Very atmospheric opening. Foggy with the eerie theme tune helping to create a wonderful effect.
The camera in a
seemingly following forcing its way into the Junkyard just like Barbara and Ian
are about to, thought it was a nice metaphor. It feels weird that the story
starts off in ‘contemporary’ London, Doctor Who would obviously return to Earth
in the modern day but considering its mostly a non-earth series it has a
different feel to the rest of the story. Ian and Barbara’s introduction seems
like two natural teachers with a friendship. It’s very low key.
In their first scene it is
Barbara who is the driving force into discovering the mystery about Susan. In the scene where Ian and Barbara are in the car it’s interesting how Barbara is
the one that can sense there is something odd about the area. Susan’s
introduction is really good. The way that she says that she likes walking
through the fog as it’s mysterious. There is a moment when Susan is listening
to John Smith and the Common Men. It’s odd how the John Smith gag seems to come
from The Wheel in Space but this is the first mention of John Smith so this
episode is the birth of the John Smith joke but it would be four years before
it became part of the character. I thought the French Revolution reference was
quite fortuitous as it would form the final story of this opening series.
The scenes where Ian and Barbara talk about their encounters with her are quite rare for the show as flashbacks don’t form part of the narrative until the new series and there good as we only see Susan but only hear Ian and Barbara so its as if we are the ones confronting Susan. Hartnell’s first appearance comes at the 11 minute mark which shows that this is really Ian and Barbara’s episode. Hartnell isn’t the warm and grandfather like figure that we know he becomes. In many respects he is the anti-grandfather figure. When they are in the TARDIS, he is very reluctant to explain himself to Ian and Barbara and won’t let them leave fearing that they will tell people.
The scenes where Ian and Barbara talk about their encounters with her are quite rare for the show as flashbacks don’t form part of the narrative until the new series and there good as we only see Susan but only hear Ian and Barbara so its as if we are the ones confronting Susan. Hartnell’s first appearance comes at the 11 minute mark which shows that this is really Ian and Barbara’s episode. Hartnell isn’t the warm and grandfather like figure that we know he becomes. In many respects he is the anti-grandfather figure. When they are in the TARDIS, he is very reluctant to explain himself to Ian and Barbara and won’t let them leave fearing that they will tell people.
Ian and Barbara’s first encounter
in the TARDIS control room is our first encounter and it’s a superb
introduction. The console room might not
have the grand scale that the new series console does but it still an
impressive room. They are trying to use human logic to what they are
experiencing and it’s a futile venture. After
Barbara leading the curiosity, its Ian who now leads the mission to try and
understand where they are. Ian’s inability to try and understand what’s going
on is fun to watch. Barbara still thinks its some sort of trick and she seems
to be dealing with it a lot more than Ian.
After a superb start for Susan, she quickly resorts to being the child of the group. When she wants to leave the Doctor and live her life on earth. She seems to throw a mini-tantrum when they says this and its perhaps the only time (apart from Inside the Spaceship) that she shrugs off the child image and acts like an alien. The cast do some fine wobbling acting when the TARDIS ‘takes off’. The panning out shot of London along with the ‘time vortex’ from the title sequence is as best an attempt to create the impression to the viewer that the TARDIS isn’t in a junkyard in November 1963.
After a superb start for Susan, she quickly resorts to being the child of the group. When she wants to leave the Doctor and live her life on earth. She seems to throw a mini-tantrum when they says this and its perhaps the only time (apart from Inside the Spaceship) that she shrugs off the child image and acts like an alien. The cast do some fine wobbling acting when the TARDIS ‘takes off’. The panning out shot of London along with the ‘time vortex’ from the title sequence is as best an attempt to create the impression to the viewer that the TARDIS isn’t in a junkyard in November 1963.
The Cliffhanger is absolutely brilliant.
A shadow appearing out of shot is one of my favourite cliffhangers in Doctor
Who. This was an wonderful episode. It started off very well and continued to
maintain my interest. Even though there are other people in the episode they don’t
have an impact on the story and so its one of the rare occasions in Doctor Who
where it’s just the main cast that are involved and it’s a clever move which
helps establish that this isn’t your typical drama.
Rating
Rating
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