Jump to content

The Apocalypse Element

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Tom.Reding (talk | contribs) at 21:31, 4 February 2021 (+{{Authority control}} (1 ID from Wikidata), WP:GenFixes on). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Apocalypse Element
Album cover
Big Finish Productions audio drama
SeriesDoctor Who
Release no.11
FeaturingSixth Doctor
Evelyn Smythe
Romana
Written byStephen Cole
Directed byNicholas Briggs
Produced byGary Russell
Jason Haigh-Ellery
Executive producer(s)Jacqueline Rayner
Production code7CC
Length2 hrs
Release dateAugust 2000
Preceded byWinter for the Adept
Followed byThe Fires of Vulcan

The Apocalypse Element is a Big Finish Productions audio drama based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It forms the second serial in the Dalek Empire arc, following on from events in The Genocide Machine. The arc continues in The Mutant Phase and concludes in The Time of the Daleks.

Plot

At a conference on Archetryx between major temporal powers, the Sixth Doctor and Evelyn discover that Romana has been missing for twenty years and that the Daleks' newest weapon — the Apocalypse Element — threatens not only the Time Lords but the entire galaxy.

Cast

Notes

  • This is the first official appearance of Romana in a production since she left the Fourth Doctor and stayed in E-Space in Warriors' Gate. Later novels established that she returned to normal space, as well as returning to Gallifrey, where she eventually became President of the High Council. She returns in future plays such as Neverland, Zagreus and the Gallifrey series. The audio story The Chaos Pool shows her before she became President, but just after she returned from E-Space.
  • This story forms the second serial in the Dalek Empire arc, a storyline that started with the Seventh Doctor (The Genocide Machine), continues with the Fifth (The Mutant Phase) and concludes with the Eighth (The Time of the Daleks). Elements from these stories tie in with the Dalek Empire series.
  • This story attempts to explain why, in the 1996 Doctor Who television movie, the Eye of Harmony is opened with a human retinal pattern.
  • The Seriphia galaxy is cleansed of life in this story, as part of the Daleks' grand plan to usurp the galaxy without resistance. Although President Romana vowed to block the Daleks from taking Seriphia, by the time of the Dalek Empire spin-off series, Seriphia has become the Daleks' main powerbase. This would suggest that the turbulent political events in the Gallifrey audio series left Seriphia open to the Daleks.
  • An article by Russell T Davies in the Doctor Who Annual 2006 refers to the events of this story ("the Etra Prime Incident") as one of the opening skirmishes of the Time War.
  • Romana reassumes the Presidency of the High Council of Time Lords at the end of this story.
  • This story also introduces the Monan Host, one of several "temporal powers" in the Doctor Who universe who possess time travel technology. The politics of the temporal powers play a major role in the Gallifrey audio series, which centres around Romana's presidency.
  • Co-ordinator Vansell first appeared in The Sirens of Time and returns in Neverland and in the Doctor Who Unbound play, He Jests at Scars...