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Context Recap / DoctorWhoS11E2InvasionOfTheDinosaurs

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1[[WMG:[[center:[-''[[Series/DoctorWho Doctor Who]]'' [[Recap/DoctorWho recap index]]\
2'''Third Doctor Era'''\
3'''Season 11:''' [[Recap/DoctorWhoS11E1TheTimeWarrior 1]] | '''2''' | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS11E3DeathToTheDaleks 3]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS11E4TheMonsterOfPeladon 4]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS11E5PlanetOfTheSpiders 5]]\
4'''[[Recap/DoctorWhoS10E1TheThreeDoctors <<< Season 10]]''' | '''[[Recap/DoctorWhoS12E1Robot Season 12 >>>]]''']]-]]]
5!Invasion of the Dinosaurs
6[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rex_4468.jpg]]
7[[caption-width-right:345:[[Series/BarneyAndFriends I love you, you love me...]] [[Franchise/{{Godzilla}} SKREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEONK!!!]]]]
8->Written by Creator/MalcolmHulke\
9Directed by Paddy Russell\
10'''Production code:''' WWW\
11'''Air dates:''' 12 January - 16 February 1974\
12'''Number of episodes:''' 6
13
14->''"Good grief, it's a triceratops! Look, Brigadier, try and keep it occupied while I'm finishing this off, will you?"''
15-->-- '''The Doctor'''
16
17JustForFun/TheOneWith [[SpecialEffectsFailure the dodgy dinosaurs]].
18----
19
20[[Recap/DoctorWhoS11E1TheTimeWarrior The Doctor brings Sarah Jane back to 20th-century London]], only to find it deserted. They're soon arrested as looters and, after a very nice photo session at the police station, duly try to escape. Although their attempt to run away fails rather miserably, the Brigadier is soon handed the files of all captured criminals of the day and fixes the "typical, ''absolutely typical''" situation as soon as he can. Back with UNIT, the Brigadier explains that the city has been evacuated due to the sudden, random and unexplained appearances of dinosaurs.
21
22The Doctor's plan to capture a dinosaur to track the energy from its disappearance back to the source is foiled through sabotage of none other than Captain Mike Yates - who, however, doesn't want the Doctor to come to any harm.
23
24Sarah Jane, being both smart ''and'' a reporter, manages to solve the plot before anyone else, getting kidnapped and almost murdered for her troubles... until she wakes up from an alleged "cryogenic sleep" on an eco-warrior spaceship headed for the planet "New Earth". When she tries to explain to its occupants that the nearest star is ''four light years away'' and they couldn't possibly get there within one generation, they lock her in the propaganda room to cool down. She does what any good reporter does - escapes and simply walks out of the "airlock" and up a flight of stairs to rejoin the plot back in London. The whole thing turns out to be a conspiracy led by a government minister, Charles Grover, who is using a MadScientist, Professor Whitaker, to clear London of people by bringing dinosaurs forward in time. They then plan to use a rudimentary time machine to return the Earth outside London to a pre-technological age, erasing most of the human race from history so that they can repopulate the planet with eugenically-selected "colonists". These are the eco-warriors, who are currently in a mocked-up spaceship in the minister's basement, believing they are on their way to colonize a new world.
25
26To make things even more difficult for Sarah Jane and the Doctor, the head of the army controlling London, General Finch, is involved. Once the Brigadier and Sergeant Benton realize that Mike has become a MinionWithAnFInEvil to Grover, they allow the Doctor to escape (Benton by allowing a Venusian neck pinch and voluntarily letting the Doctor knock him out cold) and go confront the minister and his lackeys. Also, the Doctor drives Creator/JonPertwee's car for a bit, which is ''the most awesome vehicle in the universe''.
27
28The Doctor and the Brigadier raid the underground HQ of the conspiracy helped when Sarah enlightens the "colonists", who rebel. In a struggle with the Doctor over the controls of the time machine, the Doctor uses his BizarreAlienBiology to withstand the time reversal and ReverseThePolarity. Grover accidentally transports himself and Whitaker back to the time of the dinosaurs.
29
30The Brigadier offers Yates the chance to resign quietly. Benton revels in the fact he got a chance to punch a general in the nose, while the Doctor convinces Sarah to get back on board the TARDIS after tempting her with a trip to Florana, a place he thinks is one of the most beautiful planets in the universe. Following a futile attempt to ignore him, she merrily gives in.
31----
32Episode 1 only existed for many years as a black and white film recording. For the DVD release a colour restoration was attempted; unlike other Third Doctor stories which only survived in black and white, the result was only a partial success, and the disc includes a high quality monochrome version and a "best efforts" unrestored colour version. This is also the last serial by broadcast order to have been affected by Creator/{{the BBC}}'s [[MissingEpisode/DoctorWho wiping policy]] before its termination in 1978; every story after this point survives via the original master tapes.
33----
34!!Tropes
35* ActionGirl: Sarah tackles a knife-wielding thug and stops him from stabbing the doctor.
36* AffablyEvil: Charles Grover. So courteous to everyone he meets, all the while planning to RetGone nearly all the human race in the name of Gaia.
37* AirVentPassageway: Sarah gets locked in a closet and escapes through the air-duct.
38* AntiVillain: Yates, Grover and the chosen in Operation Golden Age. Subverted with Whittaker who's the nastiest of the bunch.
39* BeingEvilSucks: By siding with Operation Golden Age, Yates not only alienates his friends but also finds himself reluctantly doing things that would harm them.
40* BewareTheNiceOnes: One instance in Episode 6, when General Finch won't come easily, has the Brigadier order Benton to stand up from the driver's seat of the car they're in. Benton ''is armed with a gun'' - a gun which, much to General Finch's displeasure, is pointed at him - and isn't afraid to use it.
41* BigBad: Charles Grover is the leader of Operation Golden Age.
42* BrainwashingForTheGreaterGood: The people on the "spaceship" voluntarily enter a brainwashing room to "remind themselves of the truth".
43** Though it's not MindControl, simply being locked in a room and forced to watch a greeny propaganda film that won't turn off unless the door is open.
44* BriefAccentImitation: The Doctor puts on a Cockney accent in order to impersonate a criminal.
45* BringItBackAlive: The Doctor and UNIT attempt to capture one of the dinosaurs alive.
46* ConvenientlyTimedDistraction: UNIT soldier Private Bryson is ordered to get tea for the Doctor. While Bryson is out getting the tea, Yates arrives and holds the Doctor, Sgt. Benton and the Brigadier at gunpoint. When Bryson, unaware of what's going on, returns with the tea, Yates gets distracted and Benton uses this opportunity to disarm him.
47* CreepyMonotone: Whitaker. You'd think a man mucking around with time travel would be a little more animated, but he doesn't really seem to enjoy ''anything''.
48* DarkerAndEdgier: Between the GreyAndGreyMorality between the heroes and villains as well as Yates defecting being the ultimate slap in the face to the otherwise cosy atmosphere of UNIT-era Dr Who, you know the stakes are higher in this serial.
49* DisasterScavengers: Looters are becoming a serious problem in the abandoned London. By the time the Doctor and Sarah-Jane arrive, they've started getting organised.
50* EasilyForgiven: Yates is simply removed from UNIT.
51* EcoTerrorist: The Golden Age crew are trying to RetGone the entire human race except themselves to wipe out environmental damage.
52* EpicFail: The Doctor and Sarah-Jane try escaping from being sent to a detention centre. They make it to a vehicle, but are unable to find any keys... and as soon as the Doctor steps out to look, it turns out they've found the transport to the detention centres. Oops.
53* EvilLuddite: The villains' motivation.
54* EvilReactionary: Operation: Golden Age plans to use a rudimentary time machine to return the Earth outside London to a pre-technological age, erasing most of the human race from history so that they can repopulate the planet with eugenically-selected "colonists".
55* ExactWords: On first meeting the Doctor, Finch asks if he can explain things. The Doctor responds "you may ask." Then when Finch gets testy, says he never said he ''would'' explain things.
56* FaceHeelTurn: Captain Yates.
57* FakedRipVanWinkle: This is the way the villains get Sarah out of the way - they knock her out and have her wake up aboard the FauxtasticVoyage. She realizes it's fake when she realizes she still has a fresh bump on her head.
58* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath: There is a short but extremely gory shot of the dead Phillips with half his face ripped off.
59* FauxtasticVoyage: The colonists sincerely believe that they're on their way to a new planet. Apparently they don't have any mathematicians on board, or someone would question the fact that the trip is only three months long. (Given that the nearest solar system, Alpha Centauri, is four light years away, this would require travelling at ''sixteen times the speed of light'', as Sarah Jane wearily points out).
60** This gets [[HandWave Hand Waved]] by one of the colonists, who mentions some kind of new space drive.
61* {{Foreshadowing}}: The Doctor is still moving and behaving normally when time is affected and the stegosaurus that the Doctor attempts to study disappears. This foreshadows the Doctor being unaffected by the Timescoop technology at the climax of the story, and being able to foil Grover's plan.
62* GenreSavvy: Sarah Jane puts two and two together incredibly quickly and works out that the Spaceship nonsense is just that - ''nonsense'' and rejoins the plot quickly enough.
63* GhostCity: Central London has been evacuated entirely. That's eight million people. The first episode in particular plays almost like someone decided to make ''Film/TwentyEightDaysLater'' forty years early, until a dinosaur shows up instead of rage zombies.
64* GreenAesop: At the end, the Doctor admits he agrees with the villains' point, that mankind is polluting too much. He just doesn't think erasing mankind from history is the way to go.
65* GulliverTieDown: Proves insufficient to restrain the stunned ''T. rex'' when Sarah Jane's camera-flash rouses it.
66* {{Handwave}}: At the climax, Whitaker activates the time-scoop, freezing everyone but the Doctor. Afterwards, Sarah Jane asks why, and figures the answer is probably "because Time Lord".
67* HandshakeRefusal: After learning Finch is the Brig's superior, the Doctor tries making nice and offers his hand. Finch doesn't take it.
68* HangingJudge: Shears, the Army officer that has to judge the looters, seems more annoyed with his job than anything else, so he spends about ten seconds on each case and finds everybody guilty.
69* HaveYouToldAnyoneElse:
70** When Sarah Jane tells Grover about her theory that the conspirators are using a secret government bunker as their base of operations, he asks her what the Brigadier thinks of the theory and she replies that she hasn't told anyone else because she wants to find some evidence first. Grover immediately warms to the idea of helping her find the evidence, which turns out to be so he can lead her into a trap.
71** Happens again with General Finch after Sarah Jane escapes. When she tells him Grover is part of the conspiracy, he asks if she's told anyone and she says he's the first person she's had a chance to talk to. (Fortunately, she doesn't mention that just before she found Finch she left a note on the Brigadier's desk.)
72* HereWeGoAgain: At the end, Sarah Jane is quite adamant she wants no more adventures, after dealing with Sonatarans and dinosaurs. The Doctor starts telling her about some of the lovely planets out there, and as the credits roll, Sarah is desperately trying to cover her ears...
73* HitMeDammit: Benton to the Doctor, when Finch orders him to hold the Doctor prisoner.
74** Also used earlier when the Doctor and Lodge, one of the looters, stage a fistfight to distract a guard.
75* HoistByHisOwnPetard: Grover and Whitaker are sent back in time by Whitaker's machine after the Doctor reverses the polarity. Grover was foolish enough to make a break for the lever, and Whitaker failed to stop him from tugging it down.
76* HorribleJudgeOfCharacter: Sarah gets captured twice through treating first Grover and then Finch as {{Reasonable Authority Figure}}s without noticing their treachery. Particularly bad the second time, as she's incredibly trusting of Finch at a point when she knows anyone could be potentially in on the conspiracy. She openly lampshades it when Finch pulls a gun on her.
77-->'''Sarah Jane''': Boy, I really don't choose my friends, don't I?
78* TheIgor: Butler.
79* ImmuneToBullets: All of the dinosaurs, for... some reason. Even grenades don't do anything other than mildly annoy them.
80* ImprobablyCoolCar: Creator/JonPertwee's futuristic contraption, which fans affectionately named "The Whomobile".
81* ItWasHereISwear: Having found the entrance to Golden Age's base in a London tube station, the Doctor tries getting the Brig to take a look at it. Of course, by the time he does, they've removed the mechanisms.
82* {{Jerkass}}: The looter who's arrested just before the Doctor and Sarah suggests they try making a break for it. Seems like a nice guy, right? No. The minute the only guard is out, he grabs the man's gun and tells the Doctor and Sarah they'll be ''his'' distraction while he makes a getaway. The Doctor judo-chops his ass.
83* KarmicDeath: Grover and Whitaker are sent back in time when their device is sabotaged by the Doctor. Best case, they manage to eke out a meagre existence for a few years before falling victim to some disease they won't be able to cure. Worst case, they get dumped right in front of a Tyrannosaurus and rapidly become dino-chow.
84* KangarooCourt: What the improvised army court judging any looters actually is.
85* LackOfEmpathy: General Finch seems to think civilians[[note]]the people he swore an oath to protect - not that it makes him any less psychopathic but Finch, like all army officers (but not the Navy because... history) would have sworn this oath: "I... swear by Almighty God that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to His Majesty King George VI, His Heirs and Successors, and that I will, as in duty bound, honestly and faithfully defend His Majesty, His Heirs and Successors, in Person, Crown and Dignity against all enemies, and will observe and obey all orders of His Majesty, His Heirs and Successors, and of the generals and officers set over me."[[/note]] are, as he put it "wretched people". Because they need food and shelter after having been evacuated from their homes due to ''dinosaur attacks''.
86* LandmarkingTheHiddenBase: Operation Golden Age is based under Trafalgar Square.
87* LateToTheTragedy: Thanks to the Old Girl's wonderful sense of timing, the Doctor and Sarah wind up in London after Bad Things have already happened, and the few people they find are twitchy and bad-tempered, and in no mood to just explain what the heck is going on to them. The audience, meanwhile, gets a good idea when they first see a ''T-Rex'' smashing its way through a house.
88* MakeItLookLikeAStruggle: Benton is told to take the Doctor into custody. Once Yates has gone and Benton has ordered the other soldiers away, comes this exchange:
89-->'''Benton:''' Right then, Doctor, you'd better get busy.\
90'''Doctor:''' What?\
91'''Benton:''' You'd better start overpowering me, hadn't you. You know, a bit of your Venusian oojah?\
92'''Doctor:''' Thank you, Sergeant Benton.\
93'''Doctor:''' Are you ready?\
94'''Benton:''' Yeah!\
95''(Benton tenses and shuts his eyes tight. The Doctor uses the pressure grip at the back of Benton's neck to put him to sleep.)''
96* MisplacedWildlife: ''Tyrannosaurus rex'', ''Apatosaurus'', and ''Triceratops'' were never indigenous to Great Britain, so a purely time-travel-based technology shouldn't have been able to bring them to London. Only the (unnamed) pterosaur averts this trope for certain; ''Stegosaurus'' may or may not, as its fossils have been found as nearby as Portugal.
97* TheMole: ''Three'' of them.
98* NotWhatItLooksLike: The Doctor and Sarah borrow a jeep from some looters, and when found by some soldiers, learn that it's loaded with stolen valuables. Naturally, "they're not ours" somehow doesn't pass muster.
99* ObviousStuntDouble: The T.Rex is terrible to begin with, but it doesn't help that the model used for closeups is obviously completely different to the one used for the long shots.
100* ObviouslyEvil: DoubleSubverted. General Finch's dour attitude and sinister moustache immediately mark him as the "inside man" the Doctor hypothesizes--but then Captain Yates, a longstanding ally of the Doctor, is seen conspiring with the villains, which seems to suggest that General Finch is okay after all--but then he has Sarah Jane kidnapped. Turns out they were both bad.
101* OhCrap: Sarah Jane, when she realizes she's revealed her findings to someone else in the plan.
102** The second time this happens, her reaction is less of an OhCrap, and more of an OhNoNotAgain.
103* PullTheThread: Sarah Jane does this with the FauxtasticVoyage.
104* ResignedInDisgrace: By the end, Captain Mike Yates has been unmasked as the traitor who aiding Operation Golden Age; however, his distinguished service record and the fact that he did his best to prevent anyone from being hurt nets him a second chance, and he is allowed to quietly resign from UNIT in lieu of imprisonment.
105* RetGone: The villains plan to do this to the entire human race except themselves.
106* ReverseThePolarity: In this case, it throws Grover and Whitaker back in time, instead of the rest of the world.
107* RightBehindMe
108* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: Once she realizes she's not in space, Sarah Jane walks out of the mock-spaceship, goes upstairs and rejoins the main plot.
109* SleeperStarship: Faked.
110* SpoilerTitle: Aversion: Part One was simply titled "Invasion". However, as always ''Radio Times'' printed the full title and spoiled the twist.
111* SpotlightStealingTitle: The serial's really about Operation Golden Age's schemes. The dinosaurs are secondary to the plot. Creator/MalcolmHulke and Creator/TerranceDicks had wanted to name the story ''Timescoop'', but the higher powers vetoed it.
112* StiffUpperLip: The Brigadier ''has no fear''. Giant triceratops? Fine, he'll go stand in front of it waving a flare around for a few minutes.
113* TapOnTheHead: Sarah Jane is briefly knocked silly while trapped in a room when a wooden cross-beam falls on her head. The Doctor shows up shortly after and gets her out.
114* TemperCeratops: The Doctor and the Brigadier encounter a belligerent triceratops in the London Underground.
115* TemptingFate: In Part Two, the Doctor has built a stun gun to use on a dinosaur. He wants a docile and rather low-watt test subject, remarking, "Mind you, I wouldn't like to try it on a Tyrannosaurus Rex." Guess what pops up at the cliffhanger?
116** Also true of the Brigadier boasting that the chains used to restrain said ''T. rex'' were unbreakable.
117* TokenEvilTeammate: Project Golden Age may not be good guys by any standard, but Whitaker probably qualifies as it's strongly implied he's only interested in advancing his research in contrast to his well-meaning accomplices, and he's much more willing and quick to use lethal force than they are.
118* TreacherousAdvisor: Sarah falls victim to this trope ''twice''. First, the man she sees for help finding the villains' base turns out to be the one who helped them set it up. Then, after she escapes from him, she takes what she knows to the general who is coordinating the state of emergency, not knowing that, while she was away, he had ''also'' been revealed as a member of the conspiracy.
119* UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans: Operation Golden Age, believing that the environment could not be saved, sent a shipload of volunteers on a FauxtasticVoyage to "another world", to disembark after time had been reversed back to the Mesozoic and the rest of humanity written out of history.
120* WellIntentionedExtremist: Operation Golden Age. Desperate to save the planet, they mean to move back time and RetGone everyone save their chosen few.
121* WhamEpisode: The suspenseful tone of the first episode as well as the morally ambiguous villains and Phillips' bloody death heralded the darker tone the series would take in the Creator/RobertHolmes era. However probably the most devastating event in the story is Yates's betrayal, not only marking the first time one of his allies had outright turned on the Doctor but also shattering the secure, cosy feeling of the UNIT family and heralding the series' return to the Doctor's more nomadic lifestyle. It's also a bit of a [[BookEnds book-end]], being the last Creator/MalcolmHulke script, one of the defining GreyAndGreyMorality writers and of the Pertwee era.
122* WhamLine: "We left Earth three months ago." It turns out to be a RedHerring.
123* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: The stegosaurus which briefly appears just before the Doctor's arrest isn't shown to vanish back to the past ''or'' be killed or captured by UNIT's forces. For all we know, it could still be standing there in the warehouse at the end of the story.
124* TheXOfY
125* YouHaveToBelieveMe: When Sarah Jane tries to convince the colonists that their spaceship is a fake and they've never left Earth, the leaders dismiss her as a deranged troublemaker. She starts to desperately shout about the danger the world is in from Whitaker's time machine, which doesn't do anything to make herself or her story more credible.
126* [[YouSaidYouWouldLetThemGo You Said You Would Let Him Live]]: The Golden Age nutjobs try to pull this on Yates concerning the Doctor.

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