Introducing The Master (Roger Delgado). |
4 episodes. Approx. 95 minutes. Written by: Robert Holmes. Directed by: Barry Letts (uncredited). Produced by: Barry Letts.
THE PLOT
Though the Autons were defeated a while ago, a dormant Nestene energy device was kept by UNIT when the Doctor couldn't bring himself to destroy it. Now the device has been stolen, its theft linked to two missing scientists. When the Doctor investigates, he receives a message from the Time Lords: a warning. The theft is the work of the Master (Roger Delgado), a renegade Time Lord who seeks to gain power through an alliance with the Nestene.
The Master takes control of a plastics company run by Rex Farrel (Michael Wisher), using his hypnotic powers to sway Farrel to his side. Under the Master's influence, the company begins turning out plastic products using a new process - a process which turns every product, from plastic chairs to plastic flowers, into an Auton!
CHARACTERS
The Doctor: In the warmer, more colorful environment of Season Eight, it stands out far more than it did the previous year just how irritable and pompous the Third Doctor is. He is generally irritable and impatient with everyone around him, often with little to no cause. This could be insufferable... but the script is aware of the Doctor's bad behavior. As with his trip to the rubbish bin at the end of Inferno, he gets shown up just often enough to undercut his arrogance. Also, Pertwee softens the Doctor's bark so as to let some warmth shine through, and he shows enough charm to make up for his character's worst traits.
Jo Grant: In a story that sees a number of changes, one of the most visible is the Doctor's new assistant. Gone is the cool, collected Liz Shaw. In her place is ditzy, bubbly Jo Grant - a character who could not be remotely considered an intellectual match for the Doctor. Liz was one of my absolute favorite companions and, on first viewing, I was very resistant to liking Jo. Certainly, the idea of changing out a professional adult woman for a klutzy "dumb blonde" did not appeal. Katy Manning is perfect casting, though, taking a character who might have been unbearable and making her human and likable from practically her first second on-screen. Jo shouldn't work, but she does - and I put that almost entirely down to the actress.
Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart: Another obvious change is in the characterization of the Brigadier. He hasn't quite slid into buffoonery yet, but he's hardly the crisp, utterly efficient leader of the previous year. Whereas the Season Seven Brigadier found the Doctor a useful ally, this newest variant actively defers to the Doctor several times over the course of the serial. Writer Robert Holmes does allow him a few moments of dignity, particularly when he gets the Doctor to accept Jo as his new assistant by telling him that if he wants her gone, then he will have to be the one to fire her. For the most part, though, this is a diminished Brig - a process that unfortunately would continue throughout the rest of producer Barry Letts' run.
The Master: This story marks the introduction of the Doctor's archenemy. As played by Roger Delgado, he's the Doctor's mirror image. Where the Doctor bristles against authority, the Master embraces it, using his powers to influence those in authority to be his puppets. Where the Doctor gains allies by building loyalty, the Master hypnotizes hapless victims into being his slaves. Delgado is wonderful in the role, and his Master is so much plain fun to watch, there are bits of the story in which I find myself almost cheering him on - particularly when dealing with the overbearing foreman of the plastics factory.
THOUGHTS
As Barry Letts proclaims in the dvd commentary, Terror of the Autons represents the story in which he put his own stamp on the series. He produced most of Season Seven, but he was largely executing predecessor Derrick Sherwin's vision. Season Eight sees him taking that template and making it serve his own vision. We have the same setup as Season Seven: Doctor stranded on Earth, working with UNIT to thwart alien invasions. Terror of the Autons could be taught in a film school classroom as a sterling example of completely revamping an existing series without actually changing any part of the basic template. On paper, it's the same series. But the way that template is delivered to the audience, and the experience of viewing it, has been made entirely different.
As a mission statement for the new season (and, ultimately, for the rest of Pertwee's era), Terror of the Autons does its job well. Three major recurring characters are introduced: The Master, Jo Grant, and Capt. Mike Yates (Richard Franklin). The story is most focused on showing off the Master and his bizarrely friendly rivalry with the Doctor, but writer Robert Holmes makes sure to give Jo and Mike enough to do to establish them as characters and to make them engaging presences. At the same time, Holmes' script showcases the revamped tone, with its more overt humor and over-the-top set pieces.
As a story in itself... Well, there really isn't much story to speak of. There's a vague sketch of a narrative involving the Master paving the way for an Auton invasion of Earth. But that's only used a thin excuse to showcase the Master in action. The Autons are an afterthought. The real show here is watching the Master set up a series of increasingly elaborate traps for the Doctor to escape. Rinse, lather, repeat until around the middle of Episode Four, with just enough exposition slipped between set pieces to keep the Auton narrative somewhat alive for the ending.
If there is any doubt that the Auton story was little more than an afterthought, the ending clears that away. After three and a half episodes of watching the Master play Wile E. Coyote to the Doctor's Road Runner, the Auton invasion is thwarted in less than two minutes with literally two lines of dialogue and the flipping of some switches... thus leaving enough time for an epilogue centered entirely around reminding us that the Master's still out there and will pop up again!
It is fun to watch, and the serial holds up better than I remembered. On my last viewing, I was very disappointed by it. Had I reviewed it then, I would have given it about a "4." This time, I basically liked it - but there's no overlooking the thin plot and the laughably weak resolution, so I can still only rate this as a high "average."
Overall Rating: 6/10.
Previous Story: Inferno
Next Story: The Mind of Evil
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