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

Running through corridors is optional.

Showing posts with label Mara. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mara. Show all posts

Thursday, July 23, 2015

Story #124 - Snakedance (1983)


Sarah -
I have to admit that I was on the edge of despair after the last two stories. Had I completely mis-remembered the Fifth Doctor Era? Fortunately, "Snakedance" has come along to set things straight. What a cracking story!


Harry -
Fun Fact: "Snakedance" was the last remaining classic Who story that I had never seen before. Thirty-two years after it first aired, I just watched it for the first time. There were no warm and fuzzy memories to influence my viewing or cloud my reactions. Instead, I let the dreaminess of it sweep over me.


Sarah -
I'm fairly certain that the last time I saw it was in the late 80s, so the story was quite fresh for me, as well. There were only two things I remembered – Tegan's possession by the Mara and Martin Clunes' marvelous performance. But more of those later.

This may be my favorite Davison performance so far. To be fair, he had a tough act to follow, but sometimes Davison's Doctor can be a bit too low-key for me. In "Snakedance", he's manic and alien and wonderful! I love how we see him through the eyes of others in the story and he looks like an absolute lunatic.


Harry -
Once again we see this Doctor being led by events, rather than leading them -- and it's starting to get to him.


Sarah -
This story feels different from the opening scene between Nyssa and the Doctor. Nyssa appears in a new outfit, which was probably necessary after all the running around she did in Amsterdam. It's a hideous ensemble, but the Doctor doesn't notice the change -- even when she throws herself in from of him, trying to make him comment on the clothes. He finally mutters a confused, "You look different." For a Doctor who has been perhaps a bit too solicitous of his companions in the past, this small moment reminds us that he is a Time Lord more effectively than anything in "Arc of Infinity".


Harry -
I'm going to run with the "dreaming" metaphor throughout our discussion, because it felt like we were watching everyone have a bad dream in this story.

Not being in control must be one of the things the Doctor hates most, in any regeneration. Right off the bat, he's lost control of the TARDIS. They have unintentionally landed on the planet Manussa, and he asks Nyssa to help figure out what's gone wrong with the coordinates.

You have referred to it above, but Nyssa's change of clothing is a nightmare unto itself. Like one of those dreams where you find yourself wearing something bizarre and nonsensical.


Sarah -
One can almost imagine JNT thinking, "The clown look really worked for a companion, I wonder how one might look on a Doctor." And what's with the heels? She looks so uncomfortable for the entire story.


Harry -
Costuming is a big let down throughout this one.


Sarah -
Meanwhile, how great is Janet Fielding in this story? Tegan's second possession by the Mara is even more frightening than the first.


Harry -
Tegan literally kicks things off with a bad dream, and it only gets worse for her.


Sarah -
She's pretty much possessed from the first scenes of the story, when the Doctor realizes the TARDIS has gone off course. She tells Nyssa and the Doctor about her dreams and Nyssa, trying to be a good friend, tells her that they're only dreams and not to worry. The Doctor suspects they're something more.


Harry -
Tegan describes how she found herself back on Deva Loka, the Kinda planet, in that dark place of the mind where the Mara lurks. The Doctor wants to study Tegan's dreams, fearing that she is still possessed. He rigs up something that looks like an ipod for her to wear as they step out to explore the village where they have landed.


Sarah -
It’s clearly a walkman, Harry. Get with the times!

I quite like the village. For a relatively small set, it packs a lot in. And look, there's Brian Miller, husband of our beloved Elisabeth Sladen, as Dugdale, the carnival barker!


Harry -
Had you not pointed that out I would never have realized!

Nearby, in a set that someone who watched too many Hartnell episodes must have dreamed up, we meet the local aristocracy. Well, "aristocracy" might be too grand a word. Amid cheap furnishings and tacky potted plants, Lom sprawls out on a chaise longue in boredom. His mother, Lady Tanha, tries to rouse him by arranging a kind of spelunking excursion with Ambril, the Director of Archaeology.


Sarah -
Oh, that set! According to the featurette on the DVD, it was borrowed from A Song For Europe, which was the former name of the show used to select the UK's Eurovision entry. You can almost imagine Bucks Fizz bopping about. 

Lom just screams over-privileged douchebag, doesn't he? And what does every one of those need? An over-indulgent mother, of course! I find Ambril to be an interesting character.


Harry -
John Carson plays the petty, small-minded, self-interested Ambril perfectly. Everyone's performances are a big plus in this one.


Sarah -
I absolutely adore Carson's performance. Ambril is poised and collected, but just sleezy enough to do what's necessary to get what he wants. 

My favorite moment in the whole story is when Ambril and the Doctor discuss The Six Faces of Delusion helmet. Ambril is dismissive of the legend of the Mara because there are clearly only five faces on the helmet. The Doctor asks Ambril to wear the helmet, pointing out that Ambril’s face is now the sixth. Ambril, unsurprisingly, does not take this news well.  

Seriously, this helmet has been there for years and no one has ever put it on. The Doctor is the first person who realized where the sixth face would be?


Harry -
On Manussa, legends of the Mara are prevalent. There are some who believe it shall one day return. I was just hoping it wouldn't return as that hokey prop we saw in Kinda.


Sarah -
Oh, the horror!


Harry -
Frightened by a toy snake at the local bazaar, Tegan bolts and becomes separated from her friends. She ducks into a fortune teller's sanctum, where a refreshingly honest seer dwells. Cheerily, she confides that her work is mostly bunk, made up on the fly with nothing tangible behind it.


Sarah -
Hilary Sesta's fortune teller is just one of the many brilliant guest performances in "Snakedance".


Harry -
But in the grip of the Mara, Tegan causes a snake's skull to manifest itself in the seer's crystal ball, shattering it and scaring the bejeezus out of her.


Sarah -
I felt so bad for the fortune teller, after she was being so helpful and honest.


Harry -
All these years, I've been reading and hearing references to Janet Fielding's "Mara laugh," and there it was!


Sarah -
And it's quite epic, isn't it?


Harry -
It totally makes sense that legions of fanboys would have hounded her at every Who Con, demanding that she perform the laugh on the spot. I recall she said she finally snapped and refused to do it any longer.


Sarah -
I believe it was at a con in Chicago and she emphasized it by knocking a fanboy on the head with his rolled-up poster!


Harry -
Tegan dekes into the carnival barker's booth, into a hall of mirrors. Dugdale mistakes her erratic behaviour for a convincing performance and offers to work with her on a new attraction. Tegan-Mara instead sends Dugdale to Lom with a summons to meet at the cave. When Lom arrives, Tegan passes some of the Mara into him. "Not bored anymore," he declares as he begins to set the Mara's plot into action.


Sarah -
I love the scene where the Mara begins to inhabit Lom. The moment when Lom and Tegan join hands and command Dugdale to look at them is really quite terrifying, especially when they both do the Mara laugh. It's a spectacular finish to part two after the somewhat lackluster scream that ends part one.


Harry -
Meanwhile, the Doctor and Nyssa implore the Director for help finding Tegan. The Director is totally uninterested, and when Lom returns they whip up some false charges and throw the Doctor into a cell. A real man of action, this Doctor! He spends the entire third episode brooding in the cell, something that should be unimaginable on this show. If this was the Pertwee era, the Doctor would have escaped, been recaptured, escaped again and been recaptured again - all in a single episode!


Sarah -
In "Kinda", Nyssa was sidelined with nothing to do. Here, it's the Doctor who gets sidelined and has to wait for Nyssa to rescue him!


Harry -
Considering there's not much story here, it feels very pacey. The second half of Snakedance is essentially "get the crystal and bring it to the cave", but quick cuts between short scenes keep it moving along briskly.


Sarah -
It really does, doesn't it? Excellent direction by Fiona Cumming.


Harry -
Nyssa continues to play the role of Action Nyssa when she goes to search the Director's office for the key to the cell.


Sarah -
A favorite moment is when she goes to the Director's office and looks for the key in a stack of papers -- because where else would you look for a key? Unfortunately, she's busted by Ambril and Tanha before she can get the key back to the cell.


Harry -
When she ends up thrown in with the Doctor, they genuinely seem to run out of options for escape. The story remains watchable for its weirdness. It was so bizarre to see that image of the two of them sitting there in the cell. "In the meantime..." Nyssa asks, to which the Doctor replies, "We wait." Seriously?


Sarah -
Well, "Snakedance" is a Buddhist parable, after all...


Harry -
When they finally escaped with Chela's help, I couldn't help notice some more costuming issues. Chela was dressed like a Renaissance courtier, while the security guards wore some kind of futuristic looking armour and helmets.


Sarah -
I can't imagine how the actors saw enough to walk around in those helmets!


Harry -
Best of all were the aristocrats. Did you see the tiara on Lady Tanha? I mean, did you see it?!


Sarah -
I really couldn't help but see it!


Harry -
It's a wonder Colette O'Neil didn't fall over in every scene - that was the biggest tiara in the universe! And Lom! What in the hell was he wearing for the climactic ceremony in the cave? So much ridiculousness, from the silly gold helmet, to the tunic with the clouds on it. Oh my word how did the costume department get away with these horrors?


Sarah -
Everyone is so over the top. I laughed out loud when Lom walked in wearing his Sun God costume. I imagine that clip haunts Martin Clunes to this day. Speaking of Martin Clunes, thanks to Little Britain, I get this song in my head every time I hear his name: 






Harry -
Holy wow, that clip. Remember how some folks are retroactively appalled at the Asian stereotypes and yellowface in "The Talons of Weng-Chiang?" What would they say to that?


Sarah -
I was shocked by the skit the first time I saw it. Having been a kid in the 70s, the casual racism of Talons surprises me not at all. The Little Britain skit made me wonder what they were thinking. Still, that’s a catchy song.


Harry -
Martin was probably flattered.


Sarah -
In the full clip, he gets off the plane and is more than a little bemused at the reception he gets. Meanwhile, back in "Snakedance"…


Harry -
...Lom makes a mockery of the cave rituals, and things get trippy for the Doctor when he, Nyssa and Chela slipped away to the convenient nearby desert. (Strange how it felt like all the various sets were within steps of each other -- the cave, the village, the desert, etc.) 

The Doctor comes up with some mumbo jumbo about calling Dojjen with a crystal, and then the old man appears with simple words of wisdom. It's all about finding the still point. I like these little bits of Buddhism that are scattered throughout the classic series.


Sarah -
Exploring Buddhist themes was Christopher Bailey’s intention in writing both Kinda and Snakedance. It’s a heady brief for a Doctor Who writer.


Harry -
Aided by the Doctor, Tegan finally overcomes the Mara's possession, sending the snake monster to its green, bubbly death (naturally!)


Sarah -
Such an abrupt ending. Tegan snaps out of the spell, the Doctor reassures her and BAM – time to run the credits. It’s all a bit hurried, isn’t it?


Harry -
Yeah.  I'm guessing any finale that would have involved spending too much time and energy on another giant snake prop was not viable.  The one they ended up using was probably all they could manage.  

And so ends Christopher Bailey's indirect Kinda-Snakedance two-parter. Both stories stand out for their trippiness, their themes of identity and existence, and their memorable characters. And the large goofy snakes.


Sarah -
On the DVD extras, our good friend Rob Shearman says that "Snakedance" is his favorite Doctor Who story. It’s an interesting choice.


Harry -
I would not have guessed that.  Maybe he loved the costumes?  

I'd give this one a higher ranking, but the costuming and sets were unforgiveable. Once can literally see the beginning of the show's long, drawn-out end becoming evident. Where the budget for this show should have been growing, it seemed to be shrinking.


Sarah -
We’re going to be doing a lot of grousing in the coming months, aren’t we?


Harry -
Best Line: Tegan-Mara's "Look at me" taunting of Dugdale. Not a great line, but hair-raisingly creepy.

Favourite Moment: the fortune teller scene.

Lasting Image: that tiara!

6/10


Sarah -
Best Line: Dojjen : "No. The still point is within yourself, nowhere else. To destroy the Mara you must find the still point."  

Favorite Moment: The Doctor’s conversation with Ambril about the Six Faces of Delusion. 

Lasting Image: Lom’s costume – wonderfully over the top, even by Doctor Who standards. 

7/10


 



Our marathon continues with Story #125: Mawdryn Undead...

Sunday, May 10, 2015

Story #118 - Kinda (1982)

Harry -
I had very little recollection of this one, other than it had a jungle setting. It was like watching a brand new Fifth Doctor story.


Sarah -
It's been a while since I've seen it, as well.


Harry -
And the experience was... peculiar. Once again, we leap right into the story. The TARDIS has already landed on a verdant, tropical planet. After awkwardly bundling Nyssa inside to recover from her recent fainting spells, the others set out to explore. Did you happen to listen to the commentary for this story, Sarah? I'm wondering if Sarah Sutton was off on vacation and unavailable for filming, as things were back in the 60s. Remember when William Hartnell would be written out of entire episodes because he'd gone on holiday?

Anyway, more likely, was she ill? Later on, Janet Fielding will vanish for an entire episode. What was up with these absences?



Sarah -
I listened to the commentary, but there was no mention of why Sarah Sutton wasn't there. I've always thought that the bundling off of companions was for the benefit of the writers. It gives them fewer regulars to contend with while they get to focus on developing their own characters. This happens over and over in the Davison Era, to varying levels of success.


Harry -
To this point, the formula for Doctor Who had been mainly "two-lead-characters-with-an-occasional-tin-dog" for over a decade, so to be confronted with a bustling troupe of new characters to write for may have put some writers off. I would think it would have presented a great new challenge to a writer, rather than the same old same old.


Sarah -
While I stand by my theory, according to tardis.wikia.com, the scripts had been completed before Nyssa was brought back as a companion and fitting her character in would have meant an entire rewrite.


Harry -
Well, the story itself gets off to a weak start regardless. I rolled my eyes when the three members of the expedition were introduced. The stereotypical gruff commander, the stereotypical security maniac, and the stereotypical sensitive scientist, all very unoriginal and borderline uninteresting. These three, Sanders, Hindle and Todd respectively, are conducting a survey of the planet S14 (Deva Loka to the natives) to determine its suitability for colonization. British imperialism played out in a sci-fi setting, the ultimate stereotype. Oh, and the faux-Polynesian natives, that was a nice touch. Five minutes in and I was dreading having to watch this story, but "Kinda" ended up pleasantly surprising.


Sarah -
"Kinda" is one of those stories that often ends up being slagged off by fans, but it's really much stronger than its reputation. Much of that credit goes to the wonderful guest actors. Nerys Hughes (Todd), Richard Todd (Sanders), and Simon Rouse (Hindle) all turn in brilliant performances, more than making up for the gaps in the storytelling and poorly realized effects.


Harry -
Exactly! The amazing performances by these guest actors were highly watchable.


Sarah -
Todd almost becomes a pseudo-companion in this story. The Doctor spends more time with her than he does with Tegan and Adric and their chemistry is wonderful. Todd made me think of Ann Travers in "Web of Fear", whose character, of course, eventually led to the creation of Liz Shaw. They work so well together that I can't help wondering what the Fifth Doctor Era would have been like if he had been partnered with a more mature companion, rather than younger characters.


Harry -
That's a fantastic observation. Did you notice at the end of the story how the Doctor seemed almost reluctant to part with her? That was a sweet moment. I was waiting for him to ask, in a squeaky voice, if she'd like to come along in the TARDIS.


Sarah -
Honestly, I thought he looked disappointed when she only offered her hand for a farewell shake. Perhaps the Doctor had higher hopes!


Harry -
There's a fan fiction for that.

As for Sanders and Hindle, they underwent incredible transformations as the story went on. Sanders was a classic old school hard man reduced to a wide eyed pussycat when ensnared by the mysterious powers of the Kinda. Richard Todd was brilliant acting as a simpleton. Hindle's breakdown was one of the highlights of the whole adventure. I'm pressed to remember another character who went so utterly doolally like that.


Sarah -
They were both amazing performances. Hindle's breakdown was absolutely brilliant and completely terrifying because there was no way to tell what he might do next. You can't mend people, Harry!


Harry -
Another riveting performance was the one delivered by Mary Morris as the Kinda elder, Panna. I don't know if it was lucky or inspired casting to ask someone with eyes as wide as saucers to play a blind woman, but I couldn't take my eyes off her (pardon the pun).


Sarah -
She was spectacular. What a face!


Harry -
In keeping with the formulaic depictions of exploited or suppressed native cultures in Doctor Who, the rest of the Kinda were less memorable. In fact, most of them were literally rendered mute.


Sarah -
"Kinda" provided a few nice moments for Adric. The scene where he teaches the Doctor a magic trick was charming and they both had the opportunity to test their skills later in the story. Adric, once again, allies himself with the opposition, but this time it's clear that he's planning to subvert Hindle's authority and break the Doctor and Todd out of the cell.

There's another nice moment near the beginning where the Doctor chastises Adric for playing with the chimes, and then plays with them himself when no one is looking. It made me think of Adric as a younger version of the Doctor -- brilliant, but awkward, not really fitting in anywhere.



Harry -
Gosh, we haven't even talked about Tegan's Adventures Through the Looking Glass yet. What did you think?


Sarah -
That was some wild stuff! Her encounter with Dukkha, as he tried to bend her to the Mara's will, was really creepy, as was the two Tegans arguing over which one was real. And then there were ten Tegans -- as if the universe could handle that!


Harry -
Every once in a while, Doctor Who takes us into an alternate reality and it's always mind-bending fun. Tegan meeting herself in the dream world took this story to one of those places. She was genuinely distressed by the encounter, as well as the encounters with Dukkha, Annica and Anatta - three names plucked right out of Buddhist teachings.

Every once in a while, Doctor Who also delves into Buddhism (most prominently in "Planet of the Spiders"). Here, we see Buddhism's characteristics of existence manifested in the dream characters that Tegan meets. The Kinda profess belief in the Great Wheel (a Buddhist concept), which turns as civilizations rise and fall, and they also show the capacity for reincarnation as the deceased Panna's life experiences transfer into the body of Karuna. I liked how much thought went into creating the Kinda civilization, making them more than just shirtless story fodder.



Sarah -
Creating a Buddhist parable was writer Christopher Bailey's intention. The results are mixed, but it's always interesting.


Harry -
Insert the malevolent threat of the Mara into the story, and now it's a real corker. Through Tegan, the Mara escapes from the dream world and possesses the body of Kinda Aris. He rallies his people to launch an assault on the expedition's dome, in order to drive them off the planet. Hindle meanwhile is on the verge of detonating an explosive combination of acid and fire for a 50-mile radius around the dome, which would annihilate everyone. With Nyssa, Tegan and Adric all unable to help, it comes down to the Doctor and Todd to first neutralize Hindle, then formulate a plan to capture and purge the Mara from Aris, then from this reality.


Sarah -
Fortunately the Doctor and his surrogate companion Todd are a dynamic duo, who are more than up to the challenge...


Harry -
Which brings us to something we haven't really seen for several seasons in Doctor Who - silly prop monsters. Oh that giant snake, oh my.


Sarah -
...The challenge of defeating one of the lamest monsters in the history of Doctor Who! The snake really is unfortunate. It has almost singlehandedly undermined "Kinda"'s reputation.


Harry -
I genuinely harkened back to the days of Colour Separation Overlay from the Pertwee era. Some close ups of a live snake transposed over its area of confinement might have looked better than the inflatable rubber thing that was hoisted over everyone's heads. What can you do.


Sarah -
At this point, not so much.


Harry -
But let's not let one weak note ruin this one for us. After all, the Doctor got a round of applause after driving the Mara back to the dark places of the inside or wherever. Who wouldn't like to receive a round of applause for a job well done?


Sarah -
Huzzah! Was that the strangest moment in the story, or what?


Harry -
I went into "Kinda" without remembering much of it. It got off to an uninspired start, but was saved by fantastic performances by the entire cast. It's the acting I'll remember from this one, more than the story or the special effects.


Sarah -
Which reminds us that there's always something to appreciate in Doctor Who!


Harry -
The Davison era seems to have hit its stride. Shall we see where our friends land next?

Best Line: The Doctor: "There's always something to look at if you open your eyes."

Favourite Moment: Hindle snaps and declares "I have the power of life and death over ALL of you!"

Lasting Image: Dukkha menaces Tegan in the dream world.

8/10



Sarah -
Best Line: "YOU CAN'T MEND PEOPLE, CAN YOU? YOU CAN'T MEND PEOPLE!"

Favorite Moment: Panna repeatedly dismissing the Doctor.

Lasting Image: You've taken my first lasting image, so I'll go with my second -- Sanders cutting paper dolls.

7/10



 


Our marathon continues with Story #119: The Visitation...