What’s it about: The Vault – an archive of alien artefacts
securely stored deep beneath the Angel of the North. There's also a prisoner in
the Vault. An extraterrestrial known as the Master. He has been on Earth for
some time, but now he's under lock and key. This is his story. Or, as Captain
Ruth Matheson and Warrant Officer Charlie Sato discover… perhaps it is theirs.
You Will Obey Me: What an awesome idea it was to tell a
first person story from the Master’s point of view. We haven’t seen anything
quite this innovative as far as the shows villains are concerned since the
trilogy of adventures that focused upon three of the most infamous at the close
of 2003’s experimental run. As soon as Geoffrey Beevers joins the story and
deploys that dark, hypnotic, menacing voice of his the story automatically went
up several notches. He brings something truly malevolent and skin crawling to
his stories that is not to be underestimated.
The Master arrives with an ominous chiming of the
grandfather clock that happens to be his TARDIS in disguise. When it sounds, it
always means he is going to wake up. He’s categorised as alien artefact number
one, which might put him at the top of the priority list as far as the Vault is
concerned but seems like such a dull official label for such a great character.
He’s locked in a vault within and vault because you can never be too careful
with the Master. He only wakes up every five years or so for an hour and
fortunately this time round we are privy to that 60 minutes. A master of mind
control and psychological manipulation, UNIT has had too many dealing with this
criminal to deal with his security lightly. Others have made the error of
underestimating him and paid the price. As far as this psychopath is concerned,
there are few things more satisfying than taking the life of an innocent. While
it looks as if the Master might take a moral stance over pushing forward
humanities technological progress in order to expedite his experiments, the
truth is he was worried that doing so would attract the attention of the CIA
and the Doctor. The Master’s waltz through the 20th Century reminds
me of the experiences that the Doctor had when he was trapped on Earth during
the same period in the novel line. It is great to compare their approaches, the
Doctor using the time to study and broaden his horizons as much as he can
whilst trying to stay in the shadows and not make too much of a fuss. In
comparison the Master is drawn to the power, taking over the bodies of a
succession of influential men and building up an impressive business Empire.
He’s so effortlessly cool that being held up by a Mafia assassin amuses him
greatly. Once UNIT have him in custody they want him to work for them, giving
them the benefit of his knowledge during potential alien incursions. How that
would stick in the Doctor’s throat.
UNIT Officers: As soon as Charlie excitedly boasts that he is going to be interviewing the Master I envisaged a terrifying future for the lad. His influence is so strong he can force people to murder themselves, to act against their own sense of self preservation, an ability that truly disturbs Ruth. The Master is an expert manipulator and he offers Ruth a glimpse of a changed past, the ability to bring her murdered unit back to life if only she releases him. Would he uphold that bargain if he was at large? Who knows, but the tantalizing truth is that what he is telling her is possible. Charlie became a soldier to honour his fathers memory, but the Master offers him the chance to save his father if he lets him go.
UNIT Officers: As soon as Charlie excitedly boasts that he is going to be interviewing the Master I envisaged a terrifying future for the lad. His influence is so strong he can force people to murder themselves, to act against their own sense of self preservation, an ability that truly disturbs Ruth. The Master is an expert manipulator and he offers Ruth a glimpse of a changed past, the ability to bring her murdered unit back to life if only she releases him. Would he uphold that bargain if he was at large? Who knows, but the tantalizing truth is that what he is telling her is possible. Charlie became a soldier to honour his fathers memory, but the Master offers him the chance to save his father if he lets him go.
Standout Performance: The material that Beevers is given in
Mastermind is miles beyond the one dimensional villainy that was foistered upon
him during the first season of 4DAs. He’s afforded the opportunity to play all
manner of guises as the Master and adopt a number of accents and personalities,
all of which convince. However he is at his best when he gets to bring his
voice right down and purr in the ears of the UNIT operatives, quietly and
threateningly inveigling his way into their minds…
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘I have worn many bodies over the years
but always they revert to my true form. I am the living embodiment of entropy,
rotten to the core…’
Great Ideas: Given that these are the UNIT vaults it makes
perfect sense for Jonathan Morris to plunder old stories for continuity
references (especially in the 50th anniversary year but there is no
reason why you wouldn’t do this anyway since the situation has presented
itself). In this case there is mention of Excalibur from Battlefield. A
grandfather clock and the Tom Baker theme tune seems to suggest that this is
the Master from that period, either somewhere between The Deadly Assassin and
The Keeper of Traken or post Traken and pre-Logopolis. Dalek scorch marks
detected on his TARDIS could mean be suggesting that was why he was suddenly an
emaciated corpse when we caught up with him in Assassin, but ultimately it
turns out that this is a post-TV Movie version of the Master set after he
escaped his prison in the Doctor’s TARDIS. A shame, it might have been fun to
wind up those people who agonise over where stories are placed by leaving the
placement ambiguous. However it is pleasing to fill out this previously
unexplored (except for a suggestion that the Master is still in the TARDIS at
the end of the 8th Doctor novel Sometime Never…) part of the
Master’s life. There is a fascinating and dramatic story to be told between the
TV Movie and his resurrection in Utopia. His TARDIS was discovered in a burial
chamber in the Valley of the Kings over a century ago, which means he has been
trapped in the Vault ever since. If it is suspected that UNIT soldiers have
been taken over by the Master they can be incarcerated for up to fifty years
until they are certain that the influence has passed and no hidden instructions
have been left to fester in your mind. Perhaps Charlie should have been made
aware of these conditions before he stepped foot in this section of the Vault.
It is quite sweet to have a story written for characters played by Daphne
Ashbrook and Yee Jee Tso featuring the Master. It turns out that the viscous
state that the Master found himself in during the TV Movie was a death worm
morphant and it was a necessary measure to ensure that he survived execution by
the Daleks on Skaro. It also allowed him to exist within the Eye of Harmony. So
there to anybody who snubbed the idea, it makes perfect sense after all (I am
talking myself more than anyone else). One of the Doctor’s companions, Edward
Grainger (I wonder if we will ever see that story emerge in the eighth Doctor
line?) made contact with the Master in the TARDIS, opened the Eye and allowed
him to escape in a vaporous state. He surged from the TARDIS into the year 1906
in a precarious, gaseous existence, his mind only held together by his
unconquerable will. He found the perfect hiding place within a human being, so
discreet that the Doctor would never be able to detect his presence within his
mind. The Master’s greatest fear and strongest motivation is to stay alive and
it seems that whatever method he chooses always comes with an inherent flaw. In
this case the body accelerated in age, brought on by his possession and
decomposing to the state that it is now. He eventually wound up on the Titanic
and stole the place of one of the survivors when it crashed and eventually took
over the body of one of the Hudson Dusters, a New York street gang. Just that
sentence alone could provide enough substance for several stories. To hear the
Master being played by Beevers as a Godfather figure is a delight. I could have
happily have spent much more time around this character and learnt of his
brutal, unlawful acts in the early 1900s. After taking over the Don’s son, the
Master soon realised there was another resource that was abundant on the planet
and that brought with it great power – money. He bought a casino and started to
exploit the greed inherent in humanity in order to harness the power of the
nearby Hoover Dam, a necessary plunder to fuel his experiments to return his
body to its previous, undecaying state. Another great full length story to be
told there. Soon he was running all the casinos, pulling the strings but
remaining in the shadows. Come 1973 he had spent two decades practically
confined to his penthouse, leaving the every day running of his business Empire
to his son Frankie. Just when you think you exactly how the story is going to
play out with the Master moving successfully from body to body he hits a snag
in the form Frankie. He’s figured out exactly what has been polluting the
family line over the years and that he will be next and turns the Master’s own
toys against him. After being trapped in his apartment by his son it isn’t
until UNIT recovered him that he saw the light of day again.
Musical Cues: An appropriately brooding, dramatic and
exciting score for a release spearheaded by the Master, Daniel Brett has
delivered his best work yet. The piece that plays over the Godfather Master’s
possession of his ‘son’ is a genuinely riveting passage and sax score that
kicks in during the casino sequences has a sensual atmosphere all of its own.
Standout Scene: I was waiting patiently throughout to see
when the Master would make his move and what trick he would play in order to
escape from UNIT confinement. When the moment comes, it doesn’t disappoint.
He’s such a devious bugger he allowed himself to brought to the UNIT vault as a
prisoner in order to obtain his property previously lost – his TARDIS. His trap
sprung, he soon makes his mistake. Let’s hope we get to stow away on board with
him one day.
5 comments:
Excellent review Joe. I've been looking forward to this one a lot. I adore GB as the Master...
Sounds very intriguing! I wish they could do an audio spin-off with Master and then somehow solve there a problem with a Master incarnation from UNIT Dominion.
Great review, but all these Masters are getting confusing.
Does Mastermind fit in continuity with The Glorious Dead and Unit:Dominion.
Edward Grainger and the release of the master is covered in a Short trips compilation called "The Centurian"
Post a Comment