The Inquisitor (Red Dwarf)
"The Inquisitor" | |
---|---|
Red Dwarf episode | |
Episode no. | Series 5 Episode 2 |
Directed by | Juliet May & Grant Naylor |
Written by | Rob Grant & Doug Naylor |
Original air date | 27 February 1992 |
Guest appearances | |
| |
"The Inquisitor" is the second episode of science fiction sitcom Red Dwarf Series V[1] and the twenty sixth in the series run.[2] It was first broadcast on the British television channel BBC2 on 27 February 1992.[3] It was written by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor, and directed by Juliet May and Grant Naylor.[4] The episode's plot deals with a time travelling simulant who visits Red Dwarf to assess if they are worthy of their existence.
Plot
[edit]Arnold Rimmer, Dave Lister, Kryten and Cat find a trip out on a Starbug cut short when they are returned to Red Dwarf. The group discover it to be the work of The Inquisitor – a self-repairing simulant who survived until the end of time, concluded that, as there was no God, the only point of existence was to lead a worthwhile life and is now time-travelling throughout history to judge all, removing from existence all he has judged unworthy of existence and replacing with others who could have been conceived in their places. Each member of the group finds themselves judged by the Inquisitor through a copy of themselves, the only means of judgement that the Inquisitor deemed to be fair. While Rimmer and Cat are spared with their arguments and own low standards for their own lives, Kryten and Lister find that they have been judged to be unworthy as a result of their mechanoid programming and lack of motivation. Both find themselves removed from the time-stream. Before they are erased, a future version of Kryten arrives and amputates the Inquisitor's left hand that holds a time-manipulating gauntlet, passing it to both before he is killed, and leaving them with a cryptic clue to operating it.
Escaping from the simulant, the pair seek out their friends, but find they no longer recognise them since being removed from history. Lister attempts to convince Rimmer that he and Kryten know him and the Cat (and not to eject them from the airlock) by citing a number of embarrassing personal details about him. They also meet their un-conceived equivalents. The Inquisitor soon catches up with the pair and attempts to destroy them but inadvertently kills their replacements, allowing them to escape again partly by Lister's use of his equivalent's severed hand to open locked doors. Kryten soon works out how to use the gauntlet from the clue they received, using it to age away their restraints. Rimmer and Cat, now convinced that Lister and Kryten are friends rather than foes, are destroyed upon confronting the Inquisitor. Kryten uses the gauntlet to freeze the simulant in place. To keep the timeline coherent, Kryten uses it to go back in time and avoid a paradox. Meanwhile, Lister uses the Inquisitor's other time gauntlet to put the simulant in danger in order to bargain for his life being spared by saving his life, only for the Inquisitor to declare that he can erase him to prevent himself being endangered. Upon doing so, his gauntlet backfires, not knowing Lister had Kryten reprogramme it, causing the Inquisitor to be erased from existence, while restoring everyone and history to its original state.
Production
[edit]"The Inquisitor", which was the second episode to be filmed,[5] was considered by Grant and Naylor to lead the series, but as it was heavily science fiction influenced the casual viewer friendly Holoship was chosen to go out first instead.[6]
With the show returning to Stage G for filming, new director Juliet May decided to shoot "Demons & Angels" first over "The Inquisitor". "Holoship" had been put back in the filming schedule because of guest star availability and "The Inquisitor" was passed on by the new director as she was still trying to make sense of the script.[7]
Jack Docherty played The Inquisitor, James Cormack played Thomas Allman and Jake Abraham played the alternative Lister.[4]
Cultural references
[edit]- At the start of the episode, Kryten observes that Lister is reading a comic-book version of Virgil's Aeneid: "The epic tale of Agamemnon's pursuit of Helen of Troy." In fact, although the Trojan horse is referred to in the Aeneid, the work as a whole is not about Agamemnon or Helen (who both feature more prominently in Homer's Iliad).
- Kryten and Lister chained together and on the run references The Defiant Ones.[8]
- In a heat of Series 2 of Robot Wars (which Craig later hosted after the end of BBC produced Red Dwarf) a robot called 'Inquisitor' competed. When the people who made the bot met Craig on the podium, Craig asked: "Where does the name come from?" and the roboteer replied "Red Dwarf". Craig responded "Never heard of it!"
Reception
[edit]The episode was originally broadcast on the British television channel BBC2 on 27 February 1992 in the 9:00pm evening time slot,[3] and received a mixed reaction from viewers.[9] Although the episode was viewed by over 5 million viewers,[10] the episode has been regarded as very Sci-Fi,[11] and some people found the ending of the episode confusing, and the time travel aspect had added to the confusion.[6]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "British Sitcom Guide — Red Dwarf — Series 5". sitcom.co.uk. Retrieved 29 January 2008.
- ^ "TV.com — The Inquisitor summary". tv.com. Retrieved 29 January 2008.
- ^ a b "BBC — Programme Catalogue — RED DWARF V — THE INQUISITOR". BBC. Retrieved 12 December 2007.
- ^ a b "The Inquisitor cast and crew". IMDb. Retrieved 29 January 2008.
- ^ Series V Preview, Red Dwarf Smegazine, issue 1, March 1992, Fleetway Editions Ltd, ISSN 0965-5603
- ^ a b Grant and Naylor Look Back, Red Dwarf Smegazine, issue 11, January 1993, Fleetway Editions Ltd, ISSN 0965-5603
- ^ "Red Dwarf Series V Production". reddwarf.co.uk. Archived from the original on 4 January 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2008.
- ^ "The Inquisitor movie connections". IMDb. Retrieved 8 January 2008.
- ^ Red Dwarf Smegazine: Survey Results, issue 10, December 1992, Fleetway Editions Ltd, ISSN 0965-5603
- ^ "Red Dwarf Series V Aftermath". reddwarf.co.uk. Archived from the original on 4 January 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2008.
- ^ "Series V review by Gavrielle". reviewsbygavrielle.com. Archived from the original on 13 April 2004. Retrieved 29 January 2008.
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