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Monday, 31 October 2022
Lady Christina Series One
Sunday, 30 October 2022
Graceless Series One
Monday, 24 October 2022
Dalek Universe 2
Vienna Series Two
Tuesday, 18 October 2022
Torchwood One: Before the Fall
Torchwood: Believe
Classic Series, New Monsters: The Stuff of Nightmares
The House that Hoxx Built by Tim Foley: Genuinely unsettling, and given I thought this was going to be the weakest of the set, imagine my surprise when it turned out to be my favourite? What you have here is two hoary old clichés, smart technology and a haunted house and it merges the two together with a massive sprinkling of characterisation that makes the whole piece sing. Who would have thought a carbon clone of The Moxx of Balhoon would transpire to be one of the more likable guest characters we have had in a while? And brought to life by Dan Starkey you have no sign that Strax is anywhere to be seen. Tim Trelor and Sadie Miller really impressed me too; I was listening to this by candlelight in the garden and kept grabbing my partners hand every time there were serious echoes of the third Doctor and Sarah. I think his hand was sore by the end. There's slight hints that the Doctor's time is coming to an end but like Hartnell in his last gasp of brilliance, Treloar still plays him with maximum charm and moral outrage. He's brilliant, and I could absolutely believe this was season eleven team. Massive kudos for that. Barnaby Edwards is here so the atmospherics are on point (this is the man who gave us The Chimes of Midnight) and the story unfolds with plenty of spooky incident, explanations and an uplifting climax. I came away feeling I had listened to one of the most refreshingly unpretentious and original horror tales from Big Finish in some time: 9/10
The Tivolian Who Knew Too Much by Robert Valentine: I've never really rated the Tivoli as an alien race; the concept is fun enough but this is the sort of thing that Douglas Adams would throw away with a devastatingly witty line and what has happened is that we've a handful of stories that labour the point. So again, big surprise that Rob Valentine (who is emerging as a real find from Big Finish) manages to forge a gorgeous character out of this premise and the simple but sunny idea that Timble Feebis just wants to have a holiday away from alien invasions. He wants no part in this madcap caper in Rome that the Doctor and Leela keep dragging him into, has no desire to be a hero of any kind and tries to escape their dangerous clutches as much as possible. It's a star turn from Robert Daws as Timble, who gets to go on a great journey and discover the joy of finding his confidence and ability. That's the character work running through this like a stick of rock but the periphery elements are just as bubbly too. A terrific location (I want every alien invasion to come to Rome from now on), the Doctor and Leela at their most irreverent as they relax into this pacy comic adventure and some glorious stereotypical gangsters. There is a serious side to this story, involving potential mass murder and enslavement, but what I really took away from this story was the pleasure and wit of the escapade and that Tom Baker seemed to be having the time of his life. And you can't help but be dragged along with that: 8/10
Together in Eclectic Dreams by Roy Gill: Big Finish isn't above dropping a companion in our lap without explanation (and strangely it seems to be the sixth Doctor that is gaining friends by the bucket load, hence Gill's clever use of the same idea here) and so I was prepared to accept that she was the genuine article as long as she was characterised robustly. She was, and yet Mark wasn't convinced at all. Given this story is about Dream Crabs, guess which one of us ended up with egg on our faces? The thing that you would imagine this story would be built around - the sixth and eighth Doctors meeting - barely registers and I think this is deliberate because the idea of multi Doctors has been flogged to death by now. It's a perfectly fun scene that is part of the larger story. Doing these 'what is real and what is flimflam?' stories are tenapenny these days and so you have to either go for a brilliantly constructed script (which Moffat does with Last Christmas) or really attempt to subdue your audience with the freakishness of the unreality, which both Gill and director Barnaby Edwards really achieve here. I was never sure from scene to scene what was real and what wasn't and more disturbing concepts dripped into the story and the reactions of the cast were disturbingly accurate and discomforting. Like the third Doctor tale I got the sense that this was at the end of the Doctor's life and so being handed one last adventure by the crabs with a kind and loyal friend was rather touching. This was all atmosphere and weirdness but I thought the entire cast acquitted themselves beautifully: 8/10
If I Should Die Before I Wake by John Dorney: This is the celebrated story in the set and I have confession to make - I fell asleep while listening to this. Ironically when it is about the power of storytelling and dreams. That is no way an a deprecation of this tale, which is a typically genius script from John Dorney, but just that my memories of this tale are scattershot because I have heard it in pieces (going back to listen to what I missed after I listened to the end when I woke up). I can say this; it's like Paul McGann and India Fisher have never been away and this is back to their series two charisma, driving the story with the sheer force of their personality. The dialogue is thick and fast and Dorney manages to take the idea of telling a narrative and pick it apart like the master craftsman that he is. At first the Doctor is in control of the story that he is telling and making the smart remarks but slowly Charley takes the reigns off him, picking apart the details and taking up the mantle. How the script leaps back and forth between the two of them is ingenious because it shows precisely how each character individually improvises within a story that they are telling but is running away and confounding them. I can only think of a few times where a script has self consciously thrown the limelight on the differences between two characters, their individual strengths and concluded that they absolutely belong together. The X-Files' Bad Blood comes to mind. If I'm making this sound like a dry intellectual piece then never fear, this is amalgamation of storytelling tropes drawn together with verve and conjured up vividly by Barnaby Edwards (perhaps the greatest contributor to this incredible set of tales) that leaves you feeling you've been on a hell of a ride. Top notch language at play here: 9/10
Monday, 17 October 2022
UNIT: Extinction
Vienna Series One
Sunday, 16 October 2022
Purity Undreamed
Dalek Universe 1
The Sixth Doctor and Peri Volume One
Like by Jacqueline Rayner: What a superb concept, cherry picked straight from the Black Mirror episode Nosedive and given a Doctor Who spin. The aliens in danger giving the Doctor's actions a sense of immediacy reminded me of A Christmas Carol, but it does mean that we are always aware of the countdown as he tries to convince a society of social media obsessed drones to commit an altruistic act. Colin Baker and Nicola Bryant are having an absolute ball with this acidly funny script - one of Jac Rayner's best (and that is saying something) - with a smart and silly reading of the whole endorsement through likes idea. When it is broken down like this (and I don't think any of us has been immune over the years) it does seem absolutely absurd to take so much worth from other people pressing a button. To create a society that builds its hierarchy out of social media status is brilliant. To drop the Doctor, who doesn't give a fig about such things and watch him flounder, is hilarious. To have Peri, who understands how to manipulate the system, out think this society is genius. The story is intercut with hilarious ads and how the Yobulans are absorbed into this world says even more about how we mock and cajole things we don't understand to make them safe. I was very impressed with this story. It could have been worthy (because how it scathingly pulls apart online culture is very worth listening) but instead it is laugh a minute: 9/10
The Vanity Trap by Stuart Manning: A surprise win that I wasn't convinced about at all in the first third. It felt like this was going to be 'the Doctor and Peri visit Hollywood' with all the chuckles and shallowness that comes with that. Instead it becomes a dark SF tale and a very decent character piece, taking the vain and OTT character Myrna Kendall and doing some surprising and thoughtful things with her. Sarah Douglas gives a brilliant turn and how the time shenanigans converge around her means that we get to see her at various stages of her life, and the life she might have led. Halfway through it becomes Sapphire and Steel in Hollywood, and that is a far more enticing prospect. Props to the direction, which means the complicated story never loses you, and for the script that keeps the 'vanity is a weakness' concept at its heart but never falls into the trap of becoming a rip off of The Vanity Trap by Paul Magrs. Again, Sixie and Peri are superb. This set really does highlight them at their best: 8/10
Conflict Theory by Nev Fountain: An insane script, appropriately so, from the ever-reliable Nev Fountain. You know you're going to get something a little different and quirky from this writer but this time he has outdone himself by taking a Doctor Who story and turning it on it's head so 90% of what we think we are listening isn't quite what we think at all. It's also a brilliant summation of the sixth Doctor and Peri's relationship, with some surprisingly dark and freakish things to say about this initially toxic but ultimately loving friendship. There were moments where I thought they were both acting entirely out of character but so convincing was the psychology in play that I wondered if we were genuinely going to a place where the Doctor would go to extraordinary lengths to protect Peri, and that Peri might actually have to kill the Doctor. The setting is genius; a whole bunch of robotic Freud's divvying out cod psychology to a bunch of automated neuroses and the whole thing becomes a massive endorsement of the Doctor/Peri pairing as they ultimately take down a facility that has caused evil to spread into the universe. Brilliant turns from Colin Baker and Nicola Bryant (again), more excellent direction and an atmosphere of disquiet, and ultimately triumph. I loved this: 9/10