Thursday, 16 January 2025

Inspirations: Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS


Steven Moffat wanted the longest ever story title, and the story could be any old rubbish as it didn't really matter.
Alternatively... 
The interior of the TARDIS had hardly been touched since the series was revived apart from the odd bit of dialogue about swimming pools and wardrobes. The Christmas Invasion had shown the Tenth Doctor selecting his new outfit - but it was clearly recorded on the usual standing console room set.
Apart from bland corridors and a handful of rooms (Zero Room, Power Room, bedroom / sleeping areas, boot room...), the classic iteration of the series hadn't shown much either.
That was apart from The Invasion of Time - but that had proven to be a major disappointment.
Action in this 1978 story moved inside the ship for much of the final 40 minutes, and many of these scenes were scheduled for the studio. However, industrial action meant the loss of studio time and, to save the story from outright scrapping, they were shifted to location - external filming being unaffected by the strike action.
The location chosen was a decommissioned mental hospital in Surrey - so the TARDIS appears to have lots of corridors designed along the lines of the old Victorian institutions. We did actually get to see the swimming pool for a change - filmed at a business property in Hammersmith.
All that brickwork, and the all too obvious location filming, disappointed everyone who saw it.

This was one of the things Moffat wanted to redress when it came to the 50th Anniversary year, though he opted not to write the story himself. That dubious pleasure went to Stephen Thompson, who had previously written the underwhelming Curse of the Black Spot. (Quite how you can write a boring pirate story, no-one knows). Thompson was working with Moffat and Gatiss on Sherlock.
His own idea for a submission was actually a prequel to Robots of Death, delving into Taren Capel's childhood.
His first idea once he'd accepted Moffat's brief was that the TARDIS would collide and meld with another space / time machine - creating a set of weird, surreal interfaces. The pilot of the other vessel was actually wanting to steal the TARDIS. The second idea was a collision with a school trip in space, and the TARDIS would be overrun by teenagers - so this could have been an awful lot worse.
Luckily Moffat hated the idea.
The ship being captured by a salvage team who only could only see the value of its components was Thompson's third idea.

The story title obviously derives from Jules Verne's 1864 novel Journey to the Centre of the Earth, most memorably adapted for cinema in 1959 with James Mason and Pat Boone.
It was Moffat who suggested the image of the TARDIS engines exploding but frozen in mid-blast, after seeing Rebecca Horn's art installation "Concert for Anarchy" at the Tate. This involved an exploding piano.
Matt Smith suggested that the Doctor's bedroom be shown for the very first time, but this wasn't picked up.

References to old stories abound.
Components which the salvagers detect include dynomorphic generators (Time-Flight), a beam synthesiser (The Curse of Peladon) and a conceptual geometer (The Horns of Nimon).
The Doctor threatens to self-destruct the TARDIS, as he previously did in Attack of the Cybermen - though he claimed he'd made the self-destruct up in Victory of the Daleks.
Some more recent props such as the Doctor's cot and some model TARDISes made by Amelia Pond are seen as Clara wanders about the ship.
An astronomical observatory is seen, which has a telescope very similar to the one from Torchwood House (Tooth and Claw).
The Cloister Bell sounds (first heard in Logopolis). This story had also first mentioned the architectural configuration system. Once simply a function of the console, it's now a big tree-like thing.
We get to see the Eye of Harmony - initially something only to be found on Gallifrey (The Deadly Assassin) but then apparently a feature of all TARDISes (The Movie).
We hear snatches of speech in the library - some of Timothy Dalton's dialogue lifted from The End of Time Part 1.

As for the Series 7 story arcs, Clara sees a book entitled "The History of the Time War," which features the Doctor - presumably named. And the Doctor finally confronts her about her true nature.
Time gets reset, however, so both these things get forgotten.
Next time: The Flask of the Red Death...

Wednesday, 15 January 2025

Christopher Benjamin 1934 - 2025

Sad to report the passing of actor Christopher Benjamin today, at the age of 90. He appeared in Doctor Who on three memorable occasions. The first was as Sir Keith Gold in Inferno, and the last was as Sir Hugh in The Unicorn and the Wasp, but by far and away his most famous role came between these - as Henry Gordon Jago, the manager of the Palace Theatre, in The Talons of Weng-Chiang. This was a fan favourite role which he returned to many times on audio. There had even been thoughts of a spin-off series featuring Jago and his friend Professor Litefoot on TV back in 1977.
RIP

Tuesday, 14 January 2025

What's Wrong With... Enlightenment


Right from the start of what is known as the Black Guardian Trilogy we've asked the question: why does the Black Guardian feel the need to hide his involvement in these events? He has elected to rely on a useless schoolboy to destroy the powerful Time Lord who already has a record of defeating him, when he might have been far more successful doing the job himself.
(Here, it turns out that he didn't really need Turlough anyway, and his real plan was to unleash the Eternal known as Wrack upon the Universe).
Now, just 8 episodes later, we discover that not only does the White Guardian know what's going on anyway, he even knows exactly where the Black Guardian is headed, and he's going to be there waiting for him.
If the White Guardian is the equal of the Black, why does he have to draw energy from the TARDIS to communicate with the Doctor? He ought to be able to come and go as easily as his opposite number.

The TARDIS crew initially think that they have arrived on an Edwardian sailing ship, but no-one bothers to look out of a porthole to see what's outside. They don't even ask the sailors where they are.
But whilst Tegan and Turlough might think they're off the English coast, the Doctor was given co-ordinates and so should know that they aren't on Earth, yet he doesn't act like it.
Striker claims that the Eternals must follow the customs of the ships they are using, which seems to be part of a general "fair play" policy. If they care so much about playing the game, why have ships from different historical periods, when nautical technology changes over time?
If they want a level playing field, shouldn't they all be using the same design of vessel?

The Doctor states that the red gemstones which Wrack uses as focus points for her powers have to be of a certain size to work - but then claims that when smashed it multiplies their effectiveness.
And when he smashes the one Tegan inadvertently brought back he leaves several sizeable pieces behind, which ought to have at least blown a hole in the ship. 
Why didn't he just bundle up the rug?
There are forcefields surrounding the decks, which presumably protect the sailors who are sent aloft to the rigging - which means that the sails are within the forcefield. How then can they capture solar winds?
What good was a trireme if the ships are powered by solar winds?

If Striker can hide the TARDIS in the Doctor's mind, surely Wrack should have been able to work out Turlough's true motives.
And if they can read minds, how could the Doctor and Turlough have successfully attacked her and her and Mansell? Did they not see it coming?
Disappointingly, the villains are defeated off screen, and we never get to see how the Doctor did it. Did he physically assault them? Doesn't sound at all like the Fifth Doctor.
The alternative is that puny Turlough physically trounced two awesomely powerful Eternals all on his own, which doesn't sound right either...

Sunday, 12 January 2025

Episode 148: The Underwater Menace (4)


Synopsis:
Professor Zaroff shoots King Thous and orders the deaths of his guards, before declaring that nothing in the world can now stop him. He then marches off to his laboratory.
The Doctor and Ben arrive soon after and find that Thous is still alive, though badly wounded. They take him to the secret chamber behind the temple.
There, the Doctor learns that Jamie and Polly have gone off to the laboratory in search of him. He has devised a plan - one which carries huge risks. He and Ben will go to the power generating station and create an overload. It should cause the sea wall to breach, resulting in the lowermost levels of Atlantis being flooded. This would include Zaroff's laboratory but also cover the temple precinct. The Doctor cannot guarantee where the water level will settle, so asks Sean and Jacko to go round the city to warn the inhabitants to make for the uppermost levels.
Ara will tend to Thous.
In his lab, Zaroff is preparing for the culmination of his plans, but the technicians in the various substations begin to panic as they hear of the growing food shortages. Even calling upon guards to help, Zaroff realises that his project could be at risk but he is determined to carry on.
The Doctor and Ben arrive at the generating station and find an armed guard on duty, who expects a password. Ben pretends to be escorting the Doctor as his prisoner, and between them they manage to bamboozle the guard into giving away the password and they gain entry.
They knock out the technician and the Doctor sets the overload building.
Elsewhere, Jamie and Polly have become lost in the tunnels. They see one of the rock walls glow and begin to crumble. Sea water begins to flood in.
Ara is helped by Sean and Jacko to get Thous up to a higher level of the city. They meet Damon, who tells them that his operating theatre is now submerged. The temple also floods, and Lolem has perished after refusing to abandon it.
They are forced further up through the city, and emerge onto the outside of the volcanic mountain. Damon's people are setting up a refugee centre here.
The Doctor and Ben go to the laboratory to confront Zaroff. He refuses to surrender and lets down a heavy metal gate, sealing him in the section of the room which contains a plunger which will trigger the explosion that will split the Earth in two.
Jamie and Polly manage to exit the city onto the surface.
As water rushes into the lab, Ben leaves - urging the Doctor to abandon Zaroff to his fate. The Doctor instead tricks the scientist into opening the gate after turning off the lights, closing it again so that the scientist is cut off from the trigger device. 
He urges Zaroff to come with him. The crazed scientist refuses and is drowned.
Out on the surface, the Doctor reunites with his companions.
Thous and Damon discuss the rebuilding of Atlantis but the latter insists that there must be no more superstition, as it was this which Zaroff had exploited, and there must be no more Fish People either.
Sean and Jacko are surprised to see the Doctor and his companions enter a Police Box, which suddenly vanishes.
Jamie asks where they will be going next, only to be told by Ben and Polly that the Doctor has no control over the TARDIS. Annoyed, the Doctor insists that he will take them exactly where they want to go to prove his mastery over the ship. The planet Mars is suggested, but as soon as the Doctor sets the controls the TARDIS begins to lurch violently out of control...
Next time: The Moonbase

Data:
Written by Geoffrey Orme
Recorded: Saturday 28th January 1967 - Riverside Studio 1
First broadcast: 5:50pm, Saturday 4th February 1967
Ratings: 7.0 million / AI 47
Designer: Jack Robinson
Director: Julia Smith
Additional cast: Ralph Watson (Technical overseer / technician voice)


Critique:
Atlantis - the Island of Atlas - is first mentioned by Plato in his 4th Century BC works Timaeus and Critias. It's described as a great naval power, dominating the western half of the known world. After falling foul of the gods, they caused it to sink beneath the surface of the Atlantic Ocean. It was very much presented as an ideal society and so regarded as an allegorical city state rather than a real historical place, despite physical descriptions such as its position beyond the Pillars of Hercules (the Straits of Gibraltar) and its layout of a series of concentric islands separated by canals.
Later writers such as Francis Bacon and Thomas More incorporated it into their work on utopian societies. However, in more recent times writers began to write of it as having been an actual civilisation. This had been technologically far in advance of known ancient civilisations, and it was claimed that it had been refugees from Atlantis who had passed on their knowledge to the peoples of the Middle East, South America etc. Inevitably, Atlantis was also linked with aliens, having been established by them in the first place.
Some archaeologists have searched for evidence of Atlantis, but either as a city on the western edge of Europe or North Africa which has since fallen into the sea, or as one of the ancient civilisations of the Mediterranean or Aegean regions. Others are looking further west in the Caribbean region.
One theory popular in recent years is that Atlantis was based on the Minoan civilisation centred on Crete. This was devastated by a tsunami created by the eruption of the Thera volcano (Santorini). The eruption was so explosive that Thera was left as a circular island with the core of the volcano at its heart - giving the concentric ring description given by Plato. 

This particular theory found its way into Doctor Who in 1972, in the story The Time Monster. The final two instalments of this six-parter see the action shift to Atlantis.
The design team look to the Minoans for sets, make-up and costumes whilst the ancient volcanic eruption of Thera is specifically mentioned in dialogue in the first episode.
The story sees the city destroyed around 1500BC by the Chronovore Kronos, angered by its lengthy imprisonment by the Atlanteans.
Exactly one year before, and from the same writers, we had The Daemons. This stated that it was the titular creatures who had destroyed Atlantis when it was deemed a failed experiment.
The Underwater Menace does not give any detail at all about the ancient destruction of Atlantis - only that there were survivors who carried on the civilisation in the subterranean levels of their volcanic island. So it could have been destroyed by Azal, or it could have been destroyed by Kronos, but can it be both?
Fans have, naturally, tried to square this particular circle by claiming that The Daemons and The Time Monster don't necessarily depict the same event. The city is sunk by Azal / Kronos but survivors are able to re-establish it - only for this New Atlantis to then be wrecked as well, not long after.
Jump forward to 2015 and it is mentioned in The Magician's Apprentice that there is a strong temporal paradox centred on Atlantis - so all three stories simply co-exist.

Episode 4 sees more of the filming at Winspit Caves, located near Worth Maltravers in Dorset. Filming there on Monday 12th and Tuesday 13th December had been for the first and fourth instalments, covering the arrival and the departure of the time-travellers on the island. For this final episode, the regulars had to change their costumes. Patrick Troughton discarded his hat and cloak, whilst Michael Craze and Frazer Hines donned wetsuits. Anneke Wills had to wear the uncomfortable Atlantean dress for the first time.
PG Stephens and Paul Anil were in attendance to film their final scene of the story as Sean and Jacko witnessed the TARDIS departure.
Thous, Damon and Ara also appear outside the city at the conclusion of the episode, but their scenes were set in a cave mouth and were recorded in studio. 
Filming continued at Ealing from Wednesday 14th December. This included the glowing rock wall observed by Jamie and Polly, which then crumbles as water pours through. A model of the temple was also filmed flooded. This included shots of water pouring through the idol's eyes and mouth.
Live action filming centred on the climactic scenes in Zaroff's laboratory. This set had been constructed in the studio's water tank, which was then slowly filled. The first shots recorded saw the water begin to gush in around the professor. Next were shots of him trying to reach through the bars of the metal grille, and his head going under. The final shots were of loose items floating in the water after the scientist has drowned - including the plunger device. As the tank filled so slowly, there were lengthy gaps in the filming before shots could be captured.

Since studio recording had moved from Fridays to Saturdays rehearsals had always begun on a Tuesday, but this week they began a day early - on Monday 23rd December.
That Friday Troughton was issued with a new contract for 23 episodes, covering four new stories. Michael Craze received his for 10 episodes - which would take him up to the second instalment of the next Dalek story planned.
Unusually the final episode was recorded out of sequence. The closing TARDIS scene had been a late addition to the scripts, and this was recorded first. A rotating camera lens was employed to add to the effect of the ship being out of control. Closing credit captions came next, and after a short break the evening saw recording run in story order.
The opening credits were played over close-up shots of Zaroff's gun and his face. The next break came when Hines and Wills moved to the rock tunnel set, where they witnessed the collapsing sea wall, with a third just before the Doctor decided to return to the lab to try to save Zaroff.
Ralph Watson appeared on a TV monitor on the laboratory set, and also provided the voices of other technicians reporting from other substations. 
Zaroff's countdown clock was actually the Rel Counter, seen recently in Daleks: Invasion Earth - 2150AD.
The generating station set was a new one, and featured a large working cog-wheel. It was linked directly to the corridor set where the guard was stationed, to allow continuous recording.
As mentioned, Thous, Damon and Ara were seen only in studio for their final scenes, using the same set which had featured as the rocky tunnel traversed by Jamie and Polly.
One scene was deleted from this sequence before broadcast, in which Sean and Ara were adamant that the Doctor survived after Jacko was convinced he must have drowned.

The problem of too many companions is evident in this episode, as Polly and Jamie are basically sent up a cul-de-sac - literally. With no role for either, they wander about some tunnels for much of the time. Presumably Polly would have been used to help Ara and Thous before Jamie was introduced and needed something to do.
The story may be poorly regarded overall, but it does have its moments - including the sequence in this episode where Ben and the Doctor trick the generating station guard, with some lovely dialogue.
Ben: "A guard! How are we going to get past him?"
Doctor: "We'll walk past him".
Ben: "In those trousers?"
We also have:
Guard, referring to the Doctor: "How do I know he's a wanted man?"
Ben: "Well, blimey, look at him. He ain't normal. is he?"
The Doctor then accuses the guard of not knowing the password himself, so he blurts it out to them.
William Hartnell noticeably raised his game when he had to act against a strong guest artist, someone who would make him have to work. Something similar seems to happen here, as Troughton comes up against Joseph Furst's OTT performance. It is noticeable that Troughton gives a more subdued performance opposite him, and there is less overt clowning in comparison with previous story. There's no point competing with Furst, so Troughton dials his performance back.

Only one brief clip survives from this episode - a shot of Professor Zaroff about to drown in his laboratory, cut by the Australian censor.
Not many countries bought this story - typical of Season 4. Australia took it first in 1967, when the censorship action took place prior to screening in September and October of that year. New Zealand took it in 1969, as did Hong Kong and Singapore. A year later it was bought by Zambia. 
The 405-line videotapes for this episode were cleared for wiping in September 1969.

Trivia:
  • The ratings have fallen by 1.3 million between first and last episodes of this serial.
  • This was the shortest of the four instalments, at only 23' 20". The second episode was the longest at 25 minutes.
  • This episode proves to be the final sighting of the Doctor's tall Paris Beau hat, worn by Polly in the closing TARDIS scene. Troughton's friends had advised him to ditch it, and it was dropped as part of a small but significant revision to the character. The disguises and a lot of the more overt clowning were discarded, and the darker, more manipulative Second Doctor begins with the following serial.
  • Ralph Watson will return in The Web of Fear to play Captain Knight, and later portraying Ettis in The Monster of Peladon, and Ben in Horror of Fang Rock
  • There is a suggestion that the Twelfth Doctor and Clara encountered Fish People in dialogue from the start of The Caretaker.
  • The story was due to have its missing episodes animated back in 2012 but the company went bust. The story finally came out on DVD / Blu-ray with animated episodes in time for the 60th Anniversary. The team behind the animations took the opportunity to reimagine all of the visual elements beyond the TARDIS and the time-travellers. As such, they don't match the existing material in any way - so it's pointless watching them if you wish to enjoy the original episodes - and most of the new designs are very poor anyway. The Fish People are especially badly realised.
  • And finally, another great retro-style film poster from artist Oliver Arkinstall-Jones:

Saturday, 11 January 2025

O is for... Orum


A member of the Tribunal of Admissions, set up to supervise the arrival of aliens to the planet Inter Minor after many generations of isolationism. This had followed a terrible space plague. Orum was a friend to the ruthless and power-hungry Kalik, who was a fellow member of the Tribunal. He was brother of President Zarb. It had been Zarb who had decided to allow aliens to visit once more, and Kalik sought to undermine him by creating a situation which could be blamed on the new policy. 
Orum tried to act as conscience to his friend but was weak-willed and easily dominated. The Tribunal was led by an officious bureaucrat named Pletrac, and Orum assisted Kalik in undermining his authority in order for their scheme to take place. This involved the release of savage Drashig creatures into the space port - allowing them to escape from miniaturised form within a Miniscope. Once the omnivorous Drashigs were free, their scheme backfired and Orum perished along with his ambitious friend.

Played by: Terence Lodge. Appearances: Carnival of Monsters (1973).
  • Lodge first appeared in the series as Medok in The Macra Terror. He also featured as Moss, one of Lupton's followers, in Planet of the Spiders.
  • In 1990 he played Inspector Lestrade in Hands of a Murderer, a US TV movie starring Edward Woodward as Sherlock Holmes.

O is for... Ortron


Following the death of the High Priest Hepesh, at the time the planet Peladon became part of the Galactic Federation, a man named Ortron was promoted in his place. Previously the royal court had two distinct roles - High Priest and the more secular Chancellor - but in Ortron these roles were combined. As such he held a great deal of power and influence.
He became even more powerful when King Peladon died and his daughter Thalira ascended to the throne. Peladonian society remained patriarchal, and Orton dominated the young queen.
Unlike his predecessor Ortron welcomed the Federation technology. When war broke out with Galaxy Five, the planet's mineral wealth became crucial to the war effort but a series of incidents were triggered by appearances of the ghostly spirit of Aggedor. These brought the mining operations to a halt and rebellion began to brew amongst the miners.
As an aristocrat, Ortron had little time for the wants and needs of the miners and saw their leader, Gebek, as a dangerous trouble-maker. 
When the Doctor arrived back on Peladon, Ortron tried numerous times to have him disposed of, since he spoke up for the miners against the nobility.
Federation ambassador Alpha Centauri was manipulated into calling in military help to resolve the situation, and Ice Warriors under the command of Azaxyr arrived. Despite their differences, Ortron was content to join forces with Gebek and the miners against what they saw as a common foe - and it transpired that the Ice Warriors and a human mining engineer were behind the Aggedor incidents.
Orton sacrificed himself trying to save Thalira, shot down by an Ice Warrior as she attempted to escape the royal citadel.

Played by: Frank Gatliff. Appearances: The Monster of Peladon (1974).
  • The eccentric Gatliff, who was born in Melbourne, Australia, was particularly noted for his outfits, dressing always head to toe in black - including a wide-brimmed hat and cloak.

Friday, 10 January 2025

O is for... Orcini


Former member of the Order of Oberon, an organisation of assassins. Orcini had broken their rules and been excluded from the group, and was now acting freelance. An honourable man, he still adhered to the Order's ethos and only took on jobs where the victim was someone deserving of death, and money mattered little to him. He often gave his fees to charities.
His constant companion was his squire Bostock who was fiercely loyal to him and offered good advice. Bostock's personal hygiene left a lot to be desired.
During his career Orcini had suffered many injuries, the most severe of which was the loss of a leg. he wore a prosthetic limb which was in need of repair, but he preferred to leave it as it was as a reminder of his mortality.
Orcini was approached by a businesswoman named Kara with a job on the planet Necros. She was being forced to share the profits of her food production business with the owner of the nearby Tranquil Repose funerary complex. This was Davros, hiding in the catacombs of the complex and posing as "the Great Healer". He was building a new army of Daleks loyal to him, using the bodies of the dead and those in cryogenic suspension. The waste products were being turned into the foodstuff produced by Kara, and she was helping fund his experiments. She now wanted everything for herself, and Orcini was to assassinate Davros. He was handed a communications device to notify her once the deed was done, but it actually contained a powerful bomb as she did not want to pay him. Orcini took on the job principally because of the honour he would achieve in killing the creator of the Daleks, thinking it might even lead to him being readmitted to the Order. He might retire after this.
Never having trusted Kara, Orcini ended up walking into a trap. Bostock was killed and Orcini had his artificial leg shot off. Kara had been captured and brought to Tranquil Repose, and confessed that the communications device was a bomb. Daleks from Skaro captured Davros and Orcini sacrificed himself to detonate it in the hope that he might destroy the Dalek spaceship with Davros on board.
Unfortunately the ship escaped, but the blast put an end to Davros' new Dalek army.

Played by: William Gaunt. Appearances: Revelation of the Daleks (1985).
  • Gaunt first came to prominence as one third of The Champions - the ITC series which ran for a single season between 1968-69. Terry Nation and Dennis Spooner contributed scripts.
  • Other popular roles for Gaunt included the sitcoms No Place Like Home and Next of Kin. The former was Martin Clunes' first big TV role after his turn in Snakedance.
  • Eric Saward took Orcini's name from the famous Roman dynasty the Orsini, one of whom was a Grand Master of the Knights of Rhodes. The writer's holiday to the region inspired a number elements of Revelation.