What's it about: Bernice
Summerfield is on Skaro, and she's very much on her own. The Doctor can't get
to her, not this time. All Benny can do is stay alive for as long as possible. And,
in a city full of Daleks, that's not going to be very long.
Archaeological Adventuress: When Benny realises they are on
Skaro her first extinct is to run, which seems like a perfectly sensible
reaction to me. You haven't seen her panic and cry this much in a long, long
time. Probably since Just War and Death and the Daleks. If you are looking for
an impossibly gorgeous blond hunk of a boyfriend then Skaro is the place to
go...Benny berates herself for not realising that he was a Thal. To admit that she
needs the Doctor is a big deal for her after all these years of independence.
Because the Daleks sprung from their loins, Bernice assumed that the Kaleds
were all evil. She certainly never envisaged falling in love with one of them.
The universe isn't ready for Bernice to admit that she was in love with a man
that became a Dalek.
The Real McCoy: The Doctor hoped that Benny would prevent
Ace from reaching Skaro. Because he is something of an insubstantial ghost that
is handing out advice Bernice declares him the worst Yoda ever. The Doctor
thinks it was him who caused all the Dalek tragedies. In his darker hours he
wonders if the Daleks were his fault. Benny has her own life and a family and
plans to get back to both. Bernice being furious with him reminds him of old
times. He hoped that perhaps Ace would succeed but the Daleks never end.
Oh Wicked: Overly apologetic, she thinks that everything that is happening on Skaro is her fault and is willing to sacrifice herself so Bernice can escape. the Doctor sent Ace to Gallifrey to the Academy to learn Time Lord stuff (very ambiguous) and whilst she was there the universe was getting on. Time passes on Gallifrey but not in the same way. She was even given a pet planet by the Time Lords to look after. It was wiped out by the Daleks and Ace figured it was time to do something about them. She accepted that was her responsibility, to help the Doctor and the universe by riding them of their scourge.
Oh Wicked: Overly apologetic, she thinks that everything that is happening on Skaro is her fault and is willing to sacrifice herself so Bernice can escape. the Doctor sent Ace to Gallifrey to the Academy to learn Time Lord stuff (very ambiguous) and whilst she was there the universe was getting on. Time passes on Gallifrey but not in the same way. She was even given a pet planet by the Time Lords to look after. It was wiped out by the Daleks and Ace figured it was time to do something about them. She accepted that was her responsibility, to help the Doctor and the universe by riding them of their scourge.
Standout Performance: Do you know how many stories I have
spent praising Lisa Bowerman's performances? Go back and look across the
breadth of Bernice Summerfield tales and see how often I pick her out as the
highlight of each story. Throughout The Lights of Skaro Bowerman is practically
narrating the adventure and she does an awesome job of it, showing the many
shades of the character that put her name on the map. Whilst I always enjoy it
when Benny is facetious in the face of great danger, it is when she is truly
frightened and desperate that Bowerman does her best work and there are plenty
of opportunities for her to strut her stuff here. Still on top after all these
years.
Sparkling Dialogue: 'Once more the lights of Skaro blaze out
across the universe!'
'I'm going to walk out of here and live. That's the worst
insult you can give a Dalek.'
'I could have been the Dalek who killed your mother!'
'Daleks don't leave behind a history, just a scar upon the
universe.'
Great Ideas: Daleks are single minded, determined and ruthless. They were created purely to survive and that is why they always do. A city that grew up from the ruins of the Kaled bunker and turned into a giant silver cancer that spread of the jungle of Skaro. Time is still out of whack on Skaro and so it is an ideal opportunity to place Bernice in the unique position of seeing the planet at various stages of its development and to walk through the events of several Doctor Who stories set on the planet. It is a unique idea and one that is exploited to the full with director Scott Handcock having a masterful control over the sound effects so a seasoned Doctor Who fan knows precisely where and when each period is. What a strange thing the Daleks are; one eye, one sucker and a little stubby gun. They look a little silly and yet they are the most terrifying and ruthless creatures in the universe. Bernice visits the period of the first Dalek story, Skaro's early days when there was testing with radiation drugs that drove some of them insane. We also visit the time of Evil of the Daleks where the Dalek Emperor lies dead like the spider in the middle of a web after the civil war. The Emperor: the most evil member of the most evil race that the universe ever came up with. He's the only Dalek who is allowed to think, making the others stupid nasty children playing with guns. The time lock dragged the ghosts from Skaro's history, plucked them out for a brief second of life and death. Including Klinus. He was a Kaled, not a Thal and he was one of the first Daleks. To get this close to one of the innocents that was mutated and turned into a Dalek is a rare scare in Doctor Who. It reminds me of the family who lost a member to the first Cybermen in Spare Parts. Daleks don't have heroes, just a long list of battles fought. All they feel is fear and pain, that's why they don't talk, only scream. I love all the discussion about how the Daleks came to be and the argument for and against creating such a despicable weapon. If you have a race that you despise and you want to wipe them off the face of the planet then you could justify the most heinous of weapons to rid yourself of them. And Goss goes some way to getting into that mindset. The secret of turning metal into gold? Hints of Evil of the Daleks. Ace brought with her an Omega device to Skaro and planned to wipe out the Daleks for good and winding up causing this mess in the first place. Breaking the time lock and causing the time jumps, all her fault because she tried to play Time Lord and she didn't have the skills. Bernice acknowledges that the Daleks were once people but something huge infected their lives and changed their destiny for good: war.
Great Ideas: Daleks are single minded, determined and ruthless. They were created purely to survive and that is why they always do. A city that grew up from the ruins of the Kaled bunker and turned into a giant silver cancer that spread of the jungle of Skaro. Time is still out of whack on Skaro and so it is an ideal opportunity to place Bernice in the unique position of seeing the planet at various stages of its development and to walk through the events of several Doctor Who stories set on the planet. It is a unique idea and one that is exploited to the full with director Scott Handcock having a masterful control over the sound effects so a seasoned Doctor Who fan knows precisely where and when each period is. What a strange thing the Daleks are; one eye, one sucker and a little stubby gun. They look a little silly and yet they are the most terrifying and ruthless creatures in the universe. Bernice visits the period of the first Dalek story, Skaro's early days when there was testing with radiation drugs that drove some of them insane. We also visit the time of Evil of the Daleks where the Dalek Emperor lies dead like the spider in the middle of a web after the civil war. The Emperor: the most evil member of the most evil race that the universe ever came up with. He's the only Dalek who is allowed to think, making the others stupid nasty children playing with guns. The time lock dragged the ghosts from Skaro's history, plucked them out for a brief second of life and death. Including Klinus. He was a Kaled, not a Thal and he was one of the first Daleks. To get this close to one of the innocents that was mutated and turned into a Dalek is a rare scare in Doctor Who. It reminds me of the family who lost a member to the first Cybermen in Spare Parts. Daleks don't have heroes, just a long list of battles fought. All they feel is fear and pain, that's why they don't talk, only scream. I love all the discussion about how the Daleks came to be and the argument for and against creating such a despicable weapon. If you have a race that you despise and you want to wipe them off the face of the planet then you could justify the most heinous of weapons to rid yourself of them. And Goss goes some way to getting into that mindset. The secret of turning metal into gold? Hints of Evil of the Daleks. Ace brought with her an Omega device to Skaro and planned to wipe out the Daleks for good and winding up causing this mess in the first place. Breaking the time lock and causing the time jumps, all her fault because she tried to play Time Lord and she didn't have the skills. Bernice acknowledges that the Daleks were once people but something huge infected their lives and changed their destiny for good: war.
Audio Landscape: Dalek heartbeat, movement and extermination
blasts, city doors, a lift, a sucky Dalek mutant squelching across the floor,
the struggling Dalek city,
Isn't it Odd: The use of Davros is so sparingly in this
adventure that a cynical person might be inclined to think that he was used
purely to be able to put his voice in the trailer for the box set and entice
more people to buy it. Cynical people, mind, not me. Sophie Aldred is
dreadfully melodramatic at times, as per usual. Sylvester McCoy seems to have
sorted his shit out since The Revolution.
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