Monday, 23 December 2024

The War Games (In Colour) - A Review


The War Games becomes the second of the Sixties B&W stories to be colourised and re-edited into a more condensed running time. 
Depending upon which side of the fence you lie, this is either:
(a) a process of dumbing-down - making the stories more attractive to younger people who cannot cope with monochrome imagery and having to concentrate attention on something for more than 30 seconds at a time, or...
(b) it is simply a way to make the stories more accessible to modern tastes and so gain new fans to these classic episodes.
Personally, I am inclined towards the former but accept that some parents did claim that their kids enjoyed the last of these things - "The Daleks in Colour".

This story is the final adventure for Patrick Troughton's Second Doctor, as well as for companions Jamie (Frazer Hines) and Zoe (Wendy Padbury) barring later guest turns. It is also notable for introducing the Time Lords and so giving us some background as to the Doctor's origins. Added to that, it brings the B&W era of the programme to a close, ending the Doctor's seemingly random wanderings in the TARDIS - preparing the ground for a new Earth-bound format and the Third Doctor. 
The other thing to say about The War Games is that it was the second longest ever story for many years, running to ten episodes and, despite what its fans say, there is quite a bit of capture / escape padding, especially in the 1917 Zone. Even its co-writer (Terrance Dicks) and director (David Maloney) agreed that it was padded, so ignore anyone who says otherwise.
It's not quite as bad as "waiting for nine episodes until the Time Lords turn up" though - it is much better than that.

This reimagining of the story has a run-time of 90 minutes, so it was always going to be interesting to see how the edit was made. The trailer also showed that there would be a few CGI sequences thrown in, and then we heard that there would be a regeneration. It was also announced that a tiny alternative take was to be included - so a clip that no-one has ever seen before.
Going into it, the CGI was my first concern as to how well it integrated with the archive material. That added to The Daleks was a little pointless, and stuck out.
Concern no.2 was always going to be the music for me. I really hated the way they stuck anachronistic radiophonic music onto The Daleks, and the least said about what was played over the whole lift escape sequence the better.
Third is obviously the edit. Will it flow? Will it make sense in light of the large amount cut out? And will they resort to overlaying dialogue designed to remind viewers of things they saw or heard less than 20 minutes before?
As for the actual colourisation, I don't really have any problem with that at all, so long as they steer clear of the shocking pink they used for Barbara's blouse last time out...

The above was written before I watched the programme, so how was it for me?
No issues with the colourisation. The episodes are in better condition than those of the earlier serial - much sharper - which certainly helped when it came to adding the colour.
Concern no.1 was the CGI. The Alien base kept popping up too frequently, as if they didn't believe we'd know from the pop-art sets that that's where we were. The little planes and tanks rolling out the doors were poorly done. 
(The Capitol on Gallifrey was shown too many times as well. Once is enough).
The TARDIS fleeing the Time Lords did look very much like a police box bubble bath container dangling on a bit of string.
Luckily not much CGI, so not enough to go terribly wrong.
Concern no.2 was the music. Nowhere near as bad as in The Daleks though I did think there was far too much of it. It was slapped over every scene, where some could have played well without it. Again we had a mix of 1969 music, courtesy of Dudley Simpson, alongside much more recent stuff. The thing everyone is sure to comment on is the use of music inextricably linked with the Master every time the War Chief did anything sinister. Terrance Dicks excluded him from being an earlier incarnation of the Master, though some spin-off material has run with the idea. I was half expecting them to cut to a regeneration from Edward Brayshaw to Roger Delgado.
Talking 'bout regeneration... I was all set to cringe at the end, but I thought they actually worked it quite well. I'm still a Season 6b fan, but if you must link directly into Spearhead From Space then this was perfectly acceptable.
Lastly, the edit. Here we definitely had problems. The first couple of episodes worked OK in condensed form, and we had a sizeable chunk of the ending, but in the middle... Significant characters just popped up out of nowhere. Von Weich hardly featured at all. Some sections were composed entirely of jump cuts. How many times were people still talking when the picture had moved onto the next scene? 
I was watching this with the background of having watched all 10 episodes multiple times, so know the intricacies of the plotting very well. I'll be interested to hear what new viewers thought of the middle section of the story, coming at it without that knowledge.

Overall, better than expected. As an alternative version, to watch when you might not have the time or inclination to work through the complete story, it's welcome. These efforts are never intended to take the place of the originals - just another way of watching them, and I sincerely hope this wins new fans for Troughton's Doctor. One thing the edit managed was to retain some of his best lines / scenes. He's always a joy to watch.

Sunday, 22 December 2024

Episode 145: The Underwater Menace (1)


Synopsis:
The TARDIS is in flight, now with Jamie as one of its occupants, wondering what he has let himself in for. The Doctor gleefully longs for dinosaurs next, whilst Polly would love to see the Chelsea of 1966. Ben hopes not to encounter Daleks again.
The TARDIS materialises on a rocky shoreline. Exploring, they discover that they have arrived on a volcanic island. Polly is sure she sees movement amongst the rocks and then spots a piece of jewellery, but is abducted by a figure and dragged into a cave before she can show it to her friends. She manages to scream a warning however. The Doctor has found some pottery, which he identifies as Mediterranean in style. It is of an archaic type, yet recently fired.
When Polly screams, Ben and Jamie rush into the cave, only to be captured as well. 
They find themselves locked in a cage with Polly. Hopes that the Doctor might rescue them are dashed when he is also pushed inside. The cage proves to be a lift, which begins to descend.
The depth they travel is such that they pass out from the change in atmospheric pressure.
Waking in a cell, Polly reveals the jewellery she found - a bracelet of Aztec design. However, it proves to be a souvenir item for the Mexico City Olympic Games, due to be held in 1968.
They are attended by guards armed with tridents, wearing costumes decorated with seashells. They take them to a reception area where they find a feast of food which the Doctor recognises as processed plankton. 
A man named Ramo arrives, dressed in ornate robes and headdress. He informs them that their coming has been foreseen by their deity Amdo. He is her High Priest. The Festival of the Vernal Equinox is due, and they have an important part to play in this ritual. The Doctor doesn't like the sound of this, and insists on talking to someone named Zaroff. Ramo is surprised to hear that he knows of him. He explains that he knows of Professor Zaroff's specialism in producing food from the sea and has deduced that he must be behind the food they have just enjoyed.
The ceremony must proceed, but the Doctor gives a serving girl - Ara - a message to pass to Zaroff before they are taken to a temple.
A huge sculpted face, that of Amdo, looks down on a sacrificial area. The Doctor and his companions are tied to boards which are arranged around a pool of water in which sharks are swimming. The boards are designed to tilt as water pours from ceramic jars, so that they will all be tipped headfirst into the pool.
The sacrifice is presided over by another priest named Lolem. Ara goes to a nearby laboratory where she is met by scientist Damon. She informs him of the message for Zaroff. He reads it and sees that it claims a great secret will die with the writer if the professor does not see him.
At the last moment the ceremony is interrupted by the arrival of Zaroff, who has the authority to overrule Ramo. He orders the captives be freed. The Doctor reveals that he had no secret to impart - it was just a ruse to pique Zaroff's interest and have him intervene. He explains how he knows of the famous scientist's work, and the story of how he disappeared some 20 years ago. The Doctor then convinces him that he may be able to assist him in his work. The arrogant Zaroff agrees, but orders that his companions be put to work. 
They are taken to Damon, whose role is that of Labour Controller. Ben and Jamie will be sent to the mines. After they have gone, Polly is told that she will help gather food from the sea. He indicates a large window looking out onto the sea bed, and she sees gilled humanoid creatures swimming around. She will be transformed into one of them.
The Doctor is taken to Zaroff's laboratory where he learns that this island lies west of Gibraltar, south of the Azores, on the Atlantic Ridge. The Doctor realises that this must be all that remains of the lost civilisation of Atlantis. Zaroff confirms this, and tells him that he is working on a plan to raise the city to the surface once again.
Ara tells the Doctor that Polly is about to be surgically altered to become one of the Fish People.
In Damon's operating theatre, his companion is prepared for the procedure as the creatures look on...

Data:
Written by: Geoffrey Orme
Recorded: Saturday 7th January 1967 - Riverside Studio 1
First broadcast: 5:50pm, Saturday 14th January 1967
Ratings: 8.3 million / AI 48
Designer: Jack Robinson
Director: Julia Smith
Guest cast: Joseph Furst (Zaroff), Colin Jeavons (Damon), Tom Watson (Ramo), Peter Stephens (Lolem), Catherine Howe (Ara)


Critique:
The Underwater Menace was the culmination of a troubled period, script-wise, for the series. 
A story centred around Atlantis, to be written by Geoffrey Orme, was originally intended to be the second Troughton adventure, provisionally slated to be directed by Hugh David. The third story was planned to be "The Imps", by William Emms - writer of the previous season's Galaxy Four. This would have been set around a spaceport, plagued by the small imp-like creatures of the title as well as a rampaging hostile plant. Production on this - to be directed by Julia Smith who had handled The Smugglers -  was quite far advanced, even down to costume design, when Emms was taken ill and unable to work on any rewrites. As they waited for Emms to recuperate, Innes Lloyd and Gerry Davis began to have qualms about his story, and The Highlanders had now been tabled as Troughton's second story.
Despite reservations about a story with an undersea setting, the Atlantis story was brought back into play, now to become the third Troughton adventure.

Orme had begun his writing career in the 1930's, much of it for theatre. He had written for Variety comics like Arthur Askey, Flanagan & Allen, and Old Mother Riley - writing some of the latter character's feature films. More recent TV work had included episodes of Ivanhoe and The Avengers.
He had submitted a story idea called "The Evil Eye" to the Doctor Who office in the spring of 1966. This had been rejected by Davis, but Orme had been invited to submit other ideas. The one accepted was for a time known simply as "Doctor Who Under the Sea".
Hugh David had a friend who had worked on the latest Bond movie which was in production at Pinewood - Thunderball. As this had a heavy underwater element David approached his friend for advice. Hearing of the budget and facilities available to him, the friend informed him that he faced an impossible task.
David went back to the production office and had himself taken off the story, and he was assigned The Highlanders instead. As she had efficiently handled filming both on the coast and offshore on her earlier production, Julia Smith was then swapped over to take on the Atlantis tale.

With filming dates rapidly approaching, Orme was obliged to make some rapid rewrites whilst Smith and designer Jack Robinson prepared. He was a late replacement for Raymond London, who had been due to design "The Imps". This would prove to be Robinson's only contribution to the series.
At this stage, the story had the working title of "Doctor Who and the Fish People". 
With Frazer Hines joining the TARDIS crew as a regular in a last minute move, Davis found himself heavily involved in the rewrites to cover the new character - which sadly meant mostly reallocating lines away from Michael Craze.
Whilst the trio had got on well during the making of the Highlands story, Craze and Anneke Wills were somewhat wary of Hines joining the show, realising that he would inevitably take away screen time from them.
Another change Davis made was the motivation for Zaroff's actions. Orme had written that he sought revenge for the deaths of his wife and child, and whilst this was retained in the official story synopsis, it was never mentioned on screen.
Zaroff was to have had a female scientist as his assistant, named Steen. It was she who distracted the professor at the end of this episode, allowing Ara to slip the note about Polly to the Doctor.

Filming got underway at Winspit Quarry in Dorset on Tuesday 15th December. The regulars had rehearsed the location sequences the day before, travelling down to the production base at Swanage that night. The bulk of the production crew had already travelled down on the Sunday to set up and to film some establishing shots prior to the cast members arriving.
This location, with its distinctive square-cut cave entrances would later feature as the planet Skaro in Destiny of the Daleks.
Filming was only required for the first and fourth instalments, with the TARDIS arrival and the crew's exploration of the island in the opening episode. For this only three extras were required, wearing Atlantean guard outfits. These were based on fishing net outfits decorated with shells and armed with tridents - the symbol of the sea god Neptune / Poseidon. The guards wore bushy eyebrows, which costume designer Gillian James had decided on for all the Atlanteans.
Continuity with the previous episode was maintained with the companions wearing the outfits they had worn at the end of The Highlanders Episode Four. They would then change into new outfits to film the scenes for the conclusion of this story.
Further filming took place on Wednesday 16th December, this time at Ealing. This was for the model work for the serial. For this episode, that included the volcanic mountain and the lift descending the rock shaft. 
Tests were also made with two of the performers who were to play Fish People, being flown on Kirby wires to simulate swimming underwater.
We'll discuss the Fish People design and costumes when we get to the third instalment, in which they feature more prominently.

It was decided to make some changes to Troughton's costume from this story. The trousers were replaced with a pair with a smaller check, and it was agreed that the tall Paris Beau hat would be discarded after this story. Troughton had been advised by friends to drop this anyway.
As mentioned last time, having a week's break for Christmas now meant that the series was being broadcast only one week after recording, leaving no room for error. A sudden illness in a principal cast member or a set or prop not being ready could prove catastrophic.
Tensions were high from the start as Smith was concerned about the technical challenges of the story, after having only had to cope with a historical adventure previously. Troughton felt that the production looked cheap - partly due to it being a late replacement but mainly due to this story being allocated a smaller budget. The regulars did not like the scripts and made sure that their feelings were known. There was also a conflict between director and star over the level of comedy Troughton was putting into the role. It is claimed that the cast sometimes upset Smith so much that she burst into tears.
Matters were not helped by the studio being unavailable for setting up on the eve of recording, thanks to a live current affairs programme taking over Riverside Studio 1. The Doctor Who crew could only get in after 6:30pm and had to work overnight to have the studio ready for camera rehearsals and recording next day. It was decided that the first evening would see recording run from 8:30 - 10pm, 15 minutes longer than the subsequent three instalments.

The opening captions played over a shot of the Doctor's hat sitting on a table in the TARDIS, then Troughton standing at the controls. A "thinks" track was recorded by the cast that afternoon to be played into studio as the camera dwelt on each person - letting the viewer know what each was looking forward to next. The Doctor wanted dinosaurs, whilst Polly wanted to be back home in the King's Road. Ben wanted Daleks - not - whilst Jamie simply wondered what madness he'd let himself in for. The three companions wore their outfits from the previous week, to tie in with the location filming at Winspit and to show that events continued immediately after leaving Scotland, 1746.
The script stated that they had just come from 1745, but Troughton stated the correct year on screen.
The compression chamber was redressed mid-evening to act as the operating theatre, which also doubled as Zaroff's laboratory in close-up - the full set for which wouldn't be seen until the following week.
The biggest set was the Temple of Amdo. On one side was the huge carved face of a fish-like female appearance, behind which were hidden steps, whilst four see-saw planks were set up around a square well - the sacrificial pool. Young acolytes removed plugs from water-filled pots, which caused the planks to slowly tilt.
Stock footage was used of swimming sharks, and Smith also used mirrors to get some interesting angles, such as overhead shots of the TARDIS crew during the sacrifice.
Whilst the script referred to Zaroff having a pet octopus, a scorpion fish was actually provided in studio.
Back projection was employed to show the Fish People at a window, filmed earlier at Ealing. To bulk out the population of Atlantis, some extras were called upon to play multiple roles - as guards, priests and medical attendants.

There was one significant cut made to the episode before broadcast. The Doctor initially resisted being taken to the temple by Ramo's guards - overturning the food on the table and running round the room, hiding behind the tapestries until finally caught. Other trims removed the odd line of dialogue at the end of a scene.
When it came to broadcasting the story in Australia, scenes depicting Polly being threatened with a hypodermic syringe were cut. This scene caused controversy in the UK at the time as well, with the production office being accused by the National Society for the Welfare of Children in Hospital of scaring children who were due to be given vaccinations or other injections in the coming days. Lloyd countered that children watching could understand that the programme was fantasy.

This episode is now lost, apart from the Australian censor material. The story has a bad reputation overall, and we can see from the above that concerns were being raised before it even went before the cameras. However, there is nothing to complain about with this opening instalment. We kick off with the entertaining TARDIS scene with the thought-track, then go in to some visually interesting location filming. From telesnaps we can see that the sets were not overly lit and performances are perfectly fine (so far). Even the Fish People look suitably spooky and ethereal when glimpsed briefly on the screen at the cliff-hanger. It will start coming apart at the seams later on, but it's a great pity that this opening episode is one of the two missing ones.

Trivia:
  • The ratings begin strongly - the highest figure of the Troughton era to date. Only one episode of The Power of the Daleks had managed to make 8 million. The AI figure is under 50, but par for the course for the time.
  • Future guest star Ken Dodd was the main opposition on ITV in the London region, with Batman screening in the north.
  • This is the first story since The Savages to have specially composed music, as opposed to the use of library tracks. The composer is Dudley Simpson.
  • There's a scene in which the travellers attempt to speak to their guards, who speak a language which they do not understand. These were the days before the TARDIS translation effect was ever considered, and everyone simply spoke English no matter where or when the ship landed. It is unusual for someone not to speak English in the series at this time.
  • We've mentioned previously Gerry Davis' belief that the main character is actually called "Doctor Who" and there's another example of it here. The Doctor signs his note to Zaroff "Dr W".
  • There was some discussion about Troughton's portrayal of the Doctor at the BBC weekly review meeting on Wednesday 18th January. Some thought he was "too human", whilst others felt he was giving a richer performance than Hartnell had managed. There were worries from Sydney Newman that the Doctor was coming across as an "anti-hero".
  • Vienna-born Joseph Furst's biggest role is as Professor Metz, Blofeld's pet scientist in Diamonds Are Forever (1971).
  • Tom Watson was well-known to TV viewers in Scotland. One role of note was as Taggart's original superior, Chief Inspector Murray (aka "The Mint") in the early days of the long-running police series.
  • Peter Stephens had previously played multiple roles in The Celestial Toymaker - as the Knave of Hearts and kitchen boy / schoolboy Cyril.
  • Colin Jeavons would not return to the world of Doctor Who until the Sarah Jane / K-9 spin-off at Christmas 1981.
  • William Emms' abandoned "Imps" story would later form the basis of a make-your-own-adventure book featuring the Sixth Doctor, titled "Mission to Venus":
  • Radio Times elected to highlight new regular Frazer Hines with a photograph, along with another featuring the latest "monster". The brief synopsis actually gave away specific details of Zaroff's scheme a week before viewers would have heard of them in the televised episode.

Friday, 20 December 2024

Tom Baker Bookazine

Fans of Tom Baker, which is pretty much all of us, have a wonderful Christmas present from Radio Times. Available to download for free, as of today, is a 64 page collection of archive interviews and profiles from the magazine's archive, lavishly illustrated with exclusive photographs. Of particular delight are the B&W studio shots from Tom's Doctor Who days.



Thursday, 19 December 2024

Daleks- The Ultimate Guide


DWM have been producing a new range of bookazines since the 60th Anniversary. They have a uniform format and design - smaller than A4, with blue text on a white background for their covers, and coming in a cardboard slipcase. They are substantial volumes, with 224 glossy colour pages.
We had a long wait for the second release - "Into The Vortex" - which had a lengthy gap between publishing date and appearances in shops. However, this was quickly followed up with another release which I mentioned a few weeks back- "Daleks - The Ultimate Guide".
This volume runs through each Dalek story from The Daleks in 1963/4 to Eve of the Daleks in 2022, giving each a four page spread. 
The first page gives some background information about the making of the story, whilst the second features a full page CG image of a Dalek from that particular story - either the basic model or one unique to that particular adventure.
The other two pages outline the development of the creatures over time in narrative terms, highlighting how each story has added to their mythos.
The accompanying photographs are a mix of publicity stills and telesnaps.
The two 1960's Dalek movies have a couple of pages each to themselves, one of which is a big CG image (the Red Dalek from the first, and the Black Dalek from the second).
Stories in which Daleks cameo - from The Space Museum to Flux - get a smaller box-out to themselves.


In between each story feature we have a Dalek-related documentary item, of 2 - 4 pages, depending on the subject. Everything is covered from the spin-off items like toys, comics, audios, novels, action figures / figurines, comic strips and annuals to behind the scenes material - actors who have portrayed Davros, Dalek voice artistes, or how different directors have handled the props over the years. Naturally we have items on Terry Nation and Ray Cusick, and the Mechonoids get a feature to themselves as well. There are a few miscellaneous features as well, such as the story of how one particular movie prop was recently refurbished, or an item on the new CGI VFX on the recent Season 25 Blu-ray special edition of Remembrance of the Daleks.


Hopefully we will see more of them in the coming months. Obvious candidates for a bookazine include the subjects already covered by the previous range which began to appear from the 50th Anniversary onwards (Cybermen, Companions etc).
Sadly, it looks like the "Chronicles" range has been discontinued (perhaps due to a lack of Nu-Who, whereas these new publications can cover the full 60-odd years and therefore please fans of either era).
You may find it hard to spot these in the shops, but they can be ordered directly from Panini or an online retailer. 
I would highly recommend.

Season 7 Boxset Confirmed

The set is now confirmed. The Matthew Sweet interview is with John Levene.
4 new documentaries - one on the science of the day and how it influenced these four stories; one on Malcolm Hulke; one on Nicholas Courtney; and another on the new Earth-based format.
One of the Behind the Sofa panels features Caroline John's husband, Geoffrey Beavers, and their daughter.
Presumably the two docs on the Spearhead Blu-ray are also included. One was about Pertwee, and the other about Caroline.
There are also two omnibus versions included: The Silurians and Inferno.

Tuesday, 17 December 2024

The Collection - Season Seven

This turned up on an online retailer site, then quickly disappeared - but not before people had downloaded the image. Announcements for the Blu-ray boxsets usually come out on Thursdays, so expect the official news, including the various bonus materials, later this week...

Inspirations: Hide


Hide is, basically, Nu-Who's attempt at a haunted house story. All the trappings of a good ghost story are present:
  • the setting is a big old rambling house,
  • it's night-time,
  • there's a storm in full blast, with rain, thunder and lightning,
  • the house is empty but for only a couple of people,
  • despite the late 20th Century setting, much of the house has no electricity so people have to wander about in the dark with candles,
  • there's a weird cold spot,
  • a figure is fleetingly glimpsed scuttling about in the darkened corridors,
  • another is a white shape with a skull-like countenance,
  • someone holds another's hand - only to discover that it was not that of their companion...
The Doctor has come specifically because he has heard of the "Caliburn Ghast" - an archaic word for an evil spirit, and presumably where we get "ghastly" from.
We get to see the Ghast, and it looks like a ghost. It is white, has what looks like a screaming, skull-like visage, and is only glimpsed in flashes of lightning.
It turns out that, unlike most ghosts, this one doesn't mind having its photograph taken, and the scientist who has purchased the house in order to investigate the haunting, has many images of it, from different parts of the house.
Apparently the works of authors Susan Hill and Shirley Jackson were major inspirations. The former is the writer behind The Woman in Black (1983) which was subsequently adapted for TV by Nigel Kneale (more of him shortly), then made into a movie by Hammer. The latter wrote The Haunting of Hill House (1959) which was filmed in 1963, retitled simply as The Haunting.
Susan Hill also wrote the ghost story The Small Hand in 2010.

The last time the Doctor and his companion went ghost hunting in a big old house was in Day of the Daleks, and this story has other links with the Pertwee era. The setting is 1974 - year of the Third Doctor's final season, and the Doctor produces a blue Metebelis crystal. How this relates to the ones we saw in The Planet of the Spiders (1974 again) isn't explained. They all seemed to get blown to bits when the Great One popped her (8) clogs.

This being Doctor Who, our hero knows that this is nothing to do with the supernatural so there has to be some sort of sci-fi explanation to events. He dons the orangey-red spacesuit he took from Sanctuary Base 6 back in The Impossible Planet / The Satan Pit and travels to the site of the house through the entirety of Earth's history, taking pictures as he goes. Sure enough, the ghast is present throughout and it turns out it's all to do with a bubble universe and time travel.
The episode actually shifts from being a ghost story to a romance. Not only do we have the relationship between the scientist - Prof Alec Palmer - and his helper, Emma Grayling (whose role in events has parallels with the psychic Theodora in The Haunting) but we also have two crooked-looking aliens who have been accidentally separated.

Palmer was originally going to Professor Bernard Quatermass, created by Kneale. The Manx writer often bemoaned the fact that for years Doctor Who had "borrowed" his ideas, and the Pertwee era isn't short of material that is ever so slightly close to the Quatermass serials.
Another inspiration for Hide is clearly Kneale's The Stone Tape, in the way that the ghast is inextricably anchored to the site of Caliburn House - even before it was built, and long after it was demolished.
Links between Doctor Who and Quatermass were hinted at in Remembrance of the Daleks, with reference to the British Rocket Group and "Bernard".

The Clara story arc is continued with the TARDIS taking a dislike to her and locking her out. This will be built on in the mini-episode in which she can never find her bedroom, and encounters multiple versions of herself, lost every night - all the work of the ship.
Next time: a Jules Verne-inspired title accompanies an effort to improve on the final two episodes of The Invasion of Time...