Fuck Me, Who Let Eric Saward Into The Building?
Irwin Allen lives.
Steve Punt and Hugh Dennis are
Pointing and laughing.
Voyage Of The Damned
Honest? I don't know what the hell to make of that one. Imagine if Irwin Allen had written Earthshock and The Robots Of Death. How silly yet needlessly grim was that? If like me you were playing 'spot the victim' ten minutes in, then you probably didn't expect (a) so many people to end up killing themselves, and (b) the moral to be 'remember kids, fate is a complete c**t'. And has the Doctor ever been so helpless? That's about as Saward as it gets.
The gay subtext 'cyborgs have marriage rights too' was subtle this year wasn't it? And nobody seems to have noticed the junior officer still has a bullet in his gut either.
Tat Wood's 'Things That Don't Make Sense' starts here...
Buckingham Palace is still standing.
I was certain from the trailers, right up to where the physics went straight out the window, that those were missiles instead of meteors and the ship was being shot at. Obviously nobody's going to watch sn episode like this for its scientific integrity, but I feel nerdily compelled to point out: meteors are big chunks of rocks and ice. So how can they (a) burn, (b) leave stupid vapour trails in space, and (c) be 'magnetised' towards the hull of a ship and away from the whacking great planet in close proximity, without dragging the ship itself straight out of orbit (big planet, remember)? No, they don't say 'tractor beam'. And aren't meteorites comparatively rare, so where did these handy ones come from at exactly the right time? Did the Cybermen happen to ionise a nearby star, 'cos it's as daft as anything in The Wheel In Space. You're not going to convince me that a bankrupt travel agency can accurately pinpoint a cruise liner's time-jump to be in the right place and time for a meteor strike either, when just blowing the fucker up or sabotaging the engines and letting it drop would have been so much damn easier, since there's not going to be any 'witnesses' anyway after life on Earth gets wiped out by the impact, thus making the whole subplot with the Heavenly Hosts magnificently irrelevant. As if the mad rampaging robots announcing their intentions by going 'INFORMATION: KILL' the whole time wouldn't be suspicious enough, particularly to the important bloke on board with a mobile phone talking to his investor, who never thinks of phoning back home and letting them know what the FUCK'S GOING ON. Does NOBODY remember 9/11 anymore? And talking of which, how lax is basic security on board this vessel, that Bannakaffalatta can sneak his metal body capable of generating a massive EMP pulse on board without setting off any sensors or security alarms?
(Dr Science is also frothing at the mouth comparing the structural integrity of the ship after the meteor impact with, say, the structural integrity of the formerly flat piece of desert that's now the Grand Canyon, but we'll let that pass.)
By the way, even if you had some kind of magic magnet that attracts rock instead of metal, (NO, they DON'T call it a 'tractor beam'), and couldn't sell the patent for untold billions and save the company that way, then what's the point of installing the device into a crappy old ship that, like the Enterprise and the Liberator, is never intended to take off and land on a planet and would have been built in space, if not for the needlessly overcomplicated Columbo-style murder plot? And since it has all the aerodynamic properties of a giant brick, then how in the name of God can the Titanic possibly pull out of an atmospheric crash dive, the shockwave from which would utterly obliterate everything underneath? Because Buckingham Palace is still standing, and the Royals go 'hurrah' at an unexpected near-miss from an alien spacecraft instead of telling the Doctor to nyaff orrrrff.
Is Max Capricorn's presence on the ship supposed to be a secret or not? The script doesn't seem to be able to make its mind up. Max's whole plan depends on being pronounced dead at the scene of the disaster, but since the dramatic yet blatantly obvious plot twist is that he's responsible for all of this, none of the crew ever acknowledges that he's on board (surely, as loyal corporate staff, somebody's first thought after the impact should have been for the safety of the chief executive?), and he's purposely killing off survivors to remain undetected. And as a cyborg he's kept himself hidden away for years, so nobody would have seen him enter or leave the ship. He must be VERY clever too to have squirrelled all his assets away without the rest of the board ever noticing, particularly if he wanted to surreptitiously spend them later after faking his own death without arousing suspicion. Not even Trau Morgus managed that one. But then the board also apparently doesn't know or find it odd that the CEO who built the company from scratch is also 170 years old, so maybe they're just inept. Just how long has Max been running the place?
Incidentally, who else guessed the real twist that didn't happen was that Max's true identity was going to be Taren Capell and not Delegate Arcturus?
Exactly HOW much money was the Captain promised to commit planetary genocide for the sake of his family's financial future, and wouldn't it also occur to him that a boss that ruthless in securing his own wealth could welch on the deal and the Captain would be too dead to stop it? As has been pointed out already, the pound/credit excange rate means it takes about twenty years to pay off a hundred pound phone bill, so it couldn't have been that much anyway.
But perhaps the biggest logical whopper of all is this: Max intends to ride out the disaster in a survival chamber that can withstand a supernova. Not a nuclear holocaust, an exploding sun. The Doctor knows all about it and how it works, suggesting that such things are in common usage, especially if a bankrupt cruise company in a fucked-up economy has got one. So, er.... WHY IS GALLIFREY DESTROYED?? Why couldn't the oldest, most technically supreme civilization in the universe with an Eye Of Harmony at their disposal knock up a larger-scale model to protect their own planet, or at the very least use for a backup to ensure the survival of the race once the Time War started? Come to that, why didn't the Daleks explore the military potential of this technology in the scope of galactic conquest? If you can make a survival chamber out of this principle, couldn't you also make an utterly indestructable battle cruiser or two? Build an armed survival ship, blow up a few stars, and ride out the ensuing holocaust while everything around you burns. Madness.
PS: Buckingham Palace is still standing. Did I mention this already?
And since the TARDIS was in orbit and the shields were down when the Titanic pranged it, why wasn't the Doctor sucked out into space as well?
(end of pedantry)
'A bit superficial' seems to be the most appropriate phrase I can muster, I think. I'm not sure if I'll ever watch it again (at least not with a straight face); there was a lot to enjoy on the day and it's visually exciting and expensive, but it's overpadded, and the tone was just off, even leaving out the monumental silliness of the last fifteen minutes which is just gagging for a podcast (I'd also say "it never decents to Last Of The Time Lords' level" if it wasn't damning with such faint praise which this special doesn't deserve to be tarred with). Surely at any other time of year, we'd all cheer like idiots at its "I CAN DO ANYTHING" gut-punch about the futility of existence, when it looked like it was going to bring Kylie back from the dead as a typically Christmas cop-out, only to snatch her away again in the cruelest fashion possible (I wonder what the Fear Factor kids made of that). But so many people died pointllessly without adding to the plot; Dalek_Sex is likening it with the space bus from Delta & The Bannermen, which sounds like as apt a comparison as one could ever get. He also doesn't like the new theme remix. I told hm he should be glad it's not Keff's.
Dedicating a disaster movie to the memory of Verity Lambert is just one more example of how intrinsically wrong it all feels, though it's not actually inappropraiate in the way that immediately springs to the fan-mind. After all, Verity did give us the equally grim, chaotic and cruel Dalek Invasion Of Earth. But that one was about conflict and hope; the Daleks were a palpable on-screen force for the Doctor to proactively oppose and overcome, almost as his duty, while no matter how bleak things got after episode one, the serial continued to exude a self-belief that human endeavour could eventually carry the day. Neither of those are true for Voyage Of The Damned, which for the most part views more like the untransmitted invasion and razing of the planet before the Doctor and party arrived.
Yet at the end of the day all comparisons with the old series are irrelevant. Despite its source influences, this is a thoroughly modern piece of television for a thoroughly modern Doctor. The Poseidon Adventure was made in 1973. Can you really see Jon Pertwee doing his own stunts for this and bellowing NOW LISTEN TO ME at the whimpering ragtags? He'd be rubbing a damn sight more than the back of his neck, I can tell you.
The Bumper Book Of Made-Up Doctor Who Facts has this to say about Voyage Of The Damned: the original plan was for wee Jimmy Vee to be overdubbed by Mel Blanc. From beyond the gwaaaaaaaave. Bedebedebedebede.
Ladies and gentlemen, we apologise for the delay; the quantum accelerator has been rectified and your programme is now ready for boring. Please take your sofas and make sure your TV dinner tray is in an upright position ready for throwing at the screen.
All shrunken corpses and molecularly-disintegrated passengers should be placed in the overhead lockers or under the seat in front of you. Please be careful when opening overhead lockers, as baggage from the previous episodes may have shafted us during the flight.
In the event of an end-of-season gimmick, please assume the bracing position with your hands on your head. In this position, should a previously written-out character come back next year for no adequate reason, you will be ready to rock back and forwards saying "Oh God, no".
The vacant stare. The wide-eyed gape. The deer-in-headlights realisation that screams 'I've fucked up' at the universe. Call it what you like, but it's that look of disbelieving horror that characterises Peter Davison's tenure as the 'vulnerable' Fifth Doctor. Odd then, how seldom you see it in Season Nineteen. It's probably what Davison means by his early performance being 'bland'; there's some great quality gimble-acting in episode one of Castrovalva, but that's down to regeneration trauma, and doesn't really count. (Davison had already made three stories before that one, which itself is telling enough.)
The turning point is of course, the end of Earthshock. Oh yes, it's easy enough to take charge with a winning smile when facing utter wimps like Terileptils or Urbankans, but the wobbly Mickey Mouse falsetto is never far away, and we know from hindisght it's all going to hell very soon. And then suddenly confronted with a heavyweight, all the boyish overconfidence is blown away and we're all cheering along with the next two seasons of hurried neurotic urgency, a Doctor completely out of his depth who could crack again at any moment. Just watch Davison's 'what have I done' face at the end of part four. We love it.
Who cares though? It's still Davison's show, and this era will always belong to that look. Even Terminus, a story so unrelentingly grey and miserable that they hired Blake 7's Mary Ridge to direct it, contains the barest trace of gravitas to inspire a brief mug at the camera. "What is this horrendous place," indeed. Hell, in Snakedance, our hero manages to reduce himself to a ranting, paranoid maniac. How deeply satisying is that? A lot more so than when they tried the same shtick after The Caves Of Androzani, anyway. In fact Androzani, given the depth of shit Robert Holmes gleefully dump everyone into, is startlingly consipicuous by the absence of a good gawp. Little did we know it would be us pulling that face the following Monday.
Because aside from a quick infodump natter with the Xeraphin, the rest of it is totally superfluous. Professor Hayter sticks his hand into the Top Of The Pops light socket rather than suffer another minute of Grimwade's superlucent stream of compressed technoballs. Angela Clifford, the world's least-reassuring stewardess, scarpers off to the Master's TARDIS once her contractually-obliged minimum of added plot is up, and is never seen again. Tea with two sugars, love. The knackered old Type-40 rather laughably turns into a helicopter by having bits swapped round in the same fashion that toy robots don't. And the Master apparently 'defeats' the Doctor by... hmmm, laying a power cable. We rang the electricity board for comment, but they told us to sod off, having got thoroughly sick of that sketch quoted at them since 1981.
(The scene: Velma of Traken and Daphne Jovanka have penetrated the inner sanctum. Kalid, caught in his own backfiring trap, is drenched in a torrent of Plasmaton snot. Doctor Freddy, with clueless comedy sidekicks in tow, prepares to unmask him.)
DOCTOR: Our first clue was Adric. You never realised that Matthew Waterhouse and the petulant little git in pyjamas were really one and the same character, and by making his vision try to act as a portent of doom instead of himself, despite just two lines of dialogue and an 'aaaargh' it totally humiliated itself over the course of six takes trying to get anything right. That's how we knew this Adric was a fake.
DOCTOR: Not so fast, Master. I think you'll find your dental pattern matches the marks on this chewed scenery, placing you at the scene of the crime. Take him away, Sheriff.
Peter Grimwade. Affectionately known as 'Grimmers' by the rest of the cast, or 'Grimmace' after they read his scripts. Why did Grimwade never direct his own utterly incomprehensible material, and show them all how to do it properly? Probably because once you've overseen that nauseating Alzarian's demise in living 24-bit BeebColour (TM), you know there's nowhere for your career to go but down. Sadly, the mines he planted around the keyboard failed to go off; arm's length wouldn't have saved the little sod's fingers then.
That's assuming they could have pretended it was on a par with The Talons Of Weng Chiang, and chucked an entire season's finances at it to do it 'justice' like the end-of-term Phillip Hinchcliffe off his face on gin. It wasn't, and they didn't. If you thought the scenery looked fake in 1982 analogue fuzz-o-vision, you won't believe how blindingly obvious it is now on the remastered DVD that everyone's standing six inches away from a crap matte skyline, absolutely the worst bit of faked perspective since the Palitoy tank in Robot. There is not a single prop that doesn't wobble, including the TARDIS doors that need to be held shut from the inside while the prop is lying on its side. The digital restoration does this story absolutely no favours whatsoever.
And that's that for episode one. Twenty-odd minutes of twiddly Radiophonic tat, bottom-of-the-barrel CSO of characters floating about the studio, and disjointed film footage that feels like an entirely different serial put there for the rest of the programme to remark upon to the watching boys and girls. If that suddenly sounds at all familiar to the other thirty-somethings in the audience, it's because it's as near as dammit the format of Words And Pictures, which this whole enterprise feels exactly like. You almost expect Peter Davison to whip out a magic pencil with a light on the end as a replacement for the mangled sonic screwdriver, before Derek Griffiths chimes in with a bouncy join-in-at-home song about words that end in -IT.
Well, it's no Five Doctors, that's for sure. There's only one scene spanning a whole seven minutes (instead of merely seeming that way when Peter Moffat sets up the camera and slopes off for a quick fag). Nobody is upstaged by Patrick Troughton, and Chris Donald's Pathetic Cybermen have thankfully been left by the wayside since the end of Season Two. And Davison doesn't give us his trademark cliffhanger-gawp like a goldfish doing Frank Drebin impressions during the freeze frame at the end of Police Squad, so it must be an android Dalek duplicate left over from The Chase and not the real thing.
Irongron is a man with an axe to grind. It needs grinding from the number of times it's hit the ground and blunted. There it goes again; Hal's well-aimed shot provokes enough prolonged blank-faced cartoon 'buh' for the Doctor to skitter away, legs akimbo in a fashion not unlike Scooby and Shaggy pinwheeling on the spot the second before the monster's arms clasp on empty air. I'm also wondering how much the insurance cost to cover that torch fire, it might help to explain the number of cheap CSO'd photographs on display next in Invasion Of The Dinosaurs.
You can thank Terrance Dicks for the flowery Olde-Worlde descriptions which the fans appear to remember this episode for far more than the first naming of the Doctor's home planet. With the Doctor's escape Linx is getting agitated, since Long-Shanked Rascal is now only evens favourite to win at Chepstow, Courtly Rogue having failed the dope test. While over at Sir Edward's more civilised company, the Third Doctor describes his primary adversary as 'nasty, brutish and short'. Don't forget 'Chaplinesque', Jon. Gallifrey isn't really that big a deal, yet; The Deadly Assassin, wherin Robert Holmes would outrage the newly-formed Doctor Who Anal-retentive Society with his depiction of Time Lord society in complacent decline, is still three years away, but if anyone had properly paid attention to how the Time Lords had been dicking the Doctor about for the previous four seasons, it shouldn't have come as a major surprise after the Doctor describes his supposedly benevolent, all-powerful godlike race as a bunch of petty beaurocratic jobsworths.
Best line of the episode is Elisabeth Sladen, so totally overwhelmed by all the talk of time-travelling extra-terrestrials, responding with the simple off-the-cuff premeditated homicide of a cup of tea. But now it's half past three and teatime is over, so let the battle for Cloppa Castle commence! There's no oil, but plenty of Bygones and Hasbeens, particularly the one tossing smoke bombs over the parapet. A few bright flashes later and it's Time Lords five hundred, Sontarans nil, stink stopped play; the troglodytes scurrying off before you can shout 'who's the bastard in the black'. Irongron's pep talk cuts little ice and even Linx's motivational 'win or I'll kill you' fails to raise the team morale. No half-time oranges for these scurvy dogs.
With Sir Edward's respite duly earned, the plan now for the Doctor and party is to go on the offensive. Less offensive one hopes than Bloodaxe's Bladrick impressions and incessant toadying, which from Irongron's expression even he doesn't buy, since 'intelligence' has more than three syllables. But alas, no; for this plan calls for a bit of subterfuge, a lot of chutzpah and the brand of cheesy disguise that Dick Dastardly wouldn't touch with a ten-foot halberd. And since EEC regulations require TV monks to come equipped with North Country accents, they come to beg arrrrrrms from the good Captain Irongron; those would be the arms that have fallen into Xeron hands. Irongron is described by his pathetic guardsmen as a kindly and charitable man. Yes, and that charity is MENCAP, since the employment of acting of this calibre borders on positive discrimination of the handicapped. Oh, and never mind, Cadfael lovers; Derek Jacobi will be along to get his own back, even if takes another three and a half decades.
Linx takes his belligerent personal grudges with the Doctor very seriously, considering they've only met for about two minutes in episode two and Jon Pertwee's pomposity isn't normally that quick to evoke a homicidal response, not even in a race bred with all the cultural tolerance of a game of Stratego. The Sontaran response, naturally enough, is the red torch shone round Chloe Webber's banister in Fear Her; a prolonged dosage of which will kill anyone.
So much for Women's Lib. Her first episode reprise, and Sarah-Jane is hauled off by a hirsuite savage. If it were Peri, that lingua muscle protruding from Linx's face mask wouldn't be the last tongueing she'd ever get. I'm not so sure where people are coming from about her being unlikeable in her first story, the way she takes charge over the useless gentry later on and does very nicely with all the planning herself until being emasculated - a word I use deliberately - in typical companion fashion under Jon's protective wing. Other than a bit of token feminism in The Monster Of Peladon, it wouldn't be until the start of Planet Of The Spiders that she gets to be properly independent again as her career demands, and not simply in need in rescue. Maybe this initial 'unlikeability' stems from everyone remembering her most fondly with the Fourth Doctor as genuine mutual friends, instead of bucking the stereotype very blatantly (but honestly) of being the Third Doctor's ward/sidekick. One wonders though which magazines she bones up on for journalist research if she can sniff out a (supposedly) undercover organization like UNIT, but apparently isn't fussed about great big gaps in the latest goss about movie productions and big tourist attractions, since she has to try and figure it out for herself. Very badly.
Everyone acts like big kids in this episode. David Daker gets increasingly frustrated during Sarah's interrogation that nobody is paying enough attention to his own overacting, so Linx tosses him a bone with the crappiest of 1970s robots that walks like it's pretending to be a Quark in the playground. Look at the thing, it's got fewer points of articulation than a six-inch David Tennant. It might just about have some use as a fighting machine if the opponent was a carrot. But Monty Python's Black Knight it isn't, so Irongron has Hal the archer pepper it with the BB gun he also got for Christmas. He'd have been better off keeping the receipt and taking it back to the shops to exchange for a Big Trak instead.
I'm not sure I've ever really bought the time-travel concept of history being altered via the introduction of higher technology, since somebody still has to discover the principles by which said technology actually works before they can duplicate it. However that's not what Jon Pertwee's outraged head thinks, so it's a pity his diplomacy head got left behind at UNIT HQ. No other Doctor would be so utterly pompous as to tell a Sontaran "I might consider helping you" in an I'm-better-than-you-are way; just give him what he wants and let him LEAVE! At least he's right that Sontran military intelligence on Gallifrey should never be put to the test. Not unless they fancy a bit of TARDIS hide-and-seek in fluent cockney, I should coco.
In fact, aside from some spectacular gurning into his 1973 headphones - nothing on but Tony Blackburn - the Doctor achieves very little in these twenty five minutes; some pitiful debating, a half-hearted escape with the aid of Mister Magoo, and a trip over his own feet bringing a halt to the ill-judged castle game of British Bulldog. And uh-oh, Irongron's suddenly remembered what age he's supposed to be and so far his track record of hanging onto his weapon (fnar) isn't very impressive. Brace yourselves, this could go anywhere.
With so much in common with this less-than-illustrious company, you'd expect The Time Warrior would be utter rubbish. Well, it isn't. Robert Holmes does his damndest to instill his brand of genuine wit where a lesser writer would succumb to Terrance's indulgant lunacy (for which Bob would get his revenge later). It's down to Bob that The Time Warrior comes across as merely whimsical - the Middle Ages are menaced by a shoulder-padded turdgoblin in a giant golf ball - instead of a twelfth-century alien abduction written by Jose Chung. And since Bob himself claimed to know nothing about real history, what we get instead is Cloppa Castle, some five years ahead of its time; Dot Cotton as Queen Ethelbruda takes charge while wet King Woebegone lies quaking under the bed, terrified of the castle-coveting Beoswyne, dim sidekick Hench, their mighty army of six and enough medieval thees and thous to give Jon Pertwee's lisp a persecution complex before the end of episode one. It's not like The Visitation was any less conceptually dumb for being utterly humourless.
Alan Bromly holds out at long as he can, but we're ten minutes into the episode and there's not going to be room for Jon Pertwee's nose or ego if we hang around any longer, so we cut grudgingly to the first research establishment of the new season (collect the set; free dioramas to cut out from packets of Coco Pops) where the Jack Klugman of the Doctors, bereft of any authority figures to argue with for a change, tinkers with his ridiculous Great Egg Race snowglobe alarm clock (orange sky model). Jon's very fond of Delta particles, they flutter very nicely when you turn it upside down and shake it about a bit.
And so to that cliffhanger moment, when Linx raises his helmet to reveal the identically sculpted features underneath in all their Spud-Hates-U glory. The Sontaran race can replicate thousands of new warriors at a time; it depends on how much brown Play-Doh and Fuzzy Pumper Crazy Clones sets there are to hand.
And I guess that's down to the essence of what makes this such a treat to watch. It's a programme perfectly in tune with its audience - childlike, without being childish; bright and breezy, oh-so-painfully modern (dayglo orange and now Speccy Magenta paint? bleurrrgh), and packed full of infectious charm. It's like a Silver Age Marvel comic compared with Torchwood's po-faced Crisis On Infinite Earths with all the fun surgically removed from it (and worse). What's wrong with fun? Somebody's got to take on the otherworldly extra-dimensional entities that keep the Chuckle Brothers employed, and long as Liz Sladen looks younger than
...Matthew Waterhouse in the out-takes, looking utterly forlorn and miserable at the near-certainty of these being the last two lines (three if you include 'aaaaarrrgh') that he'll ever get.
What do you mean, "is that it"? What do you expect with three-minute episodes? Who's going to remember the previous microscopic plot on a weekly basis anyway? I had a hard enough job in the time it took to load each one on dialup from YouTube. Imagine The Keys Of Marinus, remade by LittleKuriboh in the fashion of his Abridged Yu-Gi-Oh parody dub series. But without the gags. You might as well write a dissertation on the plot nuances of TV Action & Countdown. Or the Walls Sky Ray adverts.
It's a bit 'Poundstretcher epic' this, isn't it? This is the main let-down with The Infinite Quest - there's a different animation team at the helm who have tried to up the bar within the limited Shockwave resources at their disposal, and there's some quite impressive stuff on show with flying ships and built-up models like Caw the robot bird and the Mantis Queen. But the main characters are still the same Cosgrove-Hall character style from Scream Of The Shalka and The Invasion, which doesn't translate at all to any kind of fluid, organic movement. Indeed Tennant is almost too good in this, he brings far more life to the role than his cut-out Blue Peter Theater figure with the same sonic screwdriver stock-poses can possibly match. It's weird not seeing him leaping about.
Let's end with a really bad cartoon analogy. The Infinite Quest is the kind of wheeze the Bash Street Kids would pull during detention, where the first and last pages they hand in contain the lines they were supposed to write, and the rest in between is a pile of scribbles. Russell, Gary, Alan; go to the back of the class and write out one thousand times, "I must put Anthony Stewart Head in every episode. I must put Anthony Stewart Head in every episode. I must put..."