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FishyFish

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250px-Fury_from_the_Deep.JPG

Terrifying! Who needs CGI monsters when you have that?

So, Fury of the Deep was another monster storyline, which are becoming very prevalent in this series! I'm also noting a lot of research or science facility locations, often with power-hungry or corruptable leaders, and people infiltrating them or working undercover. Common themes here. I'm not complaining, I much prefer these types of stories.

This one sees sentient seaweed creatures spreading across a network of natural gas rigs on the north sea by travelling through the pipes and spreading foam and poisonous gas everywhere. The gas controls the workers and the workers spread more of the seaweed around to infect other people.

They really tried to scare the pants off you back then. The pulsating heartbeat noises from the pipes are just as effective today - the creature (what I could make out of it from the images and surviving clips) was obscured enough by all the foam to remain scarily hidden. And the possessed people, like our friend above there... oh my. If I was eight years old watching that, I'd've had nightmares.

Victoria screams a lot in this story, which for once actually turns out quite useful, as the sound of her scream apparently kills the seaweed creatures. They amplify her scream and send it through the pipework in order to kill the nerve centre and it works! It's an abrupt solution - it's previously mentioned that they're also weak against pure oxygen, and it looked like a plan was being put into place for that, but it never went anywhere. It's possible the ending was shortened, lengthened or re-written entirely, but I don't know. It just seemed a bit abrupt to me.

Notable in this story is the first time I've seen the Tardis physically 'land' anywhere - it literally descends from the sky and hovers over the sea, then leaves again the same way (instead of dematerialising first). Also notable is the first time a companion has remarked on how often they seem to arrive in England - Jamie mentions it shortly after they arrive on the shore. Another nod to the series tropes is when Victoria complains about how they always get into one spot of danger after another and never seem to land anywhere peaceful. It's true enough - the Tardis must have some sort of "Adventure Detector" that guides it. :P

This final point actually pushes Victoria to the brink. Deciding she cannot take anymore 'excitement', she elects to end her adventures and remain behind. The final episode winds down a little earlier than normal as the Doctor and Jamie say goodbye to her.

This six-part serial was made up of all six reconstructions, incorporating clips of the scary footage that was cut out from the overseas broadcasts. Regarding these missing episodes, I've looked ahead and there are only another 12 reconstructions remaining (including two animated episodes). The final Troughton series seems to be mostly complete. After that, there are none missing at all. Phew!

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Excellent write up as usual Sprite. The Troughton reign is widely regarded as the start of the classic "monster" era - you will recall the prevalence of historical stories in Hartnell's era - and there was every reason for kids to hide behind their sofas accordingly.

Lots of lovely stories to come, including the fantastic Invasion animation. Given your fondness for Troughton I'll be interested to hear how you get on with Jon Pertwee. He's well liked by fans, and his first season is classic story after classic story, but over the years he has become one of my least favourite Doctors, save for some exceptional moments.

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The Wheel in Space

I like the Cybermen episodes so far because they're unannounced. Aside from 'Tomb of the Cybermen', they've all taken me by surprise so far. Unlike the Dalek episodes, where you know it's a Dalek episode because it has "Dalek" in the title, you're not just waiting around for the Cybermen to show up, they just suddenly appear. You see those unmistakable helmet handles and then "surprise! It's a Cyberman episode!!"

Ooops, spoilers!

The Wheel in Space is set on a wheel... in space. A rotating Earth space station that monitors stellar phenomena, and is armed with a laser for deflecting meteors and such. Doc and Jamie materialise aboard a seemingly abandoned spaceship that's heading towards the Wheel, and only narrowly avoid being shot down by them as an off-course rogue ship.

Once aboard, things take a turn for the strange. Cybermats manage to get through the hull and sabotage the laser's fuel rods, requiring a salvage operation aboard the rogue ship. This gives the Cybermen, who were hidden aboard it, their chance to get aboard the Wheel and start brainwashing the crew. The Doctor wasn't anticipated in their rather convoluted plan to conquer the Earth (The Wheel provides a safe gateway to Earth, for some technical reason given in the eleventh hour), and his knowledge of the Cybermen is enough to fend them off. Blasted into space, their ship is blown up.

This story struck me as rather similar to a lot of others in this series. It was perfectly enjoyable, but once again we have the corruptable power-hungry leader, the hidden enemy who no-one believes at first, the brainwashed humans acting against them in secret, and so on. Fury of the Deep, The Ice Warriors, The Moon Base... it's a formula they seem to be sticking with. As I say, it's perfectly fine, and there's plenty of strong performances, but it's getting a bit old.

One of the station staff, the emotionally-crippled braniac wondergirl Zoe, decides to stick with the Doctor and Jamie. Isn't it a funny coincidence that new companions always join them on the very first mission after the previous ones leave?

Six episodes seems to have become standard practise again, and this one does drag a little. It takes an entire episode just for the Doctor and Jamie to get off the spaceship!

Only two completed episodes of this serial exist, but Loose Cannon's reconstructions are some of the most thorough I've seen so far (these are available on Youtube). Aside from the usual telesnaps and composites, they've reused bits of clips from the two available episodes wherever possible, and they even made some CGI sequences of the little robot, the Cybermats, the Cybermen and even the astronauts walking around. Impressive work, team!

Noteworthy mention: When interrogated about the Doctor, who is absent for episode 2 (having hit his head!) Jamie says his name is John Smith, seeing it on a label on a piece of equipment. The Doctor sticks with it as his name for the rest of the story.

Another noteworthy mention, not specifically about this story but classic Doctor Who in general... the supporting cast of characters are portrayed as actual intelligent and believable human beings. In modern stories (certainly in most New Who), the hero is the clever one, maybe the sidekick too, but the supporting cast are slow and dim-witted in order for the story to proceed and the hero to be seen as clevererererer. That doesn't really happen here. It's not all about the Doctor, he's just a cog in the machine. Just an observation.

Anyway, Netflix has the next couple of complete serials. I'll get around to them shortly.

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Noteworthy mention: When interrogated about the Doctor, who is absent for episode 2 (having hit his head!) Jamie says his name is John Smith, seeing it on a label on a piece of equipment. The Doctor sticks with it as his name for the rest of the story.

And indeed for the rest of the programme, on occasion. Even in the new series once or twice IIRC.

I watched a bit of Fury from the Deep after your last update. The Loose Cannon reconstructions are indeed very watchable.

I also treated myself to a DVD copy of Ambassadors of Death, as it's the only story from Jon Pertwee's (classic IMO) first season that I've never seen. At least I don't think I have - might have seen a bit in B&W in the 90's. Apparently the colour reconstruction is excellent.

Edit: Ah, so it's the Mind Robber soon. I had that on VHS back in the day. A very unusual story, be interesting to hear what you make of it. After that it's The Invasion, which is a total treat. The animated episodes are superb. I have it on DVD if you'd like to borrow it.

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Next up is a five-parter, The Dominators.

With new girl Zoe now in tow, the Tardis arrives on a peaceful alien planet, with the Doctor fully intending to have a nice relaxing break. He’s been here before, an island on the planet Dulkis, whose inhabitants are total pacifists.

But they hadn’t always been. Unknown by the Doctor, the island was a testing ground for the planet’s only ever atomic weapon, nearly two centuries prior, and became an irradiated deathtrap that must never be visited. Luckily for the Doctor and co, an alien spaceship from a fleet of warlike Dominators happens to land minutes before the Tardis does and absorbs all of the island’s dangerous radiation into its energy cells. Not so lucky for the Doctor and co is the fact that the Dominators intend to enslave the people of Dulkis and use the planet’s natural energy for their own fleet of ships.

Given the era this was made, I suspect it was intended to play into the atomic war fears of the 1960s (Star Trek did similar things back then). The Dulcians have very silly costumes, even by Doctor Who standards. Really not very flattering at all, for either gender. The Dominators do have pretty cool costumes, however, with big arching shoulder mount things around their heads, and lots of funky tassels.

It’s lucky that it’s only a scout party of two Dominators that land on the planet, as the Doctor is able to defeat them. Their main weapons are little robots called ‘quarks’ that waddle around on stumpy legs and fire deadly lasers. As they are defeated one-by-one, it sparks arguments between the two Dominators, who disagree about whether or not to hunt down the slaves or concentrate the quarks’ dwindling power reserves on drilling through the earth. Employing delay tactics, the Doctor is eventually able to capture the Dominators’ explosive device and hide it aboard their ship, moments before lift-off, destroying them as they try to leave. Nevertheless, the island is evacuated and the Doctor, Zoe and Jamie run back to the Tardis as a volcanic erruption starts.

This wasn’t a particularly interesting story, although it was well-produced. A lot of miniatures were used (for the flying saucers and transport capsules, etc.) and there were an usually high number of explosions. The Dulcians’ technology was also quite utopian futuristic-y, with transport tubes, automated navigation capsules, and all the control panels in their city seemed to use non-touch motion gestures, pre-empting Minority Report by forty years.

There was one other curious reference. When the Dominators scan one of the captured Dulcians, they mention that they have two hearts. Earlier in the story, when Jamie and the Doctor are captured, Jamie is also scanned, but they don’t bother to scan the Doctor because they assume his physiology is the same as Jamie’s. I wonder if this was just a coincidence at this point, or if this was when the writers started thinking about the Doctor’s alien physiology. It’s never really been brought up yet, aside from his extraordinary age and the fact that he can regenerate. In the previous story (The Wheel in Space), the Doctor is given a medical exam, including listening to his heart, and nothing unusual is mentioned. Not that it necessarily would be.

Anyway, enough rambling. Verdict: meh, average.

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One of the Doctor Who sites started a rewatch this year. He's doing an episode a day and blogging the lot. I'd be interested in reading your take Sprite Machine. Especially when you get to The Twin Dilemma, Time Lash and Bonnie Langford :)

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I was thinking, cataloguing a watchthrough of every Doctor Who episode ever might be something that requires a blog. Then I could add pictures and captions to each mini-review. I'm not sure if anyone would regularly read it, but does it sound like a good idea?

Okay, I've started one. Currently posting (and back-dating) old articles, so it won't be "up-to-date" for a few days yet.

http://doctorwhofromthestart.wordpress.com/

I've assigned categories, like "first doctor" or "reconstruction" or "season 1", etc., so that you can easily find episodes. Perhaps I'll do an index page too, not sure yet.

Any other suggestions or recommendations welcome, as I'm new to this blogging lark.

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The Mind Robber.

This is one of the weirdest Doctor Who stories I’ve seen so far, particularly part 1, which concludes with the Tardis exploding!

In an effort to escape from the volcanic eruption at the end of 'The Dominators', the Doctor has to reluctantly use an emergency function of the Tardis, which pulls it out of reality and into a dimension of thoughts and fiction.

This dream-like setting allows for more than the usual dose of strangeness, since anything can happen. Fictional characters appear and disappear, giant toy soldiers hunt and attack the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe, who get separated, trapped or turned into cardboard cutouts. It has monsters, characters from books and legends, a unicorn, a minotaur, a futuristic comic strip superhero (who helps them out) and a Medusa statue, with rather impressively animated snake hair.

I liked this story more when I had no idea what was going on - that sense of mystery is appealing. As the plot progresses over the five episodes and we learn there is a consciousness behind the events, it loses its appeal a little.

The man orchestrating everything calls himself The Master. Although seemingly unrelated to the Doctor’s future recurring nemesis, this is the second time a villain has called himself that, the first being The Great Intelligence from 'The Abominable Snowmen' serial. As an aside, the Master in this story is being controlled by a computer brain containing a disembodied intelligence, although I’m not sure it’s related to The Great Intelligence either. Writers, get some original names please!

Due to illness, the actor playing Jamie is replaced for a couple of the episodes, but this is worked into the plot, as the Doctor tries to reassemble a picture of Jamie’s face and revive him, but picks out the wrong pieces! They could have written Jamie out for a while, or just recast him without saying anything, but they don’t do that here. I like that.

This is another story where the Doctor’s "superior mind" overcomes being controlled, as he manages to re-write the fictional world to his own whims. A bit of a cheap get-out, but it was done in a funny way. The Master is rescued from the machine and they all escape as the universe around them ceases to exist. The exploded Tardis appears to reassemble itself and... that’s it, that’s how it ends.

Kinda weird, kinda funny, kinda creepy. I’m not quite what to make of it... but it was fun to watch.

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My Doctor Who blogathon is up to date now, and I've written about 'The Invasion'.

http://doctorwhofromthestart.wordpress.com/2013/01/28/the-invasion/

Pasted text as follows (blog has pictures):

-----

The Invasion

The second Doctor seems to attract Cybermen like a magnet! Now, I did see some images from this serial prior to watching, so the big reveal at the end of episode 4 was sadly not a surprise.

Oh, spoilers! Again! Sorry.

This time, we’re back on Earth, just a few years after the events of the The Web of Fear. The Colonel (now a Brigadier) Lethbridge-Stewart from that London Underground yeti attack now heads up a brand new government force called UNIT. A Cyberman invasion is in full swing and the stakes are high. This is certainly one of the more exciting storylines yet!

Unfortunately, like many of these old serials, it suffers with being too bloody long! I don’t mind giving a story time to breathe, but eight episodes is just too much. Four or five would have been sufficient. It’s good, but it just can’t sustain suspense and drama over that length, although it does try.

The villain of the piece isn’t really the Cybermen, but the maniac who wants to bring them down to Earth and control them, use them as a force for conquering the world. Tobias Vaughn runs an electronics company with its innocuous-looking devices now installed all over the world, which instantly reminded me of 2006’s Cybermen two-parter (although this plays out quite differently).

Vaughn is one of the more entertaining villains to watch. He’s deliciously evil, almost inhumanly so. But, despite his thorough planning and preparation, he is betrayed by the invading army and its commanding computer brain. Fortunately, his failsafe device, a machine for overloading the Cybermen with ‘emotional force’, acts as a successful weapon, and the Doctor is able to help UNIT to coordinate an attack on the Cybermen, blowing its attack ships out of the sky with missiles.

There’s a lot to like here. Being set on Earth again means relatively higher production values, on location filming and outdoor action and setpieces. If anything, the direction lets it down a little – some of the Cybermen attacking just look a bit pathetic. There’s a sequence where Jamie is trying to get one of them off his leg as he pulls himself out of a sewer, and it’s just so blandly shot it looks daft and not the least bit menacing. Maybe they should have set the invasion at night, it might have looked better.

The UNIT characters are likeable chaps, as are the other extras – Isobel, the photographer and her uncle, Professor Watkins (whose house they visit looking for Professor Travers). The world of Doctor Who starts hanging onto familiar faces and enemies, setting in a sense of continuity while also opening up into bigger things. Certainly, this mission is too much for the Doctor alone, but he’s making a name for himself on Earth now.

A word on the restoration. For its DVD release in 2006, the BBC commissioned for the two missing episodes to be restored using 2D cartoon animation. Although they look a little like a cheap Flash animation at times, the art style is nice and some of the imagery is really striking. So much so, that when it reverted back to live action for the next part, I really missed it. A much nicer experience than watching telesnaps, although those are available too.

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Vaughn is a great villain isn't he? The bit where he goads Travers to shoot him is a bit unsettling I thought. Did you recognise the actor from The Daleks' Masterplan? He plays Mavic Chen I believe.

I do know what you mean about the slight flash feel to the animation, but it's a style that rather works I think. I do wonder why they haven't done more.

Are you still enjoying Troughton's performances? I don't ever recall him ever phoning it in, not something you could really say about any of the other actors to play the role!

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