Wikia

TARDIS Index File

The Resurrection of Mars (audio story)

Talk0
34,304articles in progress
This article is written from
a real world point of view
The Resurrection of Mars
Cult Of SkaroAdded by Cult Of Skaro
Doctor: Eighth Doctor
Companion(s): Tamsin, Lucie
Main enemy: The Ice Warriors, The Monk
Main setting:
Key crew
Publisher: Big Finish Productions
Writer: Jonathan Morris
Director: Barnaby Edwards
Release details
Release number: 4.6
Release date: November 2010
Format: 1 CD - 2 parts
Production code: BFPDWCDMG030
ISBN 978-1-84435-480-1
Navigation
←Previous Next→
The New Eighth Doctor Adventures
Deimos Relative Dimensions
AudioStub

The Resurrection of Mars was the sixth release of the fourth series of The New Eighth Doctor Adventures.

Contents

Publisher's summary Edit

Deimos, moon of Mars – where Lord Slaadek's plans to revive the ancient Ice Warrior civilisation hang by a thread. Only the Doctor can stop him… but an old enemy, hiding in the catacombs, has an alternative plan, one that will test the Doctor's heroism to its limits. Just how far will the Doctor go to prevent the destruction and resurrection of Mars – on a day when his friends become enemies, and his enemies have right on their side?

Plot Edit

The Monk throws Lucie Miller out of his TARDIS. Although she expected him to leave her in Blackpool, he instead abandons her in the Deimos moonbase.

The Doctor and Professor Boston Schooner sabotaged the atmospheric re-ioniser prior to the passenger rocket's departure from Mars. However, the Doctor was uncertain that his plan was going to work, telling Temperance Finch that he had his fingers crossed.

The Monk travels to the passenger rocket in order to recruit Tamsin as his new companion. He tells her that he was impressed with her during their encounter in the Abbey of Kells in Ireland in 1006 and that he was "injudicious in [his] choice of companion." He takes Tamsin to Halcyon, a planet located 90 lightyears from Earth, in the 33rd century. While there, he uses an "S.E.P filter" to disguise himself and Tamsin as Halcyonians.

The Monk claims that Halcyon has a population of 20 billion, yet their entire population has all that they could want. On their return to his TARDIS, the Monk takes them one year forward in time, at which time the Ice Warriors have destroyed all life on the planet to their attempt to create a second Mars. The Monk blames this on the Doctor's interference with the Ice Warriors' plans on the Deimos moonbase a thousand years earlier. The Doctor later describes it as one of the greatest catastrophes in the history of the universe but is powerless to prevent it as doing so would have major ramifications on the Web of Time.

The Doctor repairs the moonbase's microwave generator, which allows the Ice Warriors to destroy the passenger rocket and kill all 600 people aboard.

During the Monk and Lucie's travels together, they subsequently visited a planet called Questes which was ruled by a dictator, who according to Lucie was "like Genghis Khan but with two beards." In order to prevent him from being born, the Monk arranged for his parents (as well as dozens of other innocent people) to be killed in an avalanche. After Lucie objected to this since she viewed it as being murder, the Monk materialised his TARDIS on Deimos and threw her out. He knew that Lucie's presence would prevent the Doctor from destroying the moonbase.

The Monk tells the Doctor that he altered the settings on the Ice Warriors' suspended animation chambers to ensure that they awoke in the 23rd century, several centuries earlier than in the original timeline.

The Doctor detonates the explosive device placed in the moonbase by Grenville, leading to the facility's destruction. This results in the moon being converted into a miniature sun, which provides the necessary heat to power the atmospheric re-ioniser. He then uses the re-ioniser to terraform Mars so that its atmosphere is composed of 80% nitrogen and 20% oxygen. Consequently, the planet is made habitable for humans as was the intention of the scientists and engineers who designed the re-ioniser prior to the Great Recession. The Doctor claims that doing so was consistent with recorded history and therefore did not damage the Web of Time.

Cast Edit

References Edit

  • After overhearing Lord Slaadek tell the Doctor that he would have detonated the explosive device if it existed, Lucie refers to the Ice Lord as "Touché Turtle."
  • Lucie refers to the Monk as "a bleedin' homicidal maniac." The Monk fires her as he begins to sense "professional friction" in their relationship.
  • Harold and Margaret have at least one child and several grandchildren, all of whom live on Mars.
  • There are scorch marks on the central console of the Monk's TARDIS due to his attempt to install what he believed was the new directional unit into the TARDIS.
  • During his travels, the Monk has collected a sculpture of Michelangelo, several Fabergé eggs, two paintings by Vincent van Gogh, a Blu-Ray copy of Something's Gotta Give and footage of the Beatles' appearance on Juke Box Jury, all of which were lost to history.
  • After materialising on Halcyon, the Monk's TARDIS, which has an operational chameleon circuit, disguises itself as a Punch and Judy stall.
  • Lucie mentions that she encountered the Roman Emperor Caligula (whom she describes as "well bonkers"), the Sensorites (who were "not as much of a laugh") and attended the final of Thordon's Got Talent which was won by a singing Slithergee during her travels with the Monk.
  • The Monk is still wearing the robes which he used while posing as Abbot Thelonious in the Abbey of Kells.
  • The Doctor tells Lucie that he loves dinosaurs.
  • Halsion is the planet that the Ice Warriors destroy in order to turn it into their new homeworld.

Notes Edit

  • To keep Lucie Miller's appearance in this audio drama secret, Big Finish released a fake cover on their website.
ResurrectionofMarscover
The false cover.

Continuity Edit

External links Edit

N

Have a question about how The Resurrection of Mars (audio story) relates to the rest of the DWU? See a problem here that's also happening on other pages of the wiki? Join us at our forum to have a good, ol' natter with the rest of our community. But if you want to talk about the editing of just this article, please click here and start talkin'.

Advertisement | Your ad here

Videos

Remove video
Are you sure you want to remove this video from the Videos list?
Please wait wile we are removing the video
Error occurred while loading data. Please recheck your connection and refesh the page.
662 videos about or featuring The Resurrection of Mars (audio story)
+ video
By site policy, all video must come from the official YouTube channel of the copyright holder — typically the BBC or its licensees. It's likely that no such video exists. Or maybe The Resurrection of Mars (audio story) is a subject which was never caught on video.
Only admin may add videos to this site.
1 of 1

Photos

+ image
18,701photos & counting
See all photos >

Recent Wiki Activity

See more >

Around Wikia's network

Random Wiki