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 Nerva. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nerva. Show all posts

Monday, December 30, 2013

Story #77 - The Sontaran Experiment (1975)

Sarah -
From the claustrophobia of Nerva to the desolation of Earth in one quick transmat hop!

Watching the first two-parter in more than 10 years, I found myself enjoying the economy of storytelling. The padding that goes into so many of the six-parters is exposed by the efficiency of "The Sontaran Experiment". Telling the story in two episodes means non-stop action. I can only wish there were more stories this tight.



Harry -
At just under 50 minutes, this story clocks around the same time as one from the new series, and it shows. The pacing is brisk and there's very little time for anything else than plot, plot, plot. Funny enough, the same things we complain about in the new series could be glimpsed here: lack of character development, not a single pause in the action to catch one's breath, and a hastily concocted conclusion. I suspect "The Sontaran Experiment" would have been pelted with tomatoes in the Internet age.

But, as we mentioned before, the relentless slow march of 6-part stories in the Pertwee era almost derailed our marathon. They were generally too long to sustain interest, especially when the padding came on heavy.

So would you agree that the ideal Doctor Who story is the classic 4-parter?



Sarah -
Absolutely. As we've discussed in the past, my local public television station ran Doctor Who in the movie format back in the day. Four-parters were perfect for the 90 minute time slot, which is probably why they seemed to air Tom Baker's stories over and over. Still, it seems to be just about the right amount of time to tell the story without extended cliffhanger wraparounds.

I say this, of course, knowing that we're about to go into a six-parter that is one of my all time favorite Doctor Who stories. There are always exceptions to the rule.



Harry -
Which show breaks its own rules more than Doctor Who?


Sarah -
As our friend Toby says, "It all matters, except when it doesn't."


Harry -
"The Sontaran Experiment" is the only two-parter of the Tom Baker era, so it's unique unto itself. I think of it as a quickie cutaway, slotted between the to-ings and fro-ings at Nerva this season.


Sarah -
As filler goes, it's not a bad use of time.


Harry -
The location is unique. I love the vast empty hillsides surrounding the one spot on Earth where so many people happened to congregate all at once. So glad they didn't fall back to the same, overdone quarry setting. There were still plenty of nooks and crannies for everyone to fall into and climb out of without it being an old grey quarry.


Sarah -
It's lovely to be in the countryside. Even after several centuries, I don't buy that they're in Central London -- but who cares, the heather is lovely!


Harry -
Because of the short running time, it took our three heroes almost no effort at all to become separated from each other. The Doctor shooed Sarah and Harry away while he worked on the transmat conduits, Harry promptly fell down a hole, the Doctor vanished, and Sarah found herself all alone in a barren place. It was all done within the first seven minutes - ruthless storytelling efficiency!


Sarah -
I felt a bit desolate on Sarah's behalf when she found herself all alone. Lis Sladen struck just the right balance of terror and resolve as she set about trying to find her companions.


Harry -
Lis Sladen does anxiety very well. Meanwhile, Harry spends half of part one climbing out of that pit with his chipper Old Boy resolve. I wonder if by this point, Philip Hinchcliffe decided that the new Doctor could handle the heavy lifting on his own, and Harry became surplus. He could have easily been given the task of sparring with the Sontaran while an older Doctor nipped over to his ship to tinker with the works. Instead, it ended up the other way round.


Sarah -
Poor Harry, always left to be the bumbling oaf. Still, The Doctor's sparring with Styre does give us some of the worst body-double work in Doctor Who history. Tom Baker broke his collarbone during filming, so a significantly shorter stunt man had to fill in for the fight scene. I imagine Jon Pertwee feeling ever-so-slightly smug about that.


Harry -
It looked odd how the Doctor suddenly swaddled his left arm with his scarf for the later part of the story, but they had to improvise.

I'd say more about the supporting cast, but there isn't much to say. It looks like the South African space program will survive thousands of years into the future, featuring all white astronauts (awkward!). Other than that, it was amusing trying to track just how many of them there were, since we kept meeting a new member of the crew every five minutes. For the record, Vural confirmed that there were nine of them in total.



Sarah -
The sweaty men did tend to run together a bit, didn't they? So these are the descendants of those who didn't run away on Nerva. It's easy to understand their contempt for those who left.


Harry -
The fact that we were already familiar with the character of a lone Sontaran nasty made this story flow well, since we didn't have to go through all the who/what/where business. A quick moment of shock from Sarah was all we needed. Although one thing we learn in this story is that the Sontarans are locked in an endless war with the Rutans (whom we shall meet in the future).


Sarah -
That we shall!


Harry -
Basically, part two finds Styre conducting an array of sadistic "experiments", seemingly for his own amusement, while a Sontaran battle fleet hovers over the Earth ready to invade. I loved the image of the Sontaran Marshall up in his ship, drumming his fingers while Styre kept stalling so he could go back to his tortures. The Sontarans have always been a kind of comedic villains - all brawny bluster, but ultimately quite silly and ineffectual.


Sarah -
It's hard to take anyone with that head too seriously. Speaking of Sontaran heads, the imagine of Styre's head deflating was, well, icky.


Harry -
That's definitely the lasting image I take away from this one. That, or the Sontaran robot. For such a cheery and fragile-looking thing, it glided with great menace.

Like I said above, this story was an amusing cutaway. A bit of light fun before the extreme gloom our heroes are about to head into next.



Sarah -
I'm in the mood for a bit of gloom. Let's have at it!

Best Line: "Foresight. You never know when these bits and pieces will come in handy. Never throw anything away, Harry. Now, where's my five hundred year diary. I remember jotting some notes on the Sontarans... It's a mistake to clutter one's pockets, Harry."

Favorite Moment: The Doctor's lecture on cluttering one's pockets.

Lasting Image: Sarah alone in the heather.

6/10



Harry -
Best Line:
"Alright, now talk."
"Certainly. What would you like me to talk about?"

Favourite Moment: I liked whenever Styre emerged from his ship to see what the robot had brought him, and he gave a little "AHHH!" of delight.

Lasting Image: Styre's head deflates like a punctured volleyball.

7/10



 


Our marathon continues with Story #78 - Genesis of the Daleks...

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Story #76 - The Ark in Space (1975)

Sarah -
Recently, I had a discussion with the cousin who started me watching Doctor Who, oh so many years ago. A new-to-Who friend of his asked for a classic story to start with and, after much discussion, it was decided that "The Ark in Space" was a perfect place to begin.

Really, it’s got everything a good story needs. For a start - base under siege! It’s been a while since we’ve had a proper base-under-siege story, hasn’t it?



Harry -
Jon Pertwee's Doctor was not one to be besieged lightly, so yes.


Sarah -
Add a newly regenerated Doctor, two plucky companions, frozen humans waiting to return to Earth, creepy space insects looking for a place to sustain their larvae, and an oppressive sense of claustrophobia and you’ve got a brilliant Doctor Who story.


Harry -
"The Ark in Space" certainly has much to recommend it. Part One is one of the single best episodes in all of Doctor Who. It's so radically different. First, the Doctor has no idea where they've landed (clumsy Harry!). He seems baffled and lost as impediments keep rising up. The power is out and so is the oxygen. Sarah and Harry start gasping for air, and the Doctor struggles to help. Then Sarah gets herself trapped in a cryogenic chamber (echoes of "Invasion of the Dinosaurs" and "Tomb of the Cybermen").


Sarah -
I completely agree on the first episode. It's absolutely perfect. The tension, the pacing, the brilliant chemistry between the actors. I think I'm going to go watch it again!


Harry -
I love the clean, sterile sets and future-analogue computers aboard space station Nerva. They really stand out early on, as our friends move about exploring from room to room.


Sarah -
The set and costume design for the entire story is absolutely perfect. It has a wonderful futuristic feeling, with just the right level of 70s fabulousness!


Harry -
There's something about the design of the future-70s that's so perfect. I loved that clear orange medical kit that Harry carried around. Creative design mixed with nostalgia, I reckon. And who knows, the future may still look that way!

The strength of Part One is that the entire episode unfolds with only Sarah, Harry and the Doctor on camera. The absence of any supporting cast for so long added to the claustrophobic feel.



Sarah -
There's nothing I love more than a good bottle episode! I might have been disappointed by the introduction of new characters, if they weren't all so interesting.

Med Tech Vira is the first to be revived, so she can supervise the revivification of the rest of the crew. Hopefully, she can also revive Dear Sarah.

We learn that the ship is filled with the last vestiges of humanity, who were evacuated from Earth centuries earlier, when solar flares threatened all life on the planet.



Harry -
Another strength of "The Ark in Space" is the strength of the supporting cast. Each of the future humans is quickly fleshed out and given a personality of their own (Bob Holmes, no surprise there). I like the stilted future-English that they speak, making them somewhat haughty if not alien to us the viewers.


Sarah -
I love how they refer to the Doctor, Sarah, and Harry as "regressives" because of their use of colloquialisms.

Vira is startled by the new arrivals, but rolls with the situation much better than the suspicious Noah, who immediately worries that they'll contaminate the gene pool with their presence. He's not the friendliest of blokes -- and that's before his encounter with the Wirrn grub!



Harry -
Vira and Sarah quickly form a team, while Harry and Rogin pair up as well. The best acting job, I think, goes to Kenton Moore as Noah. The scene in the control room where human Noah battles with the Wirrn invading his body was mesmerizing. Who cares about the rapidly expanding layers of bubble wrap on his body, his metamorphosis was well acted and genuinely horrific.


Sarah -
So much of the story relies on Moore's performance. Noah is the lynchpin for the entire narrative and he definitely convinces us that Moore is fighting to maintain his humanity. I even find the bubble wrap charming.


Harry -
Getting a bit timey-wimey on the Hinchcliffe Horror tracker, but "The Ark in Space" reminded me of Ridley Scott's Alien - which didn't come along until 1979. I'm sure there's some tradition of base-under-siege science fiction that Hinchcliffe must have been paying homage to...


Sarah -
I have to also mention Richardson Morgan's performance as Rogin. When revived, he spends most of his time griping about how he just knew it would all go wrong and he was perfectly happy on Earth. But, when the chips are down he more than rises to the occasion -- sacrificing himself to save the Doctor and everyone else on Nerva. It was quite the touching moment.


Harry -
I'm usually not a fan of characters sacrificing themselves to solve a plot dilemma, but at least Bob Holmes built up Rogin's character just enough to make his final act believeable.

And speaking of well acted, Tom Baker took no time at all to establish his Doctor, didn't he? I think it was on the DVD featurette for "Robot", but he said that basically he played the Doctor as himself - something of an exhuberant personality prone to flights of mild madness. That's Tom Baker, and that's his Doctor, so readily evident in this story.



Sarah -
My favorite moment is when Noah is holding a gun on the Doctor and tells him to head back to the control room. The Doctor turns and urges Noah to hurry, as if it was all his idea. It's one of those madcap Baker moments that we all love.


Harry -
So many little moments in this story that one forgets over time, but are wonderful to see again. Sarah pulling faces at the Doctor and Harry, the start of the "don't call me Old Girl!" routine, Harry spending the entire adventure shoeless - it's these little things, plus the overarching story that make "The Ark in Space" special.

Yes, yes and yes: I'd certainly show this one to a new viewer. That's two in a row. Shall we try for a third?



Sarah -
Oh, yes, let's!

Best Line: "It may be irrational of me, but humans are quite my favourite species."

Favorite Moment: The Doctor pretending it was his idea to head back to the control room.

Lasting Imagine: The Doctor and Co. tromping through the Ark's corridors.

9/10



Harry -
Best line: "Gremlins can get into anything, Old Girl. First law of the sea."

Favourite moment: After being shot with a stun ray by Noah, the Doctor revives a few minutes later and continues in mid-sentence.

Lasting image: Noah looking at his bubble-wrapped hand.

9/10



 


Our marathon continues with Story #77 - The Sontaran Experiment...