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Jon Pertwee
The Mind of Evil
Third Doctor Logo


Synopsis


The Master
The Master
 The Doctor and Jo are investigating a revolutionary new way of treating psychotic criminals at Stangmoor Prison - a machine invented by one Professor Keller that literally sucks the evil out of a man's brain. But when the process is complete, what is left behind - a saint or a simpleton?

 It transpires that Professor Keller is The Doctor's arch-enemy, the Master. The machine actually houses a deadly mind parasite that the Master has taken to Earth for his own evil ends. He intends to use it to sabotage the global peace conference UNIT is policing, thus bringing Earth to the brink of war. And when he takes over the prison and hijacks a missile that could wipe out half of Europe, it seems the cards are stacked firmly in his favour.

 Meanwhile, the mind parasite is growing stronger all the time, killing anyone in its path by making them experience that which they fear the most. Can The Doctor defeat both the Master and the parasite while preventing the world's major powers from embarking on all-out nuclear war?

Source: BBC VHS Video


General Information

Season: Eight
Production Code: FFF
Story Number: 56
Episode Numbers:283 - 288
Number of Episodes: 6
Percentage of Episodes Held:100%
Working Titles:"The Pandora Machine," "Man Hours", "The Pandora Box" and "The Pandora's Box"
Production Dates: October - December 1970
Broadcast Started: 30 January 1971
Broadcast Finished: 06 March 1971
Colour Status: Colour and B&W
Studio: BBC Television Centre (TC3 and TC6)
Location: Kent: Dover Castle, Whitfield and RAF Swingate (Dover), Alland Grange, RAF Manston (Ramsgate) and Pineham Road (Pineham).
London: Cornwall Gardens (Kensington).
Writer:Don Houghton
Director:Timothy Combe
Producer:Barry Letts
Script Editor:Terrance Dicks
Editors:Howard Billingham, Roger Harvey and Sam Upton
Production Assistant:John Griffiths
Assistant Floor Manager:Sue Hedden
Designer:Ray London
Costume Designer:Bobi Bartlett
Make-Up Designer:Jan Harrison
Cameramen:Fred Hamilton and Max Samett
Lighting:Eric Monk
Visual Effects:Jim Ward
Incidental Music:Dudley Simpson
Special Sounds (SFX Editor):Brian Hodgson
Studio Sounds:Chick Anthony
Title Sequence:Bernard Lodge and Ben Palmer
Title Music:Ron Grainer and the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. Arranged by Delia Derbyshire
Stunts/Action By: HAVOC
Number of Doctors: 1
The Doctor: Jon Pertwee (The Third Doctor)
Number of Companions: 4The Companions: Nicholas Courtney (The Brigadier), John Levene (Sergeant Benton), Katy Manning (Jo Grant) and Richard Franklin (Captain Mike Yates) Guest Cast: Roger Delgado (The Master) Additional Cast: Simon Lack (Professor Kettering), Pik-Sen Lim (Captain Chin Lee), Fernanda Marlowe (Corporal Bell), Michael Sheard (Dr. Summers), Raymond Westwell (Prison Governor), Neil McCarthy (Barnham), Clive Scott (Linwood), Roy Purcell (Chief Prison Officer Powers), Eric Mason (Senior Prison Officer Green), William Marlowe (Mailer), Haydn Jones (Vosper), Kristopher Kum (Fu Peng), Tommy Duggan (Charlie), David Calderisi (Senator Alcott), Patrick Godfrey (Major Cosworth), Johnny Barrs (Fuller), Bill Matthews (Prison Officer), Barry Wade (Prison Officer), Dave Carter (Prison Officer), Martin Gordon (Prison Officer), Matthew Walters (Main Gate Prisoner)Setting: Earth (1970s) Villain: The Master

The Episodes

No. Episodes Broadcast
(UK)
Duration Viewers
(Millions)
In Archive
283Episode 130 January 197124'39"6.116mm B&W telerecording
284Episode 206 February 197124'31"8.816mm B&W telerecording
285Episode 313 February 197124'30"7.516mm B&W telerecording
286Episode 420 February 197124'40"7.416mm B&W telerecording
287Episode 527 February 197123'34"7.616mm B&W telerecording
288Episode 606 March 197124'48"7.316mm B&W telerecording

Total Duration 2 Hours 27 Minutes


Audience Appreciation

Average Viewers (Millions) 7.4
Doctor Who Magazine Poll (1998)70.53%  (Position = 65 out of 159)
Doctor Who Magazine Poll (2009)71.34% Higher (Position = 92 out of 200)
Doctor Who Magazine Poll (2014)75.29% Higher (Position = 76 out of 241)
Doctor Who Magazine Poll (2023) Position = 14 out of 24


Archives


 All six episodes exist only as 16mm black & white telerecordings. Approximately 4.5 minutes of colour footage exists from the opening of episode 6.



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Notes


Roger Delgado, who plays The Master, did not appear in the first episode.

Chinn Lee, who played the part of Pik Sen-Lim, was the wife of writer Don Houghton, who also wrote "Inferno".

This story contains the first use of on-screen subtitles in Doctor Who (not counting the silent film style caption cards displayed in the "The Daleks' Master Plan" episode "The Feast of Steven") as The Doctor converses with the Chinese delegate Fu Peng in Hokkien.

This story features a guest appearance by Michael Sheard who is more famous for playing the part of Mr. Bronson in the children’s school drama Grange Hill. Michael Sheard would return to Doctor Who four more times; as Laurence Scarman in the 1975 Fourth Doctor story "Pyramids of Mars", as Supervisor Lowe in the 1977 story "The Invisible Enemy", as Mergrave in the 1982 Fifth Doctor story "Castrovalva" and as the headmaster in the 1988 Seventh Doctor story "Remembrance of the Daleks".

The Doctor describes UNIT as having been set up to 'deal with new and unusual menaces to mankind'. It is providing security for the First World Peace Conference. Despite the attacks on the Chinese and American delegates, it will retain the job for the second conference in "Day of the Daleks".

The Brigadier and Captain Mike Yates are heard to use call signs 'Jupiter' and 'Venus'. The Brigadier's helicopter has the call sign 'Windmill 347'. Two new members of UNIT appear: Corporal Bell, The Brigadier's female adjutant (who is also in "The Claws of Axos"), and Major Cosworth. Corporal Bell was originally meant to recur throughout several stories.

When Jo Grant beats The Doctor at draughts, he says that the game is 'too simple'. He prefers three dimensional chess.

The first time The Doctor is mentally attacked, the Keller machine focuses on the recent events that occurred when The Doctor witnessed the destruction of the alternate Earth in "Inferno". He tells Jo as he recovers, ‘Not long ago I saw an entire world consumed by fire…’.

On the next two occasions, the machine selects a checklist of his foes. These included a Dalek ("The Dalek Invasion of Earth"), Koquillion ("The Rescue"), Ice Lord Slaar ("The Seeds of Death"), a Zarbi ("The Web Planet"), a War Machine ("The War Machines"), a Silurian ("Doctor Who and the Silurians"), an Ice Warrior ("The Seeds of Death") and a Cyberman ("The Invasion"). For this series of mental images yanked from The Doctor's mind BBC publicity photographs were used. During these hallucinations, Dalek voices are heard chanting for subjugation, extermination, and destruction. Also considered, for this sequence, but unused were the Slyther ("The Dalek Invasion of Earth"), the Servo Robot ("The Wheel in Space") and a Sensorite ("The Sensorites").

An insight into The Master's motivation and his relationship with The Doctor is given when the Mind Parasite turns on him and attacks him with images to evoke his deepest fear: The Master is confronted with and recoils from images of a gigantic Doctor towering over him and laughing maniacally down at him. In "The Sound of Drums/Last of the Time Lords", the Tenth Doctor is infused with psychic energy and towers over The Master, who cowers in fear.

For the filming of the hijacking of the Thunderbolt missile the production office had been able to secure the loan of a real (but unprimed) Thunderbird 2 SAGW missile from the 36th Heavy Air Defence Regiment out of Horseshoe Barracks in Shoeburyness, Essex, in addition to a number of troops who would play The Master's men (eight marines had also been made available for the Dover Castle sequences). Unfortunately, the soldiers were dressed in military raiment rather than convict garb, prompting Script Editor Terrance Dicks to add a line in episode five wherein Captain Mike Yates explains that the criminals had been wearing fake uniforms.

Portions of this story, primarily for those portraying Stangmoor Prison, were filmed in and around Dover Castle; additionally, some location footage had to be re-filmed due to damage to the negatives, such as fight scenes which included members of the crew on camera.

Due to a number of extra expenses - most notably the additional day filming at Dover Castle and the last-minute addition of the helicopter to the climax of episode six - pushed the already costly "The Mind of Evil" well over-budget. Consequently Producer Barry Letts elected not to use Director Timothy Combe again on future Doctor Who stories. Timothy Combe went on to work on programmes such as Z Cars and The Brothers.

"The Mind of Evil" was also Don Houghton's final contribution to Doctor Who. Soon thereafter, he joined Hammer Films as a writer and producer, contributing scripts to a number of movies such as The Satanic Rites of Dracula. For television, he wrote episodes for programmes including Sapphire and Steel and created the Scottish soap opera Take the High Road.

"The Mind of Evil" is unique amongst the Third Doctor stories in that the BBC holds no complete colour copies of any of its episodes. Three short clips (totalling four and a half minutes) of restored colour footage from the opening of episode six does exists based on an off-air domestic NTSC recording retrieved from America. No complete recordings of this story have been located yet to enable a full re-colourisation to be made.

A black and white version of this story was released on VHS video in May 1988. This release included the four and a half minutes of restored colour footage, from the opening of episode six, as a bonus extra after the story.



First and Last

The Firsts:

 The first use of on-screen subtitles in Doctor Who.

 The first time we witness The Doctor being mentally attacked


The Lasts (Subject to Future Stories):

 Writer Don Houghton's last contribution to the show.


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The Plot

WARNING: May Contain SpoilersHide Text
The Master
The Master

The Doctor and his companion, Jo Grant, have been invited to Stangmoor Prison to observe a demonstration of a new device for treating hardened criminals, the Keller Machine - a device claimed to be capable of extracting negative emotions. The Doctor though is highly sceptical of the process. And this seems valid when a prisoner collapses during the demonstration whilst undergoing the treatment. The Doctor’s suspicions about the Keller Machine are heightened even further when it is revealed that there have been a string of deaths which all seem to occur when the Keller Machine is operated. Each death seems to be triggered by visions of personal phobias. Even The Doctor is affected when he gets too close to it. What The Doctor does not know, yet, is that the brains behind the Keller Machine, Emil Keller, is non other than The Master.

Meanwhile, The Brigadier is in charge of security at the first World Peace Conference. During which he is informed, by the Chinese delegation, that important documents have been stolen. But actually Captain Chin Lee, of the Chinese delegation, seems to be behaving strangely in an attempt to heighten tension in relations with the United States. Then the Chinese delegate dies in mysterious circumstances.

As well as looking after the security for the World Peace Conference, The Brigadier has delegated, to Captain Mike Yates, the responsibility to safely transport a banned nuclear powered missile with a warhead full of nerve gas, called the Thunderbolt, across the country so that it can be destroyed.

The Doctor
The Doctor

Back at the prison, while checking the Keller Machine, Professor Kettering, who is looking after the Keller Machine in the absence of Emil Keller, is killed when the machine suddenly becomes active. It is discovered, that he died due to drowning – something it seems Professor Kettering was terrified of. Realising that the Keller Machine is dangerous The Doctor insists that the machine must be destroyed but this is prevented by the Prisoner Governor who claims that he needs permission from the Home Office to do this.

The Doctor is then urgently summoned back to UNIT Headquarters, to assist The Brigadier with the unexplained death of the Chinese delegate. He leaves Jo Grant behind with orders that no one is to go near the machine. However, soon after leaving a riot breaks out and Jo is briefly taken hostage, but she is able to help the guards to retake the prison. But this return to order is short lived as The Master then arrives and helps the prisoners to retake control of the prison again.

The Doctor and The Brigadier
The Doctor and The Brigadier

When The Doctor returns to the prison he is captured by The Master, who sets the Keller Machine loose on him, weakening The Doctor considerably. However, The Master is losing control of the Keller Machine, which contains a dangerous alien Mind Parasite, and so is forced to persuade The Doctor to help him contain its power.

What The Doctor and UNIT do not know is The Master has come to Stangmoor Prison to engage the prisoners as a private army which he then uses to hijack the UNIT convoy transporting the deadly Thunderbolt missile as it passes close to the prison. The missile is hijacked and Captain Mike Yates is captured after he follows the missile to an abandoned airfield. On learning of the loss of the missile The Brigadier tries to locate it by helicopter but fails. With the deadly missile now in The Master’s control he has it aimed at the Peace Conference – which he plans to disrupt and so cause a huge diplomatic incident.

Realising what The Master has done The Brigadier and UNIT troops re-take control of the prison, assuming that The Master must have taken the Thunderbolt missile there. But once the prison is under UNIT control it is discovered that the missile is not there. However, Captain Mike Yates, after he manages to escape from captivity, notifies The Brigadier that the Thunderbolt is being kept in an abandoned hangar at a nearby airfield. The Brigadier sets off to retrieve the missile but he soon discovers that The Master has disabled the abort mechanism on the missile so that when The Brigadier tries to destroy it nothing happens.

Jo Grant with Sergeant Benton
Jo Grant with Sergeant Benton

Back at the prison the Keller Machine is growing stronger and it soon breaks free of the temporary restraints placed on it by The Doctor. It now has sufficient power to move at random about attacking anyone it finds, leaving them dead. However, The Doctor and Jo discover that the presence of one of the prisoners, Barnham, inhibits the machine as he no longer has any evil for it to feed off.

The Master then contacts The Doctor. He wants a deal: his dematerialisation circuit, that The Doctor stole from his TARDIS, for the missile. With time running out The Doctor is forced to agree to meet him at the airfield. The Doctor though has realised that he can use the Keller machine against The Master. He uses Barnham as a shield so that he can transport the machine to the airfield. There he uses the machine to distract The Master so he can re-connect the missile’s abort mechanism. The Master though is able to escape from the machine’s attacks and drives off in the prison van. With The Master out of the way The Brigadier is able to blow up the missile, hopefully along with the Keller Machine.

Back at the prison, The Doctor is annoyed that The Master now has a fully working TARDIS again while he is still stuck on Earth. To make matters worse The Master phones The Doctor to taunt him with the promise that he will return to destroy the Earth one day.

 
Captain Mike Yates
Captain Mike Yates
The Doctor and Jo Locked Up
The Doctor and Jo Locked Up
The Brigadier
The Brigadier
The Thunderbolt
The Thunderbolt
 
The Keller Machine
The Keller Machine
The Keller Machine Attacks The Master
The Keller Machine Attacks The Master
Captain Chin Lee
Captain Chin Lee
The Master, Jo and The Doctor
The Master, Jo and The Doctor

Due to the loss of most of the colour footage for this story B&W photos have had to be used for some of the above screenshots.




Quote of the Story


 'People who talk about infallibility are usually on very shaky ground.'

The Doctor



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Release Information

FormatTitleRelease Date (UK)Code NumberCover ArtRemarks
Audio
LP
Sounds From... EMS19727" LP from Electronic Music Studios Includes "Dover Castle" arranged by Dudley Simpson
Audio
LP
BBC Radiophonic Workshop-21197912" LP from BBC Records Includes "Minds of Evil" arranged by Dudley Simpson
Video
VHS
The Mind of EvilMay 1998BBCV 6361Photo-montageReleased as a two-tape set in black and white as no colour masters exist The sole existing colour clip from episode 6 is included at the end of the release
Audio
CD
Doctor Who at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop Volume Two - New Beginnings 1970-1980May 2005WMSF 6024-2Music and sound effects
Audio
CD
The Mind of EvilFebruary 2009Photo-montageNarrated by Richard Franklin (Captain Mike Yates) Double CD Release Includes a bonus interview with Richard Franklin
Video
DVD
The Mind of EvilJune 2013BBCDVD 3269Photo-montage
Audio
CD
The 50th Anniversary CollectionDecember 2013Photo-montageOriginal Television Soundtracks
Audio
CD
Classic TV Adventures - Collection TwoOctober 2017Photo-montagePart of the "Classic TV Adventures Collection Two" Box Set Narrated by Richard Franklin (Captain Mike Yates)
Video
Blu-Ray
Doctor Who: The Collection - Season 8 (Limited Edition)March 2021BBCBD 0506Photo-montageBlu-Ray Limited Edition boxed set containing 5 specially restored stories
Video
Blu-Ray
Doctor Who: The Collection - Season 8 (Standard Edition)November 2022BBCBD 0564Photo-montageBlu-Ray Standard Edition boxed set containing 5 specially restored stories


In Print

FormatTitleRelease Date (UK)PublisherAuthorCover ArtRemarks
Novel
Novel
The Mind of EvilJuly 1985Target No. 96Terrance DicksAndrew SkilleterISBN: 0-426-20166-3
Novel
Novel
The Mind of Evil1985Target No. 96Terrance DicksBook: Andrew Skilleter
Box: Andrew Skilleter
Re-released as part of The Eighth Doctor Who Gift Set
ISBN: 0-426-20207-4
Novel
Novel
The Mind of Evil1986Target No. 96Terrance DicksBook: Andrew Skilleter
Box: Photo
Re-released as part of The Doctor Who Gift Set
ISBN: 0-426-32410-8
Novel
Novel
Doctor Who Classics: The Mind of Evil & The Claws of AxosMarch 1989Star BooksTerrance DicksAndrew SkilleterDouble story release.
ISBN: 0-352-32381-7
CD
CD
The Mind of EvilApril 2017Target No. 96Terrance DicksAndrew SkilleterAudio version of the Target Novel read by Richard Franklin (Captain Mike Yates).
Doctor Who CMS Magazine (An Adventure in Space and Time)Issue 56
Doctor Who Monthly - ArchiveIssue 65 (Released: June 1982)
Doctor Who Magazine - ArchiveIssue 208 (Released: January 1994)
Doctor Who Magazine - Time TeamIssue 325 (Released: January 2003)
Doctor Who Magazine - Time TeamIssue 326 (Released: February 2003)
Doctor Who Magazine - The Fact of FictionIssue 451 (Released: October 2012)
Doctor Who DVD FilesVolume 143 (Released: June 2014)

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Photo Gallery


The Doctor and Companions

 
Jon Pertwee
The Third Doctor

   

Nicholas Courtney
The Brigadier
John Levene
Sergeant Benton
Katy Manning
Jo Grant
   
Richard Franklin
Captain Mike Yates





On Release

Audio LP - Sounds From... EMS Cover
Audio LP - Sounds From... EMS Cover

Electronic Music Studios
AUDIO
BBC Radiophonic Workshop 21 Cover
BBC Radiophonic Workshop 21 Cover

BBC
AUDIO
VHS Video Cover
VHS Video Cover

BBC
VIDEO
Audio - Volume 2: New Beginnings
Audio - Volume 2: New Beginnings

BBC
AUDIO
   
Soundtrack CD Cover
Soundtrack CD Cover

BBC
AUDIO
DVD Cover
DVD Cover

BBC
VIDEO
The 50th Anniversary Collection Cover
The 50th Anniversary Collection Cover

BBC
AUDIO
Classic TV Adventures Collection Two CD Cover
Classic TV Adventures Collection Two CD Cover

BBC
AUDIO
   
The Collection Season 8 Limited Edition Blu-Ray Cover
The Collection Season 8 Limited Edition Blu-Ray Cover

BBC
VIDEO
The Collection Season 8 Standard Edition Blu-Ray Cover
The Collection Season 8 Standard Edition Blu-Ray Cover

BBC
VIDEO



In Print

Target Book Cover
Target Book Cover

Target
NOVEL
The Eighth Doctor Who Gift Set
The Eighth Doctor Who Gift Set

Target
NOVEL
The Doctor Who Gift Set
The Doctor Who Gift Set

Target
NOVEL
Doctor Who Classics Cover
Doctor Who Classics Cover

Star Books
NOVEL
   
Target Audio CD Cover
Target Audio CD Cover

BBC
CD



Magazines

Doctor Who CMS Magazine (An Adventure in Space and Time): Issue 56
Doctor Who CMS Magazine (An Adventure in Space and Time): Issue 56

CMS
Doctor Who Monthly - Archive: Issue 65
Doctor Who Monthly - Archive: Issue 65

Marvel Comics
Doctor Who Magazine - Archive: Issue 208
Doctor Who Magazine - Archive: Issue 208

Marvel Comics
Doctor Who Magazine - Time Team: Issue 325
Doctor Who Magazine - Time Team: Issue 325

Marvel Comics
   
Doctor Who Magazine - Time Team: Issue 326
Doctor Who Magazine - Time Team: Issue 326

Marvel Comics
Doctor Who Magazine - The Fact of Fiction: Issue 451
Doctor Who Magazine - The Fact of Fiction: Issue 451

Marvel Comics
Doctor Who DVD Files: Volume 143
Doctor Who DVD Files: Volume 143

GE Fabbri


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