| Sylvester McCoy | ... | The Doctor | |
| Sophie Aldred | ... | Ace | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| June Bland | ... | Elizabeth Rawlinson | |
| Christopher Bowen | ... | Mordred | |
| Angela Bruce | ... | Brigadier Winifred Bambera | |
| Noel Collins | ... | Pat Rowlinson | |
| Nicholas Courtney | ... | Brigadier Alistair Gordon Lethbridge Stewart | |
| Angela Douglas | ... | Doris Lethbridge-Stewart | |
| James Ellis | ... | Peter Warmsly | |
| Marcus Gilbert | ... | Ancelyn | |
| Robert Jezek | ... | Sgt. Zbrigniev | |
| Jean Marsh | ... | Morgaine | |
| Ling Tai | ... | Shou Yuing | |
| Laurie Goode | ... | British Unit Trooper (uncredited) | |
| Marc Warren | ... | Extra (uncredited) | |
| Episode Crew |
Directed by | |||
| Michael Kerrigan | |||
Writing credits(in alphabetical order) | ||
| Ben Aaronovitch | writer | |
Produced by | |||
| John Nathan-Turner | .... | producer | |
Sound Department | |||
| Dick Mills | .... | special sound | |
| John Mooney | .... | sound | |
Special Effects by | |||
| Chris Reynolds | .... | senior special effects technician | |
Other crew | |||
| Andrew Cartmel | .... | script editor | |
| Series Crew These people are regular crew members. Were they in this episode? |
Writing credits | ||
| Sydney Newman | (creator) uncredited | |
Produced by | |||
| Peter Bryant | .... | associate producer (1966) | |
Film Editing by | |||
| John Dunstan | |||
| Glenn Hyde | |||
| Ian McKendrick | |||
| Dan Rae | |||
| Sheila S. Tomlinson | |||
Production Design by | |||
| David Buckingham | |||
| Roger Cann | |||
| Bob Cove | (1970s) | ||
| Nigel Curzon | |||
| Don Giles | |||
| Victor Meredith | |||
| Geoff Powell | |||
| Anne Ridley | |||
| Stephen Scott | |||
| Rochelle Selwyn | |||
| Michael Trevor | |||
Costume Design by | |||
| James Acheson | (1973-1976) | ||
| Anushia Nieradzik | |||
| Dee Robson | |||
Makeup Department | |||
| Dorka Nieradzik | .... | makeup designer (1982, 1984-1988) | |
Art Department | |||
| Peter Brachaki | .... | production designer: TARDIS interior | |
Sound Department | |||
| John Tellick | .... | sound | |
Special Effects by | |||
| Mat Irvine | .... | special effects (1970s-1980s) | |
| Ian Scoones | .... | special effects (1960s-1980s) | |
| Ron Thornton | .... | special effects (1980s) | |
| Bernard Wilkie | .... | special effects (1960s-1970s) | |
Visual Effects by | |||
| Mitch Mitchell | .... | special video effects (1960's-1970's) (as A. J. Mitchell) | |
| Oliver Elmes | .... | title sequence designer (1987-1989) (uncredited) | |
| Bernard Lodge | .... | title sequence designer (1963-1979) (uncredited 1963-1969) | |
| Sid Sutton | .... | title sequence designer (1980-1986) (uncredited) | |
Stunts | |||
| Alan Chuntz | .... | stunts (1960's-1970's) | |
| Peter Diamond | .... | stunts (1960s) | |
| Max Faulkner | .... | stunts (1960's-1970's) | |
| Stuart Fell | .... | stunts (1970s-1980s) | |
| Alf Joint | .... | stunts (1960s-1980s) | |
| Derek Martin | .... | stunts (1960s-1970s) | |
| Roy Scammell | .... | stunts (1960s-1980s) | |
| Lee Sheward | .... | stunt coordinator | |
| Terry Walsh | .... | stunts (1960s-1970s) | |
| Derek Ware | .... | stunts (1960s-1970s) | |
Camera and Electrical Department | |||
| Stewart A. Farnell | .... | camera operator (1 episode) | |
| Peter Hamilton | .... | camera operator (12 episodes) | |
| Alan Jonas | .... | camera operator (6 episodes) | |
| Reg Poulter | .... | senior camera operator | |
| Robert Sleigh | .... | camera operator (pilot episode) | |
| Ken Westbury | .... | camera operator (4 episodes) | |
Music Department | |||
| Mark Ayres | .... | composer: incidental music (1988-1989) | |
| Carey Blyton | .... | composer: incidental music (1970-1973) | |
| Paddy Kingsland | .... | composer: incidental music (1980-1985) | |
| Keff McCulloch | .... | composer: incidental music (1987-1989) | |
| Humphrey Searle | .... | composer: incidental music (1965) | |
| Dudley Simpson | .... | composer: incidental music (1964-1980) | |
Other crew | |||
| Christopher Baker | .... | production assistant | |
| Ali Bongo | .... | magic advisor | |
| Terry Brett | .... | technical manager | |
| Kenneth J. Bussanmas | .... | creative consultant (1979-1985) | |
| Patricia Greenland | .... | production assistant | |
| Jeremy Hare | .... | assistant floor manager (three episodes) | |
| Main series | Episode guide | Full cast and crew |
| IMDb TV section | IMDb Adventure section | IMDb UK section |
| Add this title to MyMovies |
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Doctor Who: Battlefield : Part One starts as the Doctor (Sylvester McCoy) receives a distress signal from across the boundaries between worlds, materialising where the signal came from the Doctor & his companion Ace (Sophie Aldred) find themselves in the English countryside near Lake Vortigern during the near future. They they discover a UNIT convoy transporting a nuclear missile that has been rendered immobile by a strange energy pulse, meanwhile several armoured Knights from outer space crash to Earth nearby & begin fighting amongst themselves. The Doctor & Ace are given a lift to the Gore Crow Hotel by UNIT leader Brigadier Winifred Bambera (Angela Bruce) where hanging on the wall of the lodge the Doctor sees a scabbard which raises his suspicions even further that something odd is happening...
Episode 1 from season 26 this Doctor Who adventure originally aired here in the UK during September 1989 & was the first story from Slyvester McCoy's third & final season playing the Doctor, a twenty sixth season which in turn ended up being the final one of the classic series. The script by Ben Aaronovitch is notable for a couple of aspects, first it sees the reappearance of Nicholas Courtney as Brigadier Lethbridge Stewart after he last appeared in the 20th anniversary story The Five Doctors (1983) six years prior. While the Brigadier was undoubtedly a great character in his heyday during the Jon Pertwee era in particular his inclusion here seems a little needless, he hasn't aged that well either looking rather old, grey & having eaten a few too many pies over the years... Bringing him back seems even more nothing than nostalgia when we learn UNIT has another Brigadier in charge anyway & surely the production team couldn't have made a worse choice than Winifred Bambera who is an absolutely awful character, I'm sorry but this is the British army for God's sake what on Earth is some irritating woman doing in charge? Was it to appease the politically correct brigade? Could you actually see a woman giving the Doctor & UNIT orders during the Pertwee years? Hell no! Secondly the basic story revolves heavily around Arthurian mythology like King Arthur, Excalibur & the Knights of the round table. Back to the actual episode itself & this is a reasonable start, it's not the best season opener but it's not the worst either.
Unfortunately by the time Battlefield was made in 1989 all location shooting was done on videotape to match the studio interior shots & I have to say right now that I really miss the look of proper film but that's just personal preference more than anything else. One also has to mention the horrible incidental music here in Battlefield by Keff McCulloch, it's awful. In this episode we get to see Knights from outer space, their armour looks good actually although the fights between them are generally quite poorly staged & their laser guns as already commented upon before seem to have all the destructive power of a firework. This episode also sees the very last interior shot inside the TARDIS during the classic series, the one at the very beginning as the Doctor receives the distress call.
Battlefield: Part One is a relatively fun little season opener, I suppose when it comes to Doctor Who in the 80's you really do have to take what you get & if it isn't too embarrassing then one has to consider it a success.