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Tuesday, 28 June 2022

Shadow of the Sun written by Robert Valentine and directed by Nicholas Briggs



This story in a nutshell: After an accident, the TARDIS lands on a luxury star-liner. Leaving their ship to repair itself, the Doctor, Leela and K9 find themselves facing a great terror: mingling at a cocktail party. Something seems awry behind the pleasantries, however. Guests are going missing, and equipment is breaking down. When the Doctor investigates further he discovers that the star-liner is literally on course for disaster. But no-one seems surprised by this information, still less troubled. What’s going on? And can the Doctor and his friends save everyone... when nobody wants to be saved?

Teeth and Curls: The Doctor dares to suggest that his middle is prudence. What a nerve. Ironically, Tom Baker is at his most confident in the early stages of the story (and that is very confident indeed) until he walks into a catch-22 situation. His friends are a terrible nuisance and he likes to think that they take after him. There's a wonderful moment where the Doctor pretends to have something profound to say...just to give Leela enough to attack the focus of his attention. 

Noble Savage: Leela flatters the Doctor by suggesting that when she first met him that she wanted to travel with him because he was a great and wise man...that frequently needed saving. Louise Jameson is precisely the actress you want to give a speech about the pointlessness of sacrificing yourself and she imbues her words with real emotion and desperation. The fact that she gets through to two people is the result of the earnestness of Leela's proclamation. 

Standout Performance: A huge round of applause for the prolific Barnaby Edwards, who manages to take ahold of what could have been a thankless part (the autopilot of the ship) and twists it in the most sinister character in the story. And that is a story with a Death Cult and an insane cult leader. His impassive voice (loaded with sarcasm, at times) reminds me of the Robots of Death. He'll open an airlock and suck you into space but he'll be incredibly polite while he does so. 

Great Ideas: Cruising the solar system at some point in the 26th Century, not even the Doctor could have perceived why this cruiser is sheltering in the shadow of the sun. He's convinced this is a place of drama, celebration and living it up...but not that they are have one last galactic knees up before burning to a crisp and ascending to a higher plane. Doctor Who tackling a suicide cult is not the sort of real life horror that Big Finish has the nuts to dive into these days and I admire the audacity of inserting the ebullient fourth Doctor into a story where the people he is trying to save don't want him to do that. There was a sick feeling in my gut early on when I realised that if even he does manage to save the day, he wasn't going to thanked for it. Does he have the right to involve himself in what is effectively a religious exercise where all the people involved are perfectly content to die? Leela is a great choice for this story too, because she is manipulated into a situation where she has to beg people to want to live (which isn't her usual style at all). The Helios Society believed that the Earth's nearest star contained a habitable paradise. 

Standout Scene: In a gloriously unexpected moment, the Doctor declares that the ship is heading into the sun and that within the hour they will all be dead. When he makes melodramatic portents of doom like that he isn't usually greeted with utter indifference as he learns that everybody is very well aware of the fact, and they welcome it. His words are twisted from a warning into the portent of a glorious future. I loved the cliffhanger too; which is very much a take on the 'Dead men do not require oxygen' mould but it is still a glorious moment of jeopardy as Leela faces ejection for espousing anti-Heliotopian sentiments. Having to realise the moment when the disaster hits, with all the accompanying screaming and frying, isn't what I expected to be listening to on a pleasant Sunday afternoon. 

What the Writer Said: My thinking behind writing SHADOW OF THE SUN was basically to comment on the whole 'my opinions are as good as your facts' thing. It was conceived post-Brexit and pre-Covid, and while you can read either situation into the story, initially my thinking was more along the lines of the Flat Earth movement (although Brexit does play into it with the character of disaster-profiteer, Hix). The members of the Helios Society have decided to test their belief that the Sun is a habitable paradise by flying a spaceship into it. In a religious context, what they'd be doing is testing God – and I understand gods frown on that – but in a secular sense it's simply madness, a disagreement with reality which they can only lose. And that's an interesting situation for the Doctor, Leela and K9 to wander into!

Result: Shadow of the Sun uses the one hour format of the fourth Doctor adventures to fantastic effect with the story effectively having four quarter hour segments that continually push the story along in a very engaging way. It opens with the Doctor and Leela visiting a spaceship and crashing a party and it looks as though this is going to go the way of an amiable Graeme Williams story before Robert Valentine hits with a dark twist that pivots the story off into much more insidious territory. Once the danger has been established, it is a race against to try and stop the catastrophe and when it is clear that that wont happen it is all about the Doctor and Leela salvaging as much from the situation as they can. The story stops to ponder on the very sinister idea of a Death Cult and the sort of faith you need to engage with to give up your life so freely and I really appreciated the thoughtful ending where there are no easy answers about the catastrophe that has occurred. Or even if those who did believe they were going to a better place were wrong. It's all tied up in a fine production with some terrific sound design and a score that veers between sombre and derring do depending on the tone of the scene. It's not many writers that would dare to let Tom Baker's Doctor exit the story feeling defeated by his perceived failure but it goes to show that there are still fresh avenues to take this incarnation down. If all this sounds dreadfully serious then I have misled you. It's a punchy, pacy hour with Tom at his height and more substance than I have come to expect from these two parters. Given this was the first story recorded remotely, it is a complete success story, and it paved the way for Big Finish to continue their work during a period where they couldn't get the actors to the studios. Pioneering: 8/10

Monday, 20 June 2022

The Rotting Deep written by Jacqueline Rayner and directed by Helen Goldwyn



What's it About: A mysterious SOS summons the Doctor and Mel to an oil rig in the North Sea where a dwindling group of survivors awaits rescue from a lethal menace. One of their number is Hebe Harrison, a wheelchair-using marine biologist who is definitely more than she seems. Can our heroes escape the rig? And just what is killing off the rig's beleaguered crew?

Softer Six: We're at a point where the sixth Doctor and Mel travelling together for Big Finish is old hat and yet it still feels like a rewarding and exciting thing to me. I adore their chemistry; gently ribbing and intimate and they both have a real lust for adventure. The Doctor quotes Rosetti and a quote never sounds more poetic than in Colin Baker's plummy tones. Even better, he makes an Are You Being Served? gag. Jac Rayner really understands how to make this Doctor sing but given she was largely responsible for his second wind on audio (both The Marian Conspiracy and Dr Who and the Pirates feature some of his best ever characterisation) that isn't surprising.  The Doctor's coat reminds Hebe of a beautifully coloured sea slug (but to get to that lovely observation with have to endure the dreadful Ghostbuster gag: 'You aint afraid of no coat!'). Jac Rayner remembers to give the sixth Doctor some bite and in a pretty tense moment he screams at one of the guest characters that all they think about is themselves. He decides that he likes Hebe very quickly, and admires her smarts. The Doctor does pause before granting Hebe access to their adventures but it's clear he has been pretty bewitched by her already. 

The Intergalactic Bush: Mel is a great character to pair up with Hebe because she is precisely the sort of ultra polite sort that will walk on tiptoes around somebody in a wheelchair trying desperately not to offend them. Hebe bursts that bubble straight away by having a go and then instantly apologising and immediately there is a relaxed chemistry between the pair. Mel is shat on by a bunch of seagulls, which provides a moments relief. She manages to get on her high horse with everybody else on the rig, and nobody does moral righteousness than Melanie Jane Bush! Let's hope that Hebe doesn't call Mel Melanie Mel all the time - the last thing we need is another The Doctor in the Tardy Box. I remember reading that Bonnie Langford didn't want Mel to scream on audio but clearly she has changed her mind...and clearly Langford is a little more tentative about doing so because her voice doesn't have the welly it used to. It does allow for a wonderful gag about Mel's 'noise' being worse than the monster of the week. She has been stung by a jellyfish, it is completely justified. 

Newbie: Hebe, like the shrub. The reason that everybody is talking about this new set is fresh new companion Hebe and whilst I wouldn't want to be the person that says a companion has a USP, they have chosen to represent a disabled character in the TARDIS, which comes with many interesting logistical and creative possibilities. At first I feared that Hebe would be only about the wheelchair, which I have heard some people complain that she is, but if you put yourself in the mind of somebody who cannot walk I can only imagine that that would be on your mind predominantly. I thought it was handled with great sensitivity here, and whilst Hebe has something of a chip on her shoulder at first, she soon realises that she is in the hands of people she can trust and in an all important moment (one of the sixth Doctor's best on audio, I would go as far to say) he asks her to unburden herself of anger in a quite beautiful scene. She doesn't want anyone making decisions for her and it sounds like that has been happening for her entire life. As a child she was annoyed about the story of The Little Mermaid but it wasn't because she did a deal for a pair of legs but rather because she gave up the wondrous world under the sea to explore ('She gave it all up for some stupid Prince!'). It began Hebe's obsession with marine life, and subsequently her career. She doesn't run away, in any definition of the word run. When she was at university she created a group called the Lame Ducks, re-claiming the slur and owning it. They were united in their imperfections. 

Audio Landscape: My partner and I listened to this story on the seafront at Eastbourne, literally the perfect environment for this kind of sea-based story and the scenes of attacking squawking gulls left us looking overhead just in case the swarms in the sky were coming in for the attack.

Standout Performance: I realise Mandy Simmonds' Skye is supposed to be one reef short of a barnacle and under a great deal of strain but her insane laughter in episode two and hysterical breakdown stretch credulity to the limit. When her excuse for such murderous behaviour is because she loves the Earth more than anybody else, you know you are on pretty shaken ground with the character. 'Mother Gaia calls me home!' She couldn't have died soon enough. 

Sparkling Dialogue: 'Passion for the wonders of this planet is not something you need to apologise for.'
'I think you've fought very hard to be angry because angry is better than scared, or patronised, or infantilised. And I like anger. Anger can change the world. But would you allow me, and Mel too, to take that burden from you, just for a moment.'    

Great Ideas: How glorious that the SOS that we hear at the beginning of the story is so satisfyingly answered at the end of the story. I was wondering if this would be a mystery that would go unsolved but what Rayner does instead is tie the answer into a gloriously warm piece of nostalgia featuring an old favourite of the Big Finish world. It's beautiful how the two scenes bookend the story giving it a real sense of structure.

Isn't it Odd: I'm not sure that any of the guest characters manage to squeeze out of the caricature mould; being either obnoxious, bullying, frightened or morally explosive. Sometimes they were all within one scene. I couldn't remember anybody's name after my first listen, and I was unconvinced that they were genuinely in any peril because the tone of the performances was so heightened. The story also suffers from being quite a simple narrative but a pretty obscure threat until the last minute. At first I thought it was the seagulls, then the barnacles, then the jellyfish...before it turned out that the antagonist this week is the water itself. Which wouldn't be a problem if we hadn't already done that in the much scarier Waters of Mars in the New Series. 

Standout Scene: The scariest scene comes when Hebe is at the hands of the water when the fame hunter of the gang drinks some and is taken over and he taunts her viciously over her disability and threatens to make her the victim of his recording of the ordeal. It's really rather revolting. 

Result: The setting is perfect for a good old fashioned creepy base under siege story. That isn't quite what we get because the guest performances err on the side of comical, which occasionally takes you outside the action but there is certainly enough plot here to pass an hour amiably. The sound design is very strong and gives you an immediate sense of place. The focus is new companion Hebe, and she is given a strong introduction (although not as strong as Rayner gave Evelyn) because the story puts her front and centre and much like Russell T Davies does with Rose, she isn't always entirely likeable. There's a bit of ice to thaw with this character and fortunately the Doctor is at his most charming and that has begun already and by the end of the story they have reached an understanding and a commitment to each other. I liked her very much, not despite her occasional frostiness but because of it because I like it when we get to see all shades of a character. It's very easy to make somebody all smiles and gushing (actually that's Mel) but to offer up somebody this rounded in an hour is a real achievement. A story like The Rotting Deep sounds like it might dripping with horrific incident but instead this is quite a light affair, with one or two violent moments. As an introduction to Hebe it hits it's ambition but as a story in it's own right it suffers from the same problem I find with so many hour long Big Finish stories these days, it's passable, unambitious fare. This gets an extra point just for the love letter to Evelyn Smythe. Because Big Finish can't mention her enough, and it gets a beautiful reaction out of Colin Baker: 7/10

Sunday, 5 June 2022

The Mind of the Hodiac written by Russell T. Davies and Scott Handcock and directed by Scott Handcock


What's it About:
In the depths of space, the mysterious Hodiac is manipulating the Galactic Stock Exchange to raise money. His aim? To hire mercenaries for a deadly quest across the stars. Meanwhile, on Earth, an ordinary British family is plagued by a series of psychic events. The one thing connecting these events is a magnificent patchwork coat - which just so happens to belong to the Doctor! 

Softer Six: The Doctor is happily reading The Wind in the Willows because it does no harm to keep in touch with a little magic. Mel says there is a good bit of Toad in the Doctor; pioneering, devil-may-care, reckless, the adventurous spirit, a pain...never day die. Having been brought up on The Wind in the Willows and Doctor Who, I can definitely see the parallel. Toad (as irritating as he was to his friends) was always my favourite character. There's a glorious moment when the scanner opens and the Doctor cries that all of time and space is the open road and there's to explore. It's the sort of material I would have loved to have seen Colin get whilst he was on television. I'm not sure how anyone can possibly object to the sixth Doctor quoting literature, since he was doing that ever since he stepped out of the TARDIS on Jaconda. He doesn't like not understanding things and rather petulantly states that when that happens it isn't fair. I rather love his proud exclamation that he is going to leave their destination up to the TARDIS (as if that isn't what happens all the time anyway). The Doctor gets a lovely moment when he gets to bamboozle a guard which reminded me of McCoy in Dragonfire but the guard is given lovely touches of RTD characterisation that made it sing. 

The Great Ginge: If the Doctor is Mr Toad, that makes Mel Ratty. The Doctor attempts to give an entirely nonsensical explanation for what is going on in the TARDIS and Mel, as curt as ever, calls him out on it. There's a lovely warmth between the two of them and there is no sense that Mel doesn't trust the Doctor completely. That's why she is so appalled when starts behaving in a disreputable manner when they reach the family home. Mel is delighted to be back in a suburban setting after a series of showy and colourful adventures, you get the sense that she yearns for a bit of normality after waltzing around the universe with the most bombastic of Doctors. Often Mel is used as an avatar to express how appalling people are behaving ('you're despicable!') but for once it is entirely justified when she cannot comprehend how Mrs Maitland has been convinced by Mrs Chinn that the horrors that have beset her household are the work of God punishing her for breaking her matrimonial vows. In a wonderful moment of comedy, Mel gets to impersonate a religious zealot and it is exactly the sort of fun that Bonnie Langford should have been having on TV. Pairing up Mel with a child feels fresh and fun, she gets to be protective and a little petulant when dealing with an emotional adolescent. 

Standout Performance: If there's one thing that you can guarantee with a Doctor Who story on television or audio and that is if Annette Badland is involved you are bound to have a grand time with her scenes. She gets to chew the microphone outrageously as the preposterous and irresponsible Mrs Chinn. I'm still not entirely sure the story needs the psychic investigation subplot but the story would be much less entertaining without Badland's presence. This is season seventeen fabulous, every line a delight. 'I smell...a discovery!' 'Let's not stand around like grinning ninnies!' Because this is such a grotesquely characterised villain (I say villain because she behaves appallingly whilst never quite reaching for world domination) you can't help but detect strong traces of RTD's anti-religious sentiments. Everything terrible thing she does is to reach out touch a higher power. She's both absurdly comic and slightly terrifying in that respect. This is obviously considered something of a prestige Big Finish release and so they pulled out all the stops and with no less than sixteen actors involved, this is as full cast as these stories get. T'Nia Miller is the standout draw and I was surprised that her part felt a little underwritten but just made Sutara Gayle's Nan standout all the more. Gayle really sells the emotional material. What could have been an agonising celebration of family above all else becomes something quietly profound as she plays the age-old Hodiac with no regrets of the life that she has made for herself on the Earth.  

Sparkling Dialogue: 'Some people call it the Music of the Spheres' 'Well it's certainly not the Archers.' 

Great Ideas: Davies is making political, social and economical points even at this point of his career. The line about a worker being 'devalued' is something that I heard myself bandied around. The idea that you can be boiled down to a number which determines your value is terrifying. Coming from a writer that draws upon the personal strengths and weaknesses of all his characters and doesn't criticise them for it, this has to be a deliberate point about the clinical appraisal system of the executive world. The Hodiac is reaching across the stars for a woman, described as 'like a sister, and something more.' Searching, and determined to never give up. Was I the only person who made a connection between the institute of the psychic science (on the thirteen floor, ahem) and BURPS from The Sarah Jane Adventures. After their father left, things in the Miller household started going wrong, things moving and going missing and then as time went on it became more insistent. Mrs Chinn gets in touch because she wants to pay Mrs Miller to investigate the psychic phenomena in their family. The Hodiac aspects are born to different worlds; the male and the female, they adopt an appropriate form, live out their lives and then the cycle begins again. The Hodiac is never together, that is how it thrives. Separate, experiencing different cultures. One of the aspects has become arrogant and frightened, and he is clinging to this existence and wants to cheat death by becoming God. He wants to find the aspect living on the Earth, purge everything that makes her human and force her to feel his love. It's an intriguing layer of SF concepts but I'm not entirely sure I completely understood what the point of the Hodiac was, except to exist to allow Nan to stress the value of the family that you create rather than the family you are born into. Perhaps that is enough. With Russell, I am used to a great thematic unification of ideas but the SF elements here are merely a catalyst to explore the characters. It's played for comedy, but if you were the right way inclined you could say that the Hodiac arriving on the Earth resembles a manifestation of God. 

Isn't it Odd: 'Big Finish; for the love of stories...' It's a bizarre catchphrase, isn't it? 'We love stories' was a bit on the nose but it was sharp, punchy and to the point. This offshoot declaration of romance for storytelling lacks the same kind of impact. It's a bit...twee, and it doesn't set these stories off on the right foot. It's time to rename the company. 'For the satisfaction of Finishing Big.' The first episode could easily be half the length with the amount of plot it has to offer and could get the family and the Doctor and Mel to the Bechman Centre in a handful of scenes. It would lose some of its rich characterisation but it would certainly get to the point a lot quicker. The discourse on capital feels fitting in the mid eighties ('This is it! The Day of the Middle Man!') but there is a great deal of running time given over to the acquisition of the Tungsten Warriors that doesn't really go anywhere. I'm so used to RTD getting to the point with a dense single part script these days that this does feel authentically...relaxed in its pacing. Things step up a gear in the second episode but getting there might try some people who aren't enamoured with The Wind in the Willows' patience. The cliffhanger (Mel screaming!) is very funny as realised. 

Standout Scene: The story makes a lot of noise about the family members but keeps Nan in the shadows for the most part and so I should have figured that she was going to have a pivotal role in the story. However, when the moment comes and the Doctor calls her out as the other aspect of the Hodiac I was taken by surprise (my other half wasn't, so I can only imagine that is me not paying enough attention). It's a fantastic moment too, one of those astonishingly gentle scenes where the sixth Doctor gets to be empathetic and sensitive and reach out. Baker sparkles. 

Result: Conceptually, this is very exciting for me. Russell T. Davies is my favourite Doctor Who writer and Sixie has always been my favourite Doctor and so the idea of bringing these two greats together in a Big Finish adventure is very enticing. A script written by the man who would eventually reshape what Doctor Who can do written in the mid-eighties before his career had taken of is such a tasty peek into the developing creative mind of a genius. What transpires is a fascinating hybrid of what was and what is but with an emphasis on the latter rather than indulging the former. The Doctor and Mel take an age to enter the story (much like Revelation of the Daleks they don't impact the larger narrative until the end of episode one) but rather than waste time with pointless bickering scenes, Davies uses this as an opportunity to explore their relationship and to give the Doctor a chance to wax lyrical on the wonderful absurdities of his lifestyle. Very New Series. There's a slightly cheesy science fiction plot about a lifeform that has been split across several worlds wanting to be brought together (not a million miles away from the high concept stories of season 20) but that is married to a touching and heartbreaking treatise on family and the emotional bond that transcends species. We've even got space mercenaries stomping about the place, but that's offset with a wonderfully theatrical turn from the ever reliable Annette Badland as the doctrinaire, Mrs Chinn. Even the Doctor's coat has a plot purpose rather than a representation of ghoulish eighties garishness. It's a mishmash of classic and new with scenes that would have felt completely out of place in Saward era Who (the domestic drama that exudes warmth and genuine emotion) but would have pre-dated precisely where the show was about to head in the Cartmel era and beyond. He would have paved the way once again. The fusion of all these elements doesn't sit completely easy and ultimately this quite a simple story about a being that is trying to unify itself that could have been told in a hour without the complications of the galactic stock exchange, psychic investigations and the like but the whole piece is put together with such care that it is a pretty smooth listen as a whole. I especially liked the score, which stood out in a way that little music does for Big Finish these days. Colin Baker hasn't been written this well for a while now and he responds extremely favourably to the material, and his chemistry with Bonnie Langford is so effortless at this point it is a joy to hear them being written for with such love of the characters. The Mind of the Hodiac lacks the weight and drama of Damaged Goods but it is a satisfying curiosity and there were scenes in the last episode that left me with a lump in my throat in the way that only a good Russell T. Davies story can. Props to Scott Handock for taking on the mantle and delivering such an enjoyable listen. I'd pay just to hear Colin Baker say 'Poop Poop!': 8/10