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.
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