Wednesday, 12 December 2012

Private Enemy No.1 written by Tony Lee and directed by Gary Russell

What’s it about: The Great Leader is dead… Long live the Great Leader! Atlantis is in disarray. The Historians are hiding Bernice, Leonidas and Ruth within their safe house – but the world is changing more than they could have ever imagined. People are being erased from existence, their memories wiped clean and replaced with those of others. Entire buildings are altering, times are changing… and the Hierophants are on the move. Can Bernice and her friends save Atlantis from the end of existence? Or will they too be assimilated?

Archeological Adventuress: ‘One by one I’ve ruined you all…’ As the range starts to remind us of the universe that we left behind at Year Zero, Private Enemy No.1 does something fiendishly clever with Benny that sees her dismiss this new setting and make getting back to her time and her son her priority. The series is trying to cut its ties with the past and concentrate on original storytelling and characters thus Bernice is given the choice to literally become somebody else and build a permanent wall between her and her old life and return things to their factory settings as they were at the beginning of this box set. Its an intriguing idea but I cannot imagine a wealth of stories bleeding from the Atlantis setting and its not as if Benny would ever give up searching for her son. She was always going to reject this proposal but it’s a choice that works in terms of character and plotting, proving there is some dramatic mileage in the Atlantis arrangement. The chemistry that was apparent between Bernice and Leonidas in The Temple of Questions is given more consideration and this is the point where she actually has the conversation about whether she is ready to move on a trust her heart other men again. I actually stifled laughter when Benny stormed up to the Hierophants to give herself up and they puncture her ego with one move by telling her they don’t want to arrest her. She has the effect of making people wither deliriously happy or terrified beyond belief with little middle ground, so its an extreme emotional reaction for good or for ill. Benny’s brain is like a sieve and she is remembering events as selectively as other people (she has no recollection of ever talking to Jack before despite the fact that he appeared in the last two adventures). When she first arrived on Atlantis all she wanted was to find something familiar to guide her home but since she has hooked up with Ruth and Leo she feels as though she belongs. And that scares her. When she gets close to people it usually means pain for both parties. As chat up lines go, suggesting that they have to make every second count because they don’t when reality will alter and they’ll forget that they’ve ever met is a pretty convincing one on Leo’s part. Bernice has no more fight left in her at the climax, she’s practically suicidal as the world ends around her and she has no way of holding it back. Its strikingly done and leaves you with the rare feeling that things might not work out this time.

Priestess: With Ruth and Leo now established it feels like Bernice has good fighting team behind her now and one that has adjusted to living their lives looking over their shoulder and always having an escape route planned out. The only point where Ruth doesn’t work is when the writer tries to make her a little too cute (her ‘blah blah blah’ piss take of Benny’s technobabble for example). Being cute is fine (her delightful reaction to a voice being at the end of a phone), being self-consciously cute is just irritating. Ruth offers Benny hope as the world ceases to be, more than earning her a place in her life. They face the end together as the Nothing approaches.

Standout Performance: There are a pair of performances that don’t sit quite right in this story. Rebecca Newman is being asked to play an insidious and menacing presence but her agreeable singsong voice doesn’t really convey much of that. And Chris Johnson despite only delivering the words that have been written for him is far too chirpy as Darian, even when he is being threatened.

Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Tell him he can save the world next time and I’ll go shopping!’
‘Jack be nimble, Jack be quick, dump the bloke and lose the chick’ and ‘Jack to me sounds like a bit of a dick…’
‘That coffee shop just appeared out of nowhere!’ – I don’t know why but that really tickled me!

Great Ideas: Benny is on the hunt for the future in exactly the same way that she usually seeks to expose the past. What this set has done by depriving us of the time period in which we usually see its adventures through is remind us of what an exciting place to tell stories it actually is. That might sound like a backhanded compliment and I suppose it is, Epoch is an engaging story arc for the most part but you cannot completely shift the emphasis of a series without making the audience yearn for what was. This box set was never going to be good enough to make me draw a line under all those marvellous adventures we had in the first eleven and a half seasons of this season and pleasingly it looks as though we making steps back towards that direction. Poseidon is quiet now and the only people who worshipped him have defected, there are subtle hints of a society that is falling to pieces from the outset. Peoples memories/histories are being rewritten on the spot and their friends/family are quickly adjusting to the new timeline that has emerge with it. A new army of protectorates have appeared on the streets – the Hierophants – and they aren’t afraid to throw their weight around to ensure public obedience. They have barcodes tattooed on their faces. The process of communing with the Epoch (and thus having your history rewritten) feels like you are literally melting away. Bernice realises that Atlantis has been as textbook as they come with every cliché thrown in to create the desired effect (is she actually commenting on Russell’s approach there?). The chrome and glass building standing in the middle of Atlantis is a striking edifice and one that provides a alienating reminder that Benny’s universe is waiting to be re-discovered. She examines a contemporary high rise building with all the archaeological prowess that she would a trench at a dig and has to explain the purpose of everything to her two ‘students.’ The answer to why history is banned defied my expectations, its outlawed because it is uncertain and constantly shifting. Nobody can study the past because the past as a concept doesn’t exist in this malleable universe. The idea of two realities smashing together and everybody having is quickly make sense of the resulting jumble of elements is very exciting. That premise could be at the heart of a highly original and densely plotted story if you got the details right (set up two realities vividly and then literally bleed elements from one to another and vice versa). There’s something very Castrovalva about studying a map and highlighting the geographical errors in this reality.

Audio Landscape: Market scenes, seagulls, Mars police helicars, smashing glass, the gravelly voices of the Epoch, phone ringing, lift arriving, knocking, the whirlwind of noise as each time shift takes place, the swirling apocalypse.

Musical Cues: As things get more dramatic and gather momentum so does the soundtrack and Benny and Ruth’s skyline getaway is accompanied by some memorably foot tapping music. I have massive respect for the score during the last scene too which brings events to a climactic finish, wrapping around the audience an unsettling theme whilst the Nothing does the same to Benny and Ruth.

Isn’t it Odd: I’m extremely surprised that with Gary Russell re-emerging in this series (co-inciding with the point where the series begins to feel a bit aimless again after many seasons of tight storytelling since his departure) that he opted for a format that denied the use of continuity (the very premise of Epoch is to give Benny a new start…or at least work towards getting back to her old life). Certainly when he returned to take up the realms of Gallifrey he indulged in continuity overdrive as though as if to sate his appetite for such things after having been away from creative control of a series for so long. Thus it’s a little disappointing to hear a vendor offering blessings at the ‘Temple of Amdo’ (The Underwater Menace) because to this point this fanwank free story arc has been all the fresher for it. Darian is a pretty irritating character, reminding me somewhat of Scrappy Doo the way he itches for approval and adventure. Because some characters can see and understand the changes that are taking place (basically anybody who isn’t Bernice, Ruth and Leo) and others can’t it makes it quite difficult to keep hold of what is real and what isn’t.

Standout Scene: As the story accelerates, so does the Epoch’s meddling and suddenly coffee houses and multiplexes are being conjured out of thin air and being dumped in the middle of an ancient Greek town. Lee shows off his graphic novel roots with this powerful, unforgettable imagery. The climax really gave me goosebumps, the end of the world occurring with a whimper rather than a bang as Bernice and Ruth sing the ‘Skyriders’ theme that has persisted throughout this set and they are consumed by Nothing. Its disturbing that Bernice should be erased from time in such a quiet way and the apocalypse is all the more haunting for being underplayed to such an extent.

Result: Just as Jac Rayner was handed the toughest assignment (the characterful time filler), Tony Lee is awarded the easiest slot of the ‘season’ (the exciting build up to the finale without the necessity of having to write a satisfying climax). There is something very clever going on within the Epoch box set and its only during this story that it starts to make itself apparent – Bernice is usually based in the future and features her unearthing the past but that cliché has been turned on its head. Now she’s been dumped in the (apparent) past and is attempting to unearth the future. The overlapping realities has been done to death in the books (Time Zero-Timeless, with particular reference to The Last Resort) and the audios (the godawful Divergents universe arc) but its an idea I find exciting and has much potential. Cleverly its as things start to shift around her that Bernice starts to put together all the mysteries that have amassed on Atlantis so far and builds a picture of what is taking place. By the end of the story she has found the future again (or rather the future has caught up with her) and Lee has dug up some character drama inherent in the premise when Benny loses her new lover to the Epoch. Its been a slow moving storyline but finally the Epoch arc is reaping its rewards, taking many of the elements from the first two stories and providing some coherence and explanations. Time has literally run out of for Benny as the Nothing sweeps across the city she has come to call home. It’s an abstract ending for a story that has excitingly taken this new setting to pieces and if there are similarities to the climactic scenes of Escaping the Future it has a very different tone to it for that. Stirring stuff, Private Enemy No.1 almost justifies the box set on its own: 9/10

Sunday, 9 December 2012

A little love for the authors of Doctor Who...


All of this week I have been spreading a little love for some of my favourite Doctor Who authors by plucking my favourite stories of theirs and letting them know on Twitter (I’m @docoho)

Day one of my author of the day picks…Jonathan Morris! (you can follow him @jonnymorris1973)

Tucked away in Jago & Litefoot’s series two – The Theatre of Dreams!


A heartbreaking fifth Doctor tale featuring some astonishing characterisation – The Eternal Summer


Jonny Morris out Moffatt’s Moffatt in this superb introductory tale for John Pickard’s Brewster – The Haunting of Thomas Brewster


Due a reprint shortly, a superb debut novel that tells a season 17 novel backwards – The Festival of Death


A witty, imaginative and very funny tribute to Douglas Adams – The Tomorrow Windows



Day two of my ‘author of the day’ picks…Jacqueline Rayner! (you can follow her @GirlFromBlupo)

A fantastic character tale bewitchingly capturing the magic of the Hartnell era – The Transit of Venus


A gorgeous comedy/tragedy with a musical flourish – Dr Who and the Pirates


Terrific characterisation and memorable horror – Wolfsbane


The Last Dodo, a brilliantly funny novel with a great message



Day three of my author of the day picks…Simon Guerrier! (you can follow him @0tralala)

The Cold Equations does something radical and very touching with the Hartnell era


A near perfect Zoe companion chronicles with a killer twist – The Memory Cheats


He whipped the Bernice Summerfield range into shape and departed with this stirring drama – The Wake


Mixing clever concepts, likable characters and a thought provoking ending – The Pirate Loop



Day four of my ‘author of the day’ picks…Justin Richards! (you can follow him @JJCRichards)

Rebooting the EDAs in superb, attention grabbing style – The Burning


Gripping ongoing character threads and fascinating hard science – Time Zero


Meticulously plotted with a magnitude of great ideas – Sometime Never


A Doctor Who Disney adventure with lovely characters and a great steampunk setting, The Ressurection Casket is pure sunshine


Combining Jago, Litefoot, the Doctor & Leela, The Hourglass Killers is dazzling end to season four


My favourite of the 4DAs, its colourful and very funny – The Renaissance Man


David Collings is magnificent in this shuddersome chiller – Litefoot & Sanders



Day five of my ‘author of the day’ picks…Joe Lidster! (you can follow him @joelidster)

Colin Baker & Nicola Bryant shine in an unforgettable homecoming for Peri – The Reaping


Unforgettably creepy and nightmare inducing – Daisy Chain


Hilarious, with a great social commentary – The Final Amendment


Brax is a badass and sets out to prove how much – The Crystal of Cantus


The Mark of the Berserker, The Mad Woman in the Attic & The Nightmare Man – classic SJA all



Day six of my ‘author of the day’ picks…Nicholas Briggs! (you can follow him @BriggsNicholas)

Subverting the tale it is based on in a fascinating way – Robophobia!

Bringing the 8DAs to an unforgettably climax and reducing me to tears – To the Death


Fiendishly scripted with the Daleks at their scheming best and gripping develops for the 6th Doctor and Charley – Patient Zero


A disquieting high concept tale with some very disturbing scenes – The Nowhere Place


A tale told as a scattered jigsaw with some of Big Finish’s strongest dramatic scenes – Creatures of Beauty


A cinematic end to Charley Pollard with some outstandingly vivid soundscapes – Blue Forgotten Planet



The Temple of Questions written by Jacqueline Rayner and directed by Gary Russell

What’s it about: Life can be dangerous when a god’s got it in for you. Bernice and her Historian allies, Ruth and Leonidas, are trying to unearth the truth behind the mysterious world they’re living in. Poseidon, god of the seas, is apparently offering them answers – but only if they play his games. And he’s not playing fair… Bernice’s new family is in danger of being ripped apart by forces that are beyond their understanding. To keep her friends, she might have to lose the games... and her life with them.

Archeological Adventuress: Because she’s always got her nose poked into everything Bernice has already made a name for herself on Atlantis, despite only being around for a short period of time. She’s mistaken for a member of a secret Archeological society (the Sisterhood of the Trowel?). She broaches the subject of Jason after a long time trying to hide the pain of his passing and gets herself in a tangle trying to explain their relationship over the time they knew each other – almost as much as the audience used to experiencing it! The last time Bernice was chatted up (or rather mistaken for a sex robot programmed to perform her masters every whim) she had a terrible time trying to get past the void that Jason left in her life to let go (because she fancied the ass off the man who had hired her). Now it would seem that enough time has passed and her casual flirting with Leo is a promising sign that she is ready to put his memory to rest and move on with her life. Bernice became an archaeologist because she can’t live with all those answered questions – she’s been looking for answers for her entire life. Benny greets the news that she has walked into a trap with all the surprise that she would if somebody told her she likes drink a little too much. She’s been led up the garden path far too many times now to not see the signs. The point where she stumbles is in answering the question of which of her friends has betrayed her but she figures out what we suspected all along. That that question is just another trap. How can they betray her when they don’t even know themselves. Traps within traps… Its loss that Benny, Leo and Ruth share whether it’s a person or their own memory and it’s the answers they seek that means they belong together.

Friend or Foe: Introducing Ruth who doesn’t quite make the impact a new ‘companion’ should but shows a great deal of budding enthusiasm all the same. She’s a little too cute and naïve to be entirely practical to have around but there is the potential for her to grow and mature and certainly by the end of the box set she has come quite a distance from her humble beginnings here. What I really liked about the introduction of Ruth and Leonidas was how the story deliberately exploited the question of whether Bernice could trust either one of them because that is a problem that also comes into play at some point with Benny’s friends (Bev was an art thief out to make a profit, Adrian was a little too lusty for his own good, Jason played around as a matter of course and Braxiatel was in a league of his own…even Peter has proven to be quite untrustworthy when his temper flares). So its quite nice to get that barrier out of the way early so we can get on with telling stories and not constantly question their motives. Whatever timeline jiggery pokery is going on in Atlantis Ruth is right at the heart of it. She remembers a childhood where she grew up with Leo and his now altered wife (she has a new life now and one where she doesn’t remember Leo) and yet at the same time Leo knows that he has only known her a few weeks. How can this inconsistency be ratified so both parties are correct?  Memories are being altered on the spot…how can we trust Leo and Ruth when they cannot even trust themselves? Who are they really?

Standout Performance: There is something to Ayesha Antoine’s performance that is so innocent and childlike that I would have been disappointed had she turned out to be untrustworthy. Ruth reminds me of the somewhat useless child companions that the Doctor used to cart around the universe (Susan, Dodo, Victoria) who are capable of surprising moments of bravery and ingenuity. Antoine is a natural on audio so its nice to think that she will be hanging around for quite some time.

Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Every civilisation leaves evidence behind it. If you cut a deep enough trench you can see the different layers…’
‘Perhaps we historians are the only ones who see it because we are the only ones who can be bothered to look.’
‘It wouldn’t be the first time that you’ve fallen for the villain of the piece, would it?’
‘You can’t stop time by stopping a clock!’

Great Ideas: There is nothing very wrong with Atlantis. Bernice has found Acanthus but he isn’t the same man that she struck up a friendship with in The Kraken’s Lament. Now he’s a blind old beggar who tells stories to children for scraps. What exactly can completely rewrite the life of a man? Ruth and Leonidas dangle a carrot under Bernice’s nose with mention of the ‘under ground.’ I can’t imagine anything more enticing to our intrepid historian than a mystery that requires her to get digging. Suddenly the reason for the chanting in the scene where Bernice first meets Ruth at the temple becomes clear…now you hear them, now you don’t. Details are changing within the same story now so don’t trust everything that you hear. Poseidon’s game of questions is a marvellous idea; win and you get an answer to a question that he poses and lose and you are trapped underwater forever, slowly rotting away. The game of ‘choose the Bernice’ might be the most obvious route that Poseidon could have gone down but its still a great hoot, especially because it gives Lisa Bowerman the chance to bring to identical and yet distinct Bernice Summerfield’s to life to baffled her friends.

Audio Landscape: Seagulls, chanting, a squeaky cart rattling along the road, snoring, the surf lapping at the shores, a water clock, sliding stone doors, a bell ringing, fizzing computer, bricks and rubble falling, the ocean pouring in, an explosion in the water.

Isn’t it Odd: Contradicting myself entirely, I found the scenes of Bernice exploring the ground under the ground to be quite talky and dull despite the fact that it is another example of just how far her knowledge stretches. And it engages completely with the notion of investigating the secrets on a planet wide scale that praised in the last story. For an example of how this sort of thing should be done check out Year Zero where Jonathan Clements had her discussing with such passion about her field and figuring out a complex puzzle with only the slightest of information to hand. In comparison this is drearily fact-based, as though we have stumbled in on an episode of ‘Archaeologists Weekly.’ The appearance of Hippocampi dragging a chariot that descends beneath the waves is a exquisite concept and the only reason I have dumped it in this section is that it comes only heartbeat away from Bernice’s ascension to the heavens on the back of a Pegasus. It feels like trying to repeat the success of the first wondrous set piece rather than something special in its own right. Benny even references her experience in the last story, asking for a comparison to be drawn. Such a shame. To be fair Poseidon admits that he is not going to give Bernice any answers halfway through the story…but I didn’t think it was genuinely going to be the case! Poseidon exhibits a great deal of personality but given his game of logic I don’t think (like the first story) it is any great stretch of the imagination to try and figure out his true nature. It feels like the questions that Bernice is asked which are complicated riddles (would you rather die a quick and painless death or a long a painful one?) should have satisfying answers waiting…but instead she simply refuses to give an answer. Its not very clever, is it? The ‘family hug’ scene is awful primarily because it takes place far too prematurely – Bernice hasn’t even figured out who these people are yet so its far too soon to be calling them family. It’s the only point during this adventure where it feels like the purpose of The Temple of Questions is being forced onto the audience. I physically winced. Perhaps we would have greeted the twist that Poseidon is a computer with some awe had it been channelled through Bernice but she shrugs her way through its reveal saying that she suspected as much all along. In what feels like it is heading to a big revelation we climax this adventure with Benny tossing water over the computer Poseidon and legging it with her friends. I was expecting something more supplementary to the running storyline.

Foreboding: Jack is back and he’s dropping nothing but clues and snippets of information. Its almost as if he wants to be annoying. How does this fella know so much about Bernice’s activities?

Result: Self consciously handing Benny a new family to hang with, The Temple of Questions works in that respect but is the narrative equivalent of running on the spot for an hour and refusing to develop the running story. After the cinematic ambition of The Kraken’s Lament, Jacqueline Rayner takes a very different approach (a breathless dip underwater in a chariot drawn by Hippocampi excepted) and stages the second half of the adventure like a piece of theatre. It is very brave to have a lengthy dialogue scene of this nature (its nearly half an hour long) and whilst the dialogue is snappy and keeps the momentum going it falls down at the climax where it doesn’t lead to anything even slightly revelatory. Payoff should have been a given after expecting the audience to pay attention to an exchange for this long. What we can take from this adventure is that Ruth and Leo can be trusted and Benny has her own pair of companions to rely on so I guess the journey is the important thing here rather than the destination. We’re fed a few scraps but considering most of that surrounds the name of the box set it doesn’t feel as though we are learning anything we didn’t already know. Jacqueline Rayner is too strong of a writer to produce anything truly duff but she really has been handed the hardest assignment of the Epoch story, capitalising on her talent for characterisation but giving her no space to innovate the plot (which is coming in the next installment). The chemistry between the three performers is apparent but The Temple of Questions treads water, proving that this set is perhaps one story too long: 6/10

Saturday, 8 December 2012

The Kraken’s Lament written by Mark Wright and directed by Gary Russell

What’s it about: ‘Gather round, wretched peoples of Atlantis, for Acanthus the Talesmith has a story to tell! A story of adventure, of courage, of a Winged Goddess searching for truth and sanctuary in a friendless city… On the streets of this fair city, the Goddess searches for a path to the child of two worlds, but finds instead only questions and danger. Be astonished as she defies the rage of the dreaded Kraken! Wonder as she sups with the tragic Queen in her carved stone palace, high above the city! Marvel at her bravery as she gazes deep into the Further Beyond! Come one, come all and listen! Listen to Acanthus the Talesmith and let him amaze you with his story… the story of Professor Bernice Summerfield and the Kraken’s Lament!’

Archeological Adventuress: Benny is haunted by cries from her son which serves to remind us of her new mission in life to find him. Her memory appears to have been fiddled with because although she remembers her approach to Atlantis and the space port, she no longer remembers quite how she found herself outside Acanthus’ property or the way back. Benny is awed at the sight of the Acropolis, Greek civilisation brought to life before her very eyes. Given her not inconsiderable knowledge of classical mythology Benny quickly realises that the world she has found herself in is a hotchpotch of Greek history and fiction. In the face of a creature the size of Kroll and twice as ugly, Bernice refuses to run and cower but instead protects the children who are nearest to her. That’s why she’s a heroine, you know. Keeping her head down has never been Bernice Summerfield’s style and even if she says so herself, she is good. Patience is a virtue that has long passed her by. I love the sequences of her trying to mount the Pegasus because the director takes his time and ensures that it’s a warm and amusing as it can possibly be.

Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Pure blind luck’ ‘Or stupidity. It’s a fine line.’
‘Nicely evasive’ ‘Therein lies my talent.’
‘I can’t make you do anything Your Highness – you’re the bloody Queen!’
‘The creature gazed right back at her. There was no malice or anger in its eyes, just love. And with the gentleness of the gentlest lover, the creature reached out a single giant finger and caressed the Queen’s porcelain cheek’ – that’s rather lovely.

Great Ideas: At the heart of the Epoch box set there is a really great idea that has never really been tried on this scale before and that is having an entire planet to crack open and reveal its secrets. Its an ambitious idea because usually we only get a surface examination of these things but with Epoch there are four hours worth of material in this location so it can be investigated in much greater depth than usual. By the end of The Kraken’s Lament this planet already feels well explored which is a good thing because things are about to start shifting. The whole concept of a planet being constructed out of Greek mythology is inspired purely because for an archaeologist like Benny exploring the architecture and being able to come face to face with mythical creatures is a salivating prospect. The continuation of the ‘history is outlawed’ theme is great because it automatically puts Bernice on the defence and has her looking over he shoulder. Having Acanthus narrating this adventure helps to give it the classical feel that it is reaching for, especially effective during the Kraken attack because it allows for the scene to be narrated whilst not feeling like characters standing about describing events to the audience like the lesser audios have a penchant for doing. Dumping Benny on a planet with no technology to be able to escape gives her a fixed location to rediscover herself and her surroundings. Wright has some fun with his plundering of Greek myths, the Minotaur showing up as the equivalent of a gladiator in an amphitheatre. The Queen drops a Year Zero bomb which is a relief because I thought that the whole concept of the rebooted universe was going to be skipped over. Bernice’s assertion that Atlantis is a contradictory is beautifully written by Mark Wright, highlighting that it is a culture based on ages old tradition and myths but has only been around for half a century. There’s a certain poetic irony to the Queen refusing to love her King as a Kraken and ordering his destruction and in retaliation he destroys the Palace and they fall into the sea together, embraced by its murky depths. Acanthus and his house going missing is the first sign that things are amiss on Atlantis (beyond the general nuttiness of a planet built on Greek mythology in the first place) and Bernice has lost her only friend in the world.

Audio Landscape: Steve Foxon’s soundscapes are extremely vivid throughout this adventure. The last few Bernice Summerfield adventures have been minimalist and it is wonderful to be able to get back to some ambitious audio landscapes. If you are cutting your teeth on audio then being able to bring to life a Kraken climbing a mountain and reducing a palace to rubble is a great place to stretch your talents. Foxon is a dab hand at Big Finish stories by now and his work has reached a zenith of professionalism here. If you shut your eyes and cut off your surroundings you will be whisked away to Atlantis in seconds. Footsteps, dogs barking, birdsong, snoring, market scenes, the sea lapping at the harbour, seagulls, applause, the sighing Kraken raising from the waters, screams, people flinging themselves into the water, spears and arrows flying through the air, Acanthus spitting out his wine, bees lazily carrying on the warm breeze, Pegusi braying and kicking at the mud, the wind rushing through the Queen’s bedroom, pouring wine, lashing rain, church bells sounding, the Kraken’s lashing tentacles impacting as it climbs the mountain, the creature sighing in pain, whinnying, the Palace being ripped to pieces by the angry Kraken.

Musical Cues: There’s a gorgeous theme for the Kraken that manages to be both exciting and surprisingly melancholic, the soundtrack giving some clue to the creatures distress. The piece of music when Bernice tries to mount the Pegasus and takes flight into the sky is beautiful.

Isn’t it Odd: Was this really the best place to kick start a new marketing campaign of interest in the Bernice Summerfield series? I remember before Epoch was released (along with the rather wonderful Dead and Buried animated adventure that was completely out of place, situated before Resurrecting the Past) there was something a buzz around the range. Gary Russell was back at the helm after his time with BBC Wales, the series was being rebranded with new cinematic covers, the stories were being released in box sets of three or four stories rather individual releases and there was a general feeling that things were looking very good indeed for our intrepid adventuress. And then everybody listened to the thing. That’s not fair because its nowhere near as bad as some people claimed it to be but its fair to say it wasn’t exactly what people were expecting. I just have to question the decision to push this series onto a new audience when the Epoch series is so far removed from what is recognisable as the Bernice Summerfield series – it takes place in one, undisclosed location, has disposed of the recurring cast and features Benny alone and afraid and trying to figure out a universe of her own making, How we meet Benny at the beginning of this story would elicit so many questions from a newcomer that I can imagine them running away in sheer frustration and never coming back. And that would be a shame because there is a great deal of worth within this box set. Given the creatures distressing cries, its attempts to reach the palace and Steve Foxon’s sad theme it becomes apparent very quickly it is trying to reach the summit of the mountain for a reason other than thoughtless destruction. As soon as the Queen discusses her missing husband it would take somebody very special indeed not to put two and two together.

Standout Scene: Almost justifying this approach in its entirety, the sequence of Bernice galloping towards the heavens on the back of a Pegasus is pure magic. Its unusual for this series derive its biggest thrills through cheerful events so this is doubly charming.

Foreboding: The first appearance of Jack who seems to know Benny’s name and exudes a certain camp menace. There’s clue as to his real identity at this point, he just makes his presence apparent.

Result: Paradoxically frustrating (because it is so far removed from anything that we might recognise as the Bernice Summerfield series) and innovative (what better way for a series to re-invent itself but to wipe away the old template and build itself up from scratch which is basically what this box set is setting out to achieve), The Kraken’s Lament is strong opening story for an arc that perhaps never should have happened. After two economical and dark plays set in this new universe it is a relief to take a breath and have something of a holiday experience and what better place to do that than an imaginatively conceived destination constructed out of vivid Greek mythology. Bernice gets a job, gets on the scent of a mystery, indulges in some light relief and solves a puzzle that has a profound effect on the planet. She might not be home but she is far more like her old self again, The Kraken’s Lament being extended therapy if you like. There is some dazzling imagery provoked (the palace standing proud atop a mountain, a Pegasus galloping into the sky, the Kraken attacking the harbour) which is refreshing in a series that often generates its imagination through a necessity of economy. Splitting four stories across a box set has afforded the director a chance to assemble an impressive cast and pour some real money into the post-production work. The mystery of the Kraken’s identity is predictable but the Queen’s story and her plight are only really a side issue. For now this is an effective re-branding of the series, giving Bernice a place in this universe and plenty to resolve and its a cinematic treat on the ears to boot: 8/10

Thursday, 6 December 2012

Dead Man’s Switch written by John Dorney & Richard Dinnick and directed by John Ainsworth

What’s this about: 26 years ago, a team of scientists came to a moon to unearth the secrets of a long-dead civilisation. They were later found to have died in what the authorities called an anti-matter explosion. Alone and desperate, Bernice Summerfield will do anything to get back home. But where is home? The capital world of Zordin seems to offer the only chance of answers, but that’s a long way away. The offer of a job could be her best way of paying for the voyage but… archaeology is illegal… and there’s a quarantine… and she’ll have to leap from a spacecraft in orbit. But what does that matter? On a world guarded by armed satellites and patrolled by defence drones on the surface, Benny’s going to have to use all her knowledge, skill and wits. And that’s just to get there! Because it’s not the moon itself that’s the problem. It’s what happened there; what remains there; what might escape. What matters? Nothing.

Archeological Adventuress: Its so wonderful to hear Bernice writing her diary again after so long although she does initially think of framing her thoughts in a letter to Peter but her prolonged separation from him is still too raw. She’s desperately homesick and trapped in a sector that she is still trying to come to terms with. We’ve never quite seen the character this dislocated from everything that makes her feel safe before. Flying through the atmosphere, Bernice begins to find the fun in extreme sports and its nice to see her let her hair (and her body) down for a moment and enjoy herself. A series with an anxious Benny always on the run would be gripping but it would lose the essence that this series is supposed to provide entertaining. Bernice is not one to give up without a fight and fires all manner of plans at Otek so he can let go of the button but she forgets that he has been in that position for over two decades and that’s plenty of time to think through anything she could come up with in five minutes. Why is it that everybody that gives Bernice a job these days always seems to have a hidden objective? She’s such a trusting soul but I would get the pretence out of the way straight away and ask them what their real motive is before setting off. She doesn’t know if Peter is dead or alive, it’s a really sore subject and so when Otek says it was careless of her to lose him she loses her cool for a moment. During the climax Benny channels the fifth Doctor (‘Sorry must dash!’). It genuinely feels like this might be the end for Bernice, trapped in a cold place with no friends to aid her and consumed by the merciless nothing from another universe. Imagine if they dared to end the series at this point (eleven seasons is a breakaway hit by anyone’s standards), stripping away everything that makes the character and then killing her. Of course that isn’t the case but at the point where Benny believes she is slipping away her thoughts turn to Peter and how she, like Otek and his daughter, will never know what sort of adult he would mature into. Its achingly poignant and I found myself trying to will her survival just so she could be reunited with him.

Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Please follow me. Because if you do you have far less chance of destroying the universe.’
‘When nothing gets in, everything goes…

Great Ideas: After a season of game changing stories that have kept the series constantly in flux it is refreshing to start a story on a refreshingly old school note of a distress call on a distant planet that Benny needs to investigate. Year Zero is constantly being referenced as a reminder of the new arrangement of the series. An anti matter explosion wiping out an archaeological expedition in a universe where unearthing the past is outlawed…it could be a severe reaction to the crime or perhaps something sinister and important was about to be disclosed. Its certainly an appetite whetter, I was as intrigued as Bernice. There’s nice chemistry between Otek and the robot that reminded me strongly of the 4th Doctor and K.9, his prissy attitude and unhelpful suggestions are met with a general disdain by the prisoner Its how I imagine 70s Who could have been if it was broadcast post-watershed. Even for Benny, getting to the heart of the problem in ten minutes flat is quite an accomplishment. Being told that releasing a button could destroy the entire universe is quite an enticing notion – who wouldn’t want to test that out and pull Otek’s arm away? In this case I would urge on the side of caution, the universe has recently been renovated to a new design so a suggestion as apparently fatuous as this could be true. A people that vanished completely but left their technology intact – its hardly surprising that Otek’s team wanted to peer beneath the surface of this planet and crack the mystery (and possibly obtain some of their knowledge). Stealing the technology of dead races and claiming it as your own is deeply immoral, I would love for this character to meet one of the more morally strict Doctors. Wormholes revolutionising interstellar travel. A universe of silence posing as an anti matter explosion. Dorney & Dinnick introduce some wonderful ideas in Otek’s exposition scene, enough to give muscle to an entire season of Benny stories back in the day. Otek has been holding down the button to keep the ‘nothing’ in its own universe, otherwise it would spread and consume ours. Otek’s letters to his wife and daughter are chokingly emotional, you realise precisely what he has given up to keep them safe. Its devastating to think that he has missed the best days of his daughters childhood and that his wife must have moved on with her life. His quiet acceptance that they will no longer be waiting for him is heartbreaking. How gorgeous is the parallel between Peter’s potential survival and Schrodinger’s Cat? Creatures that feed on anti-matter might just be one of the most terrifying that Bernice has ever faced but Matka’s motivation is based on maternal instinct which gives things a satisfyingly poignant edge. Bernice can empathise with her need to protect her young but at the same time she has to make her understand that her misunderstanding of the circumstances could lead to catastrophic results. It means that either way this is going to end badly which is made out of pure win in dramatic terms. That Time Ring has been nothing but trouble ever since the Doctor first gave it to Bernice, its passing as a way to satiate the appetite of the ‘nothing’ is a particularly gratifying in this respect. Its her last link to her own universe being severed. Perhaps her dealings with Braxiatel have rubbed off on her, trapping the planet in a 20-second time loop to force feed the nothing an endless banquet of time is exactly the sort of grandiose and intelligent scheme that he would come up with.

Standout Scene: There are lots of contending moments throughout this story but the concluding scene that sees Benny wrap up one mystery and warp head first into another proves that her solo adventures are going to be unrelenting. Just why has Earth been renamed Atlantis? Has the lives of everybody on the home planet been rewritten? Check out the Epoch box set to find out.

A quick word to Adrian Salmon who’s unforgettable artwork has been of an extremely high quality throughout and unique to the series. From the next box set onwards there is more of a cinematic, movie poster look to the covers of the series. It might be nice to utilise some actual photographic images of the characters and some of the imagery is gorgeous but the overall feel of the new covers is something that has been photoshopped to death. Salmon’s unique spiky art always manages to produce something that is far more memorable and striking. I will really miss his input into the series because its one of things that makes it really stand out. 

Result: Dead Man’s Switch opens with Benny writing her diary and heading off to solve a mystery and for a moment you might think that the universe has returned to normal after its dramatic reformation at the end of Escaping the Future. However this is just to lull the unsuspecting listener into a false sense of security before the writers plunge Benny into a fascinating and intricate adventure that is based on a Phone Booth style ‘how the hell are they going to maintain that?’ scenario. Both Dorney and Dinnick were relative newcomers when this was released but its clear from the quality of the writing that they were going to go on to greater things. They have managed to tell an old style economical Bernice tale (like Year Zero it has to make up for the blockbusting cast of the opening two parter) that never feels like a cheap production because they are juggling some terrifyingly huge ideas and manage to give the few characters real depth by exploiting the motivations behind their actions (Otek trying to save a family that has forgotten him and Matka potentially bringing about the end of the universe to save her children). Both characters come to a sticky and leave behind loved ones that will suffer for their passing leaving Benny to clean up the mess. Bernice is once again written as a really smart character, stripping away her comfort zone has forced her to think on her feet and rely on her significant intelligence. Eddie Robson deserves massive kudos for pulling together four unforgettable stories to make the strongest (and a near flawless) season yet and John Ainsworth has directed each tale magnificently, proving equally adept at producing epic and diminutive stories to a very high standard. I hope they were both extremely proud of what they accomplished this season. Bernice is more determined to find Peter than ever before, the series has been reshaped to make that her mission: 9/10

Wednesday, 5 December 2012

Wizards vs Aliens Season One


In the wizards camp you have Scott Haran as Tom Clarke – a Harry Potter wanabee in that he is an emerging wizard who has lost his mother under dramatic circumstances. Not a bad little actor but a perhaps a little too sensitive considering his masculine nature is referred to in the script quite a few times. Likeable, but not developed as much I would like. There’s not a great deal of difference between the Tom of the opener and the Tom of the finale besides his friendship with Benny and his opinion of one of the Nekross. Percelle Ascot as Benny Sherwood is slightly wooden to begin with, as though he has trouble saying his dialogue naturalistically (but then so did Daniel Radcliffe at first and look how well that turned out). Dressed to look younger than he is and given the most hideous specker glasses, Ascot is strangely the better looking of the two. Goes on a much more interesting journey than Tom and is far easier to sympathise with (everyone loves the downtrodden character). Finds his confidence and reveals his ability far more than the central character.

Micheal Clarke is a forgettable character and yet at the same time the character who surprises me the most because of it. He’s pushed to the background more often than not (in a way that the Sarah Jane Adventures was equally child and adult oriented, this show is far more involved with the kiddywinks) but Higgs is clearly a very capable actor and when given the right material delivers in spades. He needs more screen time. On the other hand Annette Badland as Ursula Crowe is by a whisker the best character and proof if it was needed why an adult presence is desperately needed in this series. She’s everything that the scripts want her to be; funny, scary and a bit batty. I love how she can swing from being a forgettable old crow to a formidable witch in the blink of an eye. Again the stories aren’t necessarily about her but when she is given the chance to stand out (Fall of the Nekross) she wipes all the characters off the screen. At first I thought Randall Moon was the weakest character and the reason this felt much more immature than its predecessor but continued exposure proved that his presence was well judged and he showed more potential than simply a comedy hobgoblin his initial appearance suggested. Starkey is an actor of no small talents and he inhabits this creature with a great deal of believability, even if the makeup lets him down slightly.

On the side of the aliens you have Brian Blessed as the Nekross King, an irritatingly awful special effect and a standard, one note villain. Blessed deserves much more, he’s an incredible actor. My gut reaction was that Lexi she was going to be the weakest character after Dawn of the Nekross pushed her brother centre stage but somewhere around the middle of the season she became my favourite, just edging out Ursula. Of everybody she goes on the most interesting journey and by the end of the season you don’t know if she is ally or enemy and it’s a kind of ambiguity that you wont really find anywhere else in the show. Christie, hot from the second season of Game of Thrones, let’s rip once she is inside the mask which affords her the opportunity to show surprising depths and underplay the role the further we greater understand the character. Only in the last story does she disappoint, Phil Ford seemingly wiping away all of her development by simply ignoring it. I loved how Varg started out with such confidence and by the end of the season he has been completely castrated by his father. It reminds me strongly of the journey that Crais goes on in the first series of Farscape, going from a standard, one-note villain to a more sympathetic victim in a short space of time. It might not have escaped your attention that I found the aliens far more interesting than the wizards. I’m as surprised as you are.

Its natural to make comparisons between The Sarah Jane Adventures and Wizards vs Aliens and I have to say I found the new show wanting in this respect. Its perfectly acceptable on its own terms but it doesn’t quite match up to the consistent quality of its predecessor. The storylines aren’t quite as involving and the overall look of the show isn’t quite as polished (but then they can’t dust down old Doctor Who costumes and props like the other show could). What I did find when thinking about the two shows was that Wizards vs Aliens lacked a strong adult presence which Elisabeth Sladen brought to the show and as a result this felt far more geared towards young children rather than a family audience. One thing that always impressed me about SJA was how innovative the scripts were right through to the climax, aside from one adventure each Wizards vs Alien script of the first season had a far superior opening installment than closing one.

Dawn of the Nekross: A bit uninspiring and feeling like too much is thrown at you too quickly, this is actually a rather messy introductory story. Phil Ford is capable of terrific character work but his handling of the regulars feels overly simplistic and the story hops from one set piece to another with little in the way of an engaging narrative to string it all together. There’s nothing that feels particularly original here, the core of the show seeming to be inspired from a mixture of Harry Potter and Doctor Who. The sequence with the car in space is a highlight and should be the sort of set piece this show should be aspiring too but more often than not we’re cutting to the rather embarrassing Nekross King which blows any credibility for the series out the water. I wasn’t convince of this series’ potential by the conclusion and that wasn’t a great place to start. And it might be fatuous of me to say but that is the gayest looking magical fairy dust I have ever seen: 4/10

Grazlax Attacks: Better, if not perfect. Watching this I began to see the chemistry emerging between Haran and Ascott it made perfect sense to give them an adventure on their own. It develops in surprising ways (I never thought they would destroy Benny’s house in such a unsalvageable way and Ursula’s kiddie friendly spells going awry to restore the place to its factory settings was delightful) although if you’ve seen Gremlins there is very little that is original. It’s a fun action tale with nothing deep going on (which makes that two for two in the respect), this is only really let down significantly by the horrendous realisation of the Grazlax itself. A marketing opportunity hitting the screen, me thinks, but more suited to a childs bedroom than on screen because they lack any sense of realism whatsoever. SJA never suffered production values quite this poor: 6/10

Rebel Magic: Along comes Joe Lidster to salvage the show and explore the potential in the central characters of Tom and Benny. Lidster has a way writing sophisticated scripts without making things incomprehensible for the kids which I really like. His strengths are thematic depth and strong characterisation and both are very much in evidence here. Responding to the mature writing, the direction is suddenly far darker and much more watchable. Whilst Jackson Hawke’s storyline is mapped out thanks to the flashbacks which hint at the twist long before it is revealed, the actor chosen to play the part is very strong and he injects a great deal of subtle menace into the way he bewitches Tom. The only story of the season where the climax didn’t let me down, this one played out unpredictably throughout and was one of the highlights of the season: 8/10

Friend or Foe: A superb first part which had great fun with developing Lexi and pushing her into a spanking new role and was only let down by a slightly underwhelming conclusion that runs on the spot rather than continuing to innovate. Gaunt is initially intriguing but ultimately little more than a pantomime villain that is nowhere near as effective as she is painted. Strong direction again and it was around the first cliffhanger where things were getting really interesting (hero and villain captured and suffering an equal fate) that I saw how the serialised nature of the show could be used to its advantage. A terrific chance to do something different with the Nekross and push the central storyline of their incursion on the planet into a far more interesting direction: 7/10

Fall of the Nekross: The highlight of the first season by a country mile and an enthralling piece of storytelling from Gareth Roberts. How he turns the Nekross, one of the most exaggerated alien races to grace my television screen into victims that I was concerned about is inspired and pushing Benny centre stage means that he is given a great deal of strong, dramatic maturity. Joss Agnew’s direction is second to none and he ensures the destruction that the Nekross face looks absolutely genuine and the whole notion of the compute virus gone awry is brilliantly conceived and even more impressively realised (that smiley face is strangely menacing). In the second part I really appreciated the conflict between Ursula (who is deeply unsympathetic and therefore so much more interesting than anybody else) and Benny because its exactly the sort of moral ambiguity that the show has been lacking to this point, plumping instead for grand adventure. This wasn’t perfect (the alliance between the Nekross and humanity is nowhere near as effectively handled as it was in Friend or Foe) but its as close as season one gets: 9/10

The Last Day: As the first story was underwhelming, thus the finale suffers the same fate. Season one of SJA climaxed on The Lost Boy also by Phil Ford which married the epic (a terrific multi layered plot that saw two sets of villains emerge) and the emotional (Sarah Jane losing Luke and all the drama that surrounded that). In comparison this is flaccid stuff, making a meal out of the return of Tom’s mum because it hasn’t really been explored enough to warrant the emotional investment the script expects us to make in her appearance. Its clear from the off that something is fishy about the whole set up and the concept of cloning the woman guts the story of any sincerity, choosing to go for something quirky rather than giving the story a quiet honesty. By suggesting that she is dead and embodying a clone with her essence, it feels like the show is trying to have its cake and eat it and that isn’t dramatically satisfying. With clones of a regular characters long lost relation wandering about, this had a peculiar air of The X-Files. Haran is fantastic here, his best performance of the year but the rest of the cast is barely given a chance to impress. Ford is easily the shows weakest writer and it seems a pity that he should be its most prolific. One great script a year would be much preferable to three average ones. There’s the odd moment of stinging emotion that sweetens the pill: 5/10

Summing up: There is clearly a great deal of untapped potential in this series and the initial set up has proven to have much more life in it than I imagined. Having seen Russell T Davies’ Dark Season for the first time this week, the main difference between the children’s television he was making at the beginning of his career and the children’s television he is making now is that it is a whole lot fluffier and (dare I say it) safer these days. Whether that is a good or bad thing is up to you to decide, certainly there is more complexity of characterisation nowadays but the trade off seems to be a slightly patronising and far less chilling tone. The season is a serial rather than an anthology series and it enjoys all the strengths (a running storyline with developed characters) and weaknesses (a lack of range) that comes with it. The series needs to try and marry its running plotlines with some standalone stories to see if it can survive without the Nekross presence but at the same I wouldn’t want it to lose its ability to surprise by given the villains such decent exposure. For all that Lexi and Varg are given a chance to emerge as the strongest characters, the Nekross as an alien race are a let down and I really miss the production line of great villains and aliens that the Sarah Jane Adventures offered. The biggest difference between the two shows was that in the first year SJA enjoyed a variety of tales from outright science fiction (Revenge of the Slitheen, Warriors of Kudlak), supernatural chills (Eye of the Gorgon), spellbinding time travel drama (Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane) to searing character drama (The Lost Boy). In comparison Wizards vs Aliens feels oddly one note, the same villains each week and the same tone to each episode. I could tell which stories I preferred but it was usually down to the strength of the characterisation and direction rather than a unique quality of the individual stories. At the same time by following a specific formula it does mean that plot wise it can throw in a humdinger from time to time, like the near destruction of the Nekross in the fifth story which was exciting because it left you wondering where the series would go from that point without its central antagonists. Sam Watts’ score lacks variety (whilst still being excellent) whereas for the previous series he gave every story a unique flavour. The show needs to be lavished with a larger budget, as often its deficiencies lie in its realisation (with particular reference to the Nekross King and the Grazlax). By the end of the year Haran and Ascott both seem much more comfortable with their roles than they did at the beginning (especially the latter) although it still bugs me that I’d rather spend my time with the bad guys. I should be cheering on the protagonists far more than I do. Whilst the evolving plotline gives the season some real impetus (especially in the core stories) it does seem strange that a show that feels as if it is heading somewhere special fails to culminate the Nekross plotline in the finale. Instead it promises that in the next season whilst climaxing on a limp gesture. A real mixture of good and bad with flashes of real inspiration and class but weighed down by some mediocre writing (Ford needs to up his game in series two), Wizards vs Alien is an oddity for sure but one which grew on me exponentially as the series progressed. It doesn’t have the wow factor of the Sarah Jane Adventures but it looks like it could mature into quite a respectable series in its own right with a few niggles ironed out. If this review has felt like a list of complaints, I am excited for series two and that has to be a sign of success. Kudos to Joe Lidster, Clayton Hickman and Gareth Roberts for finding something involving to hang on what is quite a clichéd framework. One question – why didn’t Russell T Davies write for the first season?

Monday, 3 December 2012

Year Zero written by Jonathan Clements and directed by John Ainsworth

What’s it about: Planet Raster, Year 54: Professor Bernice Summerfield is arrested on suspicion of Archaeology. She immediately admits that she is a Historian: is she a dangerous revolutionary, or simply mad? Inquisitors have an hour to decide, before she is terminated to prevent the spread of the contagion. If she can ever return home, Bernice Summerfield must first discover where and when she really is. And that means illegal investigations into the past… into whatever happened at the beginning… in Year Zero.

Archeological Adventuress: We seem to have stumbled into a world (or possibly even universe given the meddling that Brax and his cohorts did to the timeline in the last story) where archaeology is outlawed and the very idea of studying the past is considered a crime. For Benny, this leaves her academically up shit creek without a paddle especially as she is trying to figure out the rules as she goes along. The law enforcers describe her as innocent whilst condemning her as guilty, she’s proud of her career and doesn’t understand that any knowledge pertaining to it is outlawed. To be as dislocated as Bernice is here must be very frightening, everything she understands has vanished and been replaced by universe whose rules she doesn’t understand. And most frightening of all, this isn’t some alternative reality that will shift back to the comfortable universe that we know and love at the end of the story. These things are here to stay and so Bernice has to adjust. When she is described as being poisonous they don’t know how close to the truth they might be, in order to protect the universe from the Deindum (of which nobody has ever heard of so let’s assume that that at least was accomplished) she had to infect reality with a fiction that has had an adverse effect on everything. As Bernice is trying to figure out the universe, her captors are trying to figure her out. Suddenly she isn’t a comfortable archaeologist anymore but a reactionary, a transgressor, a purveyor of forbidden knowledge. It’s a great way of putting her in a dramatic scenario just for being herself. Bernice tries a little CBT on Pallis, getting her to approach the idea of uncovering the past not as archaeological research but deducing a mystery. In a wonderfully written sequence she exposes her skill at her craft, taking a can fizzy pop and applying rigorous archaeological deduction to explain much about the culture that created it. Pallis hits the nail on the head when she says that Benny has the ability to make things that we already know look interesting and new, she’s been bewitching her audience like that for 20 glorious years. Its like having a conjurer in the room. By the end of the story Bernice has hooked up with the historians and has a collection of mysteries to try and solve. They couldn’t have kicked off this new phase for her character on a better footing.

Standout Performance: If the last two stories were an ensemble piece that showed what this series had to offer from its cast as a whole, then Year Zero brings the focus right back on Benny and gives Lisa Bowerman the chance to show how she has been managed to keep her audience interested for so long. In a story that nakedly captures Bernice’s skill as an archaeologist, Bowerman approaches the material in a clinical and yet passionate manner that makes the intelligent dialogue flow like a fine wine. She’s a touch of class and no mistake.

Sparkling Dialogue: ‘Mix it up for a few generations, switch people around, deny them any knowledge of the past and pretty soon everyone will forget everything that you don’t want them to know.’
‘This isn’t a can of fizzy, it’s a Rosetta stone. Its proof, if ever proof was needed that you can’t hide history.’

Great Ideas: Given this is the first story that takes place in the wake of the game changing events of Escaping the Future its quite refreshing to find Bernice, like ourselves, in an unspecified location and having to start putting together her surroundings again. Anything could have happened after Bernice and her friends were forced to rewrite history, and it looks as though one of the effects is that Bernice’s friends and family no longer exist. If Eddie Robson was going for a new broom approach then deleting the universe of Bernice Summerfield as we know and replacing it with another is as dramatic a way to go about these things as any. There seems to be no record of the Collection or the Earth and Benny is trying to get back to either, anywhere that feels like home. One of the most intriguing pieces of this narrative puzzle is held in the title, its almost as if the whole universe has rebooted again at Year Zero. Some event caused the calendar to reset and we’re now half a century on in the year 54. The mystery of what occurred in Year Zero looks set to be at the heart of the series now, something so catastrophic that the time before has been erased from history. There only seems to be a few dozen stars in the sky but otherwise the sky is completely absent of stellar bodies. Have they affected the lives entire worlds the universe over? The only way to get from one world to the next is to be frozen in stasis. You might try and suppress history but it is all around you all the same, even the light in the sky is from the distant past. In the past 54 years all the books have been burnt and carefully censored, all the songs vetted and newer, safer material has been published in its place. Gormune believes there is an elite team of crack historians waiting to break Bernice out of custody. He’s paranoid that simple exposure to Benny means that they have also been infected y historical curiosity and they will be interrogated and charged themselves. Suddenly this story takes on a deeper, more insidious level of paranoia. What is the Great Leader hiding? What happened at Year Zero? What is the relevance to the ‘Sky’s No Limit’ song?

Audio Landscape: Dogs barking, intercoms, typing, phones ringing, rain sluicing down, singing crickets, police sirens, alarm bell, exploding car.

Standout Scene: Bernice manages to pull together a mass of information about this world and the universe she has found herself in via nothing more than an everyday can of fizzy pop. She deduces the materials that are available, other cultures that went into making it, their exportation methods, their levels of technology. By the end of her many conversations with Pallis she has treated her like a piece of unearthed history, analysing her character and revealing some very personal home truths. That she only hunts down the historians so she can join them. This is very smart investigation and some of Benny’s best ever work. She’s given practically nothing and she manages to bleed answers from that.

Result: Its extremely refreshing to have Bernice so dislocated from everything she recognises, a real fish out of water in a universe that she doesn’t understand. Its precisely what they tried to achieve in the past two seasons with moderate success writ large. Jonathan Clements approaches the near impossible situation of having to reboot the entire Bernice Summerfield universe by having the character and the audience unravel the mystery at the same time. It’s an interrogative story, mostly constructed out of two hander scenes and flashbacks to Benny committing the crime that she is accused of. What I particularly enjoyed about this release is that it isn’t your standard Big Finish release that is buoyed up by a persistent musical score and wealth of soundscapes. Everything is cut right back to the bone and a lush production is replaced by intelligent dialogue and the discussion of some formidable ideas. Thus it might not be to everyone’s taste because you can’t just let it wash over you, you really have to concentrate to get the most from the accomplished examination of ideas. There’s a whopping great mystery at the heart of the story (Year Zero itself) and it’s a clever conceit to allow for some imaginative restructuring of the universe as we understand it. And the way that Bernice reveals her ability through something as innocuous as a can of drink is inspired, by the end of the story she has deconstructed this society through what little exposure she has had to it. Absolutely beguiling if you give it the attention it deserves and the third classic of the season: 10/10