Two fans of Doctor Who, one marathon viewing of every episode of the series from 1963 to the present.

Running through corridors is optional.

Monday, January 23, 2012

Story #27 - The War Machines (1966)

Harry -
Well, here's something completely different: an adventure that takes place in contemporary London! Although I wonder, because of the real-time that has elapsed between broadcast and present day, would "The War Machines" now qualify as a kind of historical? I wonder... I wonder...

Still, welcome to Earth!



Sarah -
It seems almost revolutionary for this point in Doctor Who, doesn't it? We know we’re going to spend a lot of time on Mother Earth from here on out, but for now it feels so fresh.

We need to give a shout out to the timely title graphics. How cool are they?



Harry -
A refreshing change. I always loved that "computer" font.


Sarah -
And then we get a gorgeous opening shot. The War Machines had my attention from the get go!


Harry -
Great establishing shot.


Sarah -
In the opening scene, it seems that they’ve come to Earth on purpose…or perhaps it’s just another happy accident. The Doctor’s manic response to the Post Office Tower sets our adventure in motion. I had a good laugh when Dodo asked “Daleks? Who are they?” For better or worse, Dodo, you’ll never have the chance to find out.


Harry -
The movement of time kept coming to mind as I watched this story. There are so many cuts from one scene to the next where a sizeable chunk of time seems to have passed. It was more jarring than usual, and it makes us miss out on moments that go unseen. How, for instance, was the Doctor able to just waltz into the Post Office Tower and be welcomed by all? Perhaps he flashed the Psychic Paper?


Sarah -
I was wondering that myself. They seem to have just wandered in.

Despite any problems I may have had with the continuity, I really enjoyed this story. It was so much of fun to watch.



Harry -
Absolutely. This is one of my favourites. It's a "diabolical supercomputer" story that was all the rage at the time, and I love the scenes in The Inferno club.


Sarah -
The Inferno Club! The Hottest Nightspot in Town! *Cue the swinging music!*


Harry -
We meet three fun new characters here: Polly the swinging 60s girl, Ben the moody sailor, and Kitty the bargirl whose Winehouse hairdo distracts from the fact that she doesn't seem to serve up one drop of alcohol the entire time. The crowd doesn't seem to mind. They look a pretty straight-laced set in their jackets and ties.


Sarah -
I guess that counted as swinging around the BBC at the time…

Could Polly be any cuter? Dodo should have seen it coming. I love that Ben is introduced with, “He’s not great advertisement for the most with it place in town, is he?” He and Polly have immediate chemistry.



Harry -
Am I going to keep bringing up the weirdness of time in this story?  Apparently.  How about that news conference hosted by Sir Charles, the one where he announces that all major computer systems will be transferred over to the control of WOTAN. Strange to be making such a monumental announcement in the middle of the night. The Doctor barely has time to pull some quizzical faces before he goes clubbing with the youngsters.


Sarah -
I kind of loved Sir Charles. He was perfect. The thing that confused me is that all the scientists pronounce WOTAN as “Votan.” What’s with that? Some wacky cold war thing? A running joke at the Royal Scientific Club?


Harry -
It might be one of those English things, like how they pronounce "St. John" to rhyme with "engine".


Sarah -
Actually, the whole WOTAN thing is a bit wacky. Why would any of the nations involved agree to have their computer systems linked up to some super computer? It wasn’t clear to me how WOTAN achieved conscious and got all the war machines placed. For a while I thought it was an alien lifeforce, but I guess WOTAN was just your run-of-the-mill evil supercomputer after all.

Still, it’s pretty amusing when the Doctor and Dodo are impressed by the computer’s ability to compute the square root of 17422 and define TARDIS. After all he’s seen, the Doctor is excited by square roots?



Harry -
The man loves his maths.


Sarah -
Don’t we all?

This bring us to the biggest controversy of this story: for the only time in the series, the Doctor is referred to as “Doctor Who” by WOTAN. So much for the alleged “supercomputer.”



Harry -
Rob and Toby opine on this and other oddities that the production crew inserted into the story. I think Toby's standard response to such things is "it didn't count." I'm fine with that!

Jumping all over the place here. It was great to see the Doctor back in his fur hat and cape too, which we haven't seen since "An Unearthly Child." It's his best look.



Sarah -
It’s a great look. I imagine him keeping it in a special cupboard marked “Earth.”


Harry -
Hah!

As for Dodo... the enthusiasm she generated in the previous story seems to have been all for naught. Here, she's got a headache, maybe hearing voices again, who knows? Rather than continuing to play detective, she's fallen under the mind control of WOTAN. Who will help the Doctor now?



Sarah -
I couldn’t help but think that the Doctor should have known that something was up with Dodo when she started acting so lucid.


Harry -
And "Hah!" again.


Sarah -
Poor Dodo doesn’t have the power to fight the voices in her head, as Polly does later in the story. We need our companions to be strong, not mad.

Having spent these many stories happily slagging Dodo, I felt kind of badly about how quickly she’s dismissed by the story. Dodo’s brain is taken over, she tries to lure the Doctor to WOTAN, gets hypnotized by the Doctor, is shipped off to the country – and it’s adios Dodo!



Harry -
Worst companion intro and worst companion exit to date. She was one strange duck.

But Ben and Polly fill the gap admirably. Ben takes on the role of "heavy lifter" when the Doctor dispatches him to investigate the goings-on at the warehouse. Meanwhile Polly literally steps into the role that Dodo has just abandoned. It was quite remarkable.



Sarah -
Wasn’t it? Companions usually get their little moment in the sun when leaving the Doctor. Dodo’s barely off-screen before Polly’s taken over the possessed-companion role.


Harry -
And now, a moment of tribute for the most well-known vagrant in London, whose death and photo made the papers within hours. Again, this is that weirdness of time that keeps bugging me about this story.


Sarah -
It was insane, but I loved it. What a performance by Roy Godfrey! Shear genius! Perhaps the tramp was a black sheep of the Royal Family who fled Buckingham Palace to live a life of freedom on the open road. That would explain the cab ride to his squat and not having the right change for the driver.


Harry -
At the warehouse, Ben discovers the war machines being assembled. This is probably the one big let-down of the story. The term "war machines" evokes something powerful and menacing, but these clunkers are just ridiculous -- like slower, dumber, clumsier Daleks in a way. Plungers already used up? Let's give 'em a comedy mallet! Yeesh.


Sarah -
The actual war machines are undoubtedly the most disappointing aspect of The War Machines. Even the knowledge that they can break tables and smash through stacks of crates is not enough to kindle our dread. Once again, WOTAN demonstrates that its supercomputer status is unfounded.


Harry -
To give credit to the production crew, you can see how they tried to make the war machines look threatening. They used lots of low angles, extreme closeups, and repeatedly showed the machines destroying those walls of crates with contempt.

But still... It's no surprise the Doctor so coolly stood one down at the end of Part Three.



Sarah -
This is the single best moment of the story and perhaps the best image of the entire series thus far. He didn’t even have to give the “I’m the Doctor and you don’t mess with me” speech. Brilliance!


Harry -
I loved that moment. Everyone flees in panic, but the Doctor not only stands his ground, but takes one step, then another towards the approaching machine. No dialogue either. It was an act of Total Badassery.

It did render Part Four a bit of an afterthought. Since the Doctor had already figured the machines out, it was just a matter of assembling the Most Obvious Trap Ever and snaring one. Again, not the most clever things, these war machines.



Sarah -
But it gives Ben a chance to shine. Ian and Steven would be proud.


Harry -
True.  He's picked up right where they left off.


And for the second story in a row, we get a lively smashup scene at the end, when the machines are turned on WOTAN. The way the Doctor vanished from the Post Office Tower without a proper goodbye is also something we'll be seeing more of.

In the final scene, we see the budding friendship of Ben and Polly continuing, as they scamper over to meet the Doctor outside the TARDIS. It's a bit obvious what happens next, but I'm so glad to be rid of Dodo that I don't mind. Welcome aboard to the cute couple!



Sarah -
I was wondering what Ben picked up while taking the Doctor’s cape for him. The TARDIS key, of course! Let the adventure begin!

There are so many reasons this story shouldn’t work, but I agree with Toby that everything’s important except when it doesn’t count. I loved "The War Machines." With good reason, it feels like a Troughton-era story and it’s just so much fun. We had a whole stretch of stories that just felt joyless and "The War Machines" brings the fun back to Doctor Who!



Harry -
I agree. Even though I've been a bit too nit-picky above, this remains one of my favourite Hartnell stories. It's all a bit odd, but it all comes together and works, flaws be damned!


Sarah -
Lasting image: The Doctor’s Standoff.

Favorite moment: The Inferno Club, followed closely by seeing WOTAN’s billing in the credits of the first episode.

Best line: From Sir Charles – “Well, we’ve tried the Army. What else is there?”
I’m not quite sure why this made me laugh so hard, but it did.

9/10



Harry -
Lasting image: Oh those rumbling, lumbering war machines.

Favourite moment: The Doctor takes a couple of silent steps towards the approaching war machine.

Best line: "I think she'll sleep for 48 hours." I burst out laughing when the Doctor said this after hypnotizing Dodo.

9/10



 



Our marathon continues with Story #28 - The Smugglers...

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Story #26 - The Savages (1966)

Harry -
This is a First Doctor story that I had never seen before, and knew nothing about. It was a treat to watch "classic" Who totally cold.


Sarah -
I was a little anxious going in, fearing another Unearthly Child-type caveman story.


Harry -
And what a story! A far-future-totalitarian-morality-play-smash-em-up-heroic-adventure. With light guns!


Sarah -
All my fears were unfounded!


Harry -
The first few minutes of the Doctor and his companions roaming around a new planet reminded me of The Planet of the Apes. It was building up to a slow reveal, one that was hinted at by the story title. There was even a spear attack, but Our Travellers were instead approached and welcomed by the "civilized" locals.


Sarah -
And a welcoming bunch they were. Our travelers so often encounter hostility when they arrive on a new planet. What a change of pace to be welcomed with open arms!


Harry -
Strangely, the locals seem to have been expecting the Doctor, aka "The Traveller From Beyond Time." Everything seems so perfect in their city, almost sterile, and no one seems to question it, other than the Doctor and friends. They wonder aloud how this advanced civilization got to be so advanced. An ominous, almost sinister atmosphere is established from the get go. How could it not be, when the leader, Jano, pontificates about "the perfection of our race." Uh-oh...


Sarah -
Time to start worrying! The Doctor, of course, starts to wonder how they do it, while Steven and Dodo do a bit of touring.


Harry -
After the previous disappointment, I was glad to see Steven and Dodo both get an energetic story with lots for them to do. This time, it was Dodo who was the voice of reason and whose explorations uncovered the scientific vampirism that the Elders were perpetuating on the Savages. (Jano again: "Life preys on other forms of life, as you know, Doctor.")  Uh-oh...

Props to Detective Dodo! And as for Steven, after his initial dismissal of Dodo as "imagining things", he ramped it up and we got a great Angry Steven the rest of the way. Angry, decisive, sympathetic, and a bold man of action. Wow!



Sarah -
I was all, "You Go Girl," to Dodo and was happy that Steven finally got the chance to be the Man of Action we haven't seen since Ian left the TARDIS -- and then I started to wonder what the heck was going on here! A bit of research and I soon learned that this story was the first for the new production team of Innes Lloyd and Gerry Davis. I can only think that this explains the shift in what Dodo and Steven get to do. Imagine how much more interesting this season would have been if they'd been written this way all along.

I'll have more to say on these changes later, but back to the story...



Harry -
On the surface, the story is simple: one bunch of humans exploiting another bunch of humans. The historical allusions ("savages" herded onto "reserves") are obvious, and the levels of interpretation as many as one wants to read into them. Thankfully, the Doctor will have none of it! I loved his confrontation with Jano, where he declares he will oppose their regime, as he opposes the Daleks and other threats to common humanity. This might have been the first ever "I'm the Doctor and this is what I stand for" speech,  which has been reiterated by every Doctor since.


Sarah -
What a change from the Doctor we met three years before! He started off being self-serving and a bit unpleasant and has become the character that will last ten (and hopefully many more) regenerations. It's the moment that makes the viewer want to stand up and cheer and cast our lot with this cranky Time Lord!


Harry -
But what is this? The Doctor is attacked and is about to suffer the transference procedure with no one to help him. Horror!


Sarah -
I really liked this scene. It begins with Senta happily showing his lab to the Doctor, so proud of what he can do, and then realizing that he's being asked to do a transference on the Doctor. Norman Henry does an excellent job as the disengaged scientist who doesn't understand the repercussions of his work.


Harry -
Senta was almost too oblivious to what he was doing, but that always seems to be the way with these far future scientists.


Sarah -
Doesn't it just?


Harry -
His little subplot was one of many that made this story rich. There were the intertwined fates of Nanina and Exorse, there was the laughably short-lived military coup attempt by Edal, and of course the very compelling relationship between Jano and his newer self!


Sarah -
Ah, yes, Jano. The whole second-half of the story hinges on his realization of how wrong his entire society is. What did you think of his Doctor imitation?


Harry -
I found it a bit creepy at first to hear the Doctor's persona emerge fom Jano's mouth. Is our Billy little more than a high-pitched fusspot who goes "Hmm!" a lot?   Hopefully not.  It was good that Jano also absorbed some of the Doctor's conscience too, and once that happened, it really set the cat amongst the oblivious scientists.


Sarah -
It was a little broad, wasn't it? Toby and Rob speculate whether or not the new production team was trying out other actors to see if they could replace Hartnell. What do you think of this theory?


Harry -
It's certainly an avenue that the producers would have explored. What to do? They had a hit show on their hands, but a lead actor whose best days were behind him. We won't even hear the word "regeneration" for another couple of Doctors.  They were really flying without a map here.

Imagine if they did run with the idea presented here, and it turned out that the First Doctor's essence could be transferred to a new body. We'd have had ten other actors grasping their lapels and going "Hmm!" at a high pitch these past 48 years?



Sarah -
I doubt it would have lasted past 1967!


Harry -
No kidding.  And another tragedy of the lost Doctor Who episodes: we are denied seeing the epic laboratory smashup. Terribly unfair!


Sarah -
This is the scene I most want to see recovered! It sounded brilliant!


Harry -
Almost gleefully so. A smashing end to a neat little story. Hartnell was back on form, and the companions had a great outing. So glad to see Steven go out on a high note: rallying the oppressed, challenging the established order, and living up to the potential that often seemed wasted. I'm sure the people of Far Future Planet Without a Name were fortunate to invite him to lead the rebuilding of their society.


Sarah -
His reaction was so sweet. Wondering if he was up to it and if his friends thought he could do it. I'll miss Steven a little bit.


Harry -
Me too!

I even have to credit Dodo on having her best story here. What a surprising little tale! Sadly, this was the last remaining Hartnell story that I had never seen. I'm just glad it turned out to be a good one.


Sarah -
I knew nothing of the story. It was really an unexpected pleasure.


Harry -
Ready to wrap?


Sarah -
Absolutely!

Lasting image: Steven's reaction to being asked to stay.

Favorite moment: The Doctor's "I am the Doctor and this is what I stand for" speech.

Best line: "Oppose you! Indeed I am going to oppose you - just as in the same way that I oppose the Daleks, or any other menace to common humanity!"

Lumped in with the Daleks. SNAP!

7/10



Harry -
Lasting image: Dodo exploring the city alone.

Favourite moment: Definitely the Doctor's confrontation with Jano.

Best line: "Come on, soldier boy!  What are you frightened of?  You've got the gun."  Angry Steven goading Exorse in the tunnels.

7/10






Our marathon continues with Story #27 - The War Machines...