
layer of sexism which somehow feels more out of place and more bold here than
in the televised adventure.
Overall, The Five
Doctors is genuinely one of those great little novelizations that is a very
quick read. There are a couple of
additions that help, a couple that hurt the story a little bit, but especially
for a book that had to be written and was published before the episode actually
aired, it’s a book you’ll have a good time with. 8/10.
No comments:
Post a Comment