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词条 The Trial of a Time Lord
释义

  1. Synopsis

  2. Casting

      Main cast   Recurring stars  

  3. Serials

  4. Preproduction

     Original Season 23  Planned serials  Revised Season 23 

  5. Production

  6. Reception and analysis

     Reviews 

  7. Commercial releases

     Home media  In print  "The Missing Episodes"  The Trial of a Time Lord 

  8. Notes

  9. References

  10. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2015}}{{Use British English|date=September 2011}}{{Infobox television season
| show_name = Doctor Who
| season_name = The Trial of a Time Lord
| season_type = season
| season_number = 23
| bgcolour = #0E1622
| image =
| image_alt =
| caption = Cover of the 2008 Region 2 DVD release.
| starring = {{Unbulleted list|Colin Baker|Nicola Bryant|Bonnie Langford}}
| country = United Kingdom
| num_episodes = 14
| network = BBC One
| first_aired = {{start date|1986|9|6|df=y}}
| last_aired = {{end date|1986|12|6|df=y}}
| episode_list = List of Doctor Who episodes (1963–1989)
}}

The Trial of a Time Lord is a 14-part science fiction serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. The serial, produced as the show's twenty-third season, aired in weekly episodes from 6 September to 6 December 1986. The only Doctor Who presentation of its kind, it contains four adventures: The Mysterious Planet, Mindwarp, Terror of the Vervoids, and The Ultimate Foe – Colin Baker's final story.

The idea for the serial stemmed from several production changes to Doctor Who, such as reduced screen time for the season and a request from BBC controller Michael Grade that the series contain less violence and more humour.[1] Several problems occurred during production, including the death of scriptwriter Robert Holmes, and the resignation of script editor Eric Saward. This was the last serial to star Colin Baker because he was dismissed from the role when it ended.[2]

Synopsis

In the serial, the Sixth Doctor is tried by the High Council of Time Lords for breaking several of the laws of Gallifrey, the Time Lords' home world, including interference with outside worlds and genocide. A mysterious character called the Valeyard acts as prosecutor. In the first two chapters (The Mysterious Planet and Mindwarp) events from the Doctor's past and present are submitted as evidence of his guilt. The third chapter (Terror of the Vervoids) presents future events in the Doctor's defence. In the concluding chapter (The Ultimate Foe) the Doctor's trial is halted, and the Doctor confronts the Valeyard and his old rival, the Master, in order to clear his name and to save the High Council.

Casting

{{See also|List of Doctor Who cast members}}

Main cast

  • Colin Baker as the Sixth Doctor
  • Nicola Bryant as Peri Brown
  • Bonnie Langford as Melanie Bush
Colin Baker makes his final appearance as the Doctor in this longest-running serial before being fired by the BBC.[2]

Nicola Bryant departs as Peri Brown in Mindwarp.

Bonnie Langford makes her debut as the Doctor's future companion Melanie Bush in Terror of the Vervoids.

Recurring stars

  • Michael Jayston as the Valeyard
  • Lynda Bellingham as the Inquisitor
  • Anthony Ainley as The Master
  • Tony Selby as Sabalom Glitz

Michael Jayston and Lynda Bellingham both appeared throughout the whole serial, the former as the Valeyard and the latter as the Inquisitor. Tony Selby appears as Glitz in The Mysterious Planet and The Ultimate Foe. Anthony Ainley returns as the Master in The Ultimate Foe.

Serials

{{See also|List of Doctor Who episodes (1963–1989)}}

The series remained at once-weekly Saturday broadcasts. All episodes were 25 minutes long, with the exception of Part 14, which ran for 28 minutes. This unique running time was the result of a plea by John Nathan-Turner to his superiors at the BBC that the serial's final episode needed the additional three minutes to conclude the story properly. Although there were now 14 episodes in the season, the total running time was significantly reduced since the episodes were just over half as long.

{{#invoke:Episode table|main |background=#0E1622 |overall=5 |season=5 |title=15 |aux1=16 |director=12 |writer=13 |airdate=15 |prodcode=6 |viewers=10 |aux4=3 |country=UK |overallT=Story |seasonT=Serial |titleT=Serial title |aux1T=Episode titles


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|episodes ={{#invoke:Episode list|sublist |The Trial of a Time Lord
| Serial = yes
| NumParts = 4
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| EpisodeNumber2 = 1
| RTitle = The Mysterious Planet
| Aux1_1 = "Part One"
| Aux1_2 = "Part Two"
| Aux1_3 = "Part Three"
| Aux1_4 = "Part Four"
| DirectedBy = Nicholas Mallett
| WrittenBy = Robert Holmes
| OriginalAirDate_1 = {{Start date|1986|9|6|df=y}}
| OriginalAirDate_2 = {{Start date|1986|9|13|df=y}}
| OriginalAirDate_3 = {{Start date|1986|9|20|df=y}}
| OriginalAirDate_4 = {{Start date|1986|9|27|df=y}}
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| Viewers_1 = 4.9
| Viewers_2 = 4.9
| Viewers_3 = 3.9
| Viewers_4 = 3.7
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| Aux4_2 = 69
| Aux4_3 = 70
| Aux4_4 = 72
| ShortSummary = The Doctor's TARDIS is plucked out of time and space. The Sixth Doctor is charged with breaking the First Law of Time by the High Council of Gallifrey, a law forbidding interference in alien worlds and galactic affairs. The Valeyard presents the transgressions on a video screen, depicting the Doctor’s past adventures with companion Peri Brown. The Doctor becomes suspicious about evidence being censored. In the first flashback, the Doctor and Peri arrive on the tribal planet Ravalox, located two light years from Earth's known location. The Doctor notes a similarity between Ravalox and Earth, with objects from Earth—notably Marble Arch tube station and the novel Moby Dick—present on Ravalox. The only apparent astronomical difference between the two is Ravalox's position in the galaxy. Rogue Sabalom Glitz attempts to obtain secrets and technology that are guarded by a robot. The Doctor is forced to deactivate the robot’s unstable power supply to avoid a chain reaction, but in the process the secrets are destroyed. As he leaves Ravalox, the Doctor wonders why Earth appears to have been moved several million light-years from its original position.
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}}{{#invoke:Episode list|sublist |The Trial of a Time Lord
| Serial = yes
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| EpisodeNumber2 = 2
| RTitle = Mindwarp
| Aux1_1 = "Part Five"
| Aux1_2 = "Part Six"
| Aux1_3 = "Part Seven"
| Aux1_4 = "Part Eight"
| DirectedBy = Ron Jones
| WrittenBy = Philip Martin
| OriginalAirDate_1 = {{Start date|1986|10|4|df=y}}
| OriginalAirDate_2 = {{Start date|1986|10|11|df=y}}
| OriginalAirDate_3 = {{Start date|1986|10|18|df=y}}
| OriginalAirDate_4 = {{Start date|1986|10|25|df=y}}
| ProdCode = 7B
| Viewers_1 = 4.8
| Viewers_2 = 4.6
| Viewers_3 = 5.1
| Viewers_4 = 5.0
| Aux4_1 = 71
| Aux4_2 = 69
| Aux4_3 = 66
| Aux4_4 = 72
| ShortSummary = The Valeyard presents his second piece of evidence for the prosecution, the Doctor and Peri's activities on Thoros Beta, immediately before the trial. The flashback shows the Doctor investigating arms sales, where he sees his old adversary Sil. Sil's race, the Mentors, are revealed to have been supplying Yrcanos, the local king of a Viking-like primitive culture, with advanced weaponry. Meanwhile, a scientist, Crozier, is preparing for surgery on Kiv, an influential Mentor whose brain is expanding. The Doctor is portrayed as self-serving and unconcerned with Peri's welfare during the flashback, as he appears to help Crozier and the Mentors by abandoning and betraying Peri and Yrcanos. This uncharacteristic behaviour convinces the Doctor that the evidence has been altered. When the Doctor learns that Peri has been chosen as the new host for Kiv's brain, he allies with Yrcanos to kill the Mentors. However, before he can attack he is captured by the High Council, resulting in Peri's 'death'.
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| EpisodeNumber2 = 3
| RTitle = Terror of the Vervoids
| Aux1_1 = "Part Nine"
| Aux1_2 = "Part Ten"
| Aux1_3 = "Part Eleven"
| Aux1_4 = "Part Twelve"
| DirectedBy = Chris Clough
| WrittenBy = Pip and Jane Baker
| OriginalAirDate_1 = {{Start date|1986|11|1|df=y}}
| OriginalAirDate_2 = {{Start date|1986|11|8|df=y}}
| OriginalAirDate_3 = {{Start date|1986|11|15|df=y}}
| OriginalAirDate_4 = {{Start date|1986|11|22|df=y}}
| ProdCode = 7C
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| Viewers_2 = 4.6
| Viewers_3 = 5.3
| Viewers_4 = 5.3
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| Aux4_2 = 69
| Aux4_3 = 69
| Aux4_4 = 69
| ShortSummary = The Doctor is now allowed to present evidence for his defence. He chooses events from the future, in hopes that it will prove he has reformed after the Thoros-Beta incident. During the presentation, some details appear altered from what the Doctor reviewed, furthering his suspicions that evidence is being tampered with. In the year 2986, the Doctor and his new companion Mel answer a distress call from the interstellar ship Hyperion III. The ship is sabotaged and people are dying at the hands of the Vervoids, plant-like humanoids who the Doctor learns were genetically engineered to be slaves. Although the Doctor and Mel are able to stop the Vervoids, he admits that none of the Vervoids survived the voyage. The Valeyard—under Article 7 of Gallifreyan law—charges the Doctor with genocide.
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}}{{#invoke:Episode list|sublist |The Trial of a Time Lord
| Serial = yes
| NumParts = 2
| EpisodeNumber = 143d
| EpisodeNumber2 = 4
| RTitle = The Ultimate Foe
| Aux1_1 = "Part Thirteen"
| Aux1_2 = "Part Fourteen"
| DirectedBy = Chris Clough
| WrittenBy_1 = Robert Holmes
| WrittenBy_2 = Pip and Jane Baker
| OriginalAirDate_1 = {{Start date|1986|11|29|df=y}}
| OriginalAirDate_2 = {{Start date|1986|12|6|df=y}}
| ProdCode = 7C
| Viewers_1 = 4.4
| Viewers_2 = 5.6
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| ShortSummary = The Doctor claims that the Matrix has been deliberately altered, and the Keeper of the Matrix is summoned. Seconds later, the Master appears on the Matrix's screen. Sabalom Glitz and Mel are then called as witnesses to the Doctor's defence. The secrets Glitz sought had been stolen from the Time Lords, and Earth was ravaged and moved to preserve them. The Doctor was used as a scapegoat, and the Valeyard—an amalgam of the Doctor's evil personalities from between his twelfth and final incarnation—was offered the Doctor's remaining regenerations. To ensure a guilty verdict, the Valeyard distorted the evidence. The Doctor's attempts to prevent the Valeyard from killing the High Council are stopped by the Master, who wants to dispose of the Doctor. The Doctor defeats the Valeyard by destroying the Matrix archive. The Inquisitor clears the Doctor of all charges and offers him the presidency, which he declines, claiming she should stand instead. The Inquisitor informs The Doctor that Peri is not dead, but alive and well and has become the Warrior Queen Consort of King Yrcanos. After the Doctor and Mel leaves, she asks the Keeper of the Matrix to make repairs to the Matrix, who reveals his face to be the Valeyard's…
| LineColor = 0E1622
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}}

Preproduction

Original Season 23

The change of format that Doctor Who had undergone in Season 22 (45-minute episodes, moving back to one episode per week on Saturday evenings) had been reasonably successful, with ratings around the 6–8 million mark.{{citation needed|date=December 2018}} As such, the production team began preparations for Season 23 in the same format, with a total of 13 episodes spread over six stories, with five 2-episode serials and one of 3 episodes. A number of storylines were submitted, with six eventually being commissioned between September 1984 and February 1985. However, in February 1985, the BBC announced that, as a cost-cutting measure owing to the costs of several large projects (not least of which was the launch of EastEnders), Season 23 was being put back from its planned transmission in January 1986 to the following September, which would be a different financial year.

Planned serials

{{Episode list
Story numberNo of EpisodesTitleWritten by
EpisodeNumber = 1EpisodeNumber2 = 2RTitle = The Nightmare FairWrittenBy = Graham WilliamsShortSummary = Written by former producer Graham Williams, this two-part story was commissioned on 25 September 1984 as Arcade[3] and was planned to open the original 23rd series.[4] Nathan-Turner hoped to have Matthew Robinson direct the adventure.[5] Williams wrote a novelisation of the script which was published by Target Books in May 1989. It was later adapted by John Ainsworth for Big Finish Productions as part of their The Lost Stories series in November 2009.LineColor = 0E1622
}}{{Episode list
EpisodeNumber = 2EpisodeNumber2 = 2RTitle = The Ultimate EvilWrittenBy = Wally K. DalyShortSummary = Written by Wally K. Daly, this two-part story was planned to be the second story in the original 23rd series.[4] Nathan-Turner hoped to have Fiona Cumming direct the adventure.[5] Daly novelised the script which was published by Target Books in August 1989. An audiobook of this novelisation, read by Daly himself, was released by the RNIB in March 2010.LineColor = 0E1622
}}{{Episode list
EpisodeNumber = 3EpisodeNumber2 = 2RTitle = Mission to MagnusWrittenBy = Philip MartinShortSummary = Written by Philip Martin, this two-part story was planned to be the third story in the original 23rd series.[6] Nathan-Turner hoped to have Ron Jones direct the adventure.[5] Martin wrote a novelisation of the script which was published by Target Books in July 1990. It was later adapted by Martin for Big Finish as part of their The Lost Stories series in December 2009.LineColor = 0E1622
}}{{Episode list
EpisodeNumber = 4EpisodeNumber2 = 3RTitle = Yellow Fever and How to Cure ItWrittenBy = Robert HolmesShortSummary = Yellow Fever and How to Cure It was a three-part story by Robert Holmes that would have taken place in Singapore and featured the Autons as the monsters, with either the Rani or the Master appearing.[6] The first episode was commissioned on 26 October 1984, before being put on hold.[6] The entire story was subsequently commissioned on 6 February 1985,[6] only a couple of weeks before news of the planned hiatus broke. Nathan-Turner hoped to have Graeme Harper direct the adventure.[5] After the news of the hiatus, Holmes was asked by the production team to continue with the story but as six 25-minute episodes,[6] this version seeing the removal of the Master from the plot.[7] Holmes reportedly only completed a story outline before the planned Series 23 was completely cancelled.[8]LineColor = 0E1622
}}{{Episode list
EpisodeNumber = 5EpisodeNumber2 = 2RTitle = In the Hollows of TimeWrittenBy = Christopher H. BidmeadShortSummary = Commissioned as a two-part story from ex-script editor Christopher H. Bidmead on 21 November 1984.[6] After the news of the hiatus, Bidmead was asked by the production team to continue with the story but as four 25-minute episodes.[6] It was later adapted as The Hollows of Time by Bidmead for Big Finish as part of their The Lost Stories series in June 2010.LineColor = 0E1622
}}{{Episode list
EpisodeNumber = 6EpisodeNumber2 = 2RTitle = The Children of JanuaryWrittenBy = Michael Feeney CallanShortSummary = Written by Michael Feeney Callan, this story was commissioned on 5 February 1985.[9] After the news of the hiatus, Callan was asked by the production team to continue with the story but as four 25-minute episodes.[6] It had been planned that an adaptation of this story would appear as part of Big Finish's The Lost Stories range, but fell through due to the author's commitments and was replaced by The Macros.[10]LineColor = 0E1622
}}

Revised Season 23

Although Doctor Who had been recommissioned, it yet again underwent a format change, with episodes reduced in length back to 25 minutes, and the full season running to only 14 episodes (a total of 350 minutes' running time), which worked out at almost half the total of Season 22.{{citation needed|date=December 2018}} As a consequence, the production team were forced to abandon the various serials that had been commissioned for the original Season 23, and instead come up with something new. John Nathan-Turner and Eric Saward eventually came up with the idea of having the various serials linked with an overarching narrative—this led to the conception of a trial story with a Christmas Carol—inspired "past, present, and future" storyline,[11] thereby stretching the length of the season. The planned 14-part serial was intended to be divided into a pair of 4-part stories followed by a 6-part one. By July 1985, the characters of the Valeyard, the Inquisitor and Mel were conceived.{{citation needed|date=December 2018}}

Production

Robert Holmes was commissioned to write the first and final chapters of the serial. His draft of the first chapter, The Mysterious Planet, was criticised by BBC Head of Series and Serials Jonathan Powell for its comedic content, contradicting the BBC controller's request for a more humorous series – which took away confidence from Holmes.

The second chapter, Mindwarp, was written by Philip Martin. Martin's character Sil, introduced in Vengeance on Varos, was popular among the production team, who asked Martin to feature the character in the cancelled Mission to Magnus. Nathan-Turner asked Martin to include Sil in his chapter, and asked confidentially for Peri to be killed in accordance with Nicola Bryant's wishes to leave the show with a bang.{{citation needed|date=December 2018}}

The third chapter was originally to be interlinked with the fourth. Holmes was originally asked to write it, but declined, citing a dislike of six-part serials. After rejecting submissions by Christopher H. Bidmead and PJ Hammond,[12] Nathan-Turner approached husband-and-wife writing team Pip and Jane Baker to write a studio-based serial, Terror of the Vervoids.[13]{{citation needed|date=December 2018}}

Holmes was unable to finish writing the fourth chapter, originally called Time Inc., before his death from a liver illness and Hepatitis B on 24 May 1986, aged 59.[13]{{citation needed|date=December 2018}} Pip and Jane Baker were commissioned by Nathan-Turner at short notice to write a new version of the episode, after script editor Eric Saward withdrew his permission for his original version of part fourteen to be used: the original ending would have featured a fight to the death in a time vent with both the Doctor and the Valeyard as part of a cliffhanger ending to the season, which horrified Nathan-Turner, as he feared that to use such a downbeat ending would have provided an excuse for the BBC management to cancel the show. Subsequently the title was later changed to The Ultimate Foe.[13]{{citation needed|date=December 2018}}

Filming of the serial began on 7 April 1986 and ended on 14 August 1986.{{citation needed|date=December 2018}} For the opening sequence, Nathan-Turner commissioned a 45-second model shot that cost over {{GBP|8,000}}, which at that time was the highest amount of money spent on a single special-effects sequence in the history of the series. The outdoor sequences in The Mysterious Planet were filmed in mid-April in Queen Elizabeth Country Park, and studio work followed on 24 April and 10 May.{{citation needed|date=December 2018}} Studio work for Mindwarp took place from 27–29 May and 11–13 June, and location shots were filmed in Brighton from 15–16 June.{{citation needed|date=December 2018}} Terror of the Vervoids and The Ultimate Foe were produced simultaneously; production began with location filming for the latter in late June,{{citation needed|date=December 2018}} before returning to the studio to film scenes for both chapters on 16–17 July.{{citation needed|date=December 2018}} Terror of the Vervoids was the last chapter to be completed, with studio work taking place from 30 July–1 August and from 12–14 August.{{citation needed|date=December 2018}}

Reception and analysis

Public reaction to the season was mixed. Although the Audience Appreciation figures had improved since the previous season—the lowest figure was 66% for parts seven and nine{{citation needed|date=December 2018}} and the highest was 72% for parts one, four and eight.{{citation needed|date=December 2018}}— the viewing figures were lower.{{citation needed|date=December 2018}}

Reviews

The serial received mixed reviews from Doctor Who critics. Paul Cornell, Martin Day and Keith Topping, co-authors of The Discontinuity Guide, wrote that as a whole, the serial's plot "hangs together remarkably well".[14] David J. Howe and Stephen James Walker, authors of Doctor Who: The Television Companion, disagreed, arguing that the serial was a "monumental wasted opportunity".[15] They disapproved of the trial storyline, being unconvinced that a prosecutor "in any reasonable legal system" would be allowed to modify charges and court proceedings mid-trial.[16] They did find the meta-humour of "the Doctor effectively sitting down to watch Doctor Who for fourteen weeks" amusing if repetitive however, and praised Baker's acting.[17] Both reviews found that the trial scenes detracted from the chapter story arcs.[18][19]

Reviews of the individual chapters were also mixed. Although appreciative of Brian Blessed's acting, Cornell, Day and Topping argued that the script for Mindwarp lacked focus, "[trying] to be comic, grotesque, straight, and farcical all at the same time".[20] Howe and Walker were more favourable towards the script, citing Sil's re-appearance as positive, and hailing Peri's death as "one of the most dramatic and impressive moments of the entire season" and Bryant's best scene since The Caves of Androzani.[21] Both reviews judged Terror of the Vervoids to be a well-written story, although Cornell, Day and Topping criticised the dialogue, and Howe and Walker were unimpressed by Bonnie Langford's performance.[18][19]

Commercial releases

The Trial of a Time Lord was broadcast from 6 September to 6 December 1986.

Home media

{{see also|List of Doctor Who home video releases}}

The entire serial was released as a three-tape VHS set in a TARDIS-style tin box on 1 October 1993 as part of the show's 30th-anniversary celebrations from BBC Video in the UK, and it was released in North America on 1 June 1995 (where it was mistakenly titled as The Trial of The Time Lord on the box package for both region format releases).

All serials of The Trial of a Time Lord were released in a DVD box set on 29 September 2008 in region 2, on 7 October 2008 in Region 1, and on 5 January 2009 in Region 4.

In print

{{main|List of Doctor Who novelisations}}

"The Missing Episodes"

Serial name Novelisation title Author First published
The Nightmare FairThe Nightmare FairGraham Williams18 May 1989
The Ultimate EvilThe Ultimate EvilWally K. Daly17 August 1989
Mission to MagnusMission to MagnusPhilip Martin19 July 1990

The Trial of a Time Lord

Serial name Novelisation title Author First published
Parts 1–4The Mysterious PlanetTerrance Dicks19 November 1987
Parts 5–8MindwarpPhilip Martin15 June 1989
Parts 9–12Terror of the VervoidsPip and Jane Baker17 September 1987
Parts 13–14The Ultimate FoePip and Jane Baker21 April 1988

Notes

  • {{note|rani|a}} Although the following serial Time and the Rani was the Sixth Doctor's final appearance, Baker declined an offer to return either for the entire story (as originally offered) or solely for a regeneration scene, and the part was instead portrayed by Sylvester McCoy wearing a blond wig.[2]{{citation needed|date=December 2018}}

References

1. ^http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/season23.shtml
2. ^{{cite book |last1=Howe |first1=David J. |author-link1=David J. Howe |last2=Stammers |first2=Mark |last3=Walker |first3=Stephen James |year=1996 |title=Doctor Who: The Eighties |url= |location= London|publisher=Doctor Who Books |page=94 |isbn=1 85227 680 0}}
3. ^{{harvnb|Pixley|2003b|p=19}}
4. ^{{harvnb|Howe|Stammers|Walker|1996|p=83}}.
5. ^{{harvnb|Pixley|2003|p=20}}.
6. ^{{harvnb|Howe|Stammers|Walker|1996|p=84}}.
7. ^{{harvnb|Pixley|2003c|p=44}}.
8. ^{{harvnb|Howe|Stammers|Walker|1993|pp=207–208}}.
9. ^{{harvnb|Pixley|2003c|p=39}}.
10. ^{{harvnb|Berry|2010|p=18}}
11. ^http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/season23.shtml
12. ^http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/season23.shtml
13. ^{{cite journal|last=Pixley|first=Andrew|year=1992|title=Archive Feature Serial 7C The Ultimate Foe|journal=Doctor Who Magazine|publisher=Marvel UK|location=London|issue=Winter Special 1992|pages=43–49| issn = 0957-9818}}
14. ^{{cite book |title=The Discontinuity Guide |last1=Cornell |first1=Paul |authorlink1=Paul Cornell |last2=Day |first2=Martin |authorlink2=Martin Day |last3=Topping |first3=Keith |authorlink3=Keith Topping |format=reprinted on BBC Doctor Who website |year=1995 |publisher=Virgin Books |location=London |isbn=0-426-20442-5 |page=332 |chapter=The Trial of a Time Lord 4|chapterurl=http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/trialtimelord4/detail.shtml |accessdate=20 April 2009 }}
15. ^{{cite book |last1=Howe |first1=David J. |authorlink1=David J. Howe |last2=Walker |first2=Stephen James |authorlink2=Stephen James Walker |title=Doctor Who: The Television Companion |format=reprinted on BBC Doctor Who website |accessdate=20 April 2009 |edition=1st |year=1998 |publisher=BBC Books |location=London |isbn=0-563-40588-0 |page=497 |chapter=The Trial of a Time Lord 4 |chapterurl=http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/trialtimelord4/detail.shtml}}
16. ^{{cite book |last1=Howe |first1=David J. |authorlink1=David J. Howe |last2=Walker |first2=Stephen James |authorlink2=Stephen James Walker |title=Doctor Who: The Television Companion |format=reprinted on BBC Doctor Who website |accessdate=20 April 2009 |edition=1st |year=1998 |publisher=BBC Books |location=London |isbn=0-563-40588-0 |page=492 |chapter=The Trial of a Time Lord 1 |chapterurl=http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/trialtimelord1/detail.shtml}}
17. ^{{cite book |last1=Howe |first1=David J. |authorlink1=David J. Howe |last2=Walker |first2=Stephen James |authorlink2=Stephen James Walker |title=Doctor Who: The Television Companion |format=reprinted on BBC Doctor Who website |accessdate=20 April 2009 |edition=1st |year=1998 |publisher=BBC Books |location=London |isbn=0-563-40588-0 |page=493 |chapter=The Trial of a Time Lord 1 |chapterurl=http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/trialtimelord1/detail.shtml}}
18. ^{{cite book |title=The Discontinuity Guide |last1=Cornell |first1=Paul |authorlink1=Paul Cornell |last2=Day |first2=Martin |authorlink2=Martin Day |last3=Topping |first3=Keith |authorlink3=Keith Topping |format=reprinted on BBC Doctor Who website |year=1995 |publisher=Virgin Books |location=London |isbn=0-426-20442-5 |page=328 |chapter=The Trial of a Time Lord 3|chapterurl=http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/trialtimelord3/detail.shtml |accessdate=20 April 2009 }}
19. ^{{cite book |last1=Howe |first1=David J. |authorlink1=David J. Howe |last2=Walker |first2=Stephen James |authorlink2=Stephen James Walker |title=Doctor Who: The Television Companion |format=reprinted on BBC Doctor Who website |accessdate=20 April 2009 |edition=1st |year=1998 |publisher=BBC Books |location=London |isbn=0-563-40588-0 |page=496 |chapter=The Trial of a Time Lord 3 |chapterurl=http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/trialtimelord3/detail.shtml}}
20. ^{{cite book |title=The Discontinuity Guide |last1=Cornell |first1=Paul |authorlink1=Paul Cornell |last2=Day |first2=Martin |authorlink2=Martin Day |last3=Topping |first3=Keith |authorlink3=Keith Topping |format=reprinted on BBC Doctor Who website |year=1995 |publisher=Virgin Books |location=London |isbn=0-426-20442-5 |pages=325–326 |chapter=The Trial of a Time Lord 2|chapterurl=http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/trialtimelord2/detail.shtml |accessdate=20 April 2009 }}
21. ^{{cite book |last1=Howe |first1=David J. |authorlink1=David J. Howe |last2=Walker |first2=Stephen James |authorlink2=Stephen James Walker |title=Doctor Who: The Television Companion |format=reprinted on BBC Doctor Who website |accessdate=20 April 2009 |edition=1st |year=1998 |publisher=BBC Books |location=London |isbn=0-563-40588-0 |pages=495–496 |chapter=The Trial of a Time Lord 2 |chapterurl=http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/trialtimelord2/detail.shtml}}
}}

{{portal|1980s}}

External links

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7 : 1986 British television seasons|1986 British television episodes|Doctor Who lists|Doctor Who series|Sixth Doctor serials|Fiction with unreliable narrators|Television courtroom dramas

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