Whilst Adric may not be
many fans favourite companion to have ever graced the show, his death at the
time in Earthshock was definitely a palpable and very moving moment in the
history of the show. We had had deaths of companions before, with Katarina and
Sara Kingdom in The Daleks Master Plan, but somehow Adric's death seems to be
more vividly remembered.
The show at the time never
dwelt much upon personal or emotional issues as much as they do in the modern
era, so with Warzone/Conversion its very good to see Big Finish going into
detail with how the Doctor and Nyssa and Tegan cope with the fallout of Earthshock.
Do the writers succeed in delivering a memorable follow on to those shocking
events? Well, the answer is yes in most respects.
Firstly, the sound
production and music are truly authentic to the 80s era of the show. Impeccably
so and the bonus interviews are always fun to listen to also. Always great to
hear insight right from the actor’s mouths.
Warzone and Conversion are
written by two different writers (Chris Chapman and Guy Adams) but the stories
are directly linked. It is always very annoying though that Big Finish may not
always use the monsters name in the titles, but they always have a picture of
them on the front! This at once ruins any mystery the stories may have in my
own view. However, if you can get past this annoyance and give the stories a chance,
they are rather superb overall.
Warzone begins with the
TARDIS team, together with new companion Marc, landing in Warzone. A massive
gaming race track full of life-threatening obstacles in the best Doctor Who
fashion of old. The story has very good pace and develops not quite as
ludicrously quickly as most of the modern era show on telly does. The Doctor
and his friends at once have to literally run for their lives and become
embroiled in the race. And the Doctor soon discovers just what the race is for.
The main plot thrust of this story may actually be one of the more simple given
to a Big Finish story, but it is all the better for it. It gives the characters
a firm background and the acting from all involved in this story is top notch
and right on the nail. Two of the best actors in this first story are
definitely Pepter Lunkuse as Esma. She interacts well with the Doctor over the
course of the two episodes almost enough to make you think she has the
potential to become a companion.
Timothy Blore as Morris
works so well paired off with Nyssa. It’s good to hear Nyssa being given such a
good role within the story. And she seems to strike up a great friendship with
Morris so it’s quite sad and jarring at the riveting climax to part two to have
to break apart the bonds that were forming between both Nyssa and Morris and
The Doctor and Esma. The warning the Doctor gives to Esma and Morris about
being strong willed enough to resist becoming the Cybermen is a brilliant scene.
Amidst all of this Tegan
is not forgotten. The chemistry between her and George Watkin's as Marc is
wonderful to listen to. It is quite the fearsome and soul destroying ride that
Marc is forced to suffer in this story, and it is only going to get worse in
Conversion.
Peter Davison is
absolutely on his best form within these two stories, but especially in
Conversion.
I will get the only niggle
I have with this story out of the way first. The characters of Herb and Creasey
just seem a bit too caricatured and clichéd. Though Angela Bruce gives a
brilliant performance as Herb the characters are just absolutely nothing new
and seem to be rather grafted on to the story rather than written in. Your
typical run of the mill space pirates who aren't given anything original to
handle. Mind you if you love space pirates then these two girls’ banter can be
very amusing. I'll give them that. But that is where my niggles end.
The rest of the story is
extremely well written. It gives Peter Davison the chance to display an angrier
and more upset and therefore more rude and unknowable edge to his Doctor’s
persona. It’s always excellent when actors get to rise above their normal game
with an exceptional script, and this script definitely gives Peter the chance
to blow our socks off with his titanic performance.
And then the delicious
treat of once more being able to hear David Banks and Mark Hardy reprise their
80's Cyber roles just steals the show. Here in this story the Cybermen are
truly soulless and incredibly nasty with their plans. The prototype conversion
they almost succeed in performing on Marc is harrowing and George Watkins copes
sublimely well in being totally broken and at his wit's end amidst this
horrendous experiment.
The emotional impact on
all the main crew of the TARDIS is palpable at the stories climax leading to a
very unexpected ending. Tegan is truly unsettled and unforgiving of the darker
side the Doctor has displayed during this story's run. Even in spite of the
fact that against all the odds the Doctor has done his utmost to help Marc
return to being as much of a human being as he can. Guy's writing in these
final scenes is riveting and heart-breaking for all the main TARDIS team.
Conversion is the kind of
cyberman story we need to see appearing on the screen in the new modern era
televised Doctor Who! To me the serials the modern era has churned out have all
rather fallen short of the mark, in that I think they have forgotten the Cybermen
aren't robots, they happen to be dehumanized cyborgs! David Banks and Mark
Hardy truly work on this fact well in Conversion.
The CyberLeader even gets
to have a jibe at the Doctor, whom he accuses of being a hypocrite. The Doctor
is resistant to murder, yet he destroyed the Cyber Leader in Earthshock. The
only thing to offer in the Doctor's defence is that situation was one of acute
stress and even a Time Lord is not perfect every day of the universal year. But
it does add a gritty edge and bring out a touch of the mystery of who the
Doctor truly actually is once more. Vague little titbits like this are scary to
hear. It’s good to see Peter being given a more Seventh Persona role for once,
after all, all the incarnations are still the same man.
Warzone/Conversion in
summation then are two extremely well written stories on the whole. They are a
truly stark and belting follow on from the sombre and sad events of Earthshock.
I can only hope that Marc can somehow recover from his ordeal. Truly the impact
of what the Cybermen can do to people if they get hold of them has never been
quite so well portrayed before. This story even beats the Bill Potts conversion
of Peter Capaldi's Cyber epic. I would strongly recommend this story as a
worthwhile and dark follow on to Earthshock. As two two parters they work
extremely well indeed. But be prepared to be stirred by the huge amount of
emotional gravitas injected into these episodes.
Although maybe one other
little oddity is that Warzone/Conversion does seem to have forgotten the events
of the earlier Big Finish release The Boy That Time Forgot. That story led us
to believe that Adric in fact did not die but was left at the beginnings of
time and went a little insane. Perhaps this is just forgetfulness although it
does make the story's timeline placement rather unfathomable from my
perspective, as Nyssa and the Doctor in the Boy story were without Tegan, so
that means the story had to be set between the TV stories Time Flight and Arc
of Infinity, and then Tegan returned but somehow The Good Doc and Nyssa seem to
have lost all memory of the events of the Boy that Time Forgot, so that's just
a little strange. But it’s not a major quibble, and it’s not as if the show
isn't constantly mucking around with its own history and time lines!
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