Saturday, 5 October 2024

Doctor Who: The Masters of Luxor Review

Released in 2012, The Masters of
Luxor is another audio adventure in
Big Finish's third series of The Lost
Stories.
This legendary script was penned by 
Anthony Coburn in 1963 (adapted
here by Nigel Robinson) and features
the vocal talents of contemporary TV companions, William Russell and
Carole Ann Ford.
The full, and unedited scripts were
 first presented in 1992, by John
McElroy, the editor of Titan Books'
 Doctor Who: The Scripts.
Coburn's original documents were
only uncovered when the publishers
were researching his only televised serial, The Tribe of Gum (published in
1988).

"THE WAIT IS OVER... A dark and
silent planet. A magnificent crystal edifice, perched on a mountainside.
A legion of dormant robots, waiting for the signal to bring them back
 to life. The Doctor and his granddaughter Susan, and their reluctant
companions, Ian and Barbara, are about to unleash forces which will
threaten their very survival. Read for the first time the complete script
of this magnificent, but regrettably never produced Doctor Who story."

The back-cover blurb of this paperback script book previews one of
the earliest lost Doctor Who stories, and like the most of the William
Hartnell episodes, each instalment had individual titles: The Cannibal
FlowerThe Mockery of a ManA Light on the Dead PlanetTabon of
LuxorAn Infinity of Surprises, and The Flower Blooms.

The embryonic series was to open with The Giants (latterly Planet
of Giants) by C E Webber, followed by the six-part The Masters
of Luxor (initially titled The Robots), but ultimately both of these
scripts were abandoned in favour of 100,000 BC (aka The Tribe of
Gum then An Unearthly Child) and Terry Nation's The Daleks
(aka The Mutants) respectively. The rest, they say, is history.


SYNOPSIS

The crystal-city in which the TARDIS crew become trapped is in
fact an automated prison on one of Luxor's 700 satelites, in the
Primiddion galaxy.
The decadent Luxorite society was strictly ordered (effectively
enslaved by their own robots), and anyone who revolted against
the titular Masters was exiled to the prison-moon. The Masters
deemed the women of Luxor to be inferior, and any "imperfect"
female children were killed.
The rebels were then subjected to experimentation from Lord
Tabon, one of the Scientific Masters, in his quest to create the
 'Perfect One' in man's image. So both Tabon and his creation
(shades of Frankenstein) seem to have developed a God
complex, and this religious issue is touched upon in the scripts.
The Perfect One now seeks to drain the "flesh and blood" life-
force from the time-travellers too, particularly the elusive
"women". This idea is further explored in The Savages (1966).
Tabon's One has a liquid-metal cerebrum. When this Azzintium
cortex is solidified by making One immobile, an atomic device
linked to it's brain explodes and destroys the moon.

NOTES
  • this story immediately follows the events of The Tribe of Gum (Coal Hill Comprehensive, Kal and Za are all mentioned here)
  • the TARDIS can "free float" (ie. be manoeuvred "like a helicopter"), has a Fault Locator (seen in The Daleks, The Edge of Destruction and Planet of Giants), holds an "emergency" energy supply, is continually referred to as "she", possesses a kind of intuitive power, and is actually solar-powered
  • the moon is described as a "dead planet" (but this one is not radio- active like Skaro), and the prison is a very similar setting to the Dalek city, with it's surveillance cameras and mountain-side "back-door"
  • Barbara compares the city to the carnivorous cannibal flower, sucking the TARDIS' power away
  • the Doctor has a photographic memory, quotes Karl Marx, and embraces Tabon's religion
  • Susan is called Sue or Suzanne throughout the original scripts
  • the Doctor and Susan are not human (Ian and Barbara are "you Earth people") which ties in more with the pilot epiosde
  • cliffhanger recaps are absent from the scripts, and part six would have led directly into The Edge of Destruction
  • Coburn's scripts feature a hierarchy of robots: the "primitive" Mark One machines (which bow at commands, and seem incapable of speech); the more humanoid Mark Twos; the more advanced Derivitrons (one is even named, Proto); and their overall master, the human-like 'Perfect One' (programmed by Tabon)
  • these automata have a remarkable parallel to those central to The Robots of Death (1977) - here, the black Dum servants are the lowest ranked robots in their caste-system (they cannot speak), the green Vocs are superior to the Dums, whilst the silver Super Vocs control all other robots - the roboticist Dask (unmasked as Taren Capel, who was raised by robots and hates mankind) has reprogrammed all of the Sandminer's automata to obey his will

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