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 Sea Devils. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sea Devils. Show all posts

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Story #130 - Warriors of the Deep (1984)

Harry -
Hmm, a second consecutive story featuring a reunion of classic monsters. I wonder if the success of "The Five Doctors" went straight to JN-T's head.


Sarah -
It feels more like an attempt to recapture the magic of "Earthshock". Unfortunately, "Warriors of the Deep" is not up to the challenge. It’s a great premise – and I always love a good base-under-siege story – but the execution doesn’t live up to the promise. How often is that the story of Doctor Who?


Harry -
One might say that that's the story of Doctor Who in the 80s.


Sarah -
The fact that production had to be moved up by two weeks didn’t help. Margaret Thatcher had called an election and the studio space was going to be needed for news coverage. JN-T faced the choice of rushing production or chucking the story altogether. It’s satisfying to lay the blame at Thatcher’s feet, but I wonder if things would have been much better if they’d had those extra two weeks. 

The opening scenes are promising. It’s a fabulous set and everyone’s sporting Michael Jackson-esque uniforms. The eye make up on all the crew and 1940s hairstyles on the women are a little confusing, but I imagine there’s a lot of time to kill when you’re that far underwater.


Harry -
The futuristic boiler suits with flared shoulders are distinctly 80s. As for the hairstyles, the men look like leftovers from the 70s, while the women's huge sculpted hairdos speak of the future! Astonishing feats of structural engineering and hairspray there.


Sarah -
It really was the hairspray decade. I speak from personal experience.


Harry -
Speaking of haircuts, Peter Davison has gotten a trim during the offseason and begins Season 21 with a clean look.


Sarah -
I know it's almost heretical, but I so much prefer Davison's hair at this length. Apparently there was a bit of a kerfuffle with JN-T over the cut, which he'd gotten for an All Creatures Great and Small special. Can't have Tristan walking around looking like a shaggy Time Lord, you know!


Harry -
I like this shorter cut because it most closely resembles how this Doctor will look in "Time Crash", 23 years later. But that's far into the future, and for now this story goes even farther.

The TARDIS returns to Earth and settles into a quiet orbit, but is quickly intercepted by Sentinel 6, a defense satellite. It is the year 2084 and two superpowers are vying for control of the planet. Sentinel 6 demands that the TARDIS identify itself and suspects it of being a spy ship for "the other side". The Doctor tries to communicate with Sentinel six with his affable charm, but it doesn't work (will he ever learn?). The TARDIS is shot at, and makes an emergency landing inside a sea base under the ocean.


Sarah -
Tegan wanted to see Earth in the future, didn't she? Probably not what she imagined. I was thinking about how relevant this story was in 1984, but how outdated the idea of two superpowers in a cold war standoff is today. Looking back, it all seems so simple, doesn't it?


Harry -
Emerging to explore, the Doctor, Tegan and Turlough quickly gain the attention of base security. Time for some running through corridors! The Doctor gets in a lot of running and kicking by the end of the first episode, which concludes with him falling into a pool of green-looking water. Action scenes! Tegan's first instinct is to turn back and help the Doctor, but Turlough pulls her back as his instinct for self-preservation kicks in. "Face it, Tegan, he's drowned!" Frigging Turlough man.


Sarah -
Seriously! The Doctor has barely hit the water and Turlough is ready to hoof it.


Harry -
What a creep.

One thing I liked about the world Johnny Byrne envisioned for 2084 is that the two superpower blocs are left ambiguous. Is it still East vs West? Americans vs Soviets? The makeup of the seabase hints at an international crew. It's a nice throwback to the internationally-staffed bases that came under siege in the Troughton era. Anyway, I liked the ambiguity (or the shoddy lack of detail, if you want to take a darker opinion).


Sarah -
I'll go with ambiguity for now.


Harry -
Byrne even throws in a transhuman concept in the character of Maddox, the backup sync operator who has cybernetic implants that allow him to download vast stores of information and control the base's systems. Nice trick, but one that soon enough offers an opportunity for sabotage.


Sarah -
That implant portal really creeped me out. He might as well be wearing a red shirt -- it's pretty clear from the moment that we meet him that he's not going to last long. When the intern is put in charge of things, they can only go wrong.


Harry -
Speaking of sabotage, it seemed wildly ludicrous that the Doctor wanted to trigger the base's nuclear reactor as a not-so-small diversion to help him and his friends escape.


Sarah -
I was going to suggest that it must have seemed like a reasonable idea at the time, but that just sounds silly.

While the apes are busy mucking about on the sea base, the planets other inhabitants are plotting their return. The Silurians and Sea Devils are back for the first time since the Jon Pertwee era! What did you think of these new versions?


Harry -
This is a different race of Silurians from the ones we met previously. They seem to speak telepathically, or at least without moving their mouths all that much. As they initiate their plans to attack the ape creatures and reclaim the planet, they awaken their "Sea Devil cousins" (awkward ape name in use here) to serve as foot soldiers in the assault.

I like how the story plays out with dual narratives. There's the human power blocs eyeing each other across cold war frontiers, with the Doctor and his friends getting stuck in the middle of things, but there's also the unseen third power bloc observing silently. While the humans chase each other around the sea base, the ancient masters of Earth gather their forces for a new course of action.


Sarah -
I found myself wanting to be on the Silurian/Sea Devils side, but they were just as annoying as the humans.


Harry -
Leading the charge will be a new creature: the Myrka, a gigantic killer reptile.


Sarah -
Or, two men in a modified pantomime horse costume. I know we've often declared monsters to be worst ever, but the Myrka may just take the cake. I'll take the snake in "Kinda" over this any day.


Harry -
By now, the Doctor has spotted the Silurian battle cruiser outside the base. Having let the Silurians down before, he wants to avoid seeing the same disastrous end to this encounter. Unfortunately, while the Doctor is hoping that he can forge a new peace, the Myrka smashes its way in and starts to wreak havoc on the humans who are not too terribly interested in peace talks at the mo.

In the ensuring mayhem, Tegan is injured by a falling door, but her friends manage to free her. Nice work by Janet Fielding to affect a limp for the remainder of the story, by the way.


Sarah -
She's a pro, Our Janet. Not many can recover so gamely from a styrofoam injury.


Harry -
It takes some acting chops to make styrofoam look heavy.

As for the saboteur, Dr. Solow, she's not as lucky as Tegan. After re-programming Maddox into a killing machine, she finds herself fleeing down a corridor -- right into the path of the Silurians' monster. Her attempt at karate-kicking the monster into submission fails entirely, and she is killed by the giant lumbering Chinese dragon wearing a Godzilla costume the Myrka.


Sarah -
OMG, what was with that? I had to pause the video because I was laughing so hard. I just wanted to go back and watch it over and over. If only she knew some Venusian Aikido!


Harry -
The story feels so long for a four parter, despite the fact that most of it is essentially one long chase/hide/pursuit cycle. It's a story of clashing factions, none of whom seem interested in talking to each other at all. The Silurians are content to let the humans wipe themselves out in a global war that will ensure their genocide. The Doctor manages to avert catastrophe by putting himself in the sync operating device and shutting down the weapons systems. By then, humans and lizards have wiped each other out. The bodies are piled two deep -- the final scene almost looks like the end of Hamlet, with everyone lying dead.

"There should have been another way," the Doctor laments, and I can't help feel the same way. Byrne's story had a lot of promise and I really liked a lot of it. Unfortunately, and I hate to keep dwelling on this, the production is a let down. But I'm still going to give "Warriors of the Deep" a decent score. This was only the second time I've ever watched it and I liked it more than I hated it. How do you feel about it?


Sarah -
A dismal ending to a dismal story. I wanted to like it more that I did. I don't think I've seen "Warriors of the Deep" since the 80s, but I didn't remember much about -- and now I know why. It's immensely forgettable.

That general negativity aside, I have to say the model work is excellent. Mat Irvine rose to the challenge on this one. 

More importantly, Peter Davison is excellent in this story. It feels like he's finally come into his own as the Doctor, but maybe it was just the freedom of knowing it was going to be his last season. I think this is one of his strongest performances so far.


Harry -
Maybe it's best if we set this one down for a good long sleep again. Maybe we'll revisit it in the future and see if it's aged any better by then.


Sarah -
I'll set a reminder for 2084.


Harry -
Sounds about right.

Best Line: "Brave heart, Tegan." "Brave heart? It's gonna kill us!"

Favourite Moment: Dr. Solow's karate kick.

Lasting Image: the Myrka lumbering through corridors.

7/10


Sarah -
Best Line: "There should have been another way," could be the mantra of the longtime Doctor Who fan. 

Favorite Moment: The struggle to save Tegan from the styrofoam door. 

Lasting Imagine: That Karate Kick. I want to watch it again right now!

6/10 


 



Our marathon continues with Story #131: The Awakening...

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Story #62 - The Sea Devils (1972)

Sarah -
Back in high school and college, I spent loads of time explaining to skeptical friends that even if they had problems with the effects on Doctor Who, they should watch it for the excellent writing. Yet, somehow, I hadn’t spent a lot of time thinking about the actual writers. This little project of ours has turned this all around, which is to say, Mac is Back! Seeing Malcolm Hulke’s name on the opening credits is one of the highlights of this era of Doctor Who.


Harry -
Pleased to watch another Mac Hulke story, this time a sequel to Doctor Who and the Silurians. Jon Pertwee gets a second chance to broker peace between humans and the reptilian inhabitants beneath the planet's surface.


Sarah -
And it works out about as well as the first time!


Harry -
Naturally, Hulke provides another searing indictment of humanity, and the pompous buffoons who run its governments. Go Mac!


Sarah -
I would expect nothing less.


Harry -
Before we get to that, the story starts off innocently enough, in the Doctor Who sense of things. We see some murky goings on in the sea, with ships mysteriously being sunk, culminating in an attack on an abandoned sea fort by a new monster - the so-called Sea Devils.


Sarah -
What a coincidence that the Master happens to be jailed in the same waters. I mean, what are the chances of that happening? Surely, he can't have anything to do with the missing ship shenanigans, can he?


Harry -
It's uncanny!


Sarah -
Utterly. The Doctor and Jo arrive at the island prison to visit with the Master, who is as charming and delightful as ever -- the best frenemy a Time Lord could hope for.


Harry -
I wish the exchanges with my old frenemies were as witty and stylish. Was this the first time the Doctor admitted that he and the Master used to be friends? Yes, here's the quote: "He used to be a friend of mine once. A very good friend. In fact, you might almost say we were at school together."


Sarah -
Do you have many frenemies?


Harry -
No, none at all. Frenemies was a high school thing.  I have only mortal enemies now.


Sarah -
I’ll keep that in mind.

Though there have been many Doctor-Master combinations, Pertwee and Delgado will always be my favorite. Their chemistry is perfect and watching them is always a delight. The fencing scene is one of the highlights of this story for me. They’re both having a blast, and the Doctor can’t resist giving the Master another chance, just to keep things interesting.



Harry -
The Doctor clearly feels a bit of sentiment for the Master, for him to go to the trouble of paying a visit to his isolated prison. And to sit through prison governor Trenchard's ridiculous fussing over his and Jo's UNIT passes. I liked how Trenchard's obsession with passes became a running joke through the story.


Sarah -
Oh, Trenchard. Another in a line of petty bureaucrats in Doctor Who, but saved from mediocrity by Clive Morton’s performance. While Trenchard is in the Master’s power and something of a buffoon, Morton conveys the pathos in Trenchard’s character. As with so many other Doctor Who characters who have discovered they are not as in control as they thought they were, Trenchard believes that his actions will redeem his past failures. In the end, his actions are chalked up to patriotism, and not his own hubris -- but we viewers know better, having seen this all before.


Harry -
And he's not even the most loathsome bureaucrat in this story! But we'll get to him later.

Another running joke, for some, is the score. All experimental electronica. I love this kind of music, so for me this score is the electronic zenith of the 70s. The ultimate Pertwee soundtrack. It's forward-looking, but so of its time I can't see anything like this being used again. In fact, contemporary Who is the complete opposite: big, symphonic blockbuster music. And that's fine. I'll always have "The Sea Devils" to enjoy.



Sarah -
And you’re welcome to it! I don’t want to start a major row here, Dear Harry, but the soundtrack is perhaps my least favorite part of this spectacular story. Every tinny note set me on edge and even undermined the story at points. Still, it’s inextricably part of "The Sea Devils", so perhaps I should be less harsh in my judgment. I apologize for any hurt feelings I may have caused.


Harry -
Hah, we might get more readers if we had more rows!


Sarah -
We’ll have to work on generating a bit more drama.


Harry -
Another tip of the cap I want to give is for all of part two. This is one of the best single episodes of Doctor Who ever! It starts with the dazed crew man staggering along ranting about a "Sea Devil." The Doctor fiddles with a radio set, then goes to investigate. A frantic chase scene erupts, played out on stairwells and crazily-angled corridors. In the Sea Devil, we finally get a monster that can run, not shuffle, and it elevates the scariness of the scene. Trapped in the room where they started, the Doctor scares off the monster, then rigs up the radio set to send a message. The radio then blows up, just one of several quick comedic moments in the episode. Back at Trenchard's office, the Doctor gets in some office putting, some more quips, and that wild fencing duel with the Master, culminating in a knife-throwing cliffhanger. Holy wow, this episode is full of win!


Sarah -
You’ve done a spectacular job of summarizing episode two, Old Chap, but you’ve left out what is perhaps my favorite scene ever in any episode of Doctor Who! Near the end of the first episode, when the Doctor and Jo are climbing up the ladder to the sea fort and “Jo” is clearly a bloke wearing her pantsuit none-too-well and shaking what his mama gave him – because you know, that’s how ladies move.

What amuses me most is that, in my memory, which is no doubt how I want this scene to actually play, he’s wearing a miniskirt, go-go boots, and a full beard.

If only.



Harry -
There was something about the way the stuntman climbed that ladder, as if he was being electrocuted. It looked as if "Jo" would go flying into the sea at any moment. Obviously it made for lasting memories.

I agree that this story might be the best of the Doctor-Master conflicts. Pertwee and Delgado crackle just by being in the same room together. This might be Delgado's best turn in the role, and one of my favourite Delgado Master stories. Maybe we've become accustomed to his bonkers plots that this one didn't seem as jarring.



Sarah -
Seems entirely plausible to me!


Harry -
The titular monsters of the story end up being almost secondary characters, until that next fabulous scene on the beach when they emerge en masse ("en masse" in Doctor Who parlance meaning exactly six).


Sarah -
Six isn’t bad. There were only three Daleks in "Day of the Daleks". Six is positively a crowd!


Harry -
For all the repeated dashing to and fro from the prison to the naval base, the story never lags. Each episode brings a fresh angle, be it the Sea Devil and the minefield, the sunken submarine, or the arrival of Walker, the arrogant bureaucrat from the Ministry of Defence. His pompous bullying is something else, eh?


Sarah -
Parliamentary Private Secretary Walker was a complete douche. Sorry for assaulting your ears with such foul language, Old Chap, but that’s what I wrote in my notes when he appeared.


Harry -
He was a complete and total arse.


Sarah -
He made me pine for Trenchard! Like all bullies, he was also a coward when the chips were down. His only response to Jo’s heroic climb through the ventilation shaft is to think of himself: “What if you get caught? They might make reprisals against the innocent.” Utter douche.

And, then, a hovercraft! Can this story possibly get better?



Harry -
That hovercraft was majestic. I want one! Barring that, I want to ride in one!


Sarah -
Well, that sorts out your next birthday gift.


Harry -
Kudos to the Royal Navy for allowing the BBC to use so many of their toys in the making of this story.


Sarah -
I have to admit I found myself worrying about Jo – a civilian in the middle of a military assault – but she’s a lady who can handle a bit of mucking about with the best of them.


Harry -
She did more running, climbing and sneaking about than anyone else in the story.


Sarah -
She definitely held her own.

In the end, the Doctor reverses the polarity of the neutron flow and saves the day.



Harry -
Of course.


Sarah -
I couldn’t help but be disappointed when the Doctor justifies his actions by claiming he did what he had to do to prevent a war.


Harry -
He killed the Sea Devils to prevent more deaths. APPALLING.


Sarah -
I seem to recall him lecturing the Brig for doing the exact same thing to the Silurians, whom the Doctor believes should have been more properly called the Eocenes, for the record.


Harry -
The production team seem to have trouble identifying and naming the creatures on Earth, too often falling back on disparaging terms like "savages" and "sea devils". Yes, yes, times were different, but it bugs me now. And if the Doctor is resorting to minor acts of genocide, I say it's time he gets the heck off this planet for a change.

Shall we join him?



Sarah -
Yes, let’s.

Best Line: The iconic, “Reverse the polarity of the neutron flow.”

Favorite Moment: The Doctor-Master joust

Lasting Image: Stuntman Jo on the ladder

9/10



Harry -
Best Line: "Your usual childish desire to gloat, perhaps?" The Doctor crackles with sarcasm during a face off with the Master.

Favourite Moment: anytime Pertwee and Delgado are in the same room together.

Lasting Image: The Doctor-Master joust, as Pertwee gets right into it, while Delgado tries to fend him off.

8/10



 



Our marathon continues with Story #63: The Mutants...