Verity Lambert (1935–2007)
Autore di Doctor Who: The Beginning: An Unearthly Child / The Daleks / The Edge of Destruction
Sull'Autore
Fonte dell'immagine: wikimedia.org
Opere di Verity Lambert
Doctor Who: The Beginning: An Unearthly Child / The Daleks / The Edge of Destruction (1963) — Producer — 92 copie
Doctor Who: The Rescue [DVD] — Producer — 4 copie
Opere correlate
Doctor Who : A Celebration—Two Decades Through Time and Space (1983) — "How We Created Doctor Who" — 262 copie
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Data di nascita
- 1935-11-27
- Data di morte
- 2007-11-22
- Sesso
- female
- Nazionalità
- UK
- Luogo di nascita
- London, England, UK
- Attività lavorative
- film producer
- Premi e riconoscimenti
- Order of the British Empire
Utenti
Recensioni
Potrebbero anche piacerti
Autori correlati
Statistiche
- Opere
- 20
- Opere correlate
- 7
- Utenti
- 428
- Popolarità
- #57,056
- Voto
- 3.7
- Recensioni
- 9
- ISBN
- 15
The Doctor, his granddaughter, Susan, Ian, and Barbara Wright land on Captain Maitland's spaceship. There they find the crew somewhat the worse for wear. The Sensorites are an alien race who demonstrate an interesting long-distance communication method. They also manage to render the TARDIS useless in a way that wouldn't work with normal doors.
The Sensorites have good reason to distrust Terrans. Unfortunately, their City Administrator carries this to extremes. Had he succeeded in his plan for the Doctor and the others, he might well have doomed his race. (Note: I happen to prefer 'Terran' to 'Earthman', 'Earther', or 'Earthling'.)
In the ten years since they were first visited by Terrans, the Sensorites have been struck down with a deadly disease that kills within three days. The Doctor offers to help in exchange for his, his companions, and the space crews' freedom. The Doctor gets his first clue as to the cause when one of his own comes down with the disease.
This alien race has a caste system based upon abilities. There's no hint that caste is a matter of heredity. Apparently, there's no disgrace or shame involved in being in an ordinary caste. That they have family groups is known because one man's family group is held hostage. However, we do not learn if it's what we would consider immediate family or extended family.
The Sensorites' facial features do not vary as much as humans' do. In fact, from a distance even they have trouble telling each other apart except for items of clothing that indicate their jobs. For example, the First Elder wears two sashes. The Second Elder wears one. The fact that the Doctor, Susan, and the Terrans don't wear anything to indicate their jobs makes some of the Sensorites suspicious.
There's plenty of danger and suspense. Susan gets to demonstrate an unsuspected ability. She also describes a little of her home planet. Considering that we who have been brought up with blue skies, brown ground, and mostly green plant life tend to think of those three colors as generally going together, I wonder about the color tastes of someone brought up with a burnt orange sky and trees with bright silver leaves.
At one point the Doctor shares something that Beau Brummel told him. If you're a fellow American who isn't a fan of Georgette Heyer or other authors of Regency Romances (a period roughly from 1811 to 1820), Beau Brummel was the arbiter of men's fashions. Apparently he's the reason you guys got stuck with those plain dark suits for so long.
We're not told when or how the Sensorites' aqueduct was created, but I salute its makers. From what we learn about the Sensorites' weaknesses, those who created the aqueduct must have been extremely brave with loads of endurance.
This was the seventh storyline of the first season, originally broadcast in the summer of 1964. Good for writer Peter R. Newman for including a female space crew member only a year after Valentina Tereshkova had become the first woman in space. For the period, Barbara, Carol, and Susan don't do that bad.… (altro)