Doctor Who (partially lost BBC sci-fi series episodes; 1963-1978): Difference between revisions

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{{InfoboxLost
{{InfoboxLost
|title=<center>Doctor Who (missing episodes)</center>
|title=<center>Doctor Who (missing episodes)</center>
|image=Collage_offair_304_thedaleksmasterplan.jpg
|image=DoctorWho-TheFeastOfStevenOffairCollage.jpg
|imagecaption=Screenshots from "The Feast of Steven", the only episode of ''Doctor Who'' believed to be permanently missing.
|imagecaption=Screenshots from "The Feast of Steven", the only episode of ''Doctor Who'' believed to be permanently missing.
|status=<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Lost'''</span>
}}
}}
[[File:EvilFilmCan.jpg|thumb|300px|A film canister containing a previously missing episode of ''Doctor Who'', "The Evil of the Daleks: Ep 2".]]
The appropriately dubbed '''''Doctor Who''''' ''Missing Episodes''' are a collection of 147 episodes of the British sci-fi television series that were wiped by the BBC between 1963 and 1974. Though many episodes have been recovered over the years, 97 remain missing; consequently, full footage of these lost episodes have not been seen since their original airing, though every episode's audio has survived from homemade recordings. Because of the high amount of publicity surrounding these missing episodes, they are arguably one of the most famous cases of lost media in modern history.
[[File:MarcoPolo-slide-low-1024x683.jpg|thumb|300px|A picture taken on set of the lost episode "Marco Polo".]]
The appropriately dubbed '''''Doctor Who ''Missing Episodes''' are a collection of 147 episodes of the British sci-fi television series that were wiped by the BBC between 1963 and 1974. Though many episodes have been recovered over the years, 97 remain missing; consequently, full footage of these lost episodes have not been seen since their original airing, though every episode's audio has survived from homemade recordings. Because of the high amount of publicity surrounding these missing episodes, they are arguably one of the most famous cases of lost media in modern history.


While it was typical of the BBC during this time to wipe old master tapes for re-use instead of purchasing expensive new videotape reels, the story the episodes' junkings goes far deeper than what one can call standard procedure. During production, the BBC Film Library and BBC Enterprises were conflicted over which of them had the responsibility of archiving ''Doctor Who'' master reels. The Film Library was not obligated to store productions not recorded on film, prompting them to destroy their copies. Meanwhile, BBC Enterprises wiped their own reels due to a combination of them being considered unnecessarily voluminous, the high price tag of new magnetic videotape, and, following the advent of color television, the belief that the black and white serials had become visually outdated and thus impractical to re-air. During this time, each party assumed that the other had already archived their own copies, and in the end, both parties threw out their own master reels of many old black-and-white productions.
==History==
[[File:DoctorWho-RecoveredFilmCan.jpg|thumb|300px|A film canister containing a previously missing episode of ''Doctor Who'', "The Evil of the Daleks: Ep 2".]]
While it was typical of the BBC during this time to wipe old master tapes for re-use instead of purchasing expensive new videotape reels, the story the episodes' junking goes far deeper than what one can call standard procedure. During production, the BBC Film Library and BBC Enterprises were conflicted over which of them had the responsibility of archiving ''Doctor Who'' master reels. The Film Library was not obligated to store productions not recorded on film, prompting them to destroy their copies. Meanwhile, BBC Enterprises wiped their own reels due to a combination of them being considered unnecessarily voluminous, the high price tag of new magnetic videotape, and, following the advent of colour television, the belief that the black and white serials had become visually outdated and thus impractical to re-air. During this time, each party assumed that the other had already archived their own copies, and in the end, both parties threw out their own master reels of many old black-and-white productions.


In 1974, the BBC were convinced to stop wiping episodes of ''Doctor Who'' at the insistence of Ian Levine, a record producer and prominent fan of the show. Later, the rise in popularity of home media prompted the BBC to officially end their junking policy in 1978 and start searching for the episodes that they had lost by attempting to gain the cooperation of private collectors and probing the television stations that they had loaned film copies to (reels that had, as of then, not yet been returned). Through these methods, the BBC has managed to recover 50 episodes over the years (most recently in October 2013), including nine full missing serials. However, some serials are still missing several seconds of footage from the following episodes:
In 1974, the BBC was convinced to stop wiping episodes of ''Doctor Who'' at the insistence of Ian Levine, a record producer and prominent fan of the show. Later, the rise in popularity of home media prompted the BBC to officially end their junking policy in 1978 and start searching for the episodes that they had lost by attempting to gain the cooperation of private collectors and probing the television stations that they had loaned film copies to (reels that had, as of then, not yet been returned). Through these methods, the BBC has managed to recover 50 episodes over the years (most recently in October 2013), including nine full missing serials. However, some serials are still missing several seconds of footage from the following episodes:
 
==Episodes==
[[File:DoctorWho-MarcoPoloProductionPhoto.jpg|thumb|300px|A picture was taken on the set of the lost episode "Marco Polo."]]
* Episodes 2 & 3 of "The Keys of Marinus" (''Unknown'')
* Episodes 2 & 3 of "The Keys of Marinus" (''Unknown'')
* Episode 4 of "The Time Meddler" (12 seconds)
* Episode 4 of "The Time Meddler" (12 seconds)
Line 20: Line 22:
* Episode 3 of "The Faceless Ones" (20 seconds)
* Episode 3 of "The Faceless Ones" (20 seconds)


Of note is the fact that all the episodes were initially shot, edited, and broadcast on PAL videotapes; these tapes are what were wiped for reuse. Any existing copies were 16-millimetre telerecordings (film recordings produced by shooting footage of a monitor displaying playback of the source video) for international distribution; these copies were the ones recovered by the BBC. Videotapes capture interlaced video, essentially meaning that the footage runs at 48 frames per second, but has its vertical resolution halved, allowing for much smoother movements. As a result, the film copies -- depending on their age -- either had two interlaced fields (half-frames) combined into one regular frame, or discarded one field and just upscaled each half-frame to fill the screen. Either way, the result is the less stable, 24fps footage commonly seen on film. The former is easier to remaster, as they simply scan the film to digital, repair all the damage done to the film over the years, then apply a filter that turns it to interlaced video. The latter is much more difficult and technical and usually requires some clever filtering to properly double the framerate.
Of note is the fact that all the episodes were initially shot, edited, and broadcast on PAL videotapes; these tapes are what were wiped for reuse. Any existing copies were 16-millimetre telerecordings (film recordings produced by shooting footage of a monitor displaying playback of the source video) for international distribution; these copies were the ones recovered by the BBC. Videotapes capture interlaced video, essentially meaning that the footage runs at 48 frames per second, but has its vertical resolution halved, allowing for much smoother movements. As a result, the film copies -- depending on their age -- either had two interlaced fields (half-frames) combined into one regular frame or discarded one field and just upscaled each half-frame to fill the screen. Either way, the result is the less stable, 24fps footage commonly seen on film. The former is easier to remaster, as they simply scan the film to digital, repair all the damage done to the film over the years, then apply a filter that turns it to interlaced video. The latter is much more difficult and technical and usually requires some clever filtering to double the framerate properly.


A total of 26 serials still remain incomplete, 10 of which are completely missing from the BBC archives. However, while the footage of these episodes is near-completely missing, all of their audio tracks have survived from pirated audio recordings made during their initial broadcast. Most missing episodes also feature snippets of footage that have survived through various methods, and telesnaps & on-set photos of each missing episode survive as well. Through all this, the BBC have been able to make crude reconstructions of the missing episodes, all of which were released on VHS, and later the ''Lost in Time'' DVD box set in 2004. Furthermore, "The Reign of Terror", "The Tenth Planet", "The Moonbase", "The Ice Warriors", "The Invasion", and "The Power of the Daleks" have received animated remakes, based on all surviving material. There were initially plans to release an animated remake of "The Underwater Menace", but this was cancelled in favor of a telesnap reconstruction after the appointed animation studio raised its commission prices.
==Extra Information==
A total of 26 serials still remain incomplete, 10 of which are completely missing from the BBC archives. However, while the footage of these episodes is near-completely missing, all of their audio tracks have survived from pirated audio recordings made during their initial broadcast. Most missing episodes also feature snippets of footage that have survived through various methods, and telesnaps & on-set photos of each missing episode survive as well. Through all this, the BBC has been able to make crude reconstructions of the missing episodes, all of which were released on VHS, and later the ''Lost in Time'' DVD box set in 2004. Furthermore, "The Reign of Terror", "The Tenth Planet", "The Moonbase", "The Ice Warriors", "The Invasion", and "The Power of the Daleks" have received animated remakes, based on all surviving material. There were initially plans to release an animated remake of "The Underwater Menace", but this was cancelled in favour of a telesnap reconstruction after the appointed animation studio raised its commission prices.


In addition to the completely lost episodes during the First and Second Doctor's runs, there are some episodes from the Third Doctor's run that no longer exist in their original color format. When the episodes were recovered from copies loaned to Australian television networks, all footage was in monochrome, having been filtered as such to compensate for Australia's lack of color television at the time. However, the footage was gradually recolored by various methods. Many of these practices relied on the remaining color data on the international copies, while at least one (Babelcolour's official recoloring of Episode One of "The Mind of Evil") was digitally hand-colored. While most of the processes used by the BBC don't provide a 1:1 recreation of how each episode originally looked, with discrepancies such as Jon Pertwee's silver hair appearing blonde, the results are generally regarded as sufficient. As of the DVD release of "The Mind of Evil" in June of 2013, every Third Doctor story is available to watch in full color.
In addition to the completely lost episodes during the First and Second Doctor's runs, there are some episodes from the Third Doctor's run that no longer exist in their original colour format. When the episodes were recovered from copies loaned to Australian television networks, all footage was in monochrome, having been filtered as such to compensate for Australia's lack of colour television at the time. However, the footage was gradually recolored by various methods. Many of these practices relied on the remaining colour data on the international copies, while at least one (Babelcolour's official recoloring of Episode One of "The Mind of Evil") was digitally hand-coloured. While most of the processes used by the BBC don't provide a 1:1 recreation of how each episode originally looked, with discrepancies such as Jon Pertwee's silver hair appearing blonde, the results are generally regarded as sufficient. As of the DVD release of "The Mind of Evil" in June of 2013, every Third Doctor story is available to watch in full colour.


Of the 97 episodes that are currently missing, only one is confirmed to have no chance of recovery: "The Feast of Steven", the seventh part of the 12-part serial "The Daleks' Master Plan". The episode was made as a lighthearted Christmas special, due to the fact that it was set to air on Christmas day; the producers did not wish to kill the holiday spirit by continuing the current story's rather dark plot. It was only aired once, and because the episode had no relevance to the plot, there were no film copies made for overseas distribution, unlike all other episodes. The only known copy of it was destroyed in the second round of wiping on August 17th, 1967. The ''Doctor Who'' Restoration Team has theorized that the episode may survive from a routine telerecording, but the chances of this are intensely slim.
Of the 97 episodes that are currently missing, only one is confirmed to have no chance of recovery: "The Feast of Steven", the seventh part of the 12-part serial "The Daleks' Master Plan". The episode was made as a lighthearted Christmas special, due to the fact that it was set to air on Christmas day; the producers did not wish to kill the holiday spirit by continuing the current story's rather dark plot. It was only aired once, and because the episode had no relevance to the plot, there were no film copies made for overseas distribution, unlike all other episodes. The only known copy of it was destroyed in the second round of wiping on August 17th, 1967. The ''Doctor Who'' Restoration Team has theorized that the episode may survive from a routine telerecording, but the chances of this are intensely slim.
{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRFlWddgi2Y|320x240|right|A fan-made animated recreation of "The Feast of Steven," utilizing the surviving audio track.|frame}}


Also of note is the fact that of all 26 stories with missing episodes, three have no surviving footage whatsoever: "Marco Polo," "Mission to the Unknown," and "The Massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Eve." All other missing episodes feature at least some fragments of surviving footage, obtained either from Australian & New Zealand censorship boards (who literally cut the footage from their reels), amateur telerecordings, or snippets of footage used in third party programs.
{{Video|perrow  =1
  |service1    =youtube
  |id1          =ZRFlWddgi2Y
  |description1 =A fan-made animated recreation of "The Feast of Steven", utilizing the surviving audio track.
}}
Also of note is the fact that of all 26 stories with missing episodes, three have no surviving footage whatsoever: "Marco Polo", "Mission to the Unknown", and "The Massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Eve". All other missing episodes feature at least some fragments of surviving footage, obtained either from Australian & New Zealand censorship boards (who literally cut the footage from their reels), amateur telerecordings, or snippets of footage used in third-party programs.


The most recent development in the recovery of the missing episodes occurred in 2013, when nine previously lost episodes were uncovered at a local TV station in Nigeria by [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e6XPhLZTLSo Phillip Morris], those being the remaining five "The Enemy of the World" episodes (ie. 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6), and four of the five missing "The Web of Fear" episodes (ie. 2, 4, 5 and 6) - all of which have since been made available for digital purchase on iTunes. Episode 3 of "The Web of Fear" was also recovered among these nine, but the reels for it went missing before they could be sent to the BBC and are believed to have been stolen.
The most recent development in the recovery of the missing episodes occurred in 2013 when nine previously lost episodes were uncovered at a local TV station in Nigeria by [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e6XPhLZTLSo Phillip Morris], those being the remaining five "The Enemy of the World" episodes (i.e. 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6), and four of the five missing "The Web of Fear" episodes (i.e. 2, 4, 5 and 6) - all of which have since been made available for digital purchase on iTunes. Episode 3 of "The Web of Fear" was also recovered among these nine, but the reels for it went missing before they could be sent to the BBC and are believed to have been stolen. Years later, Morris confirmed the episode was likely stolen by a private collector, who recognised the value in it being the first appearance of the Brigadier, a popular recurring character who served as a regular during the Jon Pertwee era.
 
In 2020, Morris revealed in a zoom interview that "at least six" missing episodes are currently in the hands of private collectors, and he is negotiating their return to the BBC.


==List of Missing Episodes==
==List of Missing Episodes==
Line 44: Line 53:
! Serial
! Serial
! Missing / Total
! Missing / Total
! Missing Episode(s)<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/missingepisodes.shtml List of missing episodes for First and Second Doctors' episodes] Last retrieved 26 June 2011.</ref>
! Missing Episode(s)<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/missingepisodes.shtml List of missing episodes for First and Second Doctors' episodes on the BBC website.] Retrieved 05 Oct '15</ref>
|-
|-
| rowspan="12" | First Doctor
| rowspan="12" | First Doctor
Line 197: Line 206:
|}
|}


==List of recovered episodes==
==List Of Recovered Episodes==
'''Note: stories highlighted in green exist in their complete form as a result of their missing episodes' recovery.'''
'''Note: stories highlighted in green exist in their complete form as a result of their missing episodes' recovery.'''
{|class="wikitable"
{|class="wikitable"
Line 471: Line 480:
|}
|}


==List of stories that have received animated reconstructions==
==List Of Stories That Have Received Animated Reconstructions==
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
Line 506: Line 515:
| 30 October 2013
| 30 October 2013
|-
|-
| rowspan=4|Second Doctor
| rowspan=7|Second Doctor
| ''The Power of the Daleks''
| ''The Power of the Daleks''
| align=center|6
| align=center|6
Line 522: Line 531:
| 22 January 2014
| 22 January 2014
| 11 February 2014
| 11 February 2014
|-
| align=center|4
| ''The Macra Terror''
| align=center|4
| align=center|4
| BBC
| 25 March 2019
| 12 November 2019
| Unknown
|-
| align=center|4
| ''The Faceless Ones''
| align=center|6
| align=center|4 (2,4-6)
| Big Finish Productions/Planet 55
| 2020
| 2020
| 2020
|-
|-
| align=center|5
| align=center|5
Line 531: Line 558:
| 17 September 2013
| 17 September 2013
| 28 August 2013
| 28 August 2013
|-
| align=center|5
| ''Fury From The Deep''
| align=center|6
| align=center|6
| Big Finish Productions/Planet 55
| 2020
| 2020
| 2020
|-
|-
| align=center|6
| align=center|6
Line 541: Line 577:
| 3 January 2007
| 3 January 2007
|}
|}
==External Link==
*[http://missingepisodes.blogspot.co.nz/ The Destruction Of Time, A deeper look into the lost episodes.] Retrieved 11 Feb '14


==References==
==Reference==
<references/>
{{reflist}}


==External Links==
*[http://missingepisodes.blogspot.co.nz/ The Destruction Of Time, A deeper look into the lost episodes.]


[[Category:Lost TV]]
[[Category:Lost TV]]
[[Category:Partially lost media]]
[[Category:Partially lost media]]
[[Category:Historic]]
[[Category:Historic]]

Revision as of 11:07, 31 August 2020

DoctorWho-TheFeastOfStevenOffairCollage.jpg

Screenshots from "The Feast of Steven", the only episode of Doctor Who believed to be permanently missing.

Status: Partially Lost

The appropriately dubbed Doctor Who Missing Episodes' are a collection of 147 episodes of the British sci-fi television series that were wiped by the BBC between 1963 and 1974. Though many episodes have been recovered over the years, 97 remain missing; consequently, full footage of these lost episodes have not been seen since their original airing, though every episode's audio has survived from homemade recordings. Because of the high amount of publicity surrounding these missing episodes, they are arguably one of the most famous cases of lost media in modern history.

History

A film canister containing a previously missing episode of Doctor Who, "The Evil of the Daleks: Ep 2".

While it was typical of the BBC during this time to wipe old master tapes for re-use instead of purchasing expensive new videotape reels, the story the episodes' junking goes far deeper than what one can call standard procedure. During production, the BBC Film Library and BBC Enterprises were conflicted over which of them had the responsibility of archiving Doctor Who master reels. The Film Library was not obligated to store productions not recorded on film, prompting them to destroy their copies. Meanwhile, BBC Enterprises wiped their own reels due to a combination of them being considered unnecessarily voluminous, the high price tag of new magnetic videotape, and, following the advent of colour television, the belief that the black and white serials had become visually outdated and thus impractical to re-air. During this time, each party assumed that the other had already archived their own copies, and in the end, both parties threw out their own master reels of many old black-and-white productions.

In 1974, the BBC was convinced to stop wiping episodes of Doctor Who at the insistence of Ian Levine, a record producer and prominent fan of the show. Later, the rise in popularity of home media prompted the BBC to officially end their junking policy in 1978 and start searching for the episodes that they had lost by attempting to gain the cooperation of private collectors and probing the television stations that they had loaned film copies to (reels that had, as of then, not yet been returned). Through these methods, the BBC has managed to recover 50 episodes over the years (most recently in October 2013), including nine full missing serials. However, some serials are still missing several seconds of footage from the following episodes:

Episodes

A picture was taken on the set of the lost episode "Marco Polo."
  • Episodes 2 & 3 of "The Keys of Marinus" (Unknown)
  • Episode 4 of "The Time Meddler" (12 seconds)
  • Episode 3 of "Galaxy 4" (27 seconds)
  • Episode 4 of "The Celestial Toymaker" (Unknown)
  • Episodes 3 & 4 of "The War Machines" (One minute, 18 seconds)
  • Episode 3 of "The Faceless Ones" (20 seconds)

Of note is the fact that all the episodes were initially shot, edited, and broadcast on PAL videotapes; these tapes are what were wiped for reuse. Any existing copies were 16-millimetre telerecordings (film recordings produced by shooting footage of a monitor displaying playback of the source video) for international distribution; these copies were the ones recovered by the BBC. Videotapes capture interlaced video, essentially meaning that the footage runs at 48 frames per second, but has its vertical resolution halved, allowing for much smoother movements. As a result, the film copies -- depending on their age -- either had two interlaced fields (half-frames) combined into one regular frame or discarded one field and just upscaled each half-frame to fill the screen. Either way, the result is the less stable, 24fps footage commonly seen on film. The former is easier to remaster, as they simply scan the film to digital, repair all the damage done to the film over the years, then apply a filter that turns it to interlaced video. The latter is much more difficult and technical and usually requires some clever filtering to double the framerate properly.

Extra Information

A total of 26 serials still remain incomplete, 10 of which are completely missing from the BBC archives. However, while the footage of these episodes is near-completely missing, all of their audio tracks have survived from pirated audio recordings made during their initial broadcast. Most missing episodes also feature snippets of footage that have survived through various methods, and telesnaps & on-set photos of each missing episode survive as well. Through all this, the BBC has been able to make crude reconstructions of the missing episodes, all of which were released on VHS, and later the Lost in Time DVD box set in 2004. Furthermore, "The Reign of Terror", "The Tenth Planet", "The Moonbase", "The Ice Warriors", "The Invasion", and "The Power of the Daleks" have received animated remakes, based on all surviving material. There were initially plans to release an animated remake of "The Underwater Menace", but this was cancelled in favour of a telesnap reconstruction after the appointed animation studio raised its commission prices.

In addition to the completely lost episodes during the First and Second Doctor's runs, there are some episodes from the Third Doctor's run that no longer exist in their original colour format. When the episodes were recovered from copies loaned to Australian television networks, all footage was in monochrome, having been filtered as such to compensate for Australia's lack of colour television at the time. However, the footage was gradually recolored by various methods. Many of these practices relied on the remaining colour data on the international copies, while at least one (Babelcolour's official recoloring of Episode One of "The Mind of Evil") was digitally hand-coloured. While most of the processes used by the BBC don't provide a 1:1 recreation of how each episode originally looked, with discrepancies such as Jon Pertwee's silver hair appearing blonde, the results are generally regarded as sufficient. As of the DVD release of "The Mind of Evil" in June of 2013, every Third Doctor story is available to watch in full colour.

Of the 97 episodes that are currently missing, only one is confirmed to have no chance of recovery: "The Feast of Steven", the seventh part of the 12-part serial "The Daleks' Master Plan". The episode was made as a lighthearted Christmas special, due to the fact that it was set to air on Christmas day; the producers did not wish to kill the holiday spirit by continuing the current story's rather dark plot. It was only aired once, and because the episode had no relevance to the plot, there were no film copies made for overseas distribution, unlike all other episodes. The only known copy of it was destroyed in the second round of wiping on August 17th, 1967. The Doctor Who Restoration Team has theorized that the episode may survive from a routine telerecording, but the chances of this are intensely slim.

A fan-made animated recreation of "The Feast of Steven", utilizing the surviving audio track.

Also of note is the fact that of all 26 stories with missing episodes, three have no surviving footage whatsoever: "Marco Polo", "Mission to the Unknown", and "The Massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Eve". All other missing episodes feature at least some fragments of surviving footage, obtained either from Australian & New Zealand censorship boards (who literally cut the footage from their reels), amateur telerecordings, or snippets of footage used in third-party programs.

The most recent development in the recovery of the missing episodes occurred in 2013 when nine previously lost episodes were uncovered at a local TV station in Nigeria by Phillip Morris, those being the remaining five "The Enemy of the World" episodes (i.e. 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6), and four of the five missing "The Web of Fear" episodes (i.e. 2, 4, 5 and 6) - all of which have since been made available for digital purchase on iTunes. Episode 3 of "The Web of Fear" was also recovered among these nine, but the reels for it went missing before they could be sent to the BBC and are believed to have been stolen. Years later, Morris confirmed the episode was likely stolen by a private collector, who recognised the value in it being the first appearance of the Brigadier, a popular recurring character who served as a regular during the Jon Pertwee era.

In 2020, Morris revealed in a zoom interview that "at least six" missing episodes are currently in the hands of private collectors, and he is negotiating their return to the BBC.

List of Missing Episodes

Note: serials highlighted in red are missing all episodes, serials highlighted in yellow are missing a majority of their episodes, and serials highlighted in white are at least 50% intact.

Doctor Missing Season Total number of missing episodes Story Serial Missing / Total Missing Episode(s)[1]
First Doctor 44 1 9 004 Marco Polo 7 / 7 All (No surviving footage)
008 The Reign of Terror 2 / 6 4, 5
2 2 014 The Crusade 2 / 4 2, 4
3 28 018 Galaxy 4 3 / 4 1, 2, 4
019 "Mission to the Unknown" 1 / 1 No surviving footage
020 The Myth Makers 4 / 4 All
021 The Daleks' Master Plan 9 / 12 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12 (Episode 7, "The Feast of Steven", confirmed to be permanently missing)
022 The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve 4 / 4 All (No surviving footage)
024 The Celestial Toymaker 3 / 4 1, 2, 3
026 The Savages 4 / 4 All
4 33 028 The Smugglers 4 / 4 All
029 The Tenth Planet 1 / 4 4
Second Doctor 53 030 The Power of the Daleks 6 / 6 All
031 The Highlanders 4 / 4 All
032 The Underwater Menace 2 / 4 1, 4
033 The Moonbase 2 / 4 1, 3
034 The Macra Terror 4 / 4 All
035 The Faceless Ones 4 / 6 2, 4, 5, 6
036 The Evil of the Daleks 6 / 7 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
5 18 038 The Abominable Snowmen 5 / 6 1, 3, 4, 5, 6
039 The Ice Warriors 2 / 6 2, 3
041 The Web of Fear 1 / 6 3
042 Fury from the Deep 6 / 6 All
043 The Wheel in Space 4 / 6 1, 2, 4, 5
6 7 046 The Invasion 2 / 8 1, 4
049 The Space Pirates 5 / 6 1, 3, 4, 5, 6
26 incomplete serials 97 missing episodes

List Of Recovered Episodes

Note: stories highlighted in green exist in their complete form as a result of their missing episodes' recovery.

Doctor Season Story no. Serial Number of episodes Returned episodes Recovered from Total recovered Total episodes in archive
Country/Territory Source Year
First Doctor 1 008 The Reign of Terror 6 Episodes 1, 2, 3 & 6 Cyprus Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation (ep. 1-3) Copies of episodes 4 and 5 were also held by the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation, but were destroyed during the Turkish invasion of Cyprus. 1985 4 4
United Kingdom Private collector (ep. 6) 1982
2 014 The Crusade 4 Episode 1 New Zealand Private collector 1999 1 2
017 The Time Meddler 4 Episodes 1, 3 & 4 Nigeria Nigerian Television Authority 1985 3 4
3 018 Galaxy 4 4 Episode 3 United Kingdom Private collector 2011 1 1
021 The Daleks' Master Plan 12 Episodes 2, 5 & 10 United Kingdom Private collector (ep. 2) 2004 3 3
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (ep. 5 & 10) 1983
024 The Celestial Toymaker 4 Episode 4 Australia Australian Broadcasting Corporation 1984 1 1
027 The War Machines 4 All 4 episodes Nigeria Nigerian Television Authority (ep. 1, 3, 4) 1985 4 4
Australia Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ep. 2) 1978
First Doctor Totals 7 serials 17 episodes
Second Doctor 4 032 The Underwater Menace 4 Episode 2 United Kingdom Private collector 2011 1 2
035 The Faceless Ones 6 Episode 3 United Kingdom Private collector 1987 1 2
036 The Evil of the Daleks 7 Episode 2 United Kingdom Private collector 1987 1 1
5 037 The Tomb of the Cybermen 4 All 4 episodes Hong Kong Asia Television 1991 4 4
038 The Abominable Snowmen 6 Episode 2 United Kingdom Private collector 1982 1 1
039 The Ice Warriors 6 Episodes 1, 4, 5 & 6 United Kingdom British Broadcasting Corporation (Recovered from a store cupboard in the BBC Enterprises building at Villiers House in Ealing) 1988 4 4
040 The Enemy of the World 6 Episodes 1, 2, 4, 5 & 6 (A complete set of the serial was recovered, including a redundant copy of episode 3.) Nigeria Nigerian Television Authority 2013 5 6
041 The Web of Fear 6 Episodes 1, 2, 4, 5 & 6 Unknown Unknown (ep. 1) There is some debate over whether this episode is a recovered one. It is has been stated that it was recovered as part of a cache of material returned to the BBC from ATV in Hong Kong in 1978–79. However, a 1976 partial listing of material then in existence at the BBC includes a copy held at BBC Enterprises. It is unclear if this is an error, a different copy, or if the can was misplaced at the time of the 1978 audit and subsequently rediscovered. 5 5
Nigeria Nigerian Television Authority (ep. 2, 4, 5, 6) A redundant copy of episode 1 was found as part of this cache. Additionally, a copy of episode 3 was also part of this cache, but subsequently disappeared prior to being returned to the BBC. 2013
043 The Wheel in Space 6 Episode 3 United Kingdom Private collector 1984 1 2
6 044 The Dominators 5 Episode 3 (Returned as a 35 mm telerecording negative) United Kingdom British Film Institute 1978 1 5
047 The Krotons 4 Episode 4 United Kingdom British Film Institute 1978 1 4
050 The War Games 10 Episodes 1, 3, 4, 6, 7 & 10 United Kingdom British Film Institute 1978 6 10
Second Doctor Totals 12 serials 31 episodes
Third Doctor 11 071 Invasion of the Dinosaurs 6 Part 1 (entitled Invasion) United Kingdom Private collector 1983 1 6
072 Death to the Daleks 4 Part 1 (Returned as a 2-inch colour videotape) Canada Unknown TV station (as NTSC) 1981 1 (Initially returned as a 525-line NTSC master videotape; the BBC subsequently received a 625-line PAL master videotape.) 4
Dubai Dubai 33 (as PAL) 1991 (An edited PAL videotape copy had previously been returned to the BBC from Australia in 1985.)
Third Doctor Totals 2 serials 2 episodes
Totals 21 serials 50 episodes

List Of Stories That Have Received Animated Reconstructions

Doctor Season Serial Total Episodes Missing Episodes Animator DVD Release
Region 2 Region 1 Region 4
First Doctor 1 The Reign of Terror 6 2 (4,5) Big Finish Productions/Planet 55 28 January 2013 12 February 2013 6 February 2013
4 The Tenth Planet 4 1 (4) Planet 55 14 October 2013 19 November 2013 30 October 2013
Second Doctor The Power of the Daleks 6 6 BBC 21 November 2016 24 January 2017 14 December 2016
The Moonbase 4 2 (1,3) Planet 55 20 January 2014 22 January 2014 11 February 2014
4 The Macra Terror 4 4 BBC 25 March 2019 12 November 2019 Unknown
4 The Faceless Ones 6 4 (2,4-6) Big Finish Productions/Planet 55 2020 2020 2020
5 The Ice Warriors 6 2 (2,3) Qurios Entertainment 26 August 2013 17 September 2013 28 August 2013
5 Fury From The Deep 6 6 Big Finish Productions/Planet 55 2020 2020 2020
6 The Invasion 8 2 (1,4) Cosgrove Hall 6 November 2006 6 March 2007 3 January 2007

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Reference