Doctor Who/Recap/S15/E04 The Sun Makers

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< Doctor Who‎ | Recap‎ | S15


Cordo: Praise the company!
Mandrel: Stuff the company!

Doctor Who goes all political with this thinly-disguised allegory on the evils of income tax. The TARDIS arrives on the planet Pluto, which in the future has six suns, a breathable atmosphere and a thriving industrial base. "The Company" controls the entire planet and exploits the workers mercilessly, paying peanuts and taxing everything.

The Doctor and Leela contact the resistance, led by Mandrel, and learn that the workforce are being kept calm by a gas piped into the atmosphere. While The Company has a human representative in Gatherer Hade, it is in fact run by alien Usurians, noted for keeping planets in economic servitude.

The Doctor succeeds in switching off the calming gas and the workers rise up against The Company and kill the hated Gatherer Hade, while the Doctor does some computer jiggery-pokery to bankrupt it. The Usurian "Collector" is powerless to stop The Company going bust and reverts to his natural form - a harmless fungus.

Tropes

  • Absurdly Spacious Sewer: the undercity.
  • Author Tract: Writer Robert Holmes based this story on some of the troubles he was having with England's revenue office.[1] Some of the floors are numbered based on tax forms.
  • Badass Boast: Leela gets several, but most memorably when the Others threaten to kill her.

Leela: Before I die I'll see this rathole ankle deep in blood. That is a promised thing.

The Doctor (coming to grips): Perhaps everyone runs from the taxman.

The Collector: This is the moment when I get a real sense of job satisfaction!

  • Meaningful Name: The Usurians are usurers.
  • Mega Corp
  • Mister Big
  • Names to Run Away From Really Fast: Hade(s)
  • Nice Hat: Gatherer Hade wears one.
  • Only Electric Sheep Are Cheap: Gatherer Hade boasts a desk of real wood - most people only learn about trees in school - and members of the resistance are extremely impressed by Leela's skins.
  • Plant Aliens: The Usurians turn out to be a species of poisonous fungus.
  • La Résistance
  • Retroactive Recognition: Goudry is played by Michael Keating, better known for his later role as Vila Restal of Blake's 7.
  • The Revolution Will Not Be Villified: Initially subverted - the 'resistance' are depicted as brutal, self-interested and venal criminals out for themselves rather than any higher purpose until the Doctor effectively takes over.
  • Sauna of Death: Leela is captured and sentenced to death by "steaming."
  • Shout-Out: Leela's attempted execution contains visual references to Metropolis (the pod she's confined in, and the control panels). The opening shots of Cordo are a copy of the opening shots of Winston Smith in the famous 1950s BBC version of Nineteen Eighty-Four.
  • Smart People Play Chess: The Doctor plays chess with K-9. He's losing.
  • Spell My Name with a "The"
  • Stealth Insult: Gatherer Hade has an ostentatious manner of addressing The Collector (your Immensity, your Hugeness, your Supernal Eminence, etc), but as their relationship breaks down under the strain of events the honorifics become somewhat insulting, as in: "I fear the situation is worsening, your Grossness!"
  • Villainous Breakdown: The Collector, upon realizing the revolution has finally caught up with him, is reduced to a babbling wreck as he slowly (and literally) goes down the drain.
  • Visual Pun: when Leela is captured the Collector orders her status to be set as "pending". When we next see her she's hung on a wall.
  • Why Didn't You Just Say So?: After Leela attempts for several minutes to pull the Doctor's attention away from a riveting chess game:

Leela: Doctor, can I speak now?
The Doctor: What? All right, if you must. What is it?
Leela: Well, the column has stopped moving.
The Doctor: So?
Leela: It is not important?
The Doctor: WHAT?! We might have gone right through the time spiral, why didn't you tell me?
Leela: I tried to, but you wouldn't let me.
The Doctor: You didn't!
Leela: I did!

  1. Due to having been simultaneously paid by the BBC as a salaried worker in his role as script editor, and as a freelancer for the scripts he was credited writer on