Cover of the 1976 Target novelization. (From On Target - Planet of the Daleks) |
Fortunately, the Doctor has a cunning plan to infiltrate the city, which is to capture a Dalek by shoving it into a molten ice pool (in an iconic moment -- well, iconic for me, at least, but that might just be because of the cover of the Target book) and then, er, recreate the part of The Daleks that they missed in episode three by having Rebec hide in the shell and lead the others into the base (though they'll be disguised as Spiridons rather than prisoners). Oh, and they're splitting up, so Jo and Latep are going to head to the ventilation shaft in case the other group doesn't make it. So the Doctor, Codal, and Taron (all in furs) head with Rebec (inside the Dalek) into the base, where they watch Wester enter the bacteria preparation room and foil their plan of biological warfare by pushing the cover off the glass container and releasing it into the atmosphere before the Daleks have distributed the antidote. A noble sacrifice, and after Wester dies we see his face -- which might suggest that invisibility for the Spiridons is a force of will rather than an innate property. (Sadly, it turns out he's just a white-face humanoid with a lumpy face.)
And then a Dalek sees a foot and realizes these aren't real Spiridons. Cliffhanger!
Episode six continues to remake The Daleks by having Rebec get out just in the nick of time before the Daleks destroy the captured shell -- a fact we only learn in the next scene ("Well, Rebec, it seems you stopped being a Dalek just in time"). They head inside the cooling chamber and barricade the door with random stuff, which leads to possibly the most ludicrous scene ever, as Daleks take turns ramming into this barricade at low speeds to try and break it down -- rather than, say, just blowing it up with their guns. But no, this indeed serves to delay the Daleks while the Doctor tries to find a good place to set the bomb.
The Dalek Supreme emerges from its spaceship. (Planet of the Daleks Episode Six) ©BBC |
There's not really anything particularly wrong with Planet of the Daleks, but there's nothing incredibly exciting either. Terry Nation hasn't written for the series since 1965, and so sometimes there's a sense that he's assuming nothing's changed since then. There are definitely moments where this feels more like a Hartnell story than a Pertwee one -- yes, obviously all the bits that are lifted from The Daleks, but also just in the way the story is paced and written. Unfortunately, it doesn't feel like one of the good Hartnells; it's more like a mix between the first couple episodes of The Daleks' Master Plan and the runaround latter episodes of The Daleks, with lots of traipsing through jungles and avoiding Dalek patrols. Remaking those Hartnell stories in color isn't necessarily the worst of sins, but there's nothing here to add to that. And worse, all the set-up that Frontier in Space gives this story is casually brushed aside to give us this fairly generic runaround. It's not a terrible story by any means (and it's entertaining for most of the time, even if not always for the right reasons), but it does feel rather like a pointless one.