Friday, 21 September 2018

Time-flight




Four episodes

Aired between 22nd March 1982 and 30th March 1982

Written by Peter Grimwade
Produced by John Nathan-Turner
Directed by Ron Jones

Synopsis

Concorde goes missing and the staff at Heathrow airport start freaking out.

On the TARDIS, the Doctor, Tegan and Nyssa have only just collected and dropped the crew of the freighter and surviving marines off in the 26th Century (see Earthshock).

Nyssa and Tegan ask the Doctor to go back in time, but the Doctor refuses, angrily saying that there's some laws that even he can't break and they shouldn't ask him again.  He tries to take their minds off Adric's death by going to the Great Exhibition of 1851, but instead lands in Heathrow Airport, 1982.

They immediately get arrested, but thanks to the Doctor's UNIT credentials, they come to find out about the missing Concorde.


The Doctor offers to help and they load the TARDIS onto a second concorde, flying it out to the area where the other one went missing.  Whilst on the flight, the TARDIS picks up some kind of strange signal, but they all believe they pass through the area without too much trouble and land back at Heathrow.


It's not long however before they discover that this Heathrow is an illusion (like a perception filter) and they've actually travelled back in time 140 million years.


Once they can see clearly, they notice the second Concorde on a desolate plane, a great citadel in the distance, and the remains of an alien spacecraft.


The crew and passengers of the first Concorde are entranced except for Professor Hayter, a prof. in Hypnosis.  The hypnotised humans are marshalled by blobs of energy known as Plasmatons. As they talk to the Prof. the crew start to take the TARDIS to the citadel and Nyssa gets visions and hears voices.

Meanwhile, at the Citadel, a strange oriental creature known as the Kalid works with a force of psychokinetic energy to entrance everyone. It's the same energy that's affecting Nyssa so strangely.   He can view things through a crystal ball and watches with curiosity and manages to trap Nyssa in a block of the Plasmatons.


The Doctor goes with Hayter and the pilots to the citadel and finds scores of humans trying to gain entrance to a sealed chamber.  He leaves the others there to try and help the humans to snap out of it whilst he ventures further.  The Doctor meets Kalid and finds that he's brought the Concordes back through time so he can use the people on them as a slave force to get access to the sealed chamber.

Kalid manipulates the psychokinetic energies around the area to try and blackmail the Doctor into letting him have access to the TARDIS, otherwise he will hurt Hayter and the crew.

Nyssa breaks free of the Plasmatons and heeding to the voices in her head, she and Tegan go to the citadel.  They find numerous visions including one of Adric who begs them not to go any further.  They understand that it's just apparitions though, so they go onwards.  They eventually get to the sealed chamber and they somehow gain access to it.

Nyssa in a trance throws a nearby artefact into a tank and the effects hurt the Kalid who collapses and starts bleeding green slime.


The Doctor is puzzled as they examine the Kalid's crystal ball.  It turns out not to be controlled by psychokinesis, but by electronics.  The Master shrugs off his Disguise as the Kalid and laughs.


Turns out the Master somehow escaped Castrovalva but has found himself stranded in pre-historic England as his own TARDIS needs a new power source.  He found the chamber and equipment and he believes that the centre of the chamber could hold the power he needs.  Now the Doctor is here though, he wants the Doctor to give him his TARDIS so he can get into the chamber another way.

The Doctor has no option but to give him the keys, then they run to the chamber to try and get in it before the Master.  They break the wall down eventually and find Nyssa and Tegan in there.  Through Nyssa, the group learn that the tank like structure contains the essence of a race known as the Xeraphin.  Because of all the souls inside it, it's got a good personality and a bad one, the bad called to the Master, the good to Nyssa.


Prof. Hayter sacrifices his body to become a vessel of the Xeraphin. They use it to appear as an entity called Anithon.  It explains that the Xeraphin came to earth to escape the Vardon-Kosnax war. The Earth contained so much radiation that they built the citadel and shed their bodies to hide in hibernation until the world was safe. The Master's arrival forced the split personality of the Xeraphin however.

Through a couple of attempts, the Master is eventually successful in bringing the Xeraphin sarcophagus onboard his own TARDIS and making it the new power source.  Some of the Concorde crew manage to sabotage his electronics however and the Master is forced to negotiate with the Doctor for equipment so that they can all get off Pre-historic earth.


They do indeed get back to the modern day, and the Doctor reveals that he tricked the Master. He gave him a temporal limiter like he asked for, but set it to arrive slightly after them, so that it pings the Master's TARDIS all the way to modern day Xeriphas, where he hopes the Master will have revenge exacted on him for taking the sarcophagus.

Together, the Doctor and Nyssa fly away as the Law start to ask questions, believing that Tegan is now back where she's wanted to be for months.  Tegan however did decide to run back to the TARDIS, but she's too late. They're gone.

Trivia


  • This one required a lot of talking with British Airways to get permission for filming Concorde.  They used stock footage for some things, one of them including a bird that flies past the plane in pre-historic times as it's taking off!
  • This story was the brain child of renowned director Peter Grimwade. He wrote the scripts and had to make numerous changes over quite a long time before it was ready for filming.
  • The Master was a result of John Nathan-Turner meddling with the script and insisting on bringing him back. The Kalid was originally going to be an actual Arrabian sorcerer


    • Matthew Waterhouse was included as a vision in this story, purely so that they could put his name in the Radio Times and nobody know his character was going to die in the story prior to this
    • This is actually the first story where the Masters shrinking weapon is named - the Tissue Compression Eliminator


    The Review

    When you hear the outline of the story, it doesn't sound too bad, but trust me, it is.  That's probably due to the bad execution of a half good idea. The script isn't amazing, and the dialogue is AWFUL, but it could have been salvaged if not for the over-ambitious attempt to realise this story on practically zero budget.

    The Masters involvement just makes zero sense, least of which being the fact that he wears the Kalid costume for no apparent reason and dribbles green goo, again, why?!

    Watching this story is just tedious as it's slow paced, full of jargon and arguments with an old guy over whether aliens exist.  If it was the first or only story of a drama production, you might get away with it, but rightly or wrongly, it's something that people in Doctor Who tend to just accept and get on with for the sake of the audience watching it.  It's like a companion refusing to believe that the TARDIS is bigger on the inside for at least four stories.

    The only redeeming feature of this story for me is the aftrermath of Adric's death (which is incredibly short for the same reasons mentioned above)  and the faux departure of Tegan at the end.  Supposedly, she was always meant to come back, but if you watched it at the time, it was perhaps an additional shock that she'd been left behind.  Ultimately, I would say do yourself a favour and give this one a miss, there's nothing worth seeing at all and you can use your time in much better ways.

    Rating

    3 out of 10

    Re-watchability Factor

    2 out of 10

    Watch this if you liked...

    The Faceless Ones

    The Three Doctors 

    Invasion of the Dinosaurs

    Smith and Jones (Doctor Who, Series 3)

    Earthshock




    4 episodes

    Aired between 8th March 1982 and 16th March 1982

    Written by Eric Saward
    Produced by John Nathan-Turner
    Directed by Peter Grimwade


    Synopsis

    The Doctor and Adric are having a spat about him going back into E-space.


    It gets so bad that the Doctor lands the TARDIS in a cave and storms off . They leave Adric to work out the calculations to take himself home, whilst Tegan and Nyssa go to calm the Doctor down.

    As they are looking around, they find fosilised remains of dinosaurs and the Doctor tells Nyssa about what happened to them.


    As they are in the cave, they come across a bunch of angry space marines.  It turns out this is the future, and the marines had gone down into this cave to find out who killed a bunch of archaeologists who were looking at the fossils (and the marine's believe it's the Doctor and Co who are the culprits.

    It doesn't take long however before they are proven innocent as two faceless androids appear and start shooting at the marines. After a heated exchange of fire, the androids are destroyed.


    Adric finds them all and explains that the TARDIS picked up part of a signal coming from somewhere  and the Doctor speculates that it was the android's masters. They find a hatch in the rock, containing a bomb and the Doctor realises the signal was to start the bomb's timer.  He and adric work together to eventually stop the bomb.


    The group speculate as to why the androids planted the bomb and the Doctor decides to trace the source of the signal and find out.  Despite his misgivings, the marines come with him.

    The signal came from a space freighter on its way to earth and again, the Doctor is mistaken for a murderer as he and Adric explore it and are found looking at the dead body of a security guard by the ships Officer, Ringway.  He takes them to the bridge to see Captain Briggs who's only interested in making her shipment on time to get a big bonus.


    As they debate the Doctor's innocence, they discover the real threat to the ship - Cybermen!!!


    Meanwhile, Tegan goes with the marine's led by Sgt Scott as they decide to go and look for the Doctor.

    Back on the bridge, the Doctor pleads with Briggs not to put her men against the Cybermen but she refuses.  Ringway turns traitor and says he got the Cybermen on the ship, but the Doctor makes short work of him and they block off the bridge with blast doors, buying themselves some time.

    Even though the Doctor does a nifty trick with an anti-matter field to keep repairing the door, the Cybermen ultimately gain access to the bridge and capture everyone and the Cyber Leader kills Ringway.


    They explain that they are intending to destroy a conference taking place on Earth that will solidify armies against the Cybermen and wipe them out.  Now that the Doctor has stopped the bomb in the cave, he will have to turn the freighter into a bomb and crash it into the conference.  After a bit of posturing, the Cyber Leader forces the Doctor, Tegan and Nyssa to go and give him access to the TARDIS so he can escape the resulting crash.  The Cyber Leader leaves everyone else with a couple of Cybermen to die on the ship.

    Soon after, Scott manages to kill the Cybermen guards.  Adric and the freighter crew work frantically at the locked controls and manage to take the ship though a warp and back in time.  With nothing left to do, the freighter crew and Scott aim to leave the ship and urge Adric to do the same, but he's convinced he can break the codes to the ship that the Cybermen have installed and he can save the Earth. He stays behind to try and sort it.

    Meanwhile, in the TARDIS, Nyssa, Tegan and the Doctor observe that the ship has gone back in time 65 million years and will effectively cause the ice age  as it's now the meteor of legend. Scott manages to signal the TARDIS and tell them that Adric is still on the freighter but they've escaped.  The Cyber Leader decides to kill the crew, but the Doctor suffocates him by rubbing Adric's gold mathematics badge into the Cyber Leader's vent (he took it just before they left Adric).


    The Leader shoots  at them, hitting the console and damaging it, and the Doctor is forced to take the gun and kill the Cyber Leader.

    Similarly, Adric has just about found a way to avert disaster, but a Cyberman turns out to just be wounded and shoots the controls as it dies, stopping any chance Adric might have had.  He watches as the ship hits the Earth and causes a huge explosion.


    The TARDIS crew watch in stunned silence as Adric is killed and history goes on.


    Trivia


    • The cyberscope that the Cybermen watch the androids progress on was built using parts of the Nostromo set from Alien
    • One of the androids would be sprayed silver and used later on for the awesome Raston Warrior Robot in The Five Doctors
    • It's not clear why Matthew Waterhouse left the show, but it's entirely likely to have been a decision from John Nathan-Turner.  
    • The end credit scene is the only one since The War Games to have had rolling credits.  The next time would be the new series episode, Rose.
    • The part where the various Doctors are seen on the Cyberscope showed clips from The Wheel in Space, whilst talking about events that happened in The Tomb of the Cybermen. This was because Tomb had been wiped from the archives and hadn't been re-discovered yet
    • Malcolm Clarke, the guy who did the soundtrack for The Sea Devils also did the soundtrack for this.  He was asked to try and mimic the overused music that accompanied the Cybermen in Patrick Troughton's reign, but add his own flair to it


    The Review

    The Cybermen have been off screen for seven years by this point, and judging by the Revenge of the Cybermen, they were set a pretty low bar of expectation.  The haters of this story would point out that there's baffling logic at work for much of this, with the odd way they go about destroying the world being at the forefront. 

    Whilst I can't deny those faults, I would say this is a story to sit back and enjoy, like the Sea Devils. It's there to show a triumphant return of a major villainous race, and give you a shock factor of them daring to actually kill a companion.  Short of Robert Holmes, there's nobody better qualified to write a script like this than Eric Saward.  His penchant for death-heavy stories plays very well here, and in the beginning, there's a real sense of the sinister - it's pretty much a copy of Aliens, just made four years earlier than the film!  There's hints of the battle of Tantive IV in there too.

    Unfortunately, the whole thing gets a bit drab in the middle once Beryl Reed enters the scene.  It's not her fault entirely, the marines with useless guns and the pointless waiting around doesn't help at all.  It's just something to get through, but there are a few nice highlights including the Doctor's discussion with the Cyber-Leader (even though it's the most emotional Cyberman I've ever seen).

    The ending is fabulous, with the Doctor forced to actually take a life, and they witness the death of Adric.  It's definitely morose and the silence for the credits is a very nice touch.  Earthshock is definitely a Doctor Who story to watch, but go into it just looking for ways to see how awesome and cruel the Cybermen are and you'll have a good time.

    Rating 

    9 out of 10

    Re-watchability Factor

    7 out of 10

    Watch this if you liked...


    • Attack of the Cybermen
    • Silver Nemesis