Showing posts with label 8th Doctor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 8th Doctor. Show all posts

Saturday, September 29, 2012

155. Army of Death.


4 episodes. Approx. 110 minutes. Written by: Jason Arnopp. Directed by: Barnaby Edwards. Produced by: David Richardson.


THE PLOT

The Doctor brings Mary to the planet Draxine, where he has promised a fun and peaceful time. He should know better by now than to make such promises. The city of Garrak has been leveled by a bomb detonated by its president, who was also the leader of an insane death cult. The city of Stormhaven still stands, but its new President, Vallan (David Harewood), is out of his depth in the current crisis.

Not that many people wouldn't be. Garrak's dead have risen as animated skeletons, and are laying siege to Stormhaven. If the Doctor cannot determine what intelligence is animating the dead and what it wants, then it may be the end for both cities!


CHARACTERS

The Doctor:
 He is instantly intrigued by the skeletons. Instead of simply reacting to the threat of them, as the Stormhaven guards do, he thinks to let them through - an act which saves lives, and which allows him to see what their short-term goal is. When he learns the full extent of the force affecting the dead bones of Garrak, he cannot disguise his genuine fascination with the project. It repulses the moralist in him, but he is also a scientist who thirsts for knowledge and an adventurer who craves new ideas and adversaries, and he is excited at both the accomplishment and the spectacle.

Mary: Is taken aback by the Doctor's fascination with something she sees simply as an obscenity. This does not actually shake her faith in him, as she can also see that he works to save lives and that he is ready to sacrifice himself for the sake of strangers. Still, it is here that she finally sees how alien he is. This part of Mary's characterization works well. Less effective, however, is a strand of the story that sees Mary struggling with growing feelings for the Doctor - something only vaguely hinted at in the other stories of the season, and whose prominence here jars. This either needed to be explored in the previous stories or dropped from this one. Preferably the latter, as the Companion with a crush on the Doctor idea has been done before, and done better.


THOUGHTS

The 8th Doctor/Mary Shelley season ends with what I expected (and hoped) would be an all-out horror piece, with armies of walking skeletons assaulting a sole human city. A fantastic idea, to end a strongly horror-themed Who season on such a tale.

But there's no horror to be found in Army of Death. There's no real atmosphere, little sense of dread. Army of Death does not even seem to be meant to be frightening.

This is an odd choice for a story constructed around an army of the walking dead. But that's okay - I long ago promised myself I would not trash a story for what it is not. Army of Death largely ignores the horror elements and instead attempts to be an action piece, with a fast pace and multiple set pieces. Not the choice I wanted made, but it's not like I don't enjoy a good, fast-paced action story.

For just over three episodes, the story works on this level. The set pieces are strong and visually engaging, the pace is fast, the music is distinctive. The guest characters are a bit bland for the most part, with only David Harewood's flawed president making any real impression, but they're functional enough to carry the plot. And in a story like this, Plot Is All.

The downfall of a story that's made up largely of action set pieces, however, is that such a structure demands a climactic set piece that tops all that came before it. Writer Jason Arnopp attempts this, using the Hollywood "bigger is better" mentality.  But... Well... He applies that mentality a bit too literally. Because what happens after the army of skeletons reach their goal? What comes at the end of all this?

If you don't want to know, you should stop reading now.

Because at the end of the story...

We get...


THE MONSTER

Once all the human skeletons reach their objective, they combine, Voltron-style, to form one gigantic skeleton which calls itself "The Bone Lord" (yes, the giant skeleton can speak.  Unfortunately).

The Bone Lord is a major miscalculation. An army of skeletons = good. Skeletons are inherently creepy, in that they reflect us with all the surface polish and personality removed. An army of the walking, faceless dead - an army of what we will someday become - attacking us? That is effective.

But a Godzilla-sized skeleton that declares itself "The Bone Lord" before setting about the serious business of stomping Tokyo?  That's just another giant monster, in a series that's had no shortage of those over the decades. It simply isn't viscerally effective.  It's actually rather boring.

The climax is also weak in writing terms, much weaker than the rest of the story. Stray characters are squashed so that, Saward-style, the script doesn't need to worry about doing anything with them. There's not one, but two heroic self-sacrifices (TM) - both from the same character, at that! Oh, and the villain pauses to explain its motivation to the Doctor, just because sometimes a villain needs a good gloat. The explanation is... unsatisfactory.

Thankfully, this is a season finale, so there's a brief epilogue between the Doctor and Mary that allows things to end on a character-centric note. This scene is very well-written, and is wonderfully performed by Paul McGann and Julie Cox. This tag allows both story and season to go to credits on a grace note.

But it's not quite enough to wash away the bad taste of a narrative blunder that all but kills this story for me. For the first three episodes, I was leaning toward awarding a "6" to Army of Death. But the climax single-handedly squashes that score.


Overall Rating: 4/10.

Previous Story: The Witch from the Well

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Saturday, September 15, 2012

154. The Witch from the Well.


4 episodes. Approx. 110 minutes. Written by: Rick Briggs. Directed by: Barnaby Edwards. Produced by: David Richardson.


THE PLOT

An excavation at the village of Trenchard's Fell uncovers a well, blocked by stone and left undisturbed for centuries. Naturally, the workers remove the stone - and in so doing, free a witch who proceeds to butcher them all within minutes. 

Twins Lucern (Kevin Trainor) and Finicia (Alix Wilton Regan), the children of the village squire, have witnessed this massacre and appear destined to be among the victims - until the Doctor and Mary rescue them. The Doctor insists there are no witches, and that they are dealing with an alien life form. He sets the TARDIS controls for the 17th century to investigate the origin of the creature.

But there is more to Lucern and Finicia than meets the eye. Thanks to the twins' interference, the Doctor and Mary soon find themselves separated by centuries - Mary, evading the witch in 21st century Trenchard's Fell; the Doctor, probing the secrets of the 17th century village. But the Doctor's search for answers will meet a deadly barrier in the form of Master John Kincaid (Simon Rouse), the infamous Witch-Pricker!


CHARACTERS

The Doctor:
 The Silver Turk saw the Doctor focused on destroying an alien being, so it is a good decision here to show his more compassionate side. From the very beginning, he refuses to judge the aliens as monsters. Determining that they are trapped on Earth, he focuses on helping, not destroying. This trait is shown particularly strongly in Part Two, when he discovers a dying creature trapped on the alien spaceship. Unable to free it, he insists on staying until it dies: "I'll stay with you as long as it takes. You won't die alone."

Mary: Spends the bulk of the story separated from the Doctor, running about the 21st century Trenchard's Folly with the hapless Aleister Portillon (Andrew Havill). Though her function in the story is very much that of "generic companion," writer Rick Briggs has woven in a lot of material from his research on the historical Mary Shelley. Particularly amusing is her reaction to Aleister's worship of Lord Byron and his scorn of Byron's contemporaries (including her). She deals effectively with the "witch" in the modern setting, even as the Doctor deals with the witch-pricker in the distant past. Julie Cox continues to impress, and I hope that the remaining story of this Big Finish "season" does not end up being the last we hear of her version of Mary Shelley.


THOUGHTS

Most Big Finish "seasons" have a traditional runaround in the middle, with more ambitious stories on either side of it. The 8th Doctor/Mary Shelley season seems to be following the pattern, with Marc Platt's atmospheric The Silver Turk followed by this more traditional pseudo-historical.

Thankfully, The Witch from the Well is not just a tedious retread of what some audio writer thinks the show would have aired in 1976 (as too often ends up being the case). Writer Rick Briggs, who previously penned a clever single-part story for the Demons of Red Lodge collection, continues to show structural ingenuity. Separating Mary and the Doctor in time but not in space allows both characters scenes in which to shine. And by giving each character one side of the story to investigate, the Doctor the beginning and Mary the ending, we get to see how the Doctor's actions may impact on Mary's predicament.

Briggs' script juggles the two strands effectively. The 17th century scenes are the primary focus, with Mary's adventures in the modern day being clearly secondary. The cutting between the two strands is done with care. We cut back to Mary often enough to keep her story alive, but at well-judged points so that her scenes don't interrupt the flow of the Doctor's story. Her scenes also tend to be shorter than the Doctor's, which means that her bits never keep us away from the main story for long enough to lose track of the plot.

This is a good thing, because the scenes in the past are much more effective than the ones in the modern day. 17th century Trenchard's Fell is a much better-developed setting, with several strong guest characters. Simon Rouse's Witch-Pricker is the most memorable of these. He's clearly villainous, lacking any compassion for any individual in the village. The Doctor reacts to him with all the disdain you would expect, in scenes that see Paul McGann in particularly good form - but in a nice turn, we discover that he is actually genuine in his belief in his work, even if he goes about his gruesome business with one eye on his Bible and the other on his own ambitions.

The Witch from the Well is a good, entertaining yarn, one which manages to avoid the curse of the "dull middle story" that has plagued so many Big Finish trilogies. It's largely pretty traditional, with superstitious villagers and aliens who are taken for supernatural beings. But it's presented in a way that feels fresh and clever, with solid performances from the entire cast and a satisfying resolution. Another good story, in a set of stories that I'm finding immensely enjoyable.


Rating: 7/10.

Previous Story: The Silver Turk
Next Story: Army of Death

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Thursday, September 6, 2012

153. The Silver Turk.


4 episodes. Approx. 126 minutes. Written by: Marc Platt. Directed by: Barnaby Edwards. Produced by: David Richardson.


THE PLOT

Having convinced Mary Shelley (Julie Cox) to accompany him in the TARDIS, the Doctor decided to take her for a quick hop to Vienna. He hopes to reunite with friends, but the TARDIS slips forward in time, bringing him and Mary to 1873. This is the year of the Vienna World Exposition, and the Doctor is all too happy to show it off to Mary. 

It becomes quickly apparent, though, that all is not well in this city. There has been a series of mysterious deaths, men whose bodies were found eyeless after savage attacks. All the victims had invested in Alfred Stahlbaum (Christian Brassington)'s creation, The Silver Turk. When the Doctor investigates, he discovers that the Turk is no man-made automaton. It is a Cyberman - crippled, but still dangerous. And it is not alone!


CHARACTERS

The Doctor:
 The instant he realizes that the Turk is a damaged Cyberman, he becomes intently focused on one goal: destroying it. He knows that even a crippled Cyberman is a killer-in-waiting, and recognizes the threat that the Cyber technology poses in this time and place where it simply doesn't belong.  The Doctor's most formidable trait remains his intelligence.  It's armed with nothing more than his wits that he defeats the surviving Cyberman at the end, confusing it with a peculiar blend of flippancy and philosophy.

Mary: It's worth remembering that The Company of Friends: Mary's Story had been released years before this title. This means that The Silver Turk doubles both as a first trip in the TARDIS for her and as a re-introduction to her for the audience. In this, the story is highly successful. It evokes Mary's Story at many points, with Mary's protectiveness of the deteriorated Cybermen recalling her empathy for the "monster" Doctor in that story - only this time, of course, she ultimately finds that the monsters actually are monsters.

Mary doesn't fully trust the Doctor yet, and her realization that she has just run off with a man she barely knows recalls a similar scene for 9th Doctor companion Rose Tyler in The End of the World. She also reacts to the walking monstrosities of the villainous Drossel (Gareth Armstrong) with genuine terror, actually abandoning the Doctor at one point and fleeing for her life. Moments like this make her believably human, and Julie Cox's acting ability is up to the task of keeping her sympathetic even when showing weakness.

Cybermen: Though a Tenth Planet Cyberman is prominently pictured on the CD cover, this really isn't a Cyber story. The Cybermen are as much victims as villains, one reduced to slavery by Drossel and the other shown off as a curio by Stahlbaum. Even when the surviving Cyberman reveals his agenda at the end, he doesn't come across a strong threat due to his poor condition. They are effective at evoking the Frankenstein story, however, and supplement the tale here very effectively.


THOUGHTS

The Silver Turk is one of those releases where everything comes together to create a splendid entertainment. Marc Platt's script manages to be literate while at the same time remaining accessible and fast-paced. Barnaby Edwards' direction is atmsopheric, but not so heavy-handed as to smother the sense of spontaneity, of events happening as we listen to them. 

Almost all of Platt's audios are very visual. His use of dialogue, theme, and setting tends to make it easy to summon pictures in your mind. The Silver Turk features some wonderfully creepy images. The badly-damaged Cybermen are memorable enough, one with one arm and dressed up as a Turk, the other with no legs but three arms it uses to propel itself (referred to by Drossel as "Dog"). Even more chilling is Drossel's army of walking, talking, murdering marionettes. The addition of human eyes, some of them plucked from the sockets of living victims, is a ghoulishly inspired detail.

The tone is set right from the start. A young mother (Claire Wyatt) sings a lullaby to her baby, the soundscape making sure to linger on the disturbing nature of the lyrics even as we dissolve to a man running for his life. The man believes himself safe when finds a taxi, but then has an eerie and odd interaction with the driver - eventually revealed to be Drossel. As Drossel's "dog" claims the hapless victim, we return to the lullaby, allowing the moment to sink in before the Doctor arrives and begins the story proper.

The production lends plenty of atmosphere, from use of echoes to the way one scene sometimes will dissolve over the start of the next, to the sounds of a storm. There's a chase between two horse-drawn taxis, a tricky thing to pull off on audio, which is edited with precision into a genuinely exciting sequence. 

The performances of the leads are splendid, the actors making the most of Platt's dialogue. Paul McGann is at his most energetic, moving easily from whimsical to grimly focused and back again. He and Julie Cox get a lot more time to play off each other here than in Mary's Story, and their partnership is off to an engaging start. Finally, Gareth Armstrong's Drossel manages to be imposing even as he indulges in just the right amount of ham to show that this villain is also a performer, one who loves an audience. Supporting performances are more variable, but there are no obvious "weak links" to disrupt the flow.

Well-acted, and scripted and produced with an eye toward unsettling atmosphere, The Silver Turk is a delight. Highly recommended. 


Rating: 9/10.

Previous Story: The Company of Friends: Mary's Story
Next Story: The Witch from the Well


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Saturday, August 25, 2012

123-d. The Company of Friends: Mary's Story.


1 episode. Approx. 31 minutes. Written by: Jonathan Morris. Directed by: Nicholas Briggs. Produced by: Nicholas Briggs.


THE PLOT

Switzerland, 1816. At a villa rented by Lord Byron, the famous poet is spending time with Mary Shelley (Julie Cox), her husband Percy Bysshe Shelley, her stepsister Claire Clairmont, and Byron's doctor John Polidori. After reading from a collection of horror stories, Byron suggests that each member of the company prepare a ghost story for the following day, as a sort of contest. 

This friendly competition is interrupted, however, by the arrival of a badly wounded stranger: A man so burned that Polidori pronounces that he has never seen such injuries on anyone living. The man gasps out that he is a doctor, followed by another word as he recognizes his current company:

"Frankenstein!"


CHARACTERS

The Doctor:
 Paul McGann gets to play multiple variants of his Doctor. We see the self-assured Doctor of the last part of The TV Movie, a man with seemingly no care in the world. We also see an embittered Doctor, a man who has lost much and perhaps everything. Then there is the burned and badly-injured Doctor who slips in and out of coherence. Finally, there is the monster - a Doctor so wounded and mutated that he becomes violent, out-of-control, more animal than man. Given the chance to show so much variety within the story's scant thirty minutes, McGann throws himself into it with relish.

Mary: The title of the story is Mary's Story, and the narrative is seen entirely through her eyes. Julie Cox is very good as Mary, depicted as having run off with the much older Percy at the promise of adventures that never came. The young woman is already jaded by the reality of a man who "does not believe in fidelity" and who is prone to mania under the influence of laudanum. Writer Jonathan Morris is very conscious of this as a companion introduction story, even if this companion also happens to be a historical figure. His script makes sure to highlight the traits needed in an engaging companion, showcasing Mary as strong-willed, compassionate, and observant. Further depth will likely be added by the full-length stories to come, but Cox's performance and Morris' script already have her feeling like a full character even in this short piece.


THOUGHTS

The best of the one-episode stories featured in The Company of Friends, and the only of these four stories that Big Finish has to date seen fit to follow up. Mary's Story is far from the first work to explore the summer that spawned The Vampyre and Frankenstein. Like Ken Russell's muddled film Gothic, this episode plays with the idea of genuinely fantastical events inspiring the supernatural tales.

Bits of Frankenstein can be spotted throughout the piece. Percy Shelley's mania as he cries, "He's aliiive!" is an obvious echo of the Boris Karloff movie, as are references to fire and torch-wielding villagers. There's even a line that winks at the confusion caused by the later film series, wherein "Frankenstein" became the monster instead of the scientist.

All of this is amusing, though the "monster" scenes tend to be the most jumbled of the episode. Still, the real interest here is in the glimpses of the different variants of the Doctor. This is effectively a multi-Doctor story, showing the Eighth Doctor at two distinct points in his life. The early Eighth Doctor, still innocent and hungry for adventure, contrasts with the bitter, late-in-his-life Eighth Doctor, a man who has traveled with so many companions and ended up alone at the end of it. 

Despite a few rushed moments that were probably inevitable in a single-episode story, Mary's Story is a good one. An introduction to a character worth following, and a glimpse of the Eighth Doctor's full journey at both its start and its end. It's clever and fun, and I look forward to seeing where the Doctor/Mary partnership goes from here.


Rating: 8/10.

Next Story: The Silver Turk

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Saturday, May 21, 2011

123-c. The Company of Friends: Izzy's Story


1 episode. approx. 30 minutes. Written by: Alan Barnes. Directed by: Nicholas Briggs.


THE PLOT

The Doctor's companion, Izzy (Jemima Rooper), has asked him to take the TARDIS to her home town, the village of Stockbridge, at a time when she would have been a child. She wants to solve a mystery that's been bothering her since childhood. No, not a murder. No, not lights in the sky. No, not even a crop circle.

The mystery? The identity of Courtmaster Cruel, the hero of a long-running and rather brutal sci-fi comic strip. His identity was revealed in the final installment of the strip... in a publication that only hit the streets once that Izzy knows of, with all copies having vanished without a trace. But Izzy knows that the magazine was in stock the morning of its release, and is determined that it will belong to her!

The Doctor is a bit exasperated, but indulges her. Until androids come to the comics store and "pulp" the "proscribed manuscript" while it is in Izzy's hands, then rearrange the memory of the store's owner. That is when the Doctor finally gets interested, sensing a hidden hand meddling with the laws of time. But reality will be rearranged a few times more before he is able to get to the bottom of this!


CHARACTERS

The Doctor: Paul McGann does very well again in this story. Izzy, his companion for this outing, is a frenetic ball of energy. McGann counters by increasing his Doctor's cool, collected calm. The results are highly amusing, with McGann's Doctor taking on almost a "long-suffering" quality opposite his overly energetic young friend.

Izzy: Jemima Rooper is Izzy, the 8th Doctor's DWM comic strip companion. I'm not 100% sold on the character, who comes across as a bit too... enthusiastic to be entirely winning. Rooper, however, is terrific, bringing boundless energy to the part. She makes Izzy likable almost in spite of herself. Alan Barnes' script helps by crafting a rather wonderful pre-credits "intro monologue" for the character which captures Izzy's whirlwind of (too) fast-paced energy in a way that makes her at the same time somebody we can identify with. If the actress hadn't been as good, I'd have been quite happy to leave Izzy as a one-shot. Rooper is so purely wonderful, though, that I find myself very much wanting a full-length 8th Doc/Izzy story. Better still, a season of them, to allow the character more variation.


THOUGHTS

That was fun!

This 30-minute short story isn't any more substantial than the other 30-minute Company of Friends stories. It's a featherweight narrative, played entirely for comedy, and played out basically in two sets (well, if this had been a visual story). Like the other single-episode McGann stories I've reviewed, this is hardly likely to sear itself into anyone's memory. But it's a particularly enjoyable piece, which puts it above the preceding stories in this release.

One element that makes this so much fun is just how well it evokes the medium it's celebrating. This isn't just a story using a comic strip character, about comic strips... It feels like a comic strip come to life! The reality-warping, the overexaggerated characters (including Izzy), the story resting on a single high concept. Usually, when I listen to these stories, I envision the characters in live action. In this story, it is almost impossible not to visualize it all as a cartoon - and I mean that as a compliment.

Writer Alan Barnes keeps the story moving quickly, but also is very successful in filtering the story through Izzy. In this, Izzy's Story is more successful in feeling like a story about Izzy than Benny's Story was for Benny, and far moreso than Fitz's Story was for Fitz. The Doctor is pulled into this story because of Izzy, and Izzy's knowledge of the culture of these comics influences the Doctor's actions and the story's outcome. And while the Doctor's judgment of the various characters is a purely moral one, Izzy's very different reaction is clearly meant to be the one with which listeners will identify.

Anyway, there's nothing very deep to analyze here. Suffice it say: Fun. Along with the usual final note of how much I'd like to see a full story with this teaming, only moreso in this case because of how adorably infectious Jemima Rooper ended up being.


Rating: 7/10.


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Sunday, May 15, 2011

123-b. The Company of Friends: Fitz's Story


1 episode. Approx. 30 minutes. Written by: Stephen Cole. Directed by: Nicholas Briggs.


THE PLOT

The Doctor is on television (well, its sci fi equivalent), giving his personal endorsement to Alien Defence Incorporated, a private security outfit designed to battle an Earth-like planet's frequent extraterrestrial invasions. This endorsement comes as something of a surprise to the Doctor, who has certainly never recorded TV adverts for private security companies.

So the Doctor and his companion, Fitz (Matt Di Angelo) decide to pay a visit to ADI's offices. The Doctor breaks into the offices at night, determined to find out if the company is what it appears to be, or if it's hiding some other agenda. Meanwhile, Fitz prepares to enact the Doctor's backup plan, to insure against anything going wrong.

Naturally, everything ends up going wrong.


CHARACTERS

The Doctor: He is quite happy to make an appointment to talk to Commander Femor... but only after first breaking into her offices in order to determine whether or not her answers will be the truth. He continues to think quickly, and his rapid realization that the situation has changed when he and Femor end up facing a deadly alien helps to save both their lives (and Fitz's). By his 8th incarnation, he has learned to come up with a "Plan B" before blithely charging in, which is an improvement - even he hasn't quite learned how to make "Plan B" run entirely smoothly when it's needed. McGann gives a spirited performance, seeming to enjoy his co-stars and the light-hearted nature of the material.

Fitz Kreiner: Matt Di Angelo makes his debut as Fitz. The 8th Doctor's longest-running companion, Fitz ran through more than half of the BBC EDA range, gaining a fervent following among readers. To date, this is his only audio adventure, though hopefully the positive reaction to this release will inspire Big Finish to bring the character back. Di Angelo is quite good in the role, playing Fitz's sarcastic side and his cheeky (and slightly cheesy) bravado to good, humorous effect. Di Angelo has good comic timing, which is a great asset to a primarily comic story. This paper-thin story doesn't give much chance to go beyond Fitz's surface, but there is at least the sense that there is more to the character than just what is on the surface.


THOUGHTS

Fitz's Story works pretty well as far as it goes, because it does maintain an appealing light touch. Unlike the same release's Benny's Story, there's no sense of anyone trying to overreach. Writer Stephen Cole has crafted a small-scale story that's perfect for a single episode's running time. The results are consistently entertaining and energetic. The whole thing is over almost before you know it, and I found it a fine way to make one day's commute from work go by quickly.

Mind you, like pretty much all the other single-episode stories I have reviewed to date, it's as insubstantial as a spider's silk web. There's nothing here to linger in the memory. There's no sense of jeopardy, but the fast pace and strong energy keep that from mattering.

Mainly, the story works because Paul McGann and Matt Di Angelo play extremely well opposite each other, as do McGann and guest star Fenella Woolgar. The 8th Doc/Fitz partnership is an engaging one, and it's not hard to see why Fitz came to dominate the BBC Books range to such an extent. I would actually quite like to see a full-length story featuring Fitz.

In the meantime, while this teaser doesn't compel me to go out and order a bunch of BBC books, it's a fun piece, produced to Big Finish's usual polished standards.


Rating: 6/10.

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Sunday, March 6, 2011

123-a. The Company of Friends: Benny's Story.


1 episode. Approx. 35 minutes. Written by: Lance Parkin. Directed by: Nicholas Briggs.  Produced by: David Richardson.


THE PLOT

Many years after the end of her association with the Doctor, archaeologist Bernice Summerfield is participating in a dig inside the coal mines of a dead planet. It's a freelance job for which she is being very well-paid, in exchange for "not asking any questions." She is shocked when she quickly finds the object of her employer’s efforts: a TARDIS key. She is even more startled when her employer uses that key to summon the TARDIS in question – the TARDIS belonging to the Doctor!

Soon, Benny finds herself running with the Doctor from deadly security robots, through frozen coal mines and across time zones into a jungle filled with treacherous cliffs and ravenous green lions. With "her" Doctor - the 7th Doctor - she could have at least been secure in the knowledge that the Doctor had some masterplan. But this new Doctor has no more idea than she does what is going on, and no kind of plan at all!


CHARACTERS

The Doctor: Paul McGann seems to be having a terrific time, infusing his performance with a lot of energy and enthusiasm. As in The TV Movie, he can shift from wild enthusiasm to deadly serious very quickly.  He handles the Doctor's genuine anger at the climax quite well (far better, I'd say, than his immediate predecessor could have done). This story sees him travelling alone, and he reacts with delight at running into an old friend, eager at the thought of travelling with her again.

Bernice Summerfield: Lisa Bowerman has played Bernice for a long time now, both in a handful of Who audios and in her own long-running audio range.  She is likely at the point at which she could play Benny in her sleep. It's to her credit that she does not in any way phone in her performance. The story is very much told from her point-of-view, and as such it is up to her to carry the story. She does so with energy and good humor, and she plays so well opposite McGann that I find myself wanting to hear a full-length release with these two.


THOUGHTS

In the past few years, it has become standard for Big Finish to produce one "anthology" release per year, varying these among their Doctors. 2009 was the 8th Doctor's turn for such a release: The Company of Friends, in which the gimmick was to pair 8th Doctor Paul McGann with companions from the various 8th Doctor ranges: Virgin NA's, BBC EDA's, and the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip. Benny's Story, the first of the four stories, sees the 8th Doctor reunited with the New Adventures' Professor Bernice "Benny" Summerfield.

When I first listened to it, I found this the weakest of the four stories, and I suspect that opinion will hold. That's not to say Benny's Story is bad. It's an amusing trifle, with a great deal of pace and energy and spirited performances by the two leads. But it is very much a trifle, a quick runaround.

The villain is weak, and the scenes in which she tries to take over the TARDIS simply occupy too much of the story's brief running time. I wanted to hear more of the Doctor and Benny, and a lot less of the supremely uninteresting Countess Venhella (Su Douglas), whose only good scene comes when the Doctor confronts her at the end. The plot being just a thin clothesline for interaction between McGann and Bowerman is fine - but if that's the case, then surely we should get as much 8th Doc/Benny as possible?

It's amusing, and worth a listen. But it's too lightweight to be fully satisfying as a story, and too overplotted to be fully satisfying as a character comedy. An OK bit of filler, but nothing more than that.


Rating: 5/10.

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Saturday, January 1, 2011

29. The Chimes of Midnight.


4 episodes. Approx. 116 minutes. Written by: Robert Shearman. Directed by: Barnaby Edwards. Produced by: Gary Russell, Jason Haigh-Ellery.


THE PLOT

It is Christmas Eve, and the TARDIS has materialized inside the larder of an Edwardian mansion circa 1906. When the Doctor and Charley move into the house proper to investigate, they find all the rooms empty. Charley writes her name in the dust on a table, only to watch the dust blow back over it. Some force has locked them outside of time.

Has locked the Doctor out, at least. Charley is let in, just for a moment, and has a conversation with scullery maid Edith Thompson (Louise Rolfe). As they talk, Charley's name appears on the dusty table - and Edith abruptly tells Charley that there will be a murder soon. Hers.

It is an apt prediction. As the chimes of a grandfather clock are heard striking the hour, a woman's screams fill the air. The Doctor and Charley find themselves standing over Edith's body. The rest of the household staff also appears, with the stern butler Shaughnessy (Lennox Greaves) recognizing the Doctor and Charley as detectives who will surely solve this case. An hour later, another murder occurs. But the hour has passed in only half the time it should have, and the staff appears bizarrely unconcerned by the deaths.

Time continues to speed up, and the dead return to life only to be murdered again. As the Doctor comes to see that they are trapped in a time loop, Charley is visited by Edith's ghost, who tells her to remember her - And also one more thing:

"Edward Grove is alive..."


CHARACTERS

The Doctor: When the TARDIS materializes in a place that's completely dark, with no readings to indicate where and when they are, he is initially delighted at the prospect of a mystery. But once he realizes that there is an intelligent force at work, he attempts escape. "There are some mysteries best left unsolved," he tells Charley, readily admitting that he's frightened. He observes that they're being left far too many clues about the murders, and that the murders themselves are little more than red herrings. Paul McGann is superb throughout - doubly so in the final episode, as he attempts to reason first with the villain of the piece and then with Charley herself, in a scene that's a major turning point in their particular Doctor/Companion dynamic.

Charley: Though this house is larger than the one in which she grew up, she is very much a part of this culture. She instantly recognizes the servants' rooms for what they are, guiding both Doctor and listener through this confined space in Episode One to set the geography for the rest of the story. As they look over the Christmas preparations, she casually complains that "cook used to make far too much (plum pudding)," and it is evident from her comments that she never really picked up on the names of her family's own servants. The cook was just "Cook," defined by her role in the household just as the servants in this story are defined entirely by their roles. The force at work recognizes her as "belonging," and works her into a role as well: As the daughter of the Master of the House, a role she gradually finds impossible to resist.


THOUGHTS

"How can I be dead and alive at the same time...?"

Doctor Who's best Christmas story was not any of the new series' Christmas specials. It was not made for television at all, and it wasn't even released at Christmas. Which, in a story focused on paradoxes, seems oddly perfect - Much like the rest of The Chimes of Midnight.

Writer Robert Shearman's first Big Finish audio was The Holy Terror, a tremendously well-received story that helped raise the bar of what the audience expected of the company. The Chimes of Midnight not only doesn't disappoint; it raises that bar even further. It is surreal but not nonsensical, funny but emotional. It also features the most multilayered characterizations yet for the likeable Eighth Doctor/Charley team.

Shearman builds on previously established character traits, and uses those to fuel the story. Charley's privileged background makes her a ready-made guide to the basic layout of the servant's hall. Her intrinsic compassion also fuels the narrative through her connection with the murdered Edith - a connection that starts as Edith reacts to Charley's kindness, a trait she has encountered far too little of.  That connection grows over the story, and twists into something dark and sinister as the episodes progress.

The script doesn't forget to give the Doctor excellent material as well. It's a treat to hear Paul McGann's usually laid-back Doctor be genuinely afraid. He finds himself a step behind throughout: First genuinely trying to solve Edith's murder, then trying to prevent the next, before it occurs to him that the murders themselves are incidental. At one point he actually gives up, ready to abandon the servants to loop about eternally in their tiny circles. Only when the mysterious Edward Grove confronts him directly does he find an opportunity for victory - an opportunity that hinges on his own connection with Charley.

In a stunning speech, he lays out for Charley what she means to him, drawing a direct line between his solo existence and the loop in which they are all trapped: "Without you, I would just be a lonely old man, rattling around in the TARDIS with no one to talk to: My life going round and round without meaning, my life going around in circles." The speech, in its full length both emotional and poetic, is superbly delivered by McGann and is one that will go 'round and 'round within the listener's mind after the story is done. It marks the point at which his relationship with Charley ceases to be just a standard Doctor/Companion relationship. After this, they are almost equal leads for the next several stories and genuinely close friends.

The ending ties it all together with a lovely grace note, one that could have been cloying had it not been so very well earned by the time it occurs. In a more standard episode, the exact same scene with the exact same dialogue might have made me roll my eyes or groan. But coming at the end of a story that has built so well to it, the final fade out on a poor girl's humming of Hark, the Herald Angels Sing is remarkably effective.

With terrific performances (Lennox Greaves' Shaughnessy is a particular standout, and I wish I had space to give him the full praises due to him), and a wonderfully creepy yet authentic-seeming soundscape under the guiding hand of director Barnaby Edwards, The Chimes of Midnight is as close to perfect as a story can be. Well over a decade after the fact, it remains a strong contender for the title of best Big Finish audio, and is one of the best Doctor Who stories available in any form.


Overall Rating: 10/10.

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