Showing posts with label Tom Baker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Baker. Show all posts

Sunday, October 31, 2010

#42 (18.25 - 18.28): Logopolis

4 episodes. Written by: Christopher H. Bidmead. Directed by: Peter Grimwade.  Produced by: John Nathan-Turner.


THE PLOT

The Doctor is troubled.  The columns of the TARDIS are overgrown with vines, and are crumbling.   Since leaving Traken, he has felt an increasing sense of entropy. and he has a sudden desire to stay under the radar, to avoid detection.

To this end, he decides it is time to repair the TARDIS' chameleon circuit. He wants to avoid Gallifrey, so his only other option is Logopolis.  This is a world that is home to the most advanced mathematicians in the universe - a monk-like order that keeps entropy at bay through their ceaseless calculations.

But the Doctor has unwittingly brought a passenger with him. The Master, renewed and in possession of Tremas' body, is determined to gain universal domination. But even he may not be prepared for the consequences of meddling with the powers in Logopolis.


CHARACTERS

The Doctor: Tom Baker's final regular performance is an excellent one. The previous story saw him in control, dominant and flippant. This story sees him taken out of control. Even in his opening moments, he feels something wrong, in his ship and in himself. When he first sees the Watcher, gazing at him from the fence across the motorway, you can read the fear etched on his face.

From this point, the Doctor is acting out of desperation. He makes mistakes - materializing around the Master's TARDIS, then not recognizing the Master's TARDIS for what it is for the longest time. The very materialization is driven by fear, by his sudden feeling that he shouldn't be "too distinctive" right now. Throughout the first half, the Doctor is reacting: to the Master, to the Watcher, to the general fact of entropy. In this light, his half-baked plan to wash the Master out (a plot hole, whatever Chris Bidmead may think) almost makes sense. The Doctor's so desperate to escape what he fears will be the worst, he just isn't thinking rationally. Only after his conversation with the Watcher does he calm, moving onto Logopolis not because his fears have been put to rest, but because he knows that what will happen is as inevitable as entropy itself.

I have always felt Tom was at his best when playing the angrier side of the Doctor. This serial gives one blisteringly good example. At the close of Episode Three, when his companions protest his reluctant deal with the Master, he lashes out. "I have never chosen my company, never!" he shouts, furiously angry as he runs through the way each of his three companions foisted themselves upon him. The monologue is itself a fine piece of writing, and Tom delivers it with ferocity.

At the end, having seemingly exhausted, and perhaps surprised, himself with the force of his own anger, the Doctor is left with no choice but to shake the Master's hand to cement their partnership. The disgust on his face as he refuses to even make eye contact with his enemy-turned-partner is palpable. Tom may not have liked his final season, and he may be on record as hating his departure... but he sure did act it well.

Adric: Christopher Bidmead's script has Adric constantly interjecting in scenes that are otherwise flowing very nicely to ask a series of questions - sometimes to clarify plot points, but a lot of the time unnecessarily, making him quickly irritating. That said, he's still much better here than he would be in patches of the following season. If Waterhouse had only played opposite Tom's Doctor, I suspect he wouldn't be quite so badly regarded in fandom.

Nyssa: This story officially introduces her as a companion. She gets a bit lost in the shuffle, but she still teams well with Matthew Waterhouse.  There is something chilling about the Master, in Tremas' guise, using a bracelet to turn Tremas' daughter into a weapon against her own will.

Tegan: This story is Janet Fielding's debut as Tegan.  She would go on to become the Fifth Doctor's signature television companion, appearing in all but one of his televised stories. Unfortunately, this serial's characterization of her is far from its strongest element. The story seriously oversells Tegan's introduction. The first episode gives us far too many scenes of her being driven to her new job, then cuts away from (largely excellent) Doctor/Adric scenes to Tegan and her aunt changing a tire at least two more times than is actually needed. The second and third episodes overdo her aggressiveness. By the end of Episode Two, both the Doctor and Adric have been put in the position of apologizing for her rudeness, and I was firmly with the both of them in feeling a bit exasperated by her. The character would settle down later. But in this story, I frankly found her far more annoying than Adric.

The Master: The Master is wisely kept off-screen for the first two episodes. He is a presence, one that we are always aware of. We see through his eyes the killing of Tegan's aunt.  We hear him cacklin gas he pulls a policeman through the open door of his TARDIS to an agonizing death. Because we can't see him, because we only hear the Doctor talk about him and see the consequences of his deeds, he looms larger, as some kind of ultimate threat.

It is only in Episode Three that Ainley's Master emerges in the flesh. While Ainley is far from restrained in the role, he is extremely good. He may look a lot like Roger Delgado, but there are strong differences in the characterization. He's far more vicious than Delgado, for one. This Master doesn't just kill as a necessity, a convenience to advance his plans. He enjoys killing. While Delgado's Master was always clearly in control of his faculties, Ainley's Master appears to be... well, insane. I guess years (centuries?) as a burned-out husk, including several years of immobility, might do that to you. The shock on the Doctor's face as he realizes that this isn't the Master that he remembers, as he realizes that this Master is "mad, utterly mad," is wonderful.

There's a strong element of real horror. Because The Keeper of Traken is still fresh in our minds, we see Tremas walking around as clearly as Nyssa does. The theme of entropy applies even here. The good man who was Tremas has been decayed and corrupted by the Master's influence.  All the good that Tremas did in his life is as nothing to the evil the Master will do in his guise.  One can only hope that Tremas is as purely and simply "dead" as indicated. Imagine if Tremas' consciousness still exists somewhere in there, watching helplessly as his own form is used to perpetrate murder after murder, evil after evil.


THOUGHTS

"It's the end, but the moment has been prepared for."

Logopolis is a season finale in the modern sense of the word. It is not simply the story of the season that aired last. It is the culmination of the themes, stories, and character arcs of Season 18. The season referenced entropy and decay many times in its run, more and more explicitly as it went along. At the end comes a story that is literally about entropy, with the collapse of the universe itself as the stakes. The Doctor has said goodbye to two cherished companions, in Romana and K-9. This story sees him visiting Romana's room, and acknowledging to Adric that Romana will be missed. We even get an explanation of how the Doctor travelled into (and out of) E-Space. In this way, the entire season is transformed into a larger story, about the death and rebirth of both universe and Doctor. Structurally and thematically, it may be one of the most "modern" seasons of the classic series.

The serial is wonderfully directed by Peter Grimwade, who builds a grandly funereal atmosphere. It is the atmosphere that really sucked me into this story. The plot is largely a bunch of nonsense, but the feeling of impending doom is impossible to shake, growing steadily stronger throughout. One of the series' best incidental scores gives things a further boost, making this one of the most richly textured Who stories ever filmed... and I do include the New Series in that assessment.

Though many in fandom have decried Logopolis itself as a cheap-looking model, I rather enjoyed the scenes on Logopolis. The vision of this labyrinthine city of ancient monks whose chanting holds the universe together appeals to my love of the vaguely surreal and askew. Bidmead's commentary may talk about "real science," but what strikes me is how beautifully fantastic it all is. This isn't hard science fiction. It's fantasy, which uses scientific concepts to dress up its magic. That's what Bidmead consistently writes: here, in the following story, even in his limited Big Finish work. To me, this is not a weakness. It plays directly into my own tastes.

I also love the way the regeneration is handled. I could have done without the flashbacks. But once Tom has fallen to the hard, unyielding Earth, and lays dying, it's beautiful. The Fourth Doctor's poetic last lines, followed by him beckoning to the Watcher. The slow dissolve from Tom to Watcher, from Watcher to Peter Davison, capped by Davison's grin... It's quite a breathtaking scene, marred only by the decision to cut to credits on Davison sitting up (an unfortunately comical effect) rather than on his grin, as should have been done.


SUMMATION

A part of me really wants to give Logopolis full marks. There may be a bit of a fan backlash against it (and Season 18 in general) at the moment, and Logopolis as a story may be a triumph of style over substance. But the style works, and there's enough substance to at least carry the central characters and the season themes. On the other hand, there certainly are plot-holes. It's often more a series of set pieces than a story: the Doctor and Adric moving through a regressive series of TARDIS doors, into ever-darkening TARDIS console rooms. Tegan, wandering around the TARDIS interior, always being brought back to the same spot no matter which path she chooses. The shrinking of the TARDIS... All of these are memorable, executed with imagination and - for classic Who - a surprising sense of visual flair. But they all exist very much in the moment, sustaining the overall atmosphere of the piece but not actually advancing the plot very much, if at all.

The set piece issue wouldn't actually cause me to lower my score, as all of the set pieces I referenced work. But then there are the moments that don't work.  Do we really need a full quarter of the first episode to be devoted to the Tegan and Auntie Vanessa Show? And in what parallel universe does the "flush the Master" out plan make even the tiniest bit of sense? Most glaringly, by the very rules the story sets up, it seems to me that the Doctor's heroic unplugging of the Pharos cable should have doomed the universe.

These issues don't actually detract from my enjoyment of the story, its atmosphere, and the performances of Baker and Ainley. It helps that the story just happens to play heavily toward a style of entertainment I've always been partial to (the weird, the surreal, the Gilliam or Lynch-esque). Still, there are enough issues that I have to dock the serial a bit, if only in the interests of remaining honest.


My Rating: 8/10.

Previous Story: The Keeper of Traken
Next Story: Castrovalva


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Saturday, October 9, 2010

#1 (12.1 - 12.4): Robot

The robot menaces the Doctor and Sarah.
The robot menaces the newly regenerated 4th Doctor and Sarah!

4 episodes. Written by: Terrance Dicks. Directed by: Christopher Barry.  Produced by: Barry Letts.


THE PLOT

The Doctor has just regenerated into his fourth persona, and it's his most eccentric yet. Gone is the brittle yet dignified dandy.  In his place is a large, curly-haired, grinning figure who seems to be more than a little childish, and possibly a little insane.

It's a bad time for the Doctor to be unstable. The components of a top-secret disintegrator gun have been stolen by an unknown force. Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart initially insists that he needs the Doctor's help just to keep him safely around for observation - but as the crisis escalates to the point of a nuclear apocalypse, it becomes apparent that the Doctor truly is needed, possibly more than ever before.

But can this new Doctor be trusted to maintain focus on the task at hand?


CHARACTERS

The Doctor: Cards on the table: Despite being the fan favorite, the Fourth Doctor has never been a particular favorite of mine. That said, most of my issues with him come later, and there's no denying that Tom Baker makes a strong first impression. He's energetic and zany, but he also takes care to keep the Doctor at a certain remove. The Sherlock Holmes-like aspects of the character have always been there, ever since the First Doctor talked a primitive tribe into seeing the significance of a caveman's knife, but they're extremely prominent here.  This is particularly true of scenes in which he appears to be distracted by irrelevancies while actually collecting important observations, such as a crushed dandelion at a crime scene.

Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart: My first draft review of Robot was written after a run of Season Seven stories, and the jump from Inferno to this really showed the Brigadier's deterioration. In Season Seven, he was brisk, efficient, and intelligent - a man born to lead. That Brigadier wouldn't have needed the Doctor to point out that two components of the same weapon had been stolen, he would have noticed all on his own. Even viewing in strict chronological order, I'd rate this as one of the character's most ineffectual showings, and it's as well that the new production team quickly decided to rest both him and UNIT.

Sarah Jane Smith: A strong story for Sarah Jane. With Barry Letts and Terrance Dicks still in charge, her background as a journalist and an independent-minded woman is still a driving force. For the first episode, and for much of the second, she is actually more proactive than the Doctor and the Brigadier are. After she is subject to a "demonstration" of the robot's inability to override its directive to never harm humans, which causes it considerable distress, she shows compassion for it, setting up (overly obvious) King Kong parallels for the rest of the serial.

Harry Sullivan: Ian Marter, who previously played an unrelated guest role in Carnival of Monsters, makes his debut as new companion Harry, a naval physician assigned to UNIT who starts out as the Doctor's doctor. Marter brings a relaxed and likable presence to the role, and he has an easy rapport with both Baker and Sladen. There isn't actually much for him to do in this story, an early sign of why he was written out after only one year, but I wasn't sorry to see him step into the TARDIS at the story's end.


THOUGHTS

Robot marks the beginning of the end of the UNIT era, and it honestly was about time for the show to move on. By this point, UNIT had become a collection of comic book soldiers, an impression not helped by them being pitted against a league of mad scientists plotting to take over the world - with a giant robot and a Ray Gun, no less. I question how some could complain about Doctor Who cartoons such as The Infinite Quest and Dreamland. Decades before that, this was a cartoon that just happened to be in live action!

For all of that, I mostly like Robot. Some of that is nostalgia. It was not the first Who story I ever saw, but it was the one that made me a regular viewer back in the mid-1980s. From here, I watched every story during PBS' mid-1980's omnibus reruns of the series, going all the way through to Trial of a Time Lord (which, for a long time, I had thought to be the series' finale).

Even without nostalgia goggles, there is much to like. Terrance Dicks understands the importance of story construction and pace. Robot moves along briskly, effectively introducing the situation and the guest characters, establishing the threats, and bringing them all together for the final episode. The plot may feel a bit thin, but there are enough strands to give the Doctor and the Brigadier elements to investigate even as Sarah pursues leads on her own.

The UNIT set-up also ensures that Tom Baker's debut story felt familiar to contemporary viewers. This is a very different Doctor, but he's surrounded by familiar regulars while navigating what's essentially a mid-range Pertwee story. Given Pertwee's five-year tenure and his enduring popularity, this was a canny way to reassure the audience that this was still very much the same show, a bit of comfort food before the new production team took over to steer it in a very different direction.

For its first three episodes, I think it works quite well. Too bad that it falls apart in the final installment. Once the robot grows to giant size to make sure no one misses the King Kong allusions, all internal credibility vanishes. The next several minutes, showing the robot rampaging around toy cars, paper houses, and plastic soldiers is ludicrous and - worse - dull.

After five years of spearheading Who, Letts and Dicks had to know the giant robot was going to look awful. Worse, the script doesn't do anything interesting; in fact, once the robot grows in size, the script stops doing interesting things.


OVERALL:

I would rank Robot as the weakest "new Doctor" story of the first five (though it's still better than the debuts of the Sixth and Seventh Doctors). It's a thin story even during the enjoyable first thee parts, and its final episode is largely poor. Still, it is mostly enjoyable, and Tom Baker makes a good first impression in the role.

It's good that a new production team was coming in - because the series was about to get a major jolt of renewed creative energy...


Rating: 6/10.

Previous Story: Planet of the Spiders
Next Story: The Ark in Space

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