Thursday 29 August 2019

The Ark in Space

The TARDIS materializes in what seems to be a deserted space station hanging dead in space. One the Doctor manages to bring the systems back online, though, Sarah is caught up in an automated process which puts her into a cryogenic chamber along with the survivors of the human race. Earth has been devastated by a solar holocaust and the station - Space Beacon Nerva - as been used as a sleep chamber for a chosen group of humans to wait out the solar flares and return to Earth. But sometime during their long sleep the humans were visited by the wasp-like Wirrn, and the station is now a breeding ground for the monsters with the sleeping humans a ready made source of food. With only a few revived humans to help him, the Doctor has to find a way to stop the Wirrn before they overrun the station and move on to claim Earth.

The Ark in Space starts off as a tremendously claustrophobic story with the TARDIS crew emerging into an airless confined space within Nerva; with the power cut by the Wirrn to keep the humans from being revived the station is in darkness with some creepy shadows, but when light does come back it is glaring and harsh. The story later has one of the show's  most iconic visuals ever with a sweeping view of space along the ark's corridors and the towering height of the cyrogenic chambers seeming to stretch far into the vertical distance. And it was all gleaming space age clean sterile white, along with the sharp uniforms worn by the crew (and Sarah after she was processed). The future was always bright and shiny in the 70s.

 The episode was set well over 10,000 years into the future, the TARDIS accidentally flung for into the future by Harry touching part of the console, and it parallels the William Hartnell episode The Ark in its theme of the human race surviving Earth's destruction, although here the story is taking place far too early in time and the Earth is not being consumed by the fireball of the sun, just slightly toasted by the flares. This would be a loose start to the future history stories of Doctor Who with the humans fleeing Earth and striking out across the stars, although the series had already touched on the colonization era of humanity with stories such as Colony in Space, The Mutants, Frontier in Space and Death to the Daleks, although on the time scale indicated here these events would be long past by the time of the solar flares.

Series continuity where the future was concerned wasn't really on anyone's mind back then it seems, and in a way it didn't really matter as the future history episodes were spread out and often interspersed between historical and contemporary time episodes. To cling to it too much might have limited some of the creative flow of the scripts, although I will forever be trying to sort them into some kind of an order. The new series when it returned in 2005 made a much better go of keeping things in line, although some of those episodes would suggest stories like The Ark in Space would take place even further in the future to allow room for the new series stories.

Character continuity, though, is observed well and although it's only his second full story, Tom Baker is the Doctor through and through. His manner remains that of a fool at times, although it is obvious he is not. His impatience with the humans he is trying to protect comes through often, mostly with Harry, but his determination to stop the Wirrn from consuming the whole species doesn't waver.

The Wirrn are a fantastic monster; like some wasp species they lay eggs in their prey so there is food ready when they emerge, which is the plan for the sleepers on Nerva. The Wirrn have the capability to absorb knowledge from the creatures they consume, and now having happened upon the sleeping humans they are poised to overnight become a technologically advanced race without having to do any of the heavy lifting. Unfortunately they are not seen again in the series as an enemy but do get a return treatment a few times in future Big Finish episodes.

But with the surviving humans either asleep in a space station or so far out in space they have forgotten they came from Earth, what has happened to the planet below?

NEXT EPISODE : THE SONTARAN EXPERIMENT

Robot

The Doctor has regenerated again, right before the eyes of Sarah Jane Smith and the Brigadier. The new man before them is not at all like the one they knew before - he seems to take things far less seriously than he used to and is more interested in the obscure than the obvious. While he is recovering, though, top secret plans for making a highly classified weapon are stolen by an entity that seems unstoppable, but is in reality a weapon itself - a huge robot under the control of a scientific elite called  The Scientific Reform Society.  The new scientific regime believe that they have the right to rule the world due to their intellectual advantages over everyone else, and with the Robot, a disintegration weapon and a file full of nuclear codes they are set to blackmail the world. But they never counted on the Doctor.

A new Doctor and a whole new feel to the series! Tom Baker is a huge departure from the more serious tones of Jon Pertwee's Doctor, although despite some of the comic carrying on that he does he is still very much the Doctor through and through. Here is where we see the debut of the insanely long scarf that most people associate with the Doctor, as well as the hat and the big grinning mouth full of teeth and the mad curly hair. This is by far the most iconic of the Doctors of the classic series. And of course the Doctor needs his companions, so here is Sarah Jane Smith at his side to form the most famous companion duo ever. Their chemistry is immediate; he is a new Doctor but they are still best friends right away, and if Sarah accepts him, we will too.

The Brigadier never knew when he was well off now there's a new Doctor - a third for him. But as the third was starting to spend more and more time away from Earth and his role within UNIT, this Doctor is obviously not going to hang around anymore. And equally perplexed by the Doctor is Surgeon Lt Harry Sullivan, finally in the flesh, as a semi unwilling new companion in the TARDIS. As far as televised adventures go his name was mentioned in Planet of the Spiders but the retcon magic of the series made his "new" first appearance happen back in The Face of the Enemy.

Gotta love that Hilda Winters, the head of the SRS. Geez what a cold bitch, but a fanatical one at the same time. The hysterical shouting and podium thumping from her speech at the SRS meeting are the stuff of which maniacs are made. You kinda want to see someone just slap her to put her in her place.

And that Robot. A huge machine, the likes of which we don't always get to see on the show due to its sheer size. But wow what a creation and such an intimidating voice. It's unlikely and somewhat cliche attachment to Sarah evokes King Kong memories, but all for good purposes in the end.

This is just what the series needs here is a fresh start - not that Pertwee was in any way a tired Doctor but the series had gotten so rooted on Earth with the Doctor's exile that it didn't feel like an adventure show so much as it did a crackpot scientist and his crazy sometimes working time machine. With a new version of the Time Lord at the controls, the TARDIS could end up anywhere.

And oh does it ever...

NEXT EPISODE : THE ARK IN SPACE



Wednesday 28 August 2019

The Rings of Ikiria

Mysterious crop circles have appeared in Britain and upon investigation, UNIT and the Doctor meet a beautiful female alien named Ikiria, who offers the world golden rings of friendship. But all that glitters and all that, and Mike Yates finds himself the only person who has not fallen under Ikiria's spell.  With the Doctor missing, and being hunted and betrayed by even the Brigadier, Yates has to save the world himself this time.

Okay so not really huge new ground for Doctor Who as we have seen the story of someone beautiful offering friendship with an ulterior motive before (hello Claws of Axos) and Big Finish would use this idea again to an extent in Storm of the Horofax (this one was written first) but the real story here is Mike Yates himself. The tale happens somewhere before Jo Grant joins the UNIT family so the Doctor is operating without an assistant, although Mike is telling it from somewhere else in his own future, sounding wistful and sad that what he considered his home and family were no longer there anymore.

Filling in the blanks in Yates' backstory is something that has given us as fans some interesting stuff to work with, even if that total only amounts to three stories (this, Scales of Injustice and Eye of the Giant) but as he just appears out of nowhere in Terror of the Autons it's all good stuff. Big Finish have taken a great deal of time to include Yates in some of their latest work in the era of the third Doctor, so the mystery man feels like more of a team player. This makes his eventual fall from grace pack a lot more of a punch, and his reflecting upon his UNIT days seem much sadder.

Still, no-one ever really leaves Doctor Who. Yates will be back eventually, but not for a while still.

Meanwhile the Doctor...

NEXT EPISODE : ROBOT

Tuesday 27 August 2019

The Magician's Oath

Some strange weather patterns attract the attention of UNIT and the Doctor; out of nowhere there are patches of London covered with frost and snow. The Doctor notices strange energy fluctuations that coincide with the weather shifts, and while he researches, Mike Yates and Jo Grant go out looking for trouble. They find it in the form of a charismatic magician who goes by Diamond Jack, and Jack is not a normal trickster; his illusions and tricks leave people cold, and others become attached to his mind. With his unspoken love for Jo burning within him, is Mike going to make the right decision when the time comes?

Mike Yates was actually the second UNIT officer to get the Companion Chronicles treatment, leaving Benton to the end, but in this continuity his stories have to wait until after the Doctor's regeneration as they are told in hindsight. In this instance, Mike looks back at the encounter with Diamond Jack after a long time away from UNIT, long after his nervous breakdown and his attempt to meditate his way back to stable mental health. In the audio extras actor Richard Franklin rightly points out that Yates really has been the only character to be shown to have this happen to him, although revisionists and retconners have now included Dodo Chaplet in that number (Who Killed Kennedy). Regardless of how limited the number of PTSD sufferers there are in Doctor Who (and really, it's a surprise there are not more considering the things they see) it is always interesting to see the characters in more than just their scripted aspects, to see a bit deeper behind what they say and do on the screen.

There's also that bit about Mike and Jo and their on again off again relationship. Over the last several adventures across all media it has been hinted at here and there, they have gone on - or tried to go on - dates and there's been a quick snog here and there, but the idea was quietly dropped by the television production team with the reasons only to be guessed at by fans, and when Jo decides to marry Cliff Jones after a few hours of knowing him there's not really any consideration for Mike Yates and how he might react. Years later in The Magician's Oath it is obvious that Mike was hurt by the collapse of the relationship, or worse by it's casual decline into nothingness, and he's pretty much just a lonely old man now, turning up at UNIT functions and talking the ear off younger privates about the old days.

And, of course, about the Doctor.

Mike was and is still in awe of the Doctor and he carries the guilt of his betrayal of his friend in Invasion of the Dinosaurs right into his old age. The story is written to take place around the time the Doctor has become involved with UNIT once more in the new series, and Mike makes a last hopeful ask of the private he speaks with, that should he meet the Doctor that he say hello from Captain Mike Yates. Yates hasn't been a captain since forever; we never saw him again in the televised series after Planet of the Spiders but we do see UNIT for a while, and he's not there anymore.

The Magician's Oath is a very different story in the range; the whole threat posed by Diamond Jack is really all background to the real story, which is that of Mike Yates' depression and guilt, and how he has not really ever recovered from his UNIT days. Intentional comment on soldiers and PTSD? Maybe. It's certainly a relevant issue these days. And it's not like Doctor Who never had its moments with political issues and commentaries. Unlike the third (or is it fourth?) wave feminism that has led to stunt casting of the current series, this isn't a big hammer over the head diatribe, it's just there plain for all to see that Mike Yates, former career officer at UNIT, is a broken man, and his struggle for wellness never ended with a simple stay at a spider-infested monastery.

NEXT EPISODE: THE RINGS OF IKIRIA

Monday 26 August 2019

Masters of War

Continuing their adventures together, the Doctor and the Brigadier land on a world devastated by a nuclear war; the soil is barren and at first glimpse the planet seems to be totally dead. But there is life in the ashes; the Thal people live under the protection of the machine-like Daleks, who in turn are awaiting the return of their creator, a man named Davros. This is far from what the Doctor knows of the Daleks from his previous adventure with them - they are killers, they have no love for the Thals at all so this must all be a big mistake. But when Davros does return from his mission, the truth behind matters is revealed and the Doctor doesn't know whose side to be on.

It's a bit unusual with this limited series to create a continuity within itself with the Doctor and the Brigadier having left Earth together and now making up a TARDIS team. After all there are only eight of these stories and their purpose seemed more to look at how things could have been different at pivotal moments rather than go off on a big tangent. But then again, things are very different in this story for the antagonists as well, mainly for Davros.

Chronologically Davros is introduced much sooner this way than he would be if I were only looking at televised episodes; here in Masters of War his origins and his role as Dalek creator are not touched on; it is assumed that the listener at this point would know who Davros was and how his backstory played out. As with the Unbound series itself, Davros and his story are given a bit of the old "what if" treatment and this is the result: a double length adventure (why wouldn't it be considering it's a Dalek story) with a lot of the old rules tossed out the window. Probably best enjoyed after getting through the entire regular series, though, or at least after Davros shows up in it, then the "what if" factor here will be more obvious.

Delving too far into that will only serve as a spoiler, though, so let's just look at how well the Brigadier and this alternative Doctor played by David Warner work together as a team. The Brig, it has been argued, would not work so well as a companion with the Doctor on a regular basis because his strength lies not only in his allegiance to the Doctor but his skills as a leader of an army. Take that away and the Brig has a bit less of a purpose, unless of course he were a retired man and no longer had his military duties. Doesn't take long for him to find himself a new army though once this tale gets rolling, and then he's the Brigadier we all knew in his heyday. This is, however, where this travelling duo stop although the alternative Doctor does make a return eventually in the future. Can't say where though. More spoilers.

NEXT EPISODE: THE MAGICIAN'S OATH