Saturday, 28 February 2015

(654) Time and the Rani - Part 1

Ok so I enter the final stage of the original run of Doctor Who. This has come really fast because at the beginning of the year I was halfway through the Peter Davison era. It’s weird to think how much the show has changed in that short amount of time. During the 1970’s we only had one regeneration and during the 80’s we have now had three. So with Colin Baker having being sacked by JNT Michael Grade, the search was on for a new Doctor and JNT chose Sylvester McCoy. Unfortunately McCoy’s time doesn’t get off to the best of starts because Colin Baker refused to film a regeneration scene which is fair enough but it means that the ‘regeneration’ scene is one of the worst.

The way that Andrew Morgan managed to avoid showing us Colin Baker’s face is well done right up until the point where we see Sylvester McCoy in a blond wig. I suppose some credit should go towards production team for at least giving it a go. When McCoy has his first speech it starts off ok but I think the buffoonery to be rather ill-judged. Bonnie Langford is also badly served in this episode as she basically spends the entire episode either tied up or running everywhere.
We get new a new title sequence in this episode which is really good and is a breath of fresh air after six years of the same star filled one. One of the many problems with this serial is the preposterous idea that the Rani decides to pretend to be Mel to try and fool the Doctor. The purpose of this is that the Rani needs the Doctor’s help but thing is that it requires Kate O’Mara to dress, talk and act like Bonnie Langford which is a huge stretch of believability. The only good moment came when the Rani tries to convince the Doctor that Mel is dressed the same as her.

There are things that worked quite well in this episode. The bubble that is created whenever people trip an explosion is rather well done and one of the few effects that work well in this episode. Another good thing are the Tetraps which look good as a design and also serve a purpose in serving the Rani. The idea that Rani needs the Doctors help is something that works on a narrative level but I  don’t think that this was given enough screen time which is a shame.
The traditional trying of new costumes for the Doctor is something that seems to be as humorous as when Tom Baker costume change in Robot. We saw the costumes from Tom Baker, Jon Pertwee, Peter Davison and Patrick Troughton’s coat before we get the costume that McCoy wears. I think that it’s a much better outfit than the one Colin Baker wore and the only thing I would change is the question mark jumper. His performance is perfectly fine given that the material he is given isn’t the strongest. It’s never a wise thing to judge a new Doctor on their first story because it is usually the weakest of their stories.

There are very few positives to take from this episode and I have rated this episode 6.90 which is the first time that I have rated an episode in the sixes since episode three of The Horns of Nimon. I should say that I don’t think that the flaws with this story have anything to do with Pip and Jane Baker or Sylvester McCoy and Bonnie Langford. I think that circumstances behind the scenes meant that this story had zero chance of being anything other than poor. I do hope that the next three episodes will improve because things cant get any worse.
I am going to end on a stat by saying that this is the 129th episode to be produced by John Nathan Turner and now overtakes Barry Letts as the longest serving producer in Doctor Who history.

Friday, 27 February 2015

(653) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 14): The Ultimate Foe (Part 2)

So we come to the end of this Trial series and also the end of the Colin Baker era. It is also the time that the current title sequence will be used. It has been used in pretty much the same style since the first episode of The Leisure Hive. I think that it’s about time that the titles were changed and the theme tune is thankfully going as well. This episode was supposed to be written by Robert Holmes but he was ill and Eric Saward had fallen out with JNT well and truly so it fell to Pip and Jane Baker to deal with the fall out and try and write a script that a) makes sense, b) finishes this portion of the season satisfactorily and c) wrap up the entire season in a way that doesn’t disappoint.

The effect of Colin Baker being lifter out of the sinking pit it a little bit dodgy because its clear that the image is being manipulated. The Valeyard keeps jumping around and this was a good effect and made even better by the reactions of Colin Baker and Tony Selby.
I like the Master’s TARDIS because it very much suits the Master’s persona. I forget that the Doctor and Glitz stumble across it and this leads to a nice end scene where the Doctor is hypnotised and is left to be taken out by the Valeyard. This then of course doesn’t happen but moments later the Doctor is taken by Mel and it leads to the courtroom to finish the trial. I like how it comes across as a proper trial and the viewer is led to believe that the Doctor is prepared to accept the guilty verdict that is given. It doesn’t take long for the viewer to be told the truth. What I like is that the Doctor appears to accept this but in truth is just going along with the lie.

I do like the scene where the Doctor and Mel are in the machinery room. I love going to that sort of thing so this bit amused me. What also amused me is a bomb that the Valeyard has created and Mel uses word like Megabyte and Modem which sound quite futuristic in 1986 but 2015 that is nothing.
The Doctor is successful in stopping the Valeyard’s bomb and that appears to be the end of it. The Doctor is found not guilty but during the scene with the Doctor and the Inquisitor the Doctor is informed that Peri didn’t die but is shacked up with King Yrcanos. I personally think that this wasn’t the best thing to do because it completely devalues the ending of episode eight.

This was the best episode for Michael Jayston because after spending the previous thirteen episodes popping up every so often with great lines and now he gets to show us what he is really made of. Jayston really enjoys himself from the very beginning.
Final lines are quite important aren’t they. William Hartnell’s were “It’s far from being all over”, Tom Baker was “It’s the end, but the moment has been prepared for” and Peter Davison left the show with “Is this death”. Colin Baker sadly wasn’t afforded the same luxury as due to Colin Baker not wanting to return for just one story refused to return and so his final words were “Carrot Juice, Carrot Juice, Carrot Juice”. It wasn’t the best way to end the Sixth Doctor’s tenure on the show. The final shot is also slightly frustrating because shows that the Valeyard has now taken the body of the Keeper of the Matrix. Sadly we never get another TV adventure with Jayston.

Pip and Jane Baker did a very good job considering the time constraints and other constraints that they couldn’t deal with. If you didn’t know about the problems then you wouldn’t have been able to tell the difference. Chris Clough also directed this episode rather well.
I think that the season has been better than I (and many) have given it credit. The Mysterious Planet was a bit of a let-down but the rest of it worked quite well and Colin Baker gave it a good go in this season and seemed to have toned down the madness that seemed to be rampant in the previous season. Nicola Bryant and Bonnie Langford did good jobs as the companions and I have commented on my new appreciation for Bonnie Langford now. Lynda Bellingham and Michael Jayston were superb supporting cast members. Trial is never going to be very popular with fans but I have learnt to love the season.

Now I am about to enter the final portion of the classic original run and if I had concerns with the trial season before I started watching it. I have even greater concerns about the upcoming season which I have always thought of as the weakest season ever. Maybe things will change.
One thing that I have come to a conclusion about is just how badly I have judge Colin Baker’s time as the Doctor. Ok so his first story was a complete car wreck and the less said about Timelash and The Mysterious Planet the better but apart from those stories Colin Baker really hasn’t put a foot wrong as the leading man. The stories have been largely good and as far as ratings are concerned, only three stories out of the eleven did were outside the top 60 that works out at just 27.3% of his stories. Here is the full list so far.

Colin Baker (27.3%)
Tom Baker (48.8%)
Jon Pertwee (50.0%)
Peter Davison (63.2%)
Patrick Troughton (71.4%)
William Hartnell (82.8%)
When it comes to the bottom 50 stories its still good for Sixie.

Jon Pertwee (12.5%)
Tom Baker (26.8%)
Colin Baker (27.3%)
Peter Davison (31.6%)
Patrick Troughton (42.9%)
William Hartnell (62.1%)
I had always thought that Big Finish had been the ones that re-invented the Sixth Doctor but in truth they have just woken everyone up to how good Colin Baker was a the Doctor and how much better his time on the show had been than previously thought. I have enjoyed the last month a lot more than I ever thought I would and I will genuinely miss watching the Sixth Doctor because after over 20 years of not rating this Doctor very highly, I have the opportunity to say I was wrong. Badly wrong.

Thursday, 26 February 2015

(652) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 13): The Ultimate Foe - Part 1

So we are now at the business end of this trial which now in effect becomes the longest story in Doctor Who history. This is now one episode longer than The Daleks Master Plan which ran for twelve weeks during 1965 and 1966. This is where all the little threads of the past twelve weeks were going to become more significant and all the ‘evidence’ was gone. Sadly there is a great deal of sadness that goes with these two episodes. Not just that Colin Baker gets sacked at the end of this series but it is also the last to be credited by Robert Holmes. Holmes died just after giving the first draft of these two episodes and so Eric Saward worked on this episode thus meaning that this was Robert Holmes’ 64th and final episode and goes down as the most credited writer in Doctor Who history at this point.

I love how at the end of the previous episode, it was shown that the Valeyard can change and add charges at his own pleasing. It does make the legal system on Gallifrey a bit of a laughing stock but I suppose that it pretty much sums up the Timelords.
The first few moments sees the Keeper of the Matrix summoned to the trial and it is basically to continue with the Doctor’s accusation that the Matrix has been manipulated. He then accuses the Valeyard and its at this point that things start to go a bit crazy. It doesn’t take long for the Master to make a shock return. The Master for some reason has spent the last twelve weeks of the trial watching from within the Matrix. It’s at this point that the Valeyard seems to be losing control and it is fun to witness. Sabalom Glitz returns and fills in a lot of blanks about what happened in The Mysterious Planet. The question about how Earth ended where it was found was done by the Timelords. It’s always fun to have the Master back although one of the problems with the pace that the story has, is that no reference was made to The Mark of the Rani and no question as to how either managed to survive what was going on at the end of that story.

The Valeyard turns out to be the Doctor. The Valeyard is between the bad parts of the Doctor between the Doctor’s 12th and final regeneration. This was obviously at a time when the Doctor only had thirteen lives. It’s good when he flees the courtroom and it’s at this point that the episode really steps up a gear (not that it was really lacking a gear). All the stunts and attitude that the Valeyard has shown over the previous twelve episodes become understandable. He is the one that wants the Doctor’s remaining lives and was using the Master’s ‘skills’ to get this.
The Doctor gets pulled into a crate of water by mysterious hands. This was quite a shocking moment and this is the first example of things not being quite what it seems. Another example comes when Glitz is hit with an arrow. Yet more evidence of this comes with the introduction of Mr Popplewick (Geoffrey Hughes). He also plays Mr Chambers and Hughes manages to make the two characters very different. I would have liked more of Michael Jayston in this episode because after dashing out of the courtroom, we don’t see him again and he has been so good that he deserved more time. Also Bonnie Langford deserved to be more involved in the action (didn’t expect to be writing that one when I started this marathon). She was stuck in the courtroom to listen to the Inquisitor and the Master talking.

The Doctor finds himself in a wasteland which is in fact the Camber Sands and this leads to the cliffhanger which sees the Doctor pulled in quicksand. This leads us to our eleventh episode which ends with a close up of the Doctor’s face. On a positive note it’s only the second time that he has been animated when doing this as the other time came at the end of the first Mindwarp episode. I thought that despite the close up this was a very good ending to what was easily the best episode of the season. It started well and got better from there and I hadn’t realised how much time had passed by. This is always a good sign that an episode has worked and the only worry is that the next episode won’t deliver on what this episode has shown us. Anyone wondering if the show had lost its ability to produce good moments (I include myself in that) needs to watch this episode and then the will learn that the first was still burning. It might be burning as bright as it once did but it is still alight.

Wednesday, 25 February 2015

(651) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 12): Terror of the Vervoids - Part 4

I didn’t realise this until just now but this was the last story this season to be filmed and so that means that technically this was the final episode that Colin Baker recorded as the Doctor. I have commented on how well Colin Baker and Bonnie Langford seemed to be getting on and now it’s easy to see why. It will be interesting to see how their relationship comes across in the final two episodes of this season.

The Mogarians don’t really seem to have had much purpose in this story except for this episode where they enter the main control room and save the day. Saving the day is probably a stretch because it turns out that Rudge is also not quite as he seems as he turns on the Commodore and stages a hijacking. The Vervoids are much more effective as a villain as everyone else becomes a bit less effective and they have this wonderful habit of just popping out of every vent whenever people are walking past. They are killing people at quite a rate and it almost seems like Pip and Jane Baker are trying to make up for a lack of deaths in a story.
Doland is the one that committed the murders which is something that most people might have seen coming but I honestly didn’t and still don’t remember that it’s Doland. Malcolm Tierney has been very good in this serial and I have always been fan since appearing in House of Cards which was obviously filmed long after this serial but Tierney is a very good actor and managed to blend into the background which led to the good reveal.

The courtroom scenes don’t seem to impact that much into the episode as in previous episodes. A good scene comes when the Doctor acknowledges before the court that he was asked for help and the Valeyard reluctantly agrees with this. After all the good work that the Doctor does in showing us he’s a good person. It is perhaps unfortunate that this is the story where he basically commits genocide by wiping out the Vervoids. I think that this was an unfortunate but narratively necessary way to end the story. It leads to the Valeyard to wanting the Doctor charged with genocide. This leads to another close up in the cliffhanger. This is now the 10th episode out of twelve which ends with the Doctor being the last thing we see in the episode. It’s starting to come across as a bit unoriginal and repetitive.
I haven’t commented on how good a job Chris Clough did on directing this story which I will try and correct now. He has done a good job in taking my mind off the fact that there isn’t any location filming. The lighting and sets have all worked very well and apart from a few CGI effects which don’t work quite so well the effect used to show the decaying leaves is another impressive moment that occurs in this season. The death of the Vervoids looks good and the effect of a leaf in the Doctor’s hand also look good even by today’s standards. Before I did this marathon, I wouldn’t have rated Pip and Jane Baker as particularly good writers but after being impressed with the Mark of the Rani and being impressed with this story, its time to re-evaluate them as writers.

I have really changed my opinion of Mel. Ok so the screaming is annoying and I don’t think that will change but as a companion I think that Bonnie Langford deserves more credit than she has been given in the past. I think that the character is a breath of fresh air from what he have seen in the companion role because she doesn’t try and annoy the Doctor or try and kill him but decides to be very active from the beginning so because of this and other things that have happened I am really looking forward to the final story.

Tuesday, 24 February 2015

(650) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 11): Terror of the Vervoids - Part 3

Today marks the 650th episode of this marathon. 50 episodes ago I was being less than enthusiastic about the first part of The Kings Demons. I think that this episode is far better than the Demons episode. So far in this portion of the Trial season, there hasn’t been much in the way of terror from the Vervoids. That changes in today’s episode which is where things seem to be progressing more in the Vervoids story than the courtroom arc. The pulsating effect used on the infected woman named as Ruth Baxter is very impressive.

We get a proper look at the Vervoids in this episode but it takes place in a dimly lit room. When we do see them better lit I have to say that I do like the design of them. Ok so the face mask is a bit amusing but the rest of it does work quite well. There was always the possibility that the design would look a bit poor when Pip and Jane Baker created this monster but credit must go to the production for making this work.
Mel is quite active in this episode and actually does something quite clever in using one of the headphones to record what was being said in the overhead chutes. There is a questionable suspension of disbelief comes when Mel gets chucked into one of the waste bins and manages to be saved by the Doctor in the same amount of time that he listens to what she’s recorded and runs to save her.

Another example of things being changed include the Doctor being smashed in the communication room. Sadly there isn’t much about the manipulation that is going on which is something that I would have liked to see more of in this episode. Apart from this there is very little reason really to have Michael Jayston and Lynda Bellingham in the episode. The courtroom scenes don’t bring anything to the episode.
Bruchner is the one that turns out is the dodgy one in the group. This is where the story gets really interesting because I don’t feel like the Vervoids have been terrifying enough. Due to the fact that Bruchner is human it’s easier to find him a better villain that the Vervoids. As a result I find myself more interested in his story than the Vervoids. I think that it was perhaps too obvious for Lasky to be the one that was the dodgy one in the group

I thought that this was a good episode that continues things along nicely in the story arc but also sets things up nicely for the final part of this Vervoids story. I am looking forward to not having to talk about two different aspects of the story in the same review. One thing I can say for sure and that is the dubious decision of whether to try and have art imitate life and have a trial in the season when the show itself is on trial doesn’t seem so dubious because I forget about all the troubles the show was facing then and just found myself engrossed with what was on the screen.

Monday, 23 February 2015

(649) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 10): Terror of the Vervoids - Part 2

It’s hard to think that I am now ten episodes into this season and that the ending is starting to get ever closer and even weirder that we are closing in to the final few episodes with Colin Baker as the Doctor. After the initial concern that it felt like the show was a bit lifeless, its good to report that those concerns are even were quickly erased as both the trial story and the evidence parts of this season are improving the overall feel. The explosion that takes place at the beginning of the episode look really impressive but it’s the scream that is the final noticeable thing about the cliffhanger and reprise.

It doesn’t take long for the regular story arc of manipulated evidence returns to the screen and I like how the Doctor decides that he needs to let the action play out to find out who is behind it. He gets to be quite smug in front of the Valeyard when he points out that one of the people pretending to be a Mogarian shows himself to be a fake because he didn’t switch on his translator. Of course the Doctor doesn’t jump for joy but it’s clear he sees this as a small victory.
Honor Blackman gets some very amusing lines in this episode and they are usually aimed at the Doctor’s expense. The Doctor may be a fool but he’s not a criminal was one that I found particularly entertaining. There was a bit of development about her character which I thought was quite interesting and in fact the whole scientific team she works with is something that I find interesting.

I am still impressed with how well Colin Baker and Bonnie Langford are getting on considering this is only their second episode together. Due to the structure of the episode, there is a Sherlock Holmes and Watson vibe to their performance. If only Bonnie Langford didn’t scream then I think people would think more highly of the character of Mel.
It’s good how we don’t see the Vervoids in full. We just see glimpses of their hands and see things from their POV. I think that it is probably wise for them to do it like this because the end result isn’t the greatest but that said here and now the Vervoids are quite a good villain.

The build up to find out what is in the isolation room is something that is done rather well and the big reveal forms the cliffhanger along with a zoom in and a Mel scream. The eyes opening I thought was a nice touch. It has been a good episode but it didn’t seem to have the same pace that the previous episode did. Don’t get me wrong, I still like this episode and there was plenty of positives to take from this episode. The next two episodes should hopefully be just as much fun as the previous two.

Sunday, 22 February 2015

(648) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 9): Terror of the Vervoids - Part 1

Terror of the Vervoids is the beginning of the Mel era on the show and also the first opportunity that the Doctor has of defending himself. He picks a story in his future which does imply I suppose that it means he gets off in the trial but as any fan with half a brain knows, things can be re-written all the time so it is by no means a certainty that he would be freed by the end of this adventure. Pip and Jane Baker return to the show after their impressive debut in the previous season. Although you would forgive them for working under conditions which weren’t ideal bearing in mind that Eric Saward and John Nathan Turner have had a severe falling out at this point. This story is heavily influenced by several Agatha Christie stories as this is a whodunit.

The sombre Doctor that we see at the beginning of the episode is something that we haven’t seen from Colin Baker’s Doctor before. I buy that the Doctor is still not over the death of Peri and holds himself partly to blame for what happened to her. That is about as much time as Peri gets in this episode and I think that it’s a good move because its Mel’s time and things move on.
The story moves along and it seems like this is just another piece of evidence but then things change. There is another example of things being change. The Doctor speaks out after one moment where he tells Mel to basically go away is something that the Doctor doesn’t remember when he saw the film before.

Michael Craig plays Commodore Travers and he is the rather standard no nonsense captain. The thing about the Commodore is that it seems that he has encountered the Doctor before although few details are revealed. Hopefully this is an adventure that Big Finish decide to do in the future. Denys Hawthorne plays Rudge who is the security officer who is on his last journey in this story so its clear that he is going to be involved in some shape or form. Another clue is how he is undermined by the Commodore. Honor Blackman is the first person who speaks in the Hyperion III story. Blackman appeared in the best Bond film ever (Goldfinger) and previously appeared as Kathy Gale in The Avengers. I really like the character as she is driven almost to the point where she would step over a dead person to get to what she wants.
Bonnie Langford’s first appearance in the show isn’t particularly strong as we see her trying to get the Doctor into shape by riding an exercise bike and drinking carrot juice (more of that in future episodes). I think bearing in mind that it is the first story for the character, a bit more effort should have been made to make the viewer warm to her. Luckily that bumpy start is replaced with a character that is rather like Sarah Jane Smith. Firstly don’t start writing messages of hatred at me, by similar I mean that she is quite inquisitive and wants to try and solve the puzzle. Sadly she ends the episode in a less than stellar way because her screaming is rather annoying but at least it doesn’t involve the Doctor and/or a zoom in. As far as the relationship between the Doctor and Mel, its weird how the partnership seems to be working well already. It took several stories for the Doctor’s relationship with Peri to mellow (in fact it wasn’t until The Mysterious Planet that this happened).

It was an interesting episode and its weird how there seems to be a shift in the way the series appears on screen and as we reach the business end of the season its clear the best is still yet to come. I am feeling a lot more warmly towards the season than I was at the beginning and think that its starting to look like my opinion of the season as a whole might improve.

Saturday, 21 February 2015

(647) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 8): Mindwarp - Part 4

Is Peri dead? Is the question that the Doctor asks and the Valeyard responds with no which shows that he is willing to use shock tactics to go overboard. It seems to be a sign of things to come which was a clever bit of writing on the part of Philip Martin. There is a nice scene between Peri and Yrcanos in which Peri decides she wants to be at home and talks to Yrcanos about life and love. This is where the relationship between the two begins. Now what I find interesting is that when Leela departs the show, I found the lack of a long term build up to be a reason why her departure is rather disappointing. In the case of this story it seems far more plausible and I think that it’s due to the performances of Nicola Bryant and Brian Blessed.

The confusion about what the Doctor’s true mental state is something that is confusing still. He starts off seemingly willing to help Crozier, then decides he would prefer if Peri weren’t experiment and then seems to be totally his normal self. Colin Baker does his best to try and clarify the situation but he can’t completely answer the question. It might be easy to understand on Thoros Beta but in the courtroom it seems that it’s not as clear cut as it might seem.
This is the beginning of the end for Peri because she gets used in the experiment to transplant Kiv’s brain to a suitable host. It’s is quite a grim process that she goes through in this episode. She doesn’t really get much to do apart from her nice chat with Yrcanos and then she is operated on. The sight of her with a bald cap on is quite a shocking. When Peri/Kiv starts talking then it adds to the shock. Yrcanos does the only thing that he could do and that is kill Peri (or her body anyway).

The Doctor is on his way to help Peri but is lured into a suddenly appearing TARDIS which leads to the events seen in episode one. His reaction when he sees that Yrcanos has killed Peri is a totally mesmerising one. This has to be one of his finest performances since Attack of the Cybermen.
He is very determined at the end of this episode and he is determined to find out why he was taken out of time. Whilst this has another close-up/zoom in that you all know I love, it’s the way that Colin Baker delivers the line that makes this one of the best cliffhangers of the season so far. It’s been a cracking episode. Partly because I know what was going to happen but for the first time in this season I have been more impressed with the performances than the story itself.

This episode is the final one for Nicola Bryant and in terms of endings it is perhaps one of the most shocking since Adric died in Earthshock (1982). It’s fair to say that Bryant hasn’t had the most enjoyable time ever in the show but she has been surprisingly upbeat even when things weren’t going her way. I would be surprised if she missed the show in terms of what she was required to do. The Peri that we now get in the Big Finish adventures is a stronger one than we get on TV.
As a four part adventure in its own right, Mindwarp has been a very enjoyable story with the right mixture of comedy and darkness. It has been written with the same enthusiasm as Philip Martin wrote in Vengeance on Varos and Ron Jones has really impressed me with the pace and the sets that he used helped add to the effectiveness of the story. It’s not very often that I have written this but Robert Holmes has written the weakest story of the season so far. Eight episodes in and I think that it is progressing well know that there are various elements that going forward have the potential to be very good. Unfortunately, coming up in the next episode is one of most controversial companions in Doctor Who history. But considering how I have re-evaluated Bonnie Langford’s character in the Big Finish plays, it is possible that this might mean a change but I suppose time will tell.

Friday, 20 February 2015

(646) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 7): Mindswap - Part 3

The small matter of what is causing the Doctor to act the way he is on Thoros Beta is something that continues to be the problem with this story. Despite all the hard work that Philip Martin and Ron Jones have done to make this story sound and look like a great adventure. Like the previous episode, this one doesn’t feature a courtroom scene for several minutes. It’s good that the series arc story isn’t thrown in our faces so soon.

This is the episode where Kiv’s mind is swapped and considering how important it seems to be there is little sense of drama apart from Sil over reacting. Sil is rather amusing apart from this brief moment. He decides he wants to be the first face the Kiv sees in his new body and the look on his face causes Kiv to think he’s died. There is very little room for humour in this section of the story so its good to see Nabil Shaban doing the honours.
Yrcanos is basically leading a revolution in this episode and becomes leader purely by the fact that he shouts the loudest. This involves dragging Peri from one tunnel to another and they don’t actually achieve anything. It was slightly disappointing that Brian Blessed has been left to do and also Nicola Bryant seems to have drawn the short straw in trying to calm him down.

There is very little from the courtroom but what we do see is rather good. Michael Jayston is the strongest part of the courtroom part. It did feel like Lynda Bellingham and Colin Baker were spare parts but to be fair Colin Baker makes up for that in other areas of this episode. There is more about what the Doctor can and cannot remember which s fun because it just seems to give the Valeyard more ammunition to use against the Doctor. It’s good to see the Doctor in a rare situation where he doesn’t know whats going on. This is something that usually happens to the companions so you could say that the Doctor is getting a dose of his own medicine.
The final minute of the episode sees Peri seemingly gunned down. Considering that Nicola Bryant is about to leave the show it is perfectly plausible that she could have left the show an episode early. This leads to a good cliffhanger but unlike previous endings, there isn’t a zoom in but just a static shot of Colin Baker which is at least a minor difference. It’s not been an action packed episode  and is probably the weakest of the three but it’s still been an episode that hasn’t been boring. Compared to the Robert Holmes story, this one has been a huge improvement.
 

Thursday, 19 February 2015

(645) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 6): Mindwarp - Part 2

It’s weird to think that I am now six episodes into this and nearly at the half way point of the season. It’s fair to say that this season has taken a while to find its feet. It really doesn’t take long for the Brian Blessed we all know to appear. Within two minutes of the episode starting, he is throwing things around and shouting. If Blessed is shouting then Colin Baker is pretty much the opposite. It’s fun seeing the Doctor act the way that he is because its unlike anything we have seen Baker’s Doctor do and it hasn’t been seen in a Doctor since Tom Baker’s time.

When the story returns to the courtroom it seems that the Doctor’s memory is going to be a big issue for the story. On this matter it starts to become clear that the Matrix is being manipulated and that not everything we see is clear. For the first time I thought that the whole thing flowed perfectly. I didn’t find the going from one place to another to be as disruptive as in previous episodes. Again Michael Jayston and Lynda Bellingham are very good and its great to see Colin Baker having to have two different battles. The argument that the Valeyard has against the Doctor seems to be stronger in this part than in the previous story.
The Doctor appears to have turned against Peri and King Yrcarnos. It’s unclear whether the Doctor is under the control of the machine or whether it didn’t work and the Doctor is just pretending. Something’s tend to suggest the former and sometimes the latter. It makes the whole thing about this section of the trial rather confusing.

One thing I haven’t commented on is the wonderful lighting. The low lighting has been one of the things that I have liked about these two episodes so far. I know that might be damning with faint praise but it just blows the argument that there was about why the lighting always needed to be bright. Ron Jones hasn’t always been a great director in my eyes but to be fair to him, he has directed solidly paced episodes.
I thought that this was another good episode. It’s weird how this story seems to be stronger than the one written by the legendary Robert Holmes. Things are starting to get more interesting in the courtroom and the ‘evidence’ is starting to feel more like normal Doctor Who stuff and less like trial stuff. The cliffhanger was another zoom in but was at least shrouded in darkness so we didn’t get the proper close up that there has been throughout this season. It’s not as amusing as the previous episode but it is perhaps a better ending.

Wednesday, 18 February 2015

(644) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 5): Mindwarp - Part 1

Philip Martin returns for the second piece of evidence that the Valeyard is using in one the flimsiest cases ever seen on TV. Long before Deidre Barlow got stitched up on Coronation Street in the mid 90’s, The Doctor was still having to argue against evidence which showed that things might not have gone smoothly but it could have been a lot worse. This four part adventure is the one that the Doctor was on before being taken out of time and joining the courtroom at the beginning of episode one. The opening shot of Thoros Beta is stunning. I know that the colours are rather garish but I still like it.

There are a lot more court scenes which is good to see but unlike the previous story. I found this story to be far more interesting. Also the flow of the episode is better than in the previous adventure. The action centres of Kiv getting a new body and all of his hopes lay with Crozier. That is pretty much it but what I like about this is that Martin has managed to keep the action going. The Doctor has a rather unfortunate end to the episode. One that gives the sense that things are going to spiral out of control in the future. There was something that was a bit weird about the performances of Colin Baker and Nicola Bryant.
This is the story of course where Brian Blessed makes a guest appearance. This would have been several years after appearing in Flash Gordon. He quite quiet in this episode which is the only time that the words Brian Blessed and quiet will be used at the same time. It’s fun to have him in this story because he is pretty much perfect for the show. Nabil Shaban returns as the wonderful Sil. Sil seems to be less repulsive than he was in Vengeance on Varos. I still like the Shaban laugh and think that any story with Shaban in will be greatly improved. Despite Sil being in the story, Crozier is the one that is the main villain in the piece only because he is more dangerous than Sil.

Christopher Ryan plays Kiv. Ryan would return to play a Sontaran in the new series. The voice is pretty obvious but I like the character of Kiv. He basically treats Sil the way that Sil treated the Governor in the Varos story. Another person that is familiar is Trevor Laird. Laird plays Frax in this story. He would return to the new series to play Martha’s dad in the 2007 series. It’s a rather small part but its always fun when people show up and I know that they will come up in future Doctor Who.
The cliffhanger is another zooming in but this time I found myself distracted with the weird dance that Colin Baker seemed to be doing which I found partly amusing but partly confusing. Anyway this has been the first time since this trial season has begun that I have felt that it’s like a proper Doctor Who story. It also is the first time that it’s felt like a Colin Baker story.

Tuesday, 17 February 2015

(643) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 4): The Mysterious Planet - Part 4

This is the final part of The Mysterious Planet part of this season. The thing is that it doesn’t feel like the end of a story.

The cliffhanger worked quite well because it seemed to show Merdeen about to shoot the Doctor. This of course didn’t mean that the Doctor would die three episodes in. Merdeen shot Grell instead of the Doctor and it’s a rather touching moment when its revealed that Merdeen convinced Grell to join the army. This has been the best episode for Tom Chadbon because he gets a good amount of stuff to do. The character has been unravelled over the course of the four episodes and this is the reward for that.
It’s still rather funny that Queen Katryca is still under the assumption that the immortal is dead. Her death and the death of Broken Tooth is rather grim but compared to some deaths it could have been much worse. Joan Sims has been rather good in the role and when you consider what she is best known for, it makes her performance in this serial even more impressive.

The courtroom scenes do still continue to disrupt the flow but the first one was quite fun because it allows the Doctor to do a rather over the top. The next scene comes after a scene between Glitz and Dibber bleeps out a particular word which creates more mystery.
There is a nice debate between the Doctor and Drathro about the meaning of life. It’s surprising that such time was given to this philosophical issue. Drathro isn’t defeated by the Doctor but really by Glitz. The Doctor does actually save the day but it would have been better if he had been the one defeating the stupid robot. Colin Baker has slowly been getting better in this serial but it seems that he’s not really allowed to be like his previous self. Nicola Bryant was pretty much silent in this episode. I cant really recall what she was allowed to do in this episode. Scratch that comment, there is one moment that I can think of but it isn’t a positive moment. There is a bit where Peri, Merdeen, Glitz and Dibber are in a food chute and there is a laser used which sadly doesn’t look very good.

The mystery isn’t really solved in this story but there are two questions that the Doctor (and the viewer) want to know and that is ‘Who moved Earth and what was in the box that Glitz and Dibber were after’. The final scene in the courtroom is rather good because the Doctor is basically goading the Valeyard and the last shot is a close up (again) of Colin Baker’s face which is still annoying.
This is the last full story that Robert Holmes would write (his last contribution coming later) and whilst it’s not his best offering by quite some distance. It’s hard to appreciate what Robert Holmes has done for the show and so as a result I don’t have it in me to be too critical of this adventure. There are some nice things that take place over the four episodes and some of the season long story arc start to gain some significance. Four episodes into this season and I don’t know whether I like the structure that this series is going to take. The idea of the Doctor on trial is all fine and dandy but I don’t know whether mixing it with four related stories is the best move.

Monday, 16 February 2015

(642) The Trial of a Timelord (Part 3): The Mysterious Planet - Part 3

The third episode of this season is one that doesn’t get going for about ten minutes. There is a lot talking and this doesn’t exactly come across as very exciting. One of the first court room scene is quite interesting and that is something that stands out in this episode that I found the courtroom scenes to be more interesting than what was going on on Ravolox. The scenes on the surface are moderately exciting that is only because Glitz and Dibber are quite amusing and I like seeing them on screen. The stuff underground is less interesting because it just looks rather sterile and looks like an awful lot of 1980’s Doctor Who studio sets that look too clean and I just find myself not quite so interested.

It’s quite fun that they the tribe think that they have killed the Immortal but instead have just killed its robot and start to embark on a trek to the Immortal’s Castle. It’s clear that things are going to end badly for them because they are happy and we are nowhere near the end of this story. It’s a shame that Joan Sims’ character is going to get a not nice ending.
Towards the end of the episode there is the start of the suspicion that there is something dodgy going on when evidence. This is perhaps the best thing about the episode because it is where the season arc is really going to get going. As far as the central performances, I thought that Colin Baker and Nicola Bryant were good. Baker was slightly more noticeable but it’s a warm performance from the pair of them. Michael Jayston is still the strongest of the supporting cast. It’s a shame that he doesn’t have more involvement in the story at this point.

Merdeen appears to shoot the Doctor which forms the best cliffhanger in the series so far. I think that the fact there isn’t the extreme close up. I think that this episode is an odd one because it just seemed to lack any sense of excitement. If this were a normal four part story then I think that they would be building up towards something. However with this story it doesn’t feel like its building up to anything and that this story is just a holding pattern until the business end of things appear. It’s quite disappointing so far.

Sunday, 15 February 2015

(641) The Trial of a Timelord: The Mysterious Planet - Part 2

After being slightly disappointed with the opening episode, I was wondering that I was going to go back to the days of the Hartnell and Troughton era where I would be going through several days of unwatchable but I am happy to report that I don’t think this will be the case. The episode starts off with the court scene reprise which is still good and doesn’t have the zoom in. Like in the previous episode, the courtroom appears in the middle of the episode which again disrupts the flow of the Ravolox story. There is another courtroom seen scene a few moments later.

The Doctor in the Ravolox story was being stoned in the previous cliffhanger and this is stopped by Merdeen via the Immortal. The Immortal has two helpers who are blonde and quite intelligent. Sadly they are slightly annoying. Whether they are as annoying as Balazar is still up for question but I think that it’s a close call. Merdeen is played by Tom Chadbon who last time we saw him in Doctor Who was throwing punches like Amir Khan. Chadbon is different in this story. Merdeen starts off as a bit of a bossy boots but soon shows his true colours by letting Balazar escape to the surface and he has been doing this for a while.
This episode starts the joke about making fun of the Valeyard. Boatyard and Graveyard are two insults that the Doctor hurls towards the Valeyard. I like the childish behaviour between the Doctor and Valeyard. The thing that is clear is that the Valeyard is trying to use what is seen onscreen to use against the Doctor. The thing is that whilst he may have a point it is also easy to argue that without his involvement then the people of Ravolox would be still be repressed.

The immortal is a robot that is running the base like a dictatorship and won’t allow people to go to the surface to get much needed water. This is when the story is that of an overzealous robot that is taking his job role to the letter.
The cliffhanger is much better but there is still the close up of the Doctor which didn’t work the first time and it doesn’t work the second time either. Two episodes in and I feel slightly more positive to this series. It is one of those episodes that has more good things than bad things. It’s not a classic Robert Holmes script by any means but I thought that the pacing of the episode was far better than in episode one. I still have reservations about this season but I am starting to think that the previous episode might have been a blip but I will need to see a few more episodes to judge.

Saturday, 14 February 2015

(640) The Trial of a Timelord - The Mysterious Planet: Part 1

Doctor Who was saved. After being cancelled the show was saved although its clear that the show was now living on borrowed time. Instead of 13 x 45 minute episodes, the twenty-third season would be 14 x 25 minutes episodes. So it was a shorter run because instead of 585 minutes there would now be 350 minutes. The idea that the season would have one theme is something that had been done before in the form of the Key to Time and the new series would have a similar idea. However to have the Doctor on trial when the show itself was on trial is something in retrospect wasn’t the strongest idea. First that is evident about this new season is that there is a new theme tune which I hated when I first heard it but over the years via Big Finish plays its grown on me.

The open shot of the space station is one of the greatest sequences in Doctor Who history. It’s impressive to the point that for a few moments it seems like Doctor Who had stepped up a gear since it was off the air but it wouldn’t take long for that to change. The opening scene where the Doctor has landed is quite well done. The Doctor had previously been on trial in The War Games (1969) and is put on trial for pretty much the same thing.
One of the two new supporting characters for the season is the recently deceased Lynda Bellingham who plays the Inquisitor. I don’t think that it’s a very rewarding role however I think that Bellingham does a good job of acting like she is in charge. Michael Jayston plays the Valeyard and he is one of the strongest things about this season. Jayston is most recognisable to me as the father-in-law of Del Boy in Only Fools and Horses and also appeared in Emmerdale recently. He just has a sense of evil that he is rather enjoying and that is what makes the court room scenes half watchable.

The Valeyard intends to use two examples of why the Doctor is guilty and his first example form the first four episodes. When Peri appears in this story, its clear that their relationship is a lot more warm than it had been. It’s the only thing that is warm in this part of the story. There is a nice mystery (hence the title) about where they are. The planet is called Ravolox but soon its revealed to be Earth.
There are occasional moments where the action is broken up by a short scene back in the courtroom. To be this slightly ruins the momentum that the story has had. Instead of the bit in the middle which doesn’t contribute anything to the story. However the ending is slightly more important because it sees the Valeyard says he wants the Doctor’s life put on trial.

As this is a Robert Holmes story there is of course a double act. In this case its Tony Selby and Glen Murphy who star as Sabalom Glitz and Dibber respectively. They are quite a good team and Robert Holmes’ magic works in this department. They are both rubbish criminals and shouldn’t be taken seriously. That is why I like them because there is something comedic about them and that is what this story needs. Joan Sims is one of the big stars in this season. In this part of the story she plays Queen Katryca and I remember when Beryl Reid appeared in Earthshock and it was clear that she didn’t understand the part and so didn’t come across as a convincing space pilot. Here I think that Sims is far more convincing and as a result I buy into the fact that she is a Queen. There is a character called Balazar who is somewhat annoying and one of things that slightly ruins this opening episode. He keeps calling the Doctor “old one” which is funny at first but becomes quickly annoying.
The cliffhanger is basically a zoom in on Colin Baker’s face which is going to be a recurring theme during this season. It’s somewhat disappointing that this is the way they have chosen to end each episode but I suppose a cliffhanger doesn’t make or break a season. What has surprised me about this episode is just how underwhelming it feels. There doesn’t feel like the opening that it should. It doesn’t have the big selling point that Attack of the Cybermen or Warriors of the Deep had. It is sort of half-hearted in certain was which does worry me a little bit.

Friday, 13 February 2015

(639) Revelation of the Daleks - Part 2

The final episode of the shortest season of Doctor Who at this point and it’s the final story of the 22nd season. I mentioned in the previous episode that the episode wasn’t as grim as I remembered. I still don’t think that this episode was as grim as I remember but there are some moments that do stand out as memorable. The cliffhanger from the previous episode has some good things about it but I think that its instantly forgotten just moments are the episode starts.

Jobel begins his interest in Peri and his dislike of the Doctor from the very beginning. Jobel’s time in this episode is rather entertaining. He walks around the place with arrogance. The attitude he has aimed at Tasambeker leads to her killing him and its hard to muster any sympathy for him. There is a little bit more sympathy when she is exterminated by the Daleks. On the subject of Jobel’s death, it was another example of the violence in Doctor Who at this point and its one of the more valid points. There is a slight dark comedic moment in his final moment in the store when his toupee falls onto the floor.
There is a solid moment with Orcini and Bostock when they are on Necros and come across as Dalek. It ends with a spectacular explosion. They don’t seem to feature in the episode as much as I thought they did but when they are in then they are fantastic. Their next big scene is when they encounter Davros but things start to go downhill for them and Bostock is the first to fall. Orcini’s death is far better because it’s a noble death and he dies with his friend next to him. William Gaunt has been a superb piece of casting.

I like how Davros sends some Daleks to ‘protect’ Kara and Vogel. It’s at this moment that it’s clear that they won’t have very much time left in this episode. Vogel’s death is rather amusing because it’s over the top. Kara’s death is slightly better but only because it comes at the end of a good scene where she meets up with Orcini and he stabs her. It’s hard to find sadness in her death because whilst she might have started out with good intentions, the fact that she was more looking out for herself sort of removes any sympathy that the viewer should have.
The DJ in this episode is less annoying and becomes a more likeable person. The first scene with him and Peri is a rather sweet and lovely encounter. He is willing to fight against the Daleks that is good for the viewer to see but I think that he was a bit rubbish in the seconds leading to his death. He deserved slightly better. The casting of Alexi Sayle might have been part of a long running problem that hung around this period of the show but I thought that Sayle managed to that this was more than a one dimensional character.

I had forgotten about the moment where the Doctor first encounters the Daleks in this story. It’s good to have this brief encounter and if there was one thing I would change about this story then it would be to have more time between Colin Baker and Terry Molloy. Terry Molloy’s performance wasn’t mentioned in the previous entry but he has really performed well in this serial. He is just a head for most of this serial and yet he manages to be one of the best things in this serial. Davros is very good in this episode and I like the twist when it appears that Orcini and Bostock have killed Davros. Davros does something that hadn’t been seen on screen before and that is he floats in the air. It’s often mentioned that the Daleks floating in Remembrance of the Daleks is the first time they are seen in the air but Davros beat them by three years.
It seems like I have had to wait for ages to see the Doctor meet Davros. There is a nice bit of continuity link back to Resurrection of the Daleks. Another memorable moment for Davros apart from the levitating bit is when his hand is blown off. The next time we see his hand is in metal form in the new series. Davros is basically led out to survive and fight another day. This seems like a plausible way of keeping the option open of using the character in another story.

There are a new breed of Daleks that have the more traditional colour scheme. The white and gold ones that are associated with Davros are the better looking ones and thankfully they return in the next story. Compared to the Davros aligned ones, the Daleks that are associated with the Supreme Dalek look rather bland in comparison.
The final scene is quite sad because I know what’s coming up. The Doctor talks about taking Peri on holiday is about to take her to Blackpool but due to the show being cancelled before being renewed, that is edited out so that we would have to wait until 2009 before Big Finish would take us to Blackpool. It’s a shame that the show was put on hiatus at this time because it seems like the show was still firing on all cylinders. Apart from Timelash, I thought this had been one of the strongest and most consistent season for quite some time. It would be 525 days before the show would return but it wouldn’t have the soul that it had before. This would be the last great story that Colin Baker would have but one thing is for sure the next fourteen days are going to be a mixture of emotions but one of major change.

Thursday, 12 February 2015

(638) Revelation of the Daleks - Part 1

Revelation of the Daleks is a story that I have waited for and it arguably the last great Sixth Doctor story. This is the final story of the 22nd season and the final story to air as a 45 minute episode until the show returned in 2005. It is also an Eric Saward story so you can expect a darker Doctor Who story than normal. It is also a story directed by Graeme Harper which means that the story will move in an interesting way. It seems that the Doctor and Peri’s relationship is as frosty as the lake the TARDIS lands by. The fact there is a lot of snow adds something to the story which is an added bonus.

Clive Swift appears as Jobel. He is quite an arrogant individual and is instantly unlikeable but that makes his likeable. He treats everyone around with contempt and that includes Tasambeker. Tasambeker is someone who has a bit of a crush on Jobel. Tasambeker is played by Jenny Tomasin  and she might be small but she almost stands over some of the other performers. Tasambeker comes to the attention of Davros which isn’t always a good thing.
Alexi Sayle appears as a DJ and adds a bit of anarchy to proceedings. He seems to be in own little world talking to those who are in suspended animation. He in fact doesn’t interact with anyone which is quite similar to Arak and Etta in Vengeance on Varos. Sayle’s performance is quite entertaining but it’s more fun trying to listen to the music playing in the background and guessing what the tracks are.  

It takes just eight minutes for Davros and the Daleks to make a return and this is a wonderful change of form because normally they wouldn’t appear until the half way point or even later. Here, Eric Saward doesn’t waste anytime. What he does do however is delay when the Doctor realises that the Daleks and Davros are on Necros with the name ‘The Great Healer’.
The Doctor and Peri spend an awfully long time just walking around. I suppose this allows for the other aspects of the story to take centre stage. The only person they come into contact with is someone who is quite deformed due to the Great Healer’s experiment. It almost seems like they are being kept separate from the main action. They are there for the cliffhanger however when a statue of the Doctor falls over and seems to crush the Doctor. The cliffhanger is different because it’s a white statue that falls to the camera and then the screen goes white before the credits roll.

There are several different plot strands that take place in this episode . The first involved Kara and Vogel. Kara (Eleanor Bron) and Hugh Walters (Vogel) run a factory that is basically a plaything for Davros. They dislike Davros but are nice as pie to his face. They are arranging for Orcini and Bostock to kill him. The first scene between Kara and Orcini is a great one because Kara is gushing about him but Orcini is less enthusiastic and acts like a nice guy because he gives his fee to charity. William Gaunt is brilliant as Orcini and the character is great because Gaunt makes us believe that he is a gun for hire and is a man with morals and a code.
Natasha and Grigory appear at first to be two body snatchers which is a wonderfully dark idea to have in a Doctor Who adventure. They are looking for Natasha’s father and it doesn’t take long to find him. He is in a glass Dalek casing and its in a dark room that has a faint red glow. The image of a glass Dalek casing is wonderful and the make-up used for Natasha’s father is quite gruesome. He wants her to kill him which is a quick and surprisingly emotional moment.

This episode didn’t strike me as grim or dark as I remembered. I do think that this might change in the next episode but the episode wasn’t slow and had enough going on to maintain my interest. It shouldn’t be a surprise considering how good Eric Saward’s last credited effort Earthshock was. Graeme Harper also deserves credit for directing this episode with the passion that it needed to. No story will ever be as well directed as The Caves of Androzani but Harper has shown again how a story should be directed. I look forward to the season finale.

Wednesday, 11 February 2015

(637) Timelash - Part 2

The second episode of this story is a lot better than the first although that’s not a great compliment. The Doctor ends up going into the Timelash after all and what we see is rather disappointing. It doesn’t look very impressive at all. Even the sight of the Doctor being hoisted down on a rope doesn’t do very much to interest me. It was at this point that I wondered whether things were ever going to improve but then Tekker enters and I am reminder about some of the good things that happened in the previous episode. Paul Darrow continues to be superb in this episode. He acts like the ruler that he thinks he is but sadly he meets a sticky ending.

The character of Herbert is the exact opposite of Tekker. Even the Doctor is finding him irritating. It’s unclear whether Colin Baker is acting or not because if it were me then I would have pushed him into the Timelash. He spends time walking around acting its all some big adventure and I really can’t believe how disappointing this aspect of the story. It’s a good idea that the Doctor would meet the great literary figure and that encountering the Doctor would have inspired some of his novels. Sadly the casting of David Chandler has reduced this to a less interesting encounter.
There is another tease at what the Borad really looks like at the beginning of the episode. It’s around the half way mark that we finally get to see what the real Borad looks like Robert Ashby’s debut on screen is rather underwhelming. The design of the make-up is rather good however and I think that Ashby has a wonderfully booming voice which lends itself to the role. Together it is one of the highlights of the entire serial.

There is a rather interesting painting of the third Doctor. I think that after the references in the previous episode, it seemed inevitable that there should be a visual one. Don’t quite know whether its relevant to the story but it seemed to be just a passing thing.
The Doctor uses the Borad’s weapon against him so for the second time in a row, the Doctor actually causes someone’s death. Ok so you could argue that he has done this before, he has never done it so blatantly. After a moment it was strange to realise that there was about fifteen more minutes before the episode would end which is unusual in a Doctor Who story at this time. I had forgotten about there been more than one Borad and the explanation given to this is rather good and there is a nice beauty and the beast thing going on with the Borad and Peri. I like the increasing number of people that have a crush on Peri.  

This has been the weakest story of the season just like I predicted in yesterdays review. It’s certainly not as bad as The Twin Dilemma but it certainly lacks from convincing characters and that’s a shame because there is a very good idea in this middle of the serial that is trying to get out but it doesn't.

Tuesday, 10 February 2015

(636) Timelash - Part 1

Timelash isn’t my favourite Colin Baker story. However I do have the strong belief that things will change over the course of the next two episodes. This story was written by Glen McCoy who becomes the 60th credited writer in Doctor Who. That’s about the most interesting part of the entire review which is going to be a bit shorter than usual. The relationship between the Doctor and Peri isn’t as fierce as it was at the beginning of the season. There is still some tension there but it has definelty been reigned back since the beginning of the season. The story takes place in Karfel which is under a rather interesting dictatorship. The word Timelash is used within the first few minutes. This is what people are thrown into for being disobedient but to be honest it’s probably a good thing.

The first time that the Borad appears in this episode its in a chair that turns around and the camera cuts to Aram before we can see what he looks like. The voice of Borad (Robert Ashby) is very good and helps to create a ‘nice’ atmosphere. Denis Carey returns to play the human face of the Borad.  Carey had previously appeared in Shada but this is a more interesting performance.
The Doctor has previously visited Karfel before but in his third incarnation. I think that this is quite a good idea that we hear a bout the Doctor visiting somewhere that we have never seen before. Paul Darrow is easily the best thing in this story. He treats the story in the way that it should be treated and does well as Tekker. There is a wonderful sense when he walks into a room he pretty much owns that room and owns the scene that he is in. Sadly that is all the good stuff that I could find to say about this episode.

Jeanne Crowley unfortunately doesn’t impress as Vena. I just find her unconvincing and thought that it was stupid how she ended up going into the Timelash. She just doesn’t carry any emotional weight when she is on screen. The Android is rather odd but not really for the right reasons. It’s blue face and yellow hair really doesn’t look right. At least they learnt from the mistakes that were evident from Kamelion. The Bandril is another unfortunate design. The idea of the Bandril is good enough it is just that the visual lets it down completely. Like the design of the Timelash, one does suspect that a bit more money could have made a difference. Considering how important it is in the story, its weird that it wasn’t higher up on the list of priorities. The Morlox is also a disappointment. I really don’t know what it looks like but it seems like very little thought was given to the look of it. The introduction of H.G.Wells is something that should have been a great moment in the show. A big name in literaly history that is in my favourite TV show and yet the casting David Chandler means that it is another disappointment. He’s portrayed as a bit of an idiot and boards the TARDIS without the Doctor’s approval.
Sadly the Timelash doesn’t look impressive. In fact I would go so far as to say it looked a bit crap. It’s clear that the jollies to Seville took its toll on the budget. I do wonder what could have been achieved if The Two Doctors had been filmed in the UK.

As you can probably guess I don’t think very much of this episode because there are more things wrong with it than right. Despite the best efforts of Colin Baker and Nicola Bryant, this story doesn’t start off in a particular good way and I am just wanting Revelation of the Daleks to arrive so I can get past this one. I don’t think my opinion will change of this story and this is going to be the weakest story of the season. The only question that remains is whether it is worst that The Twin Dilemma.

Monday, 9 February 2015

(635) The Two Doctors - Part 3

The first three parter since Planet of Giants (1964) ends with what needed to be a better 45 minutes than the previous two for the whole return of Patrick Troughton thing to be worth it. It hadn’t struck me until now but Colin Baker and Patrick Troughton hadn’t actually met. The first encounter between the second and sixth Doctors is one of the highlights of this episode. It’s slightly frustrating that its taken until now for this to happen.

The second Doctor is going to be turned into an andragum. Quite why Robert Holmes has waited until now for this to happen is a bit of a mystery. I say this because it by far the most entertaining aspect of the episode. The Second Doctor and Shockeye start going in for food. They form a more entertaining double act than Oscar and Anita. Their walk to find food does lead to some lovely location filming. The filming ends up in Seville itself and there is quite a lot of it which makes up the little that we had in the previous episode.
The tension between the Sontarans and Chessene really starts to rise to the boil as they set to wipe the other lot out. Chessene is the one that strikes first as she drops some acid bombs on them and acts like it’s a normal activity. Stike makes it and lasts a while before he tries to make off in his ship and that explodes. Once the Sontarans are out of the way its means that the threat comes from Chessene and Dastari. I have to say that I think that the Sontarans were very underused in this serial and suffer from being treated as secondary monsters. Chessene is the one that is calling the shots and Jacqueline Pearce is very convincing as a baddie. It’s only during a scene between the two that its clear that some of Dastari’s morals start to come to the centre. There is a rather odd moment when Chessene puts her hands in some of the Doctor’s blood and seems to smother it on her face but the camera cuts away to Dastari’s reaction.  One of the grimmer moments in Doctor Who in my opinion.

This episode features a scene which is far worst that the apparent accede bath scene in Vengeance on Varos. It is where the Doctor pops a cyanide laden sponge on Shockeye’s mouth thus killing him. Even if the Doctor weren’t the one doing it then it would be a shocking moment in Doctor Who but it is the Doctor doing it and so just seems worst that what was shown in the previous serial.  

Sadly Oscar returns in this episode and when he gets stabbed by Shockeye I was really happy about this because it means that he is leaving on a permanent basis. Even just after he is stabbed he over acts in such a terrible way that I just hate the character even more. It is funny how Peri and Jamie leave Anita to tend to the recently deceased Oscar.

The deaths of Dastari and Chessene come in quick succession and I was disappointed with the death of Dastari as I would have liked for him to have made it and either die trying to save the Doctor or decide that he’s going to work for good now. Sadly this wasn’t the case but at least things ended at just the right point. The goodbye between the two Doctors, Jamie and Peri is rather amusing and seems to be just as good as the goodbye scene in The Five Doctors.
This episode has definelty the better of the three just because it’s been the most consistent. Unlike the previous episode, this one didn’t get started at the half way point. I don’t think that this story needed to be three episode and I still stand by my idea of making one of these episodes a standalone episode. That said I think that for a non-anniversary story, they just about got away with it although the question about why the story was set in Spain was never answered. Well there are just two more stories left of this season and this is the weakest of the season so far. Sadly this is the last time that Patrick Troughton would appear in Doctor Who as he passed away two years after this story transmitted. Troughton’s final performance summed up what was magical about his era on the show. Ok so most of the stories weren’t that great but there were some absolute crackers and even when the story didn’t work you could always rely on Troughton making at least worth watching.

Sunday, 8 February 2015

(634) The Two Doctors - Part 2

The thing about this being a three parter is one that I didn’t go into much in the previous review. The show went from 26 x 25 minute episodes to 13 x 45 minute and this means that there is going to be an odd number of episodes. They got around this in the previous season by having a two parter so I think that they could have don’t just a single 45 minute episode. The problem at the moment is that the fast paced feel that the previous stories have had has pretty much gone in this serial.

The cliffhanger is solved by Peri saving herself from the person that grabbed her. That person is Jamie. It’s good that the pieces of the puzzle start to slot into place so early on and its means that Jamie isn’t doing nothing. The opening scene with the Sixth Doctor, Jamie and Peri helps add a bit more to the story. The interaction between Peri and the Doctor is on fine form again with their usual bickering on display.
I like how the Doctor says he might be wiped out in a few centuries and Peri doesn’t seem to understand the rush and then he puts his head in hands. A funny moment in an episode that doesn’t have a great deal of comedy.

Shockeye’s eating habits are quite interesting. At one point he eats a rat and Dastari’s reaction mirrored my own. The group of villains is something that I think works quite well because it doesn’t feel like the old adage about too many cooks.  The trio of Shockeye, Chessene and Dastari work well together but there isn’t a clear leader amongst them which is perhaps the only thing that needs improving. Chessene does edge it a little bit but not by much.
Like the previous episode, this episode takes about 20 minutes before it starts to get going. I could tell where the point happened and that was when the Second Doctor wakes up and talking to Dastari and the others. Patrick Troughton has a rather easy time in this episode. He spends most of it either lying down or sitting in a wheelchair.

Like the previous episode, there is a nice amount of Seville on display here. Ok so its not the city centre but its still nice to see a bit of sun on Doctor Who that doesn’t involve a quarry.
Oscar continues to be annoying. He assumes that the Doctor is working for Interpol even when Anita points out that the police box sign isn’t written in Spanish. Sadly Oscar is quite involved in this episode. I don’t mind Anita but Oscar is totally annoying.

There is a nice reminder about the Rutans. For me this is a nice bit of continuity for the Sontarans. The question of the Sontaran’s involvement in the story is still something that doesn’t quite. Stike is the lead Sontaran but I think that Clinton Greyn doesn’t come across as a convincing Sontaran. I know that Sontarans are referred to as potatoes but I think that the design of the current costumes does make them look like a baked potato.
The Doctor was involved in the previous cliffhanger so it perhaps makes sense that Peri is involved in the ending. She is about to be menaced by Shockeye which is terrifying in itself because he has spent the previous 45 minutes acting in a really fun way.

I think that this has again been an episode of two halves but even the more active part hasn’t been as good as I would have expected. There were moments where things seemed to be just plodding along. I think that the final episode is going to make up for this but at the moment this has to be the weakest story of the season so far. It just doesn’t live up to the hype that this story has created for itself.

Saturday, 7 February 2015

(633) The Two Doctors - Part 1

Despite this not being an anniversary story, we are treated to a Multi-Doctor story. This is the only three part story of the season which would be six 25 minute episodes in the old format. I have never been a fan of the longer story so it was going to be interesting to see how this serial would work. This story was written by Robert Holmes and this is his first story since The Caves of Androzani. He becomes the most credited writer in Doctor Who history with this being his 57th episode. Patrick Troughton returns in his 125th episode and Frazer Hines returns in his 115th episode. The Sontarans also make a return for the first time in 152 episodes (3,598 days).This story sees the show filmed in Spain. Quite why I don’t know why and there doesn’t seem to be any explanation given. That said what we do see of Spain is quite nice but its not of the same quality that we saw in the previous story.

I like how they went to the trouble to start the episode in black and white to give a nod to the fact that the Second Doctor and Jamie were in the black and white era of the show. The Second Doctor and Jamie seem to be one a mission and I will state here and now that I won’t be going into continuity problems that arise with their involvement and their activities in this serial. The Doctor and Peri don’t really interact with anyone in this episode. They spend a lot of time fishing, a lot of time trying not to be killed by the computer and then spend the latter part of the serial in a weird area with lots of pipes. The chemistry that Patrick Troughton and Frazer Hines had in the 1960’s is very evident in this serial. The problem I think with having these two in a story together is that they have a danger of overshadowing the current line-up. Speaking of the current line-up, the bickering style that they have does seem rather out of place considering how well the Second Doctor and Jamie get on.
This story has some interesting supporting characters which shouldn’t come as much of a surprise considering that it is a Robert Holmes script. The character of Shockeye is mesmerising and well performed by John Stratton. He is obsessed with food and turns into quite the food critic when he arrives on earth. Jacqueline Pearce plays Chessene and she really is very good as one of the main threats in this serial. She carries a certain elegance throughout and never raises her voice yet there is much more to her character which shows itself during this serial. Laurence Payne plays Dastari. Payne previous appeared in The Gunfighters (1966) and The Leisure Hive (1980). However I think that this is a stronger performance than in those two. The former I will be honest don’t really remember but recognised him from the latter. Dastari is a clever person but like most clever people in Doctor Who, he just wants to use his intelligence for bad purposes.

The introduction of Oscar (James Saxon) & Anita is something of a common theme as all Robert Holmes stories feature a double act and this story slightly changes the format with a courting couple. I do find Oscar to be an annoyance and Anita is there purely to work alongside Oscar but doesn’t contribute anything to the story. Oscar uses cyanide to kill moths which seems like a horrible thing nowadays but at the time must have seemed perfectly fine and fine enough to include on prime-time Saturday evenings.
The incidental music is particularly impressive. Peter Howell’s highlight is the Sontaran music because it’s very striking.

Even though their ships had been identified as Sontaran ships, we have to wait a long time for them to appear. There is a shot of one’s hand but its 25 minutes before we actually see one and even then it’s a rather understated first appearance. Bearing in mind that it had been about seven years since they were last on screen it is somewhat disappointing that their first appearance happened in this way.
Sadly the quality of the costumes is not very good. It’s not terrible but I don’t think is as good as previous designs. The question as to why they are even in this story is something that doesn’t get answered in this episode. Considering that the Sontarans are strong enough to act on their own it does raise the question as to why they would be in league with Dastari.

The cliffhanger is ok but nothing spectacular. The problem is that the final 10-15 minutes does start to show the episode has run out steam which is very odd for a Robert Holmes story. The opening episode of this ‘special’ story is one of two halves but I think that there are a lot of positives than negatives. I don’t think that I am going to have to endure the next two episodes which is a relief. Still wonder why the story was set in Spain.

Friday, 6 February 2015

(632) The Mark of the Rani - Part 2

The cliffhanger works just as well as in this episode but something is slightly different and that is a shot of a man who is later identified as George Stevenson. It is a bit of a cheat really but it’s an interesting way of introducing a character like Stevenson. Sadly I think that Stevenson is rather under used in this episode. It does raise a question as to why he was even introduced into the story. You could easily have just mentioned his name and he would have been more involved in the story than he was. There was one fun scene when the Doctor gets very wrapped up in helping Stevenson with his design. Whilst Stevenson is pretty much underused, the same can’t be said for Luke. Gary Cady plays Stevenson’s assistant Luke. He gets put under the control of the Master but unfortunately it’s difficult to tell the difference because Cady doesn’t really show much emotion.

The whole idea about the Rani have a Turner painting hiding her TARDIS is quite a clever idea and it is something that featured in the previous episode but it seems to be more important in this one. The first thing that strikes me when we see inside the Rani’s TARDIS is that she has a better designed TARDIS than the Doctor. I just want the Doctor to travel in this TARDIS from now on
There is an interesting bit where Peri is point the Masters tissue thing and it’s clear that things are going to go wrong because its Peri. She is quickly outwitted by the Rani which isn’t too difficult but its worth it just to see Kate O’Mara act like an evil genius. The partnership of the Master and the Rani is rather interesting as they do seem to be almost on the same page. The Rani introduces some interesting bomb things which turn people into intriguing things. Luke gets turned into a tree although the performance is the same. The Rani’s reaction to Luke being a tree is funny because she reminds the Doctor that a tree has four times the life expectancy than a human so he is actually better off as he is now.

There doesn’t actually seem to be a moment which is where the Doctor is victorious. The closest that we get is when the Rani and the Master escape in her TARDIS and things go wrong. Things are worse than that actually as a dinosaur starts to grow and unfortunately its not the best model of a dinosaur that there has ever been. This story has been just as much fun as I had thought. The location filming has been one of the main reasons why this story seemed to work. The introduction of the Rani was well done and I liked the trio of Timelords battling it out on earth. I thought that Sarah Hellings, Pip and Jane Baker have done quite well with this adventure. The performances have been really very good and apart from the character of Luke, they all seemed to be relevant to the story. The next story is going to be interesting because some familiar faces make a return. I am starting to think that this season is one of the strongest seasons of Doctor Who for quite sometime.

Thursday, 5 February 2015

(631) The Mark of the Rani - Part 1

If this story goes the way that I hope it does, then it will be the best start to a season for many years. After the rather violent previous story, it’s a bit of a relief that we have a less violent story. This was the first story to be written by the husband and wife team of Pip and Jane Baker. Jane becomes the third credited woman to write for Doctor Who. Sarah Hellings becomes only the fifth woman to have directed the show. So far women have accounted for 5.1% of writers and 9.4% of directors.

This is one of those stories where I am going to bang on about the location filming but its hard not to when it looks as good as it does. I don’t live too far away from the Black Country Living Museum which is very similar to where this story was filmed. I wish that this story had been longer because its beautiful to look at. Every scene that is filmed outside looks perfect and Sarah Hellings makes really good use of every single opportunity.
This story sees the first appearance of the recently lost Kate O’Mara who plays the Rani. We don’t see much of her at first but on her second appearance she features more on screen. She wants to do her dastardly plans for scientific research whereas the Master just wants to destroy the Doctor. That is why the Rani could make a claim as being better than the Master. She is removing a chemical from people’s brains which takes away their ability to sleep. A group of miners are knocked out by the Rani’s gas and then become very aggressive and sort of become the lackeys for the Rani and the Master. The Master makes his first appearance since Planet of Fire (1984). It’s clear that his demise was short lived but it would have been interesting to have a bit of information given as to how he survived. His ‘first’ appearance comes when it’s implied that a scarecrow may be him. He doesn’t waste much time in trying to cause trouble. The aggressive trio are easily brainwashed into believing the Doctor is the one causing trouble.

“Devious and over complicated” is how the Rani describes the Master and that is pretty much how I would describe the Master. I like how the Rani and the Master don’t get along at all. Kate O’Mara is very good as the Rani and brings a freshness to this timelord fairground ride that exists between the Doctor and the Master. It’s always nice to see Anthony Ainley back and for once it does seem to be for a good reason. Ainley also seems to be enjoying what he’s doing and is more involved in the action than he was in his previous story.
The first scene between the Doctor and the Rani leads to the Doctor figuring out what’s going on within minutes. This is perhaps the only thing that really doesn’t quite work for me but I suppose I can forgive it for how the rest of the episode works out. If I was being ultra-harsh then I could pick up on the moment when the TARDIS is thrown down a mineshaft which the viewers know won’t affect that the TARDIS and the Master should know this.

The cliffhanger sees the Doctor strapped to a gurney accidentally pushed down a hill by Peri and then by the aggressive luddites. This is quite a good cliffhanger because there is no clear way of how the Doctor is going to get out of this situation. This has been a curious episode because it seems that it took a long time before things started to find its feet. The latter part of the episode (or second part in old money) was the stronger part but I still thought that there were things that worked well in the first part that made the whole thing work.