Tony objects!
When Doctor Who came back
in 1986, it was a programme on a mission. It had taken its first bloody nose in
over twenty years, being pulled off the air after a single season of the Sixth
Doctor. It was a programme increasingly misunderstood and disregarded by the
senior executives at the BBC, and with a style that had arguably coarsened its
attitude towards explicit violence in Colin Baker’s first season: Lytton’s
bleeding wrists in Attack of the Cybermen; the acid bath quipping and the
Doctor personally springing the trap which kills Quillam in squirming agony in
Vengeance on Varos; the Doctor personally throttle-poisoning Shockeye in The
Two Doctors, again quipping to the corpse; and even Peri getting in on the
murderous action in Revelation of the Daleks. It was in danger of marginalising
itself and it had its credentials as the cornerstone of family viewing to
re-establish. It had to prove it could do what it had always done – win
families to sit together for 25 minutes a week and cheer for a hero.
What the Trial season
delivered, in hindsight, was absolutely the wrong way to go about doing that
job – one overarching storyline over fourteen episodes, in an era when much of
Britain still saw TV as a watch-it-or-miss-it event, made it easier for people
to get lost. And the trial structure itself seems misjudged on two levels – it
keeps interrupting the action for irritating dialogue at one remove, and if
you’ve been off the air for eighteen months, it’s only wise to come back and
put yourself on very public trial if you smash it out of the park, and the Trial,
for many reasons, doesn’t.
In The Mysterious Planet though,
there is a very strong drive towards renaissance, towards back-to-basics
adventuring in a classic Doctor Who style.
In fact it would be hard
to find a more classic, safe, straightforward offering than the basis of The
Mysterious Planet. It’s right there in the title: what’s Doctor Who about?
Going to mysterious planets. Bang, there you go. What’s more, for its first
screen time in eighteen months, John Nathan-Turner brought back former script
editor and frequent scripting gold miner Robert ‘The Governor’ Holmes, to give
us a couple of hours of running about with savages, very thirsty people in Tube
stations and a great – arguably the greatest – Holmesian secondary character
double act ever, in Sabalom Glitz and his partner Dibber.
But before we even got
there, the Production Team were making statements. Fans are still divided over
this thirty years later, because we really know how to hold a grudge, but The
Mysterious Planet opened up with a brand new theme arrangement. And it was, at
least to this fan, bouncing up and down in anticipation of the return of the
brash, bold Doctor in his paint-explosion coat, a massive disappointment. At
thirty years’ remove, you can see the point of Dominic Glynne’s arrangement –
going back to the more spooky, mysterious, ‘Ooh, who is the Doctor?’ vibe of
the utterly classic original version, only spangled and twangled for the
eighties audience. It was an attempt to soften the programme’s offering, to
make it ‘more like people remember’ for fans tuning in after the long
Who-drought, and for people who weren’t fans, but would be checking what Doctor
Who was like these days now it was back. But the visuals of the title sequence
weren’t changed accordingly, so to many, it felt weak, lacking the undeniable punch
of Peter Howell’s version.
But once The Mysterious
Planet opens, there’s a great single-finger salute to all the tired hacks who
had talked about the show’s ‘dodgy effects and wobbly sets’ during the eighteen-month
hiatus. That opening sequence of the space station still stands up today, and
it was a punch in the mouth to those who thought Doctor Who was the home of
poor effects. ‘See this? Shut up. Thank you – Next!’
Oh. Next.
Next was the trial
opening, and my goodness it’s long, and slow, and quiet, and tedious, and has
Lynda Bellingham (still at the time fighting to escape her typecasting as ‘The
Oxo Mum’ from a series of adverts that first brought her to widespread fame),
dressed in a lightweight Time Lord headdress that looks as though it’s been
made on Blue Peter out of a couple of coat hangers and a pair of white tights
(It was the mid-eighties, this was entirely possible). It goes on forever, and
tests the patience of even long-term fans. And then, eventually, The
Mysterious Planet can really begin, with the Time Lords
all settling down, essentially, to watch a Doctor Who story.
Now, when it gets going,
The Mysterious Planet is a really good, fun, utterly unchallenging and
unthreatening Doctor Who story in the Classic tradition, not least because it’s
a Robert Holmes showreel of the best bits of his Who-writing career. Strange
planet, with a problem. Bizarre coincidences – finding Marble Arch Tube station
overgrown with foliage on an alien planet. A drab, humourless society, as in
The Sunmakers. The Tube-dwellers make perfect sense, and yet at the same time,
there’s a whacking great slab of satire in there, the society held in rigid,
need-based stasis by a robot who can’t see beyond the remit of his function
(Holmes re-pulps the central idea of the Sontarans in Drathro. He will execute
you rather than help you, because there’s a protocol to maintain). A resistance
movement – Merdeen’s runners, who become the Tribe of the Free. A kerfuffle
over a bit of high technology treated as a sacred artefact (as in The Ribos
Operation), two of the brightest students chosen to go and help the alien lord
in his castle (The Krotons), and the fantastically rogueish (and here, more
than ever again, more than a little psychotic) Glitz and Dibber, like Garron
and Unstoffe turned up to eleven, with Tony Selby as Glitz stealing many
scenes. The point about The Mysterious Planet is that it’s a great, enjoyable,
clever, logical, satirical and character-rich Doctor Who story, of the kind
that Robert Holmes could deliver in his sleep, with both hands tied behind his
back and a woodpecker on his head. The Production Team luck right the hell out
with guest actors too – Tom ‘Duggan Lives!’ Chadbon turning in a very different
performance as Merdeen, Joan Sims, bless her, clearly having no idea what she’s
taking part in, but giving it her spirited all as Queen Katryca anyway, Adam Blackwood
giving Balazar a naïve charm that makes his cluelessness all the funnier, and
Tony Selby striding and conning his way through the whole thing like a gleeful teddy
bear with a very big gun.
It's important that during
the eighteen months we’ve been away, there’s been a thawing of the relationship
between Peri and the Doctor, and Holmes in The Mysterious Planet gives us a
glimpse of the Sixth Doctor and Peri as we could have enjoyed them going
forward. The L1 and L3 robots, while not exactly sophisticated, are certainly a
cut above the likes of the Sontarans and the Borad from the previous season in
terms of believability, and left alone, The Mysterious Planet would have been a
cracking, if ultimately inconsequential return to the storytelling values of
Tom Baker’s time – if never a Robots of Death or a Pyramids of Mars, then
certainly on a par with stories like The Android Invasion or The Hand of Fear.
But it couldn’t be
left alone. Holmes was saddled with the trial format to work into the story and
there seems to be a note of Holmes the storyteller injected into the Doctor’s
frequent and tiresome interruptions – ‘Are you really offering this
inconsequential silliness as evidence?’ Perhaps the episode 1 climax is the
ultimate example of what is wrong with The Mysterious Planet. A perfectly good
cliff-hanger – the Doctor being stoned to death – is sacrificed by a return to
the courtroom, and the Doctor voices the opinion of viewers when he says ‘Oh,
why did you stop it at the best bit, I was rather enjoying that!’ There’s more
tedious toing and froing between the courtroom players, and the episode ends
not with actual peril being shown, but with Michael Jayston’s
Valeyard telling us all of peril, and that the Doctor’s life is in
danger. While bowing to no-one in my appreciation of Michael Jayston and his
voice, it’s no substitute for a good stoning (and the fact is, it’s a
cliff-hanger that’s repeated almost verbatim at the end of episode 4). The
trial sections ruin what would otherwise be a perfectly serviceable runaround
story to open Season 23, robbing it of impact and drama, and adding nothing but
court dialogue and tedium.
The Mysterious Planet is
still highly watchable popcorn Who after thirty years. But a special edition
with all the court segments edited out would be far more actively entertaining.
The blu-ray version’s coming this year. Twitter campaign to include a
trial-free version, anyone?
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