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Tardis

The Movellans were androids who warred with the Dalek Empire.

Physical characteristics[]

The Movellans outwardly resembled humans of various ethnicities and genders. All of the Movellan androids wore white, form-fitting uniforms. On each shoulder was a glowing green ampoule held in a metal frame. Movellans had long silver hair worn in braids generally tipped with matching silver beads, apart from commanders who wore black beads.

Being androids, the Movellans were strong and tough. The major weakness of the Movellan design was each android's external power pack which, being carried on their belts, was easily removed and completely shut down the android. The power pack circuitry could also be modified, reprogramming the android to obey human orders. Because they did not wish to reveal their mechanical status to others, they did not allow aliens to see them in death, claiming such a thing would be against their code of honour.

Their side-arm was a cone-shaped pink gun. It had a white cover into which their hands fitted when holding the gun. The weapon had both "kill" and "stun" settings. (TV: Destiny of the Daleks [+]Terry Nation, Doctor Who season 17 (BBC1, 1979).) While Movellans possessed eyes, they also saw through a variety of sensors, even identifying their fellows through ID chips. (AUDIO: The Triumph of Davros [+]Matt Fitton, Dalek Universe (Big Finish Productions, 2021).)

The Movellans were durable enough to withstand multiple blasts from a Dalek gunstick. (PROSE: The Whoniverse [+]George Mann and Justin Richards, BBC Books (2016)., AUDIO: The Triumph of Davros [+]Matt Fitton, Dalek Universe (Big Finish Productions, 2021).)

Technology[]

The Movellans' spacecraft fix on their landing spots with a targeting beam, and once they have landed, the lower half drills into the earth as a means of camouflage and defence. These ships have an intergalactic range and time-warp capability. Inside the ship, some Movellans wore headphones, presumably as a way of interfacing directly with the ship's computer.

The Movellans' main destructive weapon was the nova device. This invention counted down to zero, at which point it altered the molecular structure of the atmosphere so that the atoms become flammable. Without protective shielding around the device, it would burn up an entire planetary atmosphere. It could, however, be turned on without being armed (making it into basically nothing more than an elaborate egg-timer). (TV: Destiny of the Daleks [+]Terry Nation, Doctor Who season 17 (BBC1, 1979).)

The Movellans had a unified information network that linked every member of their race, comparable in functionality to the Dalek pathweb. (AUDIO: The Triumph of Davros [+]Matt Fitton, Dalek Universe (Big Finish Productions, 2021).)

"Sophisticated Movellan constrictor collars" were among the torture items kept by the War Chief in the Interrogation Chamber of his TARDIS. (GAME: "The War Chief's Equipment" [+]Part of The Legions of Death, J. Andrew Keith, The Doctor Who Role Playing Game (FASA, 1986).)

History[]

Early history[]

The Movellans originated from Movella (PROSE: The Also People [+]Ben Aaronovitch, Virgin New Adventures (Virgin Books, 1995)., AUDIO: Alien Heart [+]Stephen Cole, Main Range (Big Finish Productions, 2017).) in the star system 4-X-Alpha-4. (TV: Destiny of the Daleks [+]Terry Nation, Doctor Who season 17 (BBC1, 1979).)

There were several conflicting accounts on how the Movellans came to be. As claimed by the Dalek Prime in one account, the Movellans were actually created by the Daleks for the purpose of faking a war in order to convince Davros he was in danger. (PROSE: War of the Daleks [+]John Peel, adapted from War of the Daleks, BBC Eighth Doctor Adventures (BBC Books, 1997).) In another account, Brastall claimed that the actions of the Fourth Doctor, Sarah Jane Smith, and Harry Sullivan in the Adelphine Cluster led to Deepcity developing "a force of synthonic robots… that [would] contribute significantly to the Daleks' final demise". (PROSE: A Device of Death [+]Christopher Bulis, Virgin Missing Adventures (Virgin Books, 1997).) By one account, the Movellans were created in the image of a humanoid race that they destroyed after achieving self-awareness. (PROSE: The Also People [+]Ben Aaronovitch, Virgin New Adventures (Virgin Books, 1995).)

By one account, the Movellans had been created as servants millennia before they would come into conflict with the Daleks. Coming to acknowledge their perfection, the Movellans deemed themselves logical and much better suited to rule and so overthrown their old masters, then established control of all near-space. By the Movellan War, the species which created them was long extinct. (PROSE: The History of the Daleks [+]John Peel and Terry Nation, The Official Doctor Who & the Daleks Book (St Martin's Press, 1988).)

According to another account, the first Movellan was a reconstruction of the android Space Security Service agent, Mark Seven, who was recovered from the destruction at Beltross Station, intended as a weapon against the Daleks. Believing himself to have always been Movellan, with the memories of his previous life buried deep in his systems, this "First Movellan" forgot his name and created the Movellans in his image. Davros theorised that the name Movellan may have been a corruption of the name Mark Seven – all that remained of the Doctor's former companion. (AUDIO: The Dalek Defence [+]Matt Fitton, Dalek Universe (Big Finish Productions, 2021)., The Triumph of Davros [+]Matt Fitton, Dalek Universe (Big Finish Productions, 2021).)

Some historians believed that the Clades were created in response to a species being pushed to brink of extinction by the Movellans. (PROSE: Peacemaker [+]James Swallow, BBC New Series Adventures (BBC Books, 2007).)

Movellan-Dalek War[]

Main article: Dalek-Movellan War

Most accounts agree that the Movellans and the Daleks encountered each other while both sides were expanding their interstellar empires beyond the bounds of the Mutter's Spiral and immediately engaged in a war which lasted for centuries. (TV: Destiny of the Daleks [+]Terry Nation, Doctor Who season 17 (BBC1, 1979)., Resurrection of the Daleks [+]Eric Saward, Doctor Who season 21 (BBC1, 1984)., PROSE: Remembrance of the Daleks [+]Ben Aaronovitch, adapted from Remembrance of the Daleks (Ben Aaronovitch), Target novelisations (Target Books, 1990).)

Movellans (The Pilot)

Movellans are exterminated during the war. (TV: The Pilot [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 10 (BBC One, 2017).)

The Twelfth Doctor lured a sentient oil puddle which had taken the form of human university student Heather into a war zone during a skirmish between Movellans and a group of Daleks, in the hopes of the Daleks destroying it. (TV: The Pilot [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 10 (BBC One, 2017).)

As the empires' respective warfleets were evenly matched, neither side's purely logical battle computers could find a successful strategy for an attack against the other and so the two fleets remained locked in a stalemate, constantly manoeuvring and probing for weakness but never actually firing a single shot.

Agella

A Movellan on Skaro. (TV: Destiny of the Daleks [+]Terry Nation, Doctor Who season 17 (BBC1, 1979).)

The Daleks returned to their homeworld, Skaro, to retrieve and revive their creator Davros, hoping that he could find a way to break the impasse, and the Movellans sent their own expedition to stop them. Davros determined that the first side to take a seemingly reckless gamble would be able to gain the advantage, but the Fourth Doctor prevented either side from returning to their respective fleets with this insight. (TV: Destiny of the Daleks [+]Terry Nation, Doctor Who season 17 (BBC1, 1979).)

The Movellans developed a human-Movellan hybrid, Kamen Vers, as a weapon on a spaceship. The Movellans who made him lost control due to Kamen's emotions causing them to malfunction and Kamen was found on a wreck ship by River Song who attempted to supress his emotions to prevent him overloading, pretending to be a Movellan herself. Kamen used the ship's tractors beam to capture other vessels, creating Mto, to impress the First Movellan who he regarded as his father. This included a human colonist ship, who Kamen tricked into believing they'd crashed and needed to follow him. He was exposed by the Tenth Doctor and Anya Kingdom who helped the colonists escape and exposed Mto to nearby Movellan and Dalek forces who promptly invaded. In the drama River lost control of Kamen's emotions, resulting in him fatally overloading. (AUDIO: The First Son [+]Lizzie Hopley, Dalek Universe (Big Finish Productions, 2021).)

Through a human spy, the Movellans traced the Earth Protection Corps ship transporting Davros, intercepting it whilst a Dalek vessel was attempting to capture it. In the ensuing skirmish the Earth ship crashed on Kembel so the Movellan force, led by First Movellan personally, pursued and captured the Tenth Doctor and Davros on the surface. (AUDIO: The Dalek Defence [+]Matt Fitton, Dalek Universe (Big Finish Productions, 2021).) The pair were put to work by the First Movellan, believing they could aid the Movellans against the Daleks however after his companion Anya Kingdom attempted to infiltrate the Movellan rocket on the Dalek Kembel faction's behalf, the First Movellan threw the Doctor out with her. Davros proposed an alliance between the Movellans and Daleks against humanity which the First Movellan accepted, however Davros used the officiating of the alliance to plant a virus in the First Movellan. The Doctor was able to prevent the virus spreading further than the Movellans on Kembel and set the rocket to leave Kembel whilst its crew rebooted.

After rebooting, the First Movellan decided to investigate a virus to use against the organic component of the Daleks. (AUDIO: The Triumph of Davros [+]Matt Fitton, Dalek Universe (Big Finish Productions, 2021).) Human historians attributed this decision to the Movellans realising the Daleks were organic after the Daleks used some trace of imagination left in them to gain an advantage in the war. (PROSE: Dalek: The Astounding Untold History of the Greatest Enemies of the Universe [+]George Mann, Justin Richards and Cavan Scott, Dalek: The Astounding Untold History of the Greatest Enemies of the Universe (Ebury Publishing, 2017).)

The Movellans developed so that they would still work if their power packs were taken from them. At some point during the war, a group of Movellans headed by Narina was sent to deliver the final weapon against the Daleks. However, their ship was damaged and they landed on 4th century BC Earth and were attacked by the locals. They had created Chenek, a Movellan with human fear. (AUDIO: The Movellan Grave [+]Andrew Smith, The Fourth Doctor Adventures (Big Finish Productions, 2017).)

During the war, they became time active and travelled back to the 1970s to establish a strategic base and encountered Suzanne Clare, who helped them in their invasion. (AUDIO: The Movellan Manoeuvre [+]John Dorney, The New Counter-Measures (Big Finish Productions, 2020).) The Daleks later came after them. (AUDIO: The Dalek Gambit [+]Roland Moore, The New Counter-Measures (Big Finish Productions, 2020).)

The Movellans, within ninety years after the Fourth Doctor encountered them on Skaro, developed a biological agent, which attacked and was almost instantly fatal to the physiology of the mutant within the Dalek shell. This virus effected a turning point in the Dalek-Movellan War, reducing the once-great Dalek empire to a few scattered colonies. Once more, they sought out Davros for assistance. By this time, Davros resided in cryogenic suspension in a space station. The plan went wrong both as a result of Davros himself turning against the Supreme Dalek as well as the involvement of the Fifth Doctor. (TV: Resurrection of the Daleks [+]Eric Saward, Doctor Who season 21 (BBC1, 1984).)

By one account, the Movellans, after defeating the Daleks, had moved into the humanoid sectors of space. This led them unexpectedly into a conflict with the allied forces of Earth and Draconia who pushed back the Movellans, annihilating them as they went. It was as a result of this conflict that the Prison Station containing Davros was vulnerable to attack in the Duplicate Incident. Though the Movellans were ultimately destroyed, the victory was not achieved without many losses on the human side, and the Draconians were also very much weakened. In the aftermath, humanity returned to their own areas of space, hoping to begin a new alliance to stand against the inevitable return of the Daleks. (PROSE: The History of the Daleks [+]John Peel and Terry Nation, The Official Doctor Who & the Daleks Book (St Martin's Press, 1988).)

By another account, Daleks mounted a "war of vengeance" against the Movellans which was called the Pa Jass-Gutrik. The Special Weapons Dalek participated in this war. (PROSE: Remembrance of the Daleks [+]Ben Aaronovitch, adapted from Remembrance of the Daleks (Ben Aaronovitch), Target novelisations (Target Books, 1990).) According to records, though unsubstantiated ones, recovered from the Space Security Service archive on Micawber's World, this conflict came about when the Daleks managed to use their duplicate program to infiltrate and sabotage the Movellan power pack production facilities, linking them all to the Pathweb. After some time had passed, the Daleks sent out a command for the Movellans to turn on each other, sparking a civil war that left them vulnerable to be wiped out by the Imperial Daleks. (PROSE: Dalek: The Astounding Untold History of the Greatest Enemies of the Universe [+]George Mann, Justin Richards and Cavan Scott, Dalek: The Astounding Untold History of the Greatest Enemies of the Universe (Ebury Publishing, 2017).)

During an encounter with the Daleks on Red Rocket Rising, the Eighth Doctor guessed that the Daleks may have been at war with the Movellans at the time. The Daleks did not clarify who they were currently fighting. (AUDIO: Blood of the Daleks [+]Steve Lyons, Eighth Doctor Adventures (Big Finish Productions, 2006).)

When the Eighth Doctor and Sam Jones visited Skaro, the Daleks were using Movellans as part of their workforce. The Doctor suggested that the Movellans may have been reprogrammed, but the Dalek Prime insisted that the Movellans were not an independent race and that they had been obeying Dalek orders since their creation. (PROSE: War of the Daleks [+]John Peel, adapted from War of the Daleks, BBC Eighth Doctor Adventures (BBC Books, 1997).)

Legacy[]

Movellans Happy Deathday

The Movellans in Happy Deathday. (COMIC: Happy Deathday [+]Scott Gray, DWM Comics (Panini Comics, 1998).)

In the video game Happy Deathday, played by Izzy Sinclair on the Time-Space Visualiser, a pair of Movellans were among a host of "every single enemy" that the Doctor had ever defeated, who were assembled by the Beige Guardian and pitted against the Doctor's first eight incarnations. (COMIC: Happy Deathday [+]Scott Gray, DWM Comics (Panini Comics, 1998).)

When the Fourth Doctor was regressed backwards in time by a space amoeba, the Movellans were among the past adversaries he had visions of. (COMIC: Timeslip [+]Dez Skinn and Paul Neary, DWM Comics (Marvel Comics, 1980).)

The introduction to The Children of Davros mentioned the Movellans as an example of a synthetic warrior race. (PROSE: Introduction [+]Ben Aaronovitch, Marvel Comics (1990).)

Behind the scenes[]

  • "Technical" (mainly made up by the author) information on the Movellans and their side-arms appear in The Doctor Who Technical Manual.
  • FASA's The Doctor Who Role Playing Game offered background information on the Movellans, describing them as android slaves given independence by a computer virus.
  • The Dalek Handbook speculates on the origins of the Movellans, acknowledging their disappearance after apparently prevailing over the Daleks. Noting their exterior appearance, one theory suggests that they were created by a humanoid race who they likely turned against destroyed. Acknowledging their enmity towards the Daleks, another theory suggests that they were created to fight them, potentially by the Time Lords. A third theory, acknowledging the Movellans' extensive knowledge of their enemy, claims that the Movellans were a slave race connected to the Dalek duplicate program which had gone rogue, likening them to the Robomen.
  • The Movellans (as well as other antagonists) appear in a Doctor Who skit, "The Monster Society of Evil" - Gallifrey One Masquerade 2011.
  • The Movellans are stars of a long-running Internet series "What Are The Movellans Watching Today?" by Pip Madeley, in which they watch strange and unusual television clips in their spacecraft.
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