Showing posts with label Time Lords. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Time Lords. Show all posts

Sunday, September 1, 2024

#15 (10.1 - 10.4): The Three Doctors.

The 2nd and 3rd Doctors pit their wills against Omega (Stephen Thorne), a Time Lord hero who has gone insane!
The 2nd and 3rd Doctors pit their wills against Omega
(Stephen Thorne), a Time Lord hero who has gone insane!

4 episodes. Running Time: Approx. 98 minutes. Written by: Bob Baker, Dave Martin. Directed by: Lennie Mayne. Produced by: Barry Letts.


THE PLOT:

Dr. Tyler (Rex Robinson), a researcher, brings his cosmic ray monitoring device to UNIT after he picks up unusual readings and after he sees Ollis (Laurie Webb), the man guarding the device, disappear. The Doctor and Jo leave to investigate the scene of Ollis's disappearance. They return to find that Dr. Tyler has also vanished, and that UNIT HQ is under attack by "Gel Guards," creatures made out of antimatter that seem to be specifically hunting for the Doctor.

Overwhelmed and with no options beyond hiding inside the TARDIS, the Doctor sends a distress call to the Time Lords. They have their own problems, however, with their power being drained from inside a black hole. They can't help the Doctor - but, as the Time Lord President observes, "Perhaps he can help himself."

The Doctor is joined by his second incarnation (Patrick Troughton). The Time Lords also send a projection of the Doctor's original version (William Hartnell) to advise. Between the three of them, they come up with a plan that sends them through the black hole to a universe of antimatter - a universe ruled over by Omega (Stephen Thorne), a hero to the Doctor's people for unlocking the secrets of time travel.

Omega supposedly died in the supernova that granted the Time Lords their power. He insists he was "sacrificed," and millennia of solitude have left him hungering for vengeance. He demands that the Doctors aid him - or else he will destroy their entire universe!


CHARACTERS:

The 3rd Doctor: Is annoyed the presence of his more frivolous 2nd incarnation, seeming embarrassed by his younger self's conduct. Though they end the serial on amiable terms, he doesn't hesitate to say that he hopes never to meet himself again. He's determined to stop Omega, but he still feels empathy for his plight. He takes the lead in the interactions with Omega, with the 2nd Doctor more or less acting as both disruptive force and backup.

The 2nd Doctor: Both script and Patrick Troughton turn up the comedy to a far higher degree than was usually the case during his actual era. The story makes his recorder (which was relatively little seen after his first few serials) into something he's obsessive about, though it does pay that off at the end. There is a nice moment when the 2nd Doctor plays up his manic behavior until Omega loses his temper. When the 3rd Doctor demands to know what he's doing, he replies that he's testing their adversary, observing, "The limits of his self-control... aren't very good, are they?"

The 1st Doctor: William Hartnell's poor health resulted in his role being pared back to a handful of pre-filmed inserts, with him addressing the other Doctors from the TARDIS scanner. Faced with his two successors, he reacts like a disappointed father figure at finding "a dandy and a clown," and he provides advice that steers his older selves in the right direction. Though his decline is visible, Hartnell still manages some fine deliveries, and I laughed out loud at several of his line readings.

Jo Grant: She is confused by the appearance of the 2nd Doctor, but she adjusts rapidly to the situation once it's been explained to her. She finds the 2nd Doctor to be "sweet," which sounds a bit like she's gushing over the Doctor's baby pictures (and, in a way, she sort of is). Her loyalty remains to the 3rd Doctor, though, with her refusing to abandon him even when he tries to make her do so.

Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart: Unless I'm misremembering a later story, I'm fairly sure this story represents the character's low point. The normally composed and rational Brigadier is a complete buffoon here. When he sees the 2nd Doctor, he insists that one of his experiments changed his face back, refusing to listen when both the 2nd Doctor and Benton try to tell him otherwise. When the TARDIS transports them through the black hole, he insists they are in "Cromer." It's only when he finally sees both Doctors together that he even begins to accept reality. 

Sgt. Benton: He gapes in wonder when dragged into the TARDIS. But when the Doctor asks if he's going to say that it's bigger on the inside, he sensibly responds: "It's pretty obvious, isn't it?" There isn't the slightest hesitation in his happiness at seeing the previous Doctor, with whom he's paired for most of Episode Two. He seems slightly exasperated at the Brigadier's recalcitrance, making it a point to "look after" his superior as he strides out to idiotically march on "Cromer."

Omega: He should come across as a tragic villain, a man of brilliance and vision who was lost while making time travel possible. Unfortunately, Stephen Thorne's performance reduces him to a shouty, ill-tempered tyrant. It's left to Jon Pertwee's reactions to convey the sense that this is a great man who's fallen. Thorne shows none of that - and in fairness to him, the script gives him very few opportunities to.


THOUGHTS:

I first watched The Three Doctors a little over twenty years ago, when I got back into Doctor Who as an adult. It was a story I was particularly looking forward to watching, and... I hated it. It was cheap and silly. It felt like a bad comic book, complete with tacky (vaguely Christmas-like) monsters, tinfoil costumes, and sets that seemed to be generously adorned with tinsel.

A couple of decades on, I stand by all of these complaints - only this time, I enjoyed it. Ironically, I think that specifically because my degree of Doctor Who fandom has receded, with it now just one of several shows I enjoy, I was better able to get into the spirit of it.

The Three Doctors launched the tenth season of the series. Though it didn't air anywhere close to the show's actual tenth anniversary, it effectively fulfilled that function. I can only imagine how it must have felt to contemporary viewers at a time when reruns were rare and home video a rare thing. For the majority of viewers, William Hartnell's and Patrick Troughton's Doctors would have existed only in memory; for some, only in what was related by parents or older siblings.

The story fills out its four episodes well. The first part is mostly a standard (if broadly played) 3rd Doctor/UNIT story, with the multi-Doctor aspect introduced near the end. The second builds the mystery, with the 2nd Doctor and UNIT trying to get a handle on events while the 3rd Doctor and Jo explore the quarry... er, impossible world that exists on the other side of the black hole. The last two episodes pair the 2nd and 3rd Doctors as they pit first their will and then their ingenuity against Omega.

The frequent shifts give the story its greatest strength: pace. It's a very basic, slightly Flash Gordon-like story, with the Doctors confronting a futuristic madman. But it moves right along, with a generous amount of humor. I may wish that some of the humor didn't come at the expense of a couple of the characters, but it's light and lively and goes by quickly.


OVERALL:

"Light and lively" pretty well sums up The Three Doctors. The main appeal of the story is right there in the title: three Doctors, with William Hartnell and Patrick Troughton returning to their roles in a way that doubtless evoked waves of nostalgia in 1972.

It's not a story that stands up to any serious scrutiny, and it is very different from Baker's and Martin's ambitious original proposal, Deathworld. That treatment was recently adapted by Big Finish as part of their "Lost Stories" range, and it will be the subject of my next Doctor Who review.

The Three Doctors does its job as a fun celebration of ten years of Doctor Who on air. I used to hate it. On this viewing, I enjoyed it for what it is, but it will still never rank among my favorites. It's a fun romp, though, as long as you don't try to take it at all seriously.


Overall Rating: 6/10.

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Friday, September 15, 2023

#8 (8.15 - 8.20): The Colony in Space.

The Doctor and Jo study the history of a once-great, now primitive civilization.
The Doctor and Jo study the history of a
once-great, now primitive civilization.

6 episodes. Running Time: Approx. 145 minutes. Written by: Malcolm Hulke. Directed by: Michael E. Briant. Produced by: Barry Letts.


THE PLOT:

The Doctor has completed repairs on his dematerialization circuit. He installs it while showing off the TARDIS control room to Jo. Then, suddenly, the timeship takes off on its own!

They materialize on Uxarieus, a desolate world whose only indigenous life is a civilization that has devolved into a tribal, primitive state. A group of humans, fleeing overpopulation on Earth, is attempting to build a colony here. Ashe (John Ringham), their leader, reveals that they have begun running into problems: crops that fail without cause and sightings of giant lizard creatures. Many of the colonists are on the verge of giving up and going back to Earth.

That's when representatives of the Interplanetary Mining Corporation show up. Led by Captain Dent (Morris Perry), the IMC men insist they were surprised to find a colony here. Soon enough, the Doctor discovers that the colony's problems stem from sabotage by IMC, with Dent determined to drive them out so that he can strip-mine the planet.

The colonists send for an Adjudicator to resolve the dispute. But the man who arrives, for all his credentials, is an imposter. The Doctor and Jo recognize him immediately: It's the Master - and he has come to this barren world for reasons all his own!


CHARACTERS:

The Doctor: When he shows off the TARDIS to Jo, he preens at her amazement that "it's bigger on the inside." As soon as they take off, he realizes that the Time Lords must be controlling his ship. Even so, he's happy to step out onto a planet that isn't Earth again. He badly wants Jo to share in his delight at even this temporary escape, seeming to almost need her to feel the sense of wonder.

Jo Grant: She reacts to the TARDIS's sudden takeoff the way most people would: with fear and a desire to go back home. She trusts the Doctor, and she allows him to coax her out onto her first alien world. She seems to pass an unspoken test when she forgets her anxiety long enough to be dazzled by an alien flower - but that doesn't stop her from being appalled when the TARDIS is stolen. This nervous reaction is well written, and it helps her to remain relatable. Crucially, her fear doesn't come at the expense of her helping the colonists. She bonds with them quickly and is actively assisting with daily chores by the second episode.

The Master: This is the one Season Eight story where his appearance feels tacked on. Still, Roger Delgado's performance remains excellent, and the script feeds him a few good character beats. He's learned caution from the Doctor's previous burglary of his TARDIS, putting in an alarm and additional defensive measures. He's also entirely genuine in wanting the Doctor to join him in his scheme, and he's hurt by his rival's rejection.

Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart: Nicholas Courtney appears just long enough to justify his spot in the credits. Even that couple of minutes establishes that he's actively following up on leads regarding the Master's whereabouts. The Doctor insists that this is a waste of time, but I'm going to side with the Brig on this. It's already clear that the Master has a desire to defeat the Doctor, not just escape him, so it's reasonable to think that he'll turn up on Earth again at some point.

Capt. Dent: The story's actual main villain. Morris Perry leans hard into the character's archness, just in case you miss that he's evil... Not that you're going to, because this is a man with zero positive traits. He's utterly corrupt and obsessed with profits. His plan is to scare the colonists away, but he is unbothered when an encounter results in two deaths. He wants to cover his worst abuses legally, even holding a show trial for the colony leaders at one point. The only thing that ultimately matters, however, is that he clears them out so that he and his men can mine the planet's resources.


THOUGHTS:

The Colony in Space is the first story of the Pertwee era to break the Earthbound/UNIT format. Though I've enjoyed that format, it was time for a change of pace. The simple fact that the Doctor goes back to traveling for a story, albeit on a leash, makes for a refreshing change of pace.

This story is not generally regarded as one of the era's better ones, but I've always rather enjoyed it. The first four episodes work particularly well. The conflict between the colonists and the miners may be routine stuff, but it's deftly scripted and builds steadily, an accumulation of incidents that leads to rising violence.

There are a range of personalities on both sides. Ashe, the colony's leader, is patient to a fault and wants to find peaceful solutions using the law. His second-in-command, Winton (Nicholas Pennell), is quick to want to fight, with both Ashe and the Doctor trying to hold him back. But given how aggressive the IMC men are, Winton may just have a point regarding the need for self-defense! Meanwhile, though the miners are definitely the "baddies," mining expert Caldwell (Bernard Kay) despises the methods that Dent is willing to use - and even Dent occasionally has to check the open sadism of security man Morgan (Tony Caunter).

I find the final two episodes to be a lot weaker, and I can describe why in two words: The Master. Roger Delgado is as good as ever, but he doesn't feel like an intrinsic part of the plot. It takes more than half the serial for him to appear, and he spends all of Episode Four pretending to be an Earth official and acting in that capacity. It would not surprise me if this had been originally scripted as a Master-free serial, with his subplot tacked on.

The final episode particularly feels as if it's cutting between two unrelated narratives, one involving the colony and one involving the Master. This harms both threads: The Master story feels rushed and underdeveloped, and the ending of what had been the serial's central plot gets squeezed around the Master's latest shenanigans.


OVERALL:

The Master subplot harms the ending, but not enough to stop me from recommending the story overall. For the bulk of its running time, The Colony in Space is enjoyable bread-and-butter Who, and even the final episodes offer several good moments. Most of all, when viewing the series in order, it's a breath of fresh air to see the Doctor get away from Earth, if only for one story.

I just wish that this one time, the Master had been left out of the proceedings.


Overall Rating: 6/10.

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