This story in a nutshell: Oil rigs are being smashed,
doppelgangers are more dangerous than ever and there is a spaceship hidden
beneath Loch Ness...
Teeth and Curls: Wow, what a transformation between Revenge of
the Cybermen (where Tom seemed a little wobbly and unsure in the role) and
this. By all accounts he received some feedback on his performance in the first
season and flew off the handle at the comments (according to an interview with
Nicholas Courtney). It seems to have put him in a massive grump and what
materializes is the brooding, menacing fourth Doctor of seasons thirteen and
fourteen. Perhaps the definitive fourth Doctor for most. He storms in on he
Brigadier dressed up for the occasion, demanding answers and making a mockery
of his investigation so far. The softly softly approach of the latter Pertwee
tales has long past. It takes the Brigadier to remind him that men have died
for him to stop being so curt and fatuous and get on with the job at hand. This
is the story where Baker starts using his eyes as a weapon, several scenes
feature him staring boggle eyed off camera, alien, unknowable thoughts racing
through his head. Watch as the Doctor reveals his theory that the Prince
Charlie oil rig has been torn apart by a set of giant molars that can chew
through steel as easily as paper, he looks as terrifying and ominous as any of
the villains he has ever faced. Rather than sympathising with Sarah when the
air is sucked out of the room he tells her to shut up and save her breath. When
he hypnotises her, the Doctor is the most frighteningly alien thing in this
story. You can see everything coming together for Tom Baker's Doctor in the
final episode as he shares moments of sarcasm and intensity with Broton.
Suddenly this Doctor can mock his enemies and turn on a sixpence to absolute
horror in a second. The switch of moods is effortless. The Doctor seems to blow
the shit out of the Zygon spaceship because that is the way he rolls these
days. And what an explosion it is.
Investigative Journalist: Is there anything more glorious
than seeing the Doctor, Sarah and Harry walking out of the TARDIS? With this
team you are guaranteed a good time, some fun banter and sense of camaraderie
that you don't see with every set of regulars. It's especially nice that we
have another minute of two of fresh material from the trio that has been
unearthed and slipped back into the story on the DVD. You can see precisely why
Sarah made such an excellent journalist, coaxing ghost stories out of Angus,
grafting in front of a typewriter when she could be travelling through time and
space and generally asking a lot of questions throughout the adventure and
poking her nose in where it is not wanted. It almost gets her killed several times
but that just makes the story all the more exciting for us. Watch the giggles
between the Doctor an Sarah at the Brigadier's expense, there is such a depth
of friendship between these two. There are too many times when I love Sarah
Jane Smith during her tenure that it would take me a day or so to list them all
but they can be epitomised in her scenes at the castle where she dumped by the
Doctor and forced to rifle through dusty shelves. She's sardonic, witty,
insightful, inquisitive and displays bags of personality. These could be the
most tedious of scenes but with Sarah on the case that was never on the books
(poking her tongue out at Caber is glorious). Even better are her moments with
Harry; affectionate, hilarious and natural.
I Say: What a shame for Harry to depart on the story that
gives him some of his best material. Whilst I wouldn't do anything to change
the period that the Doctor and Sarah spent alone (there are few runs for a
Doctor/companion team than match what takes place between Planet of Evil - The
Hand of Fear), I do wish we could have enjoyed some more time with Harry all
the same. The bumbling fool of The Ark in Space has all but vanished and he has
been replaced with a thoroughly reliable, professional, good-humoured chap to
look after the Doctor and Sarah. Back on Earth (he hasn't been home since
Robot) his skills as a Doctor are useful again and he gets straight back to
work as though he had never been away. After playing the bumbling simpleton for
a year, who knew that Ian Marter had it in him to turn Harry into such a
threatening character? It makes you wonder that we might have been denied a lot
of the potential of this actor when he can deliver something this terrorizing
when called upon. I was sad to see him go but his departure does seem like
something of an anti-climax. When an irritating little squit like Adric can
gain immortality with a death that put him in the history books it seems unfair
that Harry should depart with a quick one liner and then return a few stories
later for an even more ignominious departure in The Android Invasion.
Chap with Wings: Proud of his Scottish heritage, the
Brigadier sports a very fetching kilt. Under Camfield's watchful eye the
bumbling, comical figure from Planet of the Spiders and Robot is gone and
replaced once again with an assured, authoritative figure. Whilst it is always
nice to see Courtney playing the part with a twinkle in his eye we haven't seen
him this focussed and confident since The Daemons (with the exceptional of The
Green Death, possibly). Just as Harry is about to get to the truth of what has
happened to the rig he is shot and left for dead by the Caber, a shocking act
that really highlights the difference between Letts' and Hinchliffe's approach.
Under the previous administration it would have been made perfectly clear that
Harry was okay but with a scalp wound leaking blood we are left hanging as to
the nature of his fate. His reaction to an off screen Zygon is one of horror
and hysteria - it is a great moment because we have yet to see one of the
creatures and this truly suggests they are a grisly sight. I love the Brig
sympathising with the Duke over his scepticism, it reminds us of how far he has
come in his time on the show. His stiff upper lip in the face of the (female)
Prime Minister is another golden moment for the character. Nick Courtney wasn't
always given the best of material to play but he made the most of every single
moment on the show. I'm pleased that in his last regular appearance he was
treated to such wonderful scenes.
Sparkling Dialogue: 'Oil an emergency, hah! It's about time
you realised that reliance on a chemical slime just doesn't make sense!'
'It suddenly came at us and smashed the rig to pieces...'
'You have to come out on the balcony and wave a tentacle, if
you'll pardon the expression.'
The Good:
* I was very struck
by the quality of the modelwork in this story, especially during the dynamic
opening sequence where the oil rig is smashed to pieces by an unknown
aggressor. The shot of the rig blowing against the silhouette of the moon is
especially dramatic. Douglas Camfield knows how to drag you into the action and
just over a minute into the story I am already hooked.
* Proof if ever it
was needed that parts of Scotland look very much like parts of the rest of
Britain as Camfield shoots his story in parts of Sussex and it convincingly
doubles for it. He's renowned for his exceptional location work (stories such
as The Invasion and Inferno are given a huge boost thanks to his action on film)
and Terror of the Zygons might be the best example yet of the atmosphere and
filmic scale that Camfield can bring to a shoot. Shots of the rig worker being
washed ashore are very effective; the sun glistening on the sea as at gathers
around the victim, stumbling to his feet as he tries to make it to the shore.
The sequence where Harry discovers him and is shot down by the Caber takes
place almost entirely without dialogue, expertly told through visuals. The pace
and realism that Hinchcliffe wanted to bring to the show is in full swing now,
we haven't witnessed action sequences quite this graphic and well paced since
Inferno (tellingly Camfield's last stint on the show although to be fair season
seven is full of gripping action).
* It is not so much
subverting cliché when Camfield takes some well worn material and makes it
work. It's more like watching a magician at work, treating the material so
seriously that something as corny as Angus telling an old wife's tale of
missing boys on the moor becomes chilling, especially when it is intercut with
shots of a Zygon's eyes observing their conversation. Camfield can build an
atmosphere like no other and he can toss in all kinds of clichés to pull it
off.
* In another
directors hands the Zygons spaceship would still be an exciting piece of design
work but filmed without it care its organic detail would be wasted. Camfield
wastes no time getting up close on the fleshy technology, featuring cross fades
of the creatures fondling the protuberances and revealing that we have never
seen anything like this pulsing, breathing equipment before. The veins that run
through the scanner screen are novel too. It feels like the designer and the
director are completely in sync with each other and know exactly what look they
are going for with the Zygons and their spaceship. There have been impressive
monster costumes in Doctor Who before (the Mutants, the Draconians) but we've
never seen anything quite like the Zygons before. So bizarre looking and yet so
scary, they are a unique creation and it astonishes me that it took as long as
it did for them to make a return appearance. Such attention to detail is
evident; the veins threading through the skin, a segmented face, fluid
glistening on the flesh, pustules and suckers that spread the length of their
body. Not only is the design superb but the direction adds so much to their
effect, the whispering voices in particular going against what you might expect
from a creature this grotesque. Their raison d'etre, the fact that they can steal
your identity and infiltrate your life, is especially chilling and used to
menacing effect throughout the story. You don't know who you can trust when
anybody could be a Zygon replica. The icing on the cake (this shows you how
spectacular the creatures are realised because the performance is often what
sells the aliens in Doctor Who, it is rarely the finishing touch on something
so perfectly brought to life) is John Woodnut's stunning turn as Broton, not a
bog standard alien character but a character in his own right. He's petulant,
sinister, humorous, aggressive, twisted and thoughtful. The Zygons really are
as good as it gets when it comes to Doctor Who monsters.
* I have mentioned
before that there are individual episodes of Doctor Who that can be held up as
an example of the show at it's absolute best, even when the story at large has
some faults. The Invasion seven. Inferno six. The Daemons four. Caves of
Androzani four. Terror of the Zygons episode one can be comfortably added to
that list; thick with atmosphere and chills, a great mystery, the introduction
of shocking aliens and packed to the gills with great characters and dialogue
(it is also before the Skarasen turns up and reminds us this good old Doctor
Who). You will not see a better example of how to build to a cliffhanger in
this person than the Zygon assault on Sarah and Harry at the cliffhanger.
* Hauntingly evocative and eerily beautiful, we have never
heard anything quite like Geoffrey Burgeon's score before. Listen to the
screaming stings as Harry attacks Sarah with a fork or the violin plucks as the
Skarasen emerges over the moors. I have the soundtrack to Terror of the Zygons
and The Seeds of Doom (also by Burgeon) and have listened to it ad nauseum and
wept for the fact that he never had the chance to score any more stories beyond
Camfield's participation (or lack of) in the show.
The Bad: The Skarasen has come in for a lot of flack in the
past but the truth of the matter is that there are far worse Doctor Who
monsters out there. It is simply that highlighted against the success of the
rest of the production it fails to meet the same standards. As a stop motion
creature it does everything it is supposed to do. The problem is that whilst
they had a success in the cinema before the advent of more impressive visual
effects, stop motion animation isn't a particularly convincing method of
realising a titanic creature like the Skarasen. Douglas Camfield uses lots of
techniques to try and make the cumbersome lummox of a dinosaur work, including
POV shots, melding the animation with live action and CSO but he is fighting
against some pretty ropey animation in the first place and cannot overcome the
odds. I dread to think how this would have looked in the hands of a lesser
director. It is a good thing that Broton is on the rampage in the final set
piece at the Energy Conference otherwise we would be relying on the glove
puppet Skarasen popping his head up the Thames in a particularly unimpressive
climax.
The Shallow Bit: Check out Ian Marter's arse as he climbs
the ladder in the barn. Phewie!
Result: Terror of the Zygons was the first Doctor Who story
to seriously frighten me. I first became a fan at six years old when my friend
Paul who lived two doors down started telling me a lot of the backstory of this
insanely exciting show. The first video I had bought for my by my mother was
Death to the Daleks (another reason it holds such an affectionate place in my
heart despite being a bit rubbish in places) but the next was Terror of the
Zygons. I can still remember watching it sitting on the carpet at my mums feet
as she fell asleep in the chair on a winters night - it was the afternoon and
it was dark early. I devoured all four episodes, alone and terrified and
riveted to the spot. I had never been allowed to watch anything quite like it
before, something this terrifying and bizarre. Moments that stood out for me as
being particularly terrorizing were: Sister Lamont and her crazy eyes and the
dark blood that runs down her arm, Harry's murderous eyes as he waits in the
darkness of the barn to skewer Sarah, the intense weirdness of the Zygon
technology being fondled and groped by sticky, webbed hands, Tom Baker's
sibilant performance as he hypnotises Sarah, the swivelling deer eyes watching
all in the pub, that insidious feeling that nobody can be trusted, the dying
shriek of the UNIT soldier who is strangled to death at the conference and Tom
Baker's piercing scream as he is electrocuted. Even the Skarasen's snapping
jaws and unearthly roars were intimidating to an eight year old. Doctor Who had
been handed to me as a show with so much potential but never in a million years
did I imagine it could be so fearsome. It went from a mild curiosity to an
addiction across these four episodes and I was soon begging for more videos
(and despite the extortionate price, my mum soon relented). I wanted to capture
that feeling of terror and that I was doing something naughty watching the show
again and found across the Hinchcliffe years in particular that that hunger was
satisfied. Some Doctor Who fans will tell you that this story is a load of old
wank, comprised of hoary old clichés and stereotypes but for that eight year
old boy it was the gateway to world of so much excitement and terror. Even as
an adult as I pick apart the production and story there is a manifest of things
to enjoy; terrific dialogue, warm interaction between the characters, a
stunningly atmospheric score, ample evocative location work, shock moments,
effective model work and a great cast of regulars. If you were looking for the
quintessentially excellent Doctor Who story, I think you might have found it.
It even has a rubbish monster thrown in too which in some strange way makes a
very good story absolutely perfect: 10/10
First Classic Story me and my brother see. I should probably see it again after 10 years. I will probably find a lot to mock, but it was a great watch.
ReplyDeleteWhere did Nick Courtney make this claim?
ReplyDeleteWatched it for the first time in years - still a truly great story from a truly great era: the scene in the barn with Doctor Who 'doing' Hammer House of Horror remains stunning and one of the great moments of 70s Doctor Who.
ReplyDeleteI like this story but it only comes 4th in the season after Seeds, Pyramids, and Morbius. I did see the original VHS once perhaps, but it had minimal effect on me compared to Robots of Death and Five Doctors.
ReplyDeleteThe Zygons are very very good monsters and just as with the Ice Warriors' first story, they all have their own personality and look.
Baker is now totally in his stride - with the first full production block completed in his long Doctor Who career. A fine story for the Brigadier to go out on, but the plot is a little weak in places compared to the other stories I mentioned.
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ReplyDeleteI agree with Martin that this is only the fourth-best story of the season, which just goes to show how amazing this season is. One of the highest points in the show's history.
ReplyDeleteWatching all in order. Not quite as good as Ark or Genesis but easily 3rd so far. Baker is there, he is outstanding as is lovely Lis. I am glad Nathan-Turner never got his hands on the Zygons, he would have ruined them like the Silurians and Sea Devils. Cliffhanger to Part One is in the top 5 ever easily. Part One itself is a masterpiece, but then, the story has very few weak points, the pace is relentless. The last fight with Broton is great. Some lovely Doctor/companion scenes especially at the beginning and end. The Skarasen is better than anything we saw in Green Death and Dinosaurs. I excused those stories, this story is better than any Pertwee story, therefore 3rd best so far. A nice sign off for the Brig. Excellent story. Loved this when I was a kid, cliffhanger 1 terrified me first time round at the age of 4.
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