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Doctor Who: Warriors’ Gate

By: John Lydecker
Narrated by: Jon Culshaw, John Leeson
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Summary

Jon Culshaw reads this iconic novelisation of a Fourth Doctor TV adventure, newly restored and extended by the author

The Doctor and his companions are trapped in E-Space, struggling to find their way back into their own universe. Arriving at an intersection, the TARDIS is invaded by a refugee of the enslaved Tharil race.

With K9 damaged by the Time Winds, the Doctor, Romana and Adric explore the strange white eternity of the Gateway, where past, present and future cross over.

They also meet the crew of the Privateer, led by the embattled Rorvik. As all parties strive to find a way out, the Doctor realises that Rorvik’s ship holds the terrible secret of the Tharils’ history, as well as the means of their liberation.

Jon Culshaw reads Stephen Gallagher’s novelisation (writing as John Lydecker) of his 1981 TV adventure starring Tom Baker as the Doctor, now newly extended and restored from an unpublished manuscript. John Leeson provides the authentic Voice of K9.

©2019 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd (P)2019 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd
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Critic reviews

“Attention to detail is the hallmark of this always excellent range” Doctor Who Magazine

What listeners say about Doctor Who: Warriors’ Gate

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

A wonderful reinterpretation of an classic story

This is a reinterpretation of the broadcast story based on the original script, and it's compelling stuff. The narration is terrific, there's a great soundtrack and soundscape, and it oozes with atmosphere. Thanks to Radio Free Skaro for letting me know this existed.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

One of the Fourth Doctor's later adventures ...

I have no recollection of this story as a child - I’ve a feeling I’d switched over to ITV to watch the Star Wars rip-off Buck Rogers at this point.

Tom Baker’s time as the Doctor was almost up - and I don’t blame him jumping ship as the stories weren’t what they used to be. Tom’s golden era was the first few seasons; simpler stories with big monsters to grapple with and a megalomaniac to defeat each week. With Harry and Sarah-Jane by his side, of course.

The later stories were too ‘esoteric’ (with irritating sidekicks and wishy-washy villains that often looked like New Romantics) - more in line with what was to come in the Peter Davison era). The Producers made the mistake of thinking their audience wanted ‘less childish’ episodes; typical clueless BBC.

So, is this particular story any good? Well, it’s got unpleasant, bickering space-slavers, 'time-surfing' lion-men and a mirror the Doctor falls through. Oh, and K9 is on the blink. It’s a bit odd; hints of ‘Aslan’ or the lion from the Wizard of Oz.

The author has expanded and fleshed out his original script (I like it when they do that), which helps it. Jon Culshaw’s narration is excellent as always. Works better in this format than on TV (with the BBC’s cheap budget). The recording is excellent, as are the subtle sound effects in the background.

I’m slowly collecting all of the Fourth Doctor audios, because Tom was the best Doctor; this isn’t one of my favourites, but it’s worth a listen.

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