What’s it about: ‘This is the Chesterton exhibition. A
series of breathtakingly faithful tableaux, painstakingly detailed to the nth
degree. Dedicated to the life of that most extraordinary time traveller, Ian
Chesterton!’ Ian finds himself in a shrine to his own past and on the run
with man named Pendolin. From Coal Hill School to Jobis Station, from Totter’s
Yard to the crusades, Ian’s history is unfolding. And a confrontation with a
deadly enemy with a voracious appetite is waiting…
Schoolteachers in Love: ‘You’ve led a remarkable life, Mr
Chesterton!’ Ian is shocked to wake
up in Coal Hill School. His laboratory to be precise and it feels like he is still
in the throngs of a nightmare. Imagination coming face to face with an
exhibition in a museum that devoted entirely to you and your adventures.
Everybody wants to be remembered, don’t they? So this must be a very flattering
experience for Ian. That is until he realises that he has been taken out of
time to be preserved here, the ultimate exhibit. He’s wonderfully true to
himself – always being taken to remarkable places and demanding to be taken
home. That’s all he ever wanted really. He still can’t believe he had the
chance to stand on alien worlds, it still feels like it had happened to someone
else. How fabulous that Ian can laugh his head of now at the ridiculous notion
of an old man living in a police box! He visited so many alien planets that he cannot
remember them all distinctly now. History was never his strong point and that
was why they needed the Doctor. The idea of Ian losing his magical memories of
a time when he wandered through time and space is heartbreaking. This is a
story built around the same shock treatment that befell Jamie, Zoe and Donna
Noble, losing your link to the Doctor and your adventures to him. Imagine the
ignominy to discover that instead of being an important exhibit in the Time
Museum Ian’s life is presented in an annex off the beaten path. He grew up
during a war and would hear reports of hundreds of deaths abroad but he
couldn’t visualise anything beyond the family at the end of the street
suffering when a bomb fell on them. To be told about the deaths of entire races
is one thing but to witness what is left of their mark on history is much more
potent. Ian is a little disappointed that the only reason he was brought here
was to lure the Doctor but he’s pragmatic enough to get over it quickly.
Hmm: It would appear that the Mercury fluid links overheated
far more than we ever realised between stories and emergency landings were
crucial. I love the image of him settling down on a rock to smoke his pipe,
what a shame that his smoking habit was lost as the kids fell in love with
Hartnell. Ian was frequently exasperated because the Doctor would constantly
get them into scrapes which could be avoided by keeping a decent set of spares.
What Ian didn’t realise was that obtaining these spares in life and death
struggles was where all the best adventures took place…and I think the Doctor knew
that. Not so much absent minded but looking for excitement. Before he met Ian
and Barbara the Doctor was a selfish man, only getting involved if he had to
save his own skin. They changed him, made him better than that. They made him noble
and helped him save lives. Ian likes to think that after they met him that he
continued in that vein, travelling, meddling and helping. ‘Our destiny is in
the stars’ he once said, and he set out to find it. Ian is delighted to
hear that the Doctor never stopped travelling. Pendolin tries to prey on Ian’s
weaknesses and suggest that the Doctor never came for him…but Ian has faith
that if he does come he will outwit him. In the Doctor’s head sometimes you
have to do something brutal and unpleasant in order to survive and escape and
Ian knew that when he picked up that rock in 100,000 BC he was planning on
bashing that caveman’s head open. Ian challenged him and it was possibly the
only time in his life he had been told he was wrong. A simple stupid human had
pointed out his error. He couldn’t explain what he was trying to do because it
was wrong, not just in Ian’s eyes but his own. He had changed all
because of a rock.
An Unearthly Child: When he first met Susan Ian remembered
her looking at him as though he were an exhibit under a microscope, something
charming, quaint and puzzling. Ian always suspected that Susan could operate
the console far more effectively than the Doctor could but he never let her
near the console.
Standout Performance: William Russell, of course. Its become
predictable to sing his praises so I will just say how marvelous it is that such a great actors is still involved with this show 50 years on. He's incredible.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Come on! We’re going to bury them under
my past!’
‘Smell triggers memory. The sulphur of a match, the stink of
an acid sea on a dead world, the tang of dodgem cars in a metal city, Marco
Polo’s horses cooling down at a caravanserai after a hard days ride, smoke
drifting from the Doctor’s pipe, Barbara’s perfume…’ – the sound of the rain
that accompanies this scene helps to provoke vivid memories of these
adventures.
‘In the early days it was you can’t change history, not
one line but by the time we left him he was tearing out old pages.’
‘We broke our bread on forgotten worlds in distant times. He
stopped trying to get us home and just started looking forward to where we’d
land next. That became the adventure. And d’you know I don’t think we minded.
Not one bit.’
‘If there’s one thing I’ve learnt about the Doctor its when
not to interfere!’ says Ian as the creatures devour Pendolin. What a guy.
Great Ideas: Ian’s memories are being attacked and he cannot
remember his wife’s name. Gathered in this museum are travellers who have wiped
the dust of ages from their feet – a Time Museum. It would be harder to brew up
a more potent snapshot of the first two seasons of Doctor Who than having Ian
actually re-experience those memories and then have them slip from his fingers.
He recalls meeting Susan, being ill on Skaro, being taught to fight by
Alexander the Great, witnessing the Crusades, fighting against the forces of
Kublai Khan, clashing swords in a Roman arena, visiting the temple of Yetaxa,
being pursued by Robespierre’s men, Susan being sacrificed to the Master’s of
Luxor, the Doctor getting married, from Vortis to Versailles, the Cave of
Skulls, giant ants being enslaved by an evil creature, giant matchboxes, …but
its getting all mixed up in his head and he can’t separate one adventure from
another. Alarmingly as Ian’s memory shifts and alters the Museum becomes whatever
he perceives it to be now…hundreds of adventures dovetailing into each other,
cross pollinating each others exhibits. Which is why they can visit the Cave of
Five Hundred Skulls utilised by the Aztecs. The exhibit isn’t entirely accurate
because it has been built up from Ian’s memories but then is history ever
really accurate when it is being passed down to people with their own take on
what happened? The curators have obtained the services of a Time Scoop which
can gobble up aspects of your past to be placed on exhibit. Creatures that can
devour the Time Museum, capable of invading a complicated space time event and
feasting on memories. If you are what you eat that makes them thoughts
themselves. Memories of entire races have been consumed in the museum by
creatures that feast on time travellers. The plan was to steal Ian out of time
so the Doctor came to rescue him but he never came. The greatest exhibit the
Time Museum never had. Its Pendolin who has been feeding off of Ian’s
memories and he has been feeding of the reactions of those who have flocked to
the museum for centuries. The memories of time travellers are the most
nourishing of all. The other creatures have been attacking to kill Pendolin, to
save Ian for themselves (he’s not much but he’s the only meal going).
Audio Landscape: Beautifully done. Can you imagine the
difficulties in trying to recreate so many old adventures and trying to make it
sounds both evocative of the era and fresh and exciting for this audio? Never
fear though, its Fox and Yason on the case and the resulting drama is skilfully
realised. A ticking, ringing clock going nuts, the echoey corridors of Coal
Hill School and chattering students, writing on the blackboard, the hissing
creatures reaching out for Ian’s memories, walking on metal grating, a horse
screaming, sword fighting, we can actually hear the exhibits being broken down
and put back together again as Ian’s memories shift, exotic birdsong, falling
over the edge of a precipice and taken rocks and debris with them, footsteps on
gravel, a humming police box, lightning crackling, the TARDIS door opening,
lightning flashing, heavy rainfall, lighting a match, the Time Museum
announcement, the creatures consuming Pendolin and his scream.
Isn’t it Odd: After the reminiscent tone of The Reverants,
the screaming voices of the past being anchored through Rasputin in The
Wanderer, and this giddying skip through Ian’s memories the companion
chronicles have pretty much exhausted the nostalgia card for the first Doctor’s
early years. Let’s get back to some original storytelling (ala The Rocket Men)
for the next William Russell-led adventure. The ambiguous, creepy ending didn’t
add a great deal for me.
Standout Scene: In a cliffhanger that deserves a place up
there with The Face of Evil episode three and The Mind Robber episode one, Ian
not only loses his memories of the past but starts to lose who he is. In a
deftly scripted and performed sequence Ian starts to transform into the Doctor
himself, fingers at the console, waiting to explore a new alien world. To say I
was confused at this point would be an understatement but to say I was gripped
by these unusual developments was also true. You’ve got William Russell who has
become quite adept at playing the First Doctor on audio playing Ian playing the
Doctor! Recursive occlusion!
Notes: Gloriously as Ian’s memories go through the grinder
he starts to recall meeting the Doctor in the way depicted in David Whitaker’s
Dr Who and the Daleks novelisation. Also in the Time Museum can be found the
Edwardian sailing ships of the Eternals (Enlightenment). Also two great battle
fleets, the pride of Sontar and the arrogance of the Rutan cluster. Nekistani
freighters (Neverland, The Apocalypse Element).
This one is just fantastic. The best part to me is that it was a companion chronicle that wasn't narrated or at least only parts of it were narrated when Ian was trying to remember things. Instead we were experiencing the adventure that Ian is having in the present and to me that lent it some immediacy and drama that a narrated story can't - since you know he'll make it out in the end.
ReplyDeleteI'd really love a story with Ian meeting the Doctor (any Doctor) now so that we could have some of the relationship alluded to here fleshed out. How have both men changed because of knowing each other?
My one complaint here is that I hate for time travel to be so pedestrian that there can actually be a museum for it that is apparently visited by lots of time traveling species. Of course the series already made time travel pedestrian with Delta and the Bannermen but we don't have to compound the mistake.
Still, all-in-all this one is a fantastic story.