Review by Matt Hills

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A Videographic ‘Recontextualisation of the Daleks’

Placing moments side by side from the black and white source-text Doctor Who serial and Dr. Who and the Daleks is an interesting decision – it certainly pays off in terms of decentring the supposedly ‘original’ text. Far lower resolution TV looks murky and diminished when its aspect ratio is set next to the filmic version, acting more like an echo or degraded copy than a point of origin. However, I do wonder whether the comparison between TV and film, and AV black and white and colour, marginalises the transmedial – or intermedial – array of Daleks which would have been in circulation in 1965.

Fans had the opportunity to encounter Daleks in colour comic strips on the back pages of TV Century 21, where black, red and blue variants had already been introduced ahead of the Subotsky movie, which was released on August 23rd, 1965. The ‘Duel of the Daleks’ (3rd April-15th May 1965) offered a curious origin story for a singular red Dalek, named Zeg, who had been transformed and newly empowered by an accident in the “inventions” lab. Provided accidentally with a coat of stronger armour, red Zeg was attacked, on the bulbous yellow Dalek Emperor’s orders, by his apparent hench-Dalek depicted in black (by contrast, standard worker Daleks were grey-ish blue; Zeg had been unwittingly transformed from this livery into vibrant red, as if becoming a kind of ‘superhero’ Dalek). The different colour scheme for Zeg, who then becomes embroiled in a duel with the Emperor over who should lead the Daleks, seems little more than a visual trick to allow this one Dalek to stand out distinctively in the comic’s frames. More problematically, perhaps, colour stands as a marker of supposedly inherent supremacy rather than mere hierarchy – red is stronger than black, and so a threat to the Emperor’s leadership (and Dalek social order tout court).

Promotion for Dr. Who and the Daleks in July 1965 would also see a colour still of Peter Cushing’s Doctor Who plus blue, red and black Daleks on the front cover of TV Century 21, whilst the colour ‘Daleks’ comic strip continued on the title’s full-colour back cover, making movie Daleks almost interchangeable with the brightly-depicted, stylised comic strip Daleks just as much as displacing their monochromatic TV forerunners.

Dr. Who and the Daleks has received relatively little scholarly attention, despite the mass of literature on Doctor Who as a whole, which is one reason to appreciate the focus of this specific videographic essay. However, fan-scholars (fans writing for an audience of fellow fans and drawing on broadly scholarly approaches) have dedicated analysis to the film, and to its use of colour. In About Time 6, Tat Wood observes – only perhaps somewhat facetiously – that the film’s Dalek City has a “predominant colour scheme” of “beige and salmon-pink. This reminds us of the fact that when this was made, prawn cocktail was considered the height of sophistication” (2007: 389). Adding colour to the world of the movie Daleks thus adds cultural-historical specificity in terms of colour’s connotations and associations – the Dalek City may be read not only as a matter of gaudiness, but also in relation to colour (and lifestyle) fashions of the time, possibly connoting a degree of ‘hip’ sophistication. Even the 1965 movie Daleks are “inordinately fond of lava-lamps” (ibid.), a point also made by fellow fan-scholar Philip Sandifer in TARDIS ERUDITORUM Volume 1: William Hartnell. Sandifer reads the movie’s use of colour as “not about realism, but about spectacle. Which is why Skaro is, in this film, a technicolour monument to retrofuturism, complete with lava lamps” (2011: 242)

Viewing full-colour Daleks as pop spectacle plays down the narrative and intertextual possibilities of their tonality, though. Wood argues that in Dr. Who and the Daleks, they are basically figured as “Bond villains… We’ve stepped into big-scale megalomaniacal technophilia. Whilst Skaro’s forests are rather 1950s mauve and lilac filigree, we’ve got chunky metallic doors that would be impressive in a model for Thunderbirds, but with real actors running up to them” (2007: 391). This suggests a further side-by-side comparison that it would be intriguing to explore, namely the imagery of Bond villains’ techno-coloured bases versus the 1965 Dalek City (by which point the first three Bond films had played at cinemas, with Thunderball to follow in late ‘65).

In summary, there is a tension between this essay’s statement – which rightly invokes the intermediality of merchandise and ‘Dalekmania’ – and its videographic presentation which remains fixed, textually, at the level of film and TV. Similarly, whilst fan-scholars have addressed a wider range of intertextualities, whether to food, fashion or the emergent James Bond franchise, this essay remains focused on Doctor Who in comparison with itself rather than with other British cinematic heroes of the moment (and beyond).

Of course, fans are perfectly happy to read Doctor Who intra-textually, as it’s their prime specialism, and Sandifer suggests that this “film is also where the dominant visual look of the Daleks comes from. If you’re wondering why the New Paradigm Daleks introduced in Victory of the Daleks [2010] look the way they do, go look at the poster for this movie” (2011: 242). Both the Daleks and the “gleaming blue TARDIS exterior” of the Steven Moffat era are noted as being “explicitly modelled on the movie” (Sandifer 2011: 243), with this feedback loop between 1960s colour film and 2010s TV being a spectacularly slow one, measured over the longue duree of a franchise’s self-mining. Setting the ‘Paradigm’ Daleks and Matt Smith TARDIS exterior against Dr. Who and the Daleks could also highlight the allure of the film for long-term fans – even whilst socially-organised fandom has bemoaned its changes to TV lore, and hence its non-canonicity, the colour and scale of the chunky movie Daleks appears to have exerted a hold on the fan imagination (and beyond – what with the 1960s Dalek movies being repeated on UK TV far more than any original TV stories, at least prior to the era of on-demand Who).

Expanding the videographic essay’s scope to become more diachronic in its Doctor Who intratextuality would thus open up some additional interesting possibilities, with Dalek shells from the movies moving back into the TV series at a certain moment, as well as the Daleks eventually being depicted in colour on TV, of course, albeit in ways that rendered them curiously grey and monochrome in iconic and militaristically Nazi-encoding instances such as 1975’s ‘Genesis of the Daleks’. There is a sense of bright fun to the colourful Daleks of the ‘65 film (even if Nazi symbolism remains hauntologically present), suggesting at least some of their ‘Dalekmania’ merchandising and commercial extra-textuality in comparison with the latter dourness and self-conscious seriousness of public service ‘Genesis’ (which is also arguably one reason why it has been so beloved by fans). Contrasting non-canonical Dr. Who and the Daleks with the hyper-canonical ‘Genesis of the Daleks’ would offer a further route, oddly, into the cultural-historical specificity of the 1965 movie Daleks as extra-textual kids’ playthings, sometimes implicitly rendered as textual objects of ‘play’, as for example in the film’s detailed focus on the TV story’s sequence where Ian gets inside a Dalek. But the playfulness of Johnston’s essay itself speaks to the Dalek as a cultural object which remains malleable and capable of sustaining new fan (and academic) thought experiments. Not necessarily aiming to be a ‘Resolution of the Daleks’, this essay nevertheless both examines and performs a thought-provoking ‘Recontextualisation of the Daleks’.

References:

Sandifer, Philip (2011) TARDIS ERUDITORUM Volume 1: William Hartnell Amazon, Marston Gate 

Wood, Tat (2007) About Time 6 Mad Norwegian Press, Illinois.