What’s it about: Sick of the same-old slaughter-appliances? In need of a killer new killing-machine? Then look no further than Garundel Galactic's secret arms auction. Blasters, tanks, missiles and bombs – no bang too big or micro-laser too small. If you’ve got the credits, Garundel's got the kill-sticks. (Cash buyers get preferential rates.) In search of the key to a sinister alien technology, the Doctor, Klein and Will set their sights on an illicit intergalactic arms fair run by an old acquaintance – the slippery Urodelian crook, Garundel. But what are their chances of pulling off a particularly audacious heist from under the noses of Garundel and his alien clients, the ever-belligerent Sontarans…?
The Real McCoy: Last month’s
Doctor Who magazine gave me the impression that Fitton would have more of a
chance to explore the seventh Doctor in the writers second audio from his era
(his first, Black and White, was recorded when McCoy was busy filming The
Hobbit and so his role had to be reduce significantly). So imagine my
surprise when he was barely present throughout the first two episodes, having
to have the reins of this operation over to Will and Klein (lest Garundel
recognised him) and waits by the phone in the TARDIS for one of them to call
with a report. First Klein, then Garundel; it seems that the Doctor is in the
habit of picking up old acquaintances at the moment. It is about time that
somebody coined the seventh Doctor a control freak, and you can trust Garundel
to cut to the chase when it comes to assassinating someone’s character.
Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Who next, Bandrils?’
‘Humanity is no slouch when it
comes to war, Marshall. I’d say we’re beyond the nursery now.’
‘Small talk/Sontaran…funny!’
Great Ideas: It’s great how this
story instantly segues into Persuasion, with Garundel trying to flog the
machine and the inventors body’s (at no extra charge). This end of Mutter
Spiral attracts the belligerent, humans included. It must be the feng shui. The
Sontaran stratagem is at its limit – the Imperial war fleet is active across a
thousand star systems and the clone banks are at capacity. They need to find
new ways of waging war beyond the militaristic and the persuasion machine fits
the bill perfectly. Fitton includes some amusing races bidding at the auction,
including one whose refreshment of choice is the spinal fluid of its victims
once it has crushed the life out of them. There is no point telling a Sontaran
that you will take care of its weapons as though they were its children because
they will have more than likely have sent their brood hatchlings into battle to
be slaughtered for the glory of the Sontaran Empire – you’re much better saying
you will treat the weapons as weapons, because they are much more
valued. Everybody hates the Sontarans which makes them the perfect attendees to
push the bids up. Did Garundel ever think that the Sontarans would ever bid for
the persuasion machine in the usual fashion? When a phalanx of warships
approaches, the pace starts to pick up exponentially. Garundel’s whole auction
set up was a fake – he has no weapons or EM field that prevents the bidders
from killing each other, he just let them believe that to keep the peace. The
whole purpose of the auction was to steal the bidders weapons as well as their
money. Whatever else he might be, the Doctor cannot deny Garundel’s technical
genius. Garundel never trusted his female associate, he arranged for his ship
to be operated by remote control just in case she decided to step out on him.
He’s a slippery toad (hohoho). The persuasion-lite device does not work on
anybody that doesn’t want to be persuaded, which rather defeats the purpose of
the thing! Garundel murdering Ziv was the first genuinely shocking moment in
the story (which isn’t a criticism, this isn’t a story that is trying to
be shocking); where we see that no matter how amusing he might be, he is still
a dangerous con man who always has his finger on the trigger. I’m guessing he
had to do something genuinely unpleasant to justify his excruciating fate in
this story (although we do learn that his hand will grow back within a month).
He’s a frog with big ambitions, planning on stealing the entire Sontaran fleet
(ships, guns and technology – woohoo!) and making tracks.
Musical Cues: I’m guessing that
Howard Carter is going to have the honour (see what I did there?) of scoring
every Sontaran story because of his phenomenal theme for the militaristic race?
It first appeared in Heroes of Sontar and continued apace in The First
Sontarans and now the opening seconds of Starlight Robbery and instantly buoyed
up by the familiar and yet bombastic and exciting presence of this theme. The
godawful lift music that is slavered over Garundel’s advertisement is
frighteningly authentic. Where the Sontaran theme fails is the cheerful
adaptation that skips over the Sontaran attack in episode two – are we supposed
to take these events seriously?
Isn’t it Odd: Given that the
general reaction to treating the Sontarans as comedy buffoons in Heroes of
Sontar went down like a cup of cold sick (I exaggerate, as usual, some people
did like this treatment but I’m willing to bet not as many as Big Finish were
hoping for) and their repair work accomplished in The First Sontarans, it galls
to see them once again treated as a figures of fun quite so soon. With the race
being belittled in the TV series on a regular basis (I love Strax, but he is hardly
an argument for why this race is considered an intimidating military force) it
feels as if everybody is going for the funny the bone when it comes to this
once proud race (yes I know there were plenty of humorous lines in The Time
Warrior, but it treated Styre as the straight amongst so many primitive
buffoons). ‘We are not errand boys to be sent shopping!’ Deep Space Nine
crafted an episode (Business as Usual) that dealt with the potentially comic
and grave consequences of aiding an arms business that forced its central
character (Quark) into a moral dilemma concerning 80 million that were about to
be made an example of. Quark was generally treated as a comic relief character
but he managed to make the leap into high drama with surprising ease. Try hard
as I might I could never imagine a character as broadly drawn as Garundel
proving as dramatically chameleonic. Come to think of it, Deep Space Nine
also pulled off a comedic episode with an auction of some the galaxy’s most
dangerous criminals all seeking a dangerous artefact (Q-Less). Some of
Garundel’s dialogue is very similar to Quark’s to the bidders when the shit
starts to hit the fan. When characters state unconcerned ‘we’ve all got to
make a living, it’s not like we’re pulling the trigger’ you know that the
ethics of this situation are being quietly side stepped so we can get to the
fun. I wasn’t sure whether the Sontaran attack was supposed to be funny
(Garundel is firing off witty lines like he’s auditioning for the role of Noel
Coward) or dramatic (people are dying en masse), to me it felt like a
incompatible mixture of both. It strikes me that every opportunity that Fitton
has to probe deep beneath the characters he fails to do so in order to keep the
story light and frothy. Garundel asks the Doctor about Ace and Hex and he
instantly changes the subject and there is the perfect opportunity to discuss
Klein’s opinion on motherhood which is similarly skipped over. I did hope that
there would never one a day when any character said ‘totes impossible’ in
a Doctor Who story, but that day has now arrived. They’ve just driven off Tom
Baker’s latest season, they turned up as a surprise ending in the previous
season of Gallifrey and now they make their presence known in the main
range…it’s the Daleks again! I’m starting to hope that Nation Estate
withdraws their permission for Big Finish to use them because this is getting
beyond tedious now. One new monster race every couple of years isn’t enough
(the Viyrans, the Eminence), stop wheeling out the mobile dustbins and do
something original! The fact that this entire story is a distraction rather
displays its insignificance…but at least it was a diverting intrusion to the
main narrative of the trilogy.
Standout Scene: The end of episode
three where Will’s life hangs in the balance, and at the whim of a Sontaran
missile. I was screaming ‘press the button!’ which might not be the
response that Fitton was after.
Result: As much as some the
details bugged me (more Sontarans in a comic setting, Stuart Milligan’s shrill
choice of voice for Garundel), the first episode of Starlight Robbery is jolly
good fun, taking place as it does in an auction for the device that was so
sacrosanct in the first adventure of this trilogy. There’s a lightness of touch
to the events that makes this story much more easier to enjoy than its
predecessor. Garundel is much more tolerable in this adventure than he was in
Black and White because he is not pitched at quite such a ridiculous level and
this time around he is the star of the show and there aren’t a ton of other
characters and ideas vying for your attention. Milligan is clearly having a
great time playing the intergalactic wrangler and that energy infects the rest
of the cast and they all pitch up their performances to match it. For a heist
story it doesn’t quite have the twists and turns that you might expect from the
genre (Grand Theft Cosmos was much more surprising in that respect, what I was
looking for was the constantly subverting narrative of something like Situation
Vacant) but it sure gets the tone and the pace spot on. It basically does
exactly what it says on the tin; it is a peppy adventure through space with the
seventh Doctor, Klein (who is given much more to work with here), Will
Arrowsmith (still irritating but showing glimmers of potential) and the
Sontarans. With Matt Fitton scripting there is plenty of witty, memorable
dialogue and to his acclaim he is treating the Sontarans credibly, it is just
the humorous tone of the story means that they are rather swept up in the
comical tide. Ultimately this was never going to top what I still consider to
be the ultimate Doctor Who auction story, Alien Bodies, which took the very
simple idea and turned it into a portmanteau of oddball characters, hyper
imaginative concepts and stunning world building (in the same breath The Name
of the Doctor loses points for stealing most of its best ideas for this novel
too). Starlight Robbery is an enjoyable Doctor Who story that diverts for its
running time and provides a good ride. Just don’t expect to remember much of it
afterwards, this is ultimately pretty disposable stuff (Garundel even admits as
much at the climax) with an ending that rips of Frontier in Space and sees Big
Finish leaping on the continuity bandwagon again (can you guess who the menace
in the next story is?). Worth checking out : 7/10
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ReplyDeleteI hated "Persuasion" but I thought that this was one of the best stories in the main range this year, though I have to say that so far 2013 is the weakest year for the main range since 2007.
ReplyDeleteWill reminded me of Wesley as well but the big difference is that I liked Wesley from the beginning while I think that Will is the worst Big Finish companion in its history.
As far as I'm concerned, "Heroes of Sontar" was a complete disaster which can be summed up in five words: "Doctor Who does Dad's Army. Badly." I was happy with the treatment of the Sontarans this time around. I thought that it focussed more on the military might of the Sontarans rather than treating them as nothing but walking punchlines. The Strax jokes wore thin after one episode.
*summed up in six words!
ReplyDeleteWhat's an extra word, it's still a great six word review! :-)
ReplyDeleteI always get a chill when you mention Angel, because although you haven't reviewed it, your brief mentions of that show's shortcomings are bang-on. In particular, the character of Wesley who was, probably, the most-developed of the lot, but suffered from his baggage over on Buffy, which won the undying hatred of some fans. Seems like a great waste. Because the dark characters offer the best opportunities for actors. But for some reason, on television at least, the audience just can't get behind an anti-hero.
ReplyDeleteAfter Tegan, Adric and now S.7 Capaldi, I don't really see the point in re-attempting that dynamic here. And in an audio format? If I'm honest, it's an idea which almost weaponizes stupidity.
I wonder if this is payback for the fans revolting against the Ace-Hector-Seven team?
Just listened to it for the first time. The actor playing Garundel is so awful that it defies description. 0/10 from me
ReplyDelete