Showing posts with label The Silurians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Silurians. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 February 2021

Who Reviews The Hungry Earth / Cold Blood by S. F. Cambridge

 


Starring Matt Smith as The Doctor, Karen Gillan as Amy & Arthur Darvill as Rory

 

The Doctor: “Restricted access. No unauthorized personnel”

Amy: That is breaking and entering!”

The Doctor: “What did I break? Sonic-ing and entering, totally different” 

Set in the Welsh village of Cwmtaff, Dr Nasreen Chaudhry helped by Tony Mack and her team of scientists are drilling into the earth’s core in search of the minerals that have appeared in their small village which are turning their grass blue. 

After a successful day, they are replaced on the night shift by Tony’s son in law Mo who after an uneventful few hours is surprised by what appears to be an earthquake as a hole forms in the ground of the mine. 

He investigates and gets pulled underground by a mysterious force.

Nasreen and Tony arrive for their shift in the morning and find Mo gone!

The Doctor, Amy and Rory arrive in the village later that day en route to Rio and thoroughly annoyed that the TARDIS has brought them to the wrong time and place yet again! 

( The Doctor : “You didn't always take me where I wanted to go.”

Idris : “No, but I always took you where you needed to go”

The Doctor’s wife, Series 6 ) 

As they look across the valley, Amy spots two figures waving at them from the opposite hillside. It is Amy and Rory from ten years in their future, coming back to revisit past glories. (This is a key point we must remember during this episode) The Doctor discovers the blue grass and exclaims that the ground doesn’t “feel right” 

He and Amy head towards the mine and Rory comes across Ambrose and her son Elliot, Mo’s wife and child. They ask him for his help as some of their relatives who were dead in their graves, seem to have gone missing as though they were taken from under the earth. 

Whilst he is helping them investigate their dilemma, The Doctor and Rory come across Nasreen and Tony and there is another earthquake which sees the ground opening up again, taking Amy beneath its surface. 

The Doctor discovers that the drilling into the earth’s core has awoken something up that has been sleeping beneath the surface for many years and now transport pods are heading for the surface. 

Having to break the bad news that Amy is gone to Rory and promising to save her and Mo, the Doctor enlists the help of the villagers just as the village is encased in an energy field, stopping anything from entering or leaving the village as the beings from the earth’s core that the Doctor has identified as Silurian, come to the surface. 

The Doctor: “It’s a transport. Three of them. Thirty kilometres down. Major speed looks about 150 kilometres now. Should be here in… ooh, quite soon. Twelve minutes. Whatever bio programmed the Earth is on its way up. Now!” 

Amy and Mo are being held prisoner below the earth and Mo is experimented on, whilst Elliot gets caught and is held in some kind of suspended animation. The Doctor and Rory manage to capture one of the Silurian’s which looks like a human reptile and decide to trade her for Mo, Amy and Elliot. Unfortunately, the Silurian attacks Tony, poisoning his blood so that he will slowly die and when the Doctor and Nasreen use the TARDIS to go below to talk to the alien race and set up a trade and a peace treaty, Ambrose kills the hostage when she refuses to help save Tony’s life.

Below the surface The Doctor finds an entire civilisation of Silurian’s waking up thinking they are under attack from the drilling and they start planning a war to take back the earth which they claim was their planet to start with, from the humans by wiping them out. 

Amy and Rory are united, along with Mo, Ambrose and Elliot and whilst the peace treaty cannot go ahead at that time due to the death of the Silurian hostage, it is decided that the race will go back into hibernation for longer and try and live harmoniously with the humans another time when they think the human race is ready to accept an alien race and share the planet. 

Tony and Nasreen agree to go into hibernation with the Silurian’s so that they can cure Tony and they can live a happy life together in some other time. 

As the Doctor, Amy and Rory leave, they find the TARDIS by the crack in the wall that started in Amy’s bedroom as a child that now seems to be following them around much like the words “Bad Wolf” did in previous episodes with David Tennant and Billie Piper. The Doctor considers it an explosion and places his hand inside the crack, pulling out some debris which he later reveals is a piece of the TARDIS itself, concluding that the TARDIS must have exploded somehow which has caused the cracks in time. 

As they are about to leave, an angry Silurian catches up with them and shoots Rory, killing him. As Amy cries over his dead body and pleads with The Doctor to help him, he pulls her away and forces her into the TARDIS knowing what is about to happen as she begs him to save her husband, trying her hardest to get back to him for fear of leaving him behind. 

Flashback to the Byzantium when the crack in the wall took the lives of anyone who got close to its light and wiped them from history as though they had never existed. 

Rory has gone and erased form Amy’s mind and when they land back in the village and look outside, Amy sees only herself waving at her from afar and all memories of Rory have now gone. 

The Doctor: “If the time-energy catches up with you you’ll never have been born. It’ll erase every moment of your existence. You will never have lived at all.” 

Seeing as the Hungry Earth & Cold Blood are parts 1 & 2 of the same story, I thought it best to review them together. It’s not one of my favourites although towards the end when Rory “died” as he seemed to do a lot during his time as a companion, I did actually gasp out a loud and anguished “NO!” at the T.V as he is by far one of my favourite companions and I felt cheated by his death as his story had really only just begun having not been explained very much at all. 

Without any spoilers I will say that it all turns out ok in the end and this isn’t the last we’ve seen of Mr. Williams – Pond and I’m glad to say that his life and death from now on become an integral part of the show making him one very interesting character indeed. 

We also see within these episodes the indication of a future ally of The Doctors known as Madame Vastra. A Silurian detective whose life was saved by The Doctor at some point in time, so that she went on to become very well respected in her field during the Victorian era along with her human wife, Jenny, showing that at some point, both Silurian’s and humans do eventually learn to get along and co exist on earth. 


Monday, 6 July 2020

Who Reviews Doctor Who and the Silurians by Matt Rabjohns



When Doctor Who entered its seventh season, a stark change in the tone of the series came with it. Season 7 is probably without a doubt the single most mature and adult season of Doctor Who ever in its long history. None of the four stories within this season are done for laughs. The seriousness of the tone in fact makes them have a feel quite unlike most of the following Jon Pertwee seasons too. There is a real sense of acting gravitas and storytelling that is pertinent and highly engaging. Spearhead from Space first brought an iconic menace to the show in the Nestenes, and then next came one of the show's most morally ambiguous and interesting stories ever.

Malcolm Hulke's scripts for Doctor Who are always firstly character led. All the characters in his stories you truly feel something for and you care about what happens to them, even his creatures and alien menaces too. And another trademark stamp of Malcolm's writing is his almost routine use of Humans as being the main adversary in the stories. Whilst that is not wholly true in the Silurians, it is still a very firm suggestion in the story, especially towards the climax.

The characters in this story are all extremely well developed. Fulton Mackay as Dr Quinn is a superb character, with his downfall being his hunger for knowledge from the species that predate our own. That his own greed for that power leads to his undoing is a resonant theme of the first three parts of the story.

Nicholas Courtney turns in a very very fine performance as the Brigadier in this story. This is definitely one of his best performances as the man with the totally immovable military mind. His scenes with Jon Pertwee are always a great joy to watch for the fractious and unpredictable friendship they have. And his actions at the end of the story can only be described in his own words on the show: Typical, absolutely typical in how he just routinely murders the Silurians.

Caroline John is superb as Liz Shaw and a great foil for Jon Pertwee. Frankly she is my favourite of his three companions. Despite the fact that she never travelled in the TARDIS I for one still definitively call her a companion. I think that she never truly had a long enough go at showing us what Liz was made of actually. And it was an even bigger shame that she never got a proper goodbye story either.

Peter Miles portrays the director fo the Nuclear Project with ease too. And his descent into disease provoked lunacy in his final scene is extremely harrowing and very very frightening to watch. The makeup of the people catching the Silurian disease are extremely convincing and very well done indeed.

This story is also notable for its appearance of the late great Paul Darrow and here he portrays Captain Hawkins and he is brilliant in the part. He plays the deadpan soldier with ease and is very convincing.

The Silurians here are of a far better quality than the frankly appalling new series efforts. Here the Silurians have three eyes and they have a very human streak to them though, in that there is a wiser Old Silurian who is prepared to listen to the Doctor when he starts trying to promote a peace between the races, yet there is also the devious and treacherous Younger Silurian who ends up murdering his elder in cold blood so that he can ascend to being Leader. This is very paradoxical for a race who are so against the humans, when the Silurians start bickering amongst themselves they sound very human like too!

The scenes of the plague claiming victims in the London station are very bold and gripping. And they add a genuine sense of real fear and foreboding to the episodes. So much so that this story never feels like it is Seven Episodes long at all. The script is of a fantastically strong quality and unravels at a believable and very good pace.

The story's climax though is surely one of the finest in the show's history. The Doctor's shock and indignation at the slaughter of the Silurians is extremely palpable and ends this story on a real sombre note, which is unusual for the show. It is extremely impacting and I share his bleak silence as he drives off with the caves still exploding. It’s a haunting image of the mindset of humanity when faced with anything new, and resorting to the tried and wasteful method of destroying what they don't understand. Themes that still run through our race as commonly today as ever. Doctor Who and the Silurians succeeds in making the perfect statement on this trait. Utterly excellent story telling.