Category: Episode by Episode
Doctor Who episode 462: Image of the Fendahl – Part One (29/10/1977)
This has the style of The Time Monster done right – bantering scientists; advanced equipment in a country house; ancient glowing artefacts wreaking supernatural havoc on hapless passers-by; the whiff of something unethical that needs covering up, and Pertwee-years yokels. It resurrects an interest in the origins of humankind, and has some attractive folk horror overtones.
Doctor Who episode 461: The Invisible Enemy – Part Four (22/10/1977)
Most of the silly bits are knowingly ridiculous: the jokes about the embiggened Nucleus being another ranting megalomaniac, and the fact that – after repeatedly dismissing the idea the Doctor solves everything by blowing up Titan – are definitely deliberate. There’s an amusing bit of business when the Doctor opens a door on Titan and has to shut it again quick sharp because a man with a gun is standing right outside, and ‘I only hope he’s TARDIS trained’ is a funnier punchline than most of the “they all laugh at Spock” endings from Star Trek (a low bar, to be fair). Only the Nucleus claiming to be ‘mighty and invulnerable’ when it can barely move without assistance is obviously a gap between the imagination of the script and the budget-conscious logic of the production (CORRECTION: the script says the Nucleus is cumbersome and immobile, which instantly makes me like the story 10% more. Thanks to Revenge of the Swarm’s Jonathan Morris for pointing this out).
Doctor Who episode 460: The Invisible Enemy – Part Three (15/10/1977)
The best bits of the serial so far take place inside the Doctor’s brain, where there’s a creditable attempt to create an environment as weird and alien as Axos, supported by strange little gnomic comments like the mind/brain interface ‘the gap between logic and imagination’ where you can’t see one side from the other. There’s also an odd little reference to the Doctor’s ability to tune into the Time Lord intelligentsia having been removed when they kicked him out – an idea of the Doctor as a sort of university drop-out that hovers round the edges of the Williams stories.
Doctor Who episode 459: The Invisible Enemy – Part Two (8/10/1977)
Compare Frederick Jaeger’s performance here as Professor Marius to Sorenson in Planet of Evil. Both are fairly big performances – Sorenson’s werewolf transformation is hardly achieved through subtlety. But there was a sense that Sorenson was a realistic person being torn apart. No-one could say the same of Marius, who’s a wacky professor with a mid-European accent and a robot dog. Tom Baker is clearly enjoying what Jaeger is doing (‘Good for nothing spaceniks’, ‘Oh dear, he’s gone again!’), and so do I – but it sums up the difference between Hinchcliffe and Williams’ versions of Doctor Who.
Doctor Who episode 458: The Invisible Enemy – Part One (1/10/1977)
Made before Horror of Fang Rock, this is new producer Graham Williams’ first Doctor Who serial. After all the fuss kicked up by Mary Whitehouse about violence during Hinchcliffe’s run, Williams had been instructed to tone down the horror. I think that’s instantly clear. The opening scene on a spaceship navigating the asteroid belt is apparently crewed entirely by students of the Rogin school: 1970s workers transported to the year 5000, and still griping about how dull their jobs are, and how often they’ve been overlooked for promotion. Equally, the crew of the Titan base can’t wait to go home, have broken out the bubbly and fruit bowl. The new series has made an art out of making the future feel familiar in precisely this way.
Doctor Who episode 457: Horror of Fang Rock – Part Four (24/9/1977)
A lot of the effects look like something from Top of the Pops or an early 1980s pop video – like the Doctor hanging from the lighthouse window, or Reuben the Rutan’s transformation. It’s obviously a long transition period, but for the first time I feel like this is starting to look like the show I remember from my own childhood in the 1980s. The Rutan itself looks like a lump of phlegm, but speaks with a fairly clipped, RP accent – much like Linx the Sontaran. And like the Sontarans, the Rutans of Ruta 3 are ruthless warmongers, concerned only about victory at any cost. No wonder the Doctor’s never taken sides in their war.
Doctor Who episode 456: Horror of Fang Rock – Part Three (17/9/1977)
This is a masterclass in how to structure a Doctor Who four-parter. Having established the situation in the first episode, introduced a wider cast of characters and complications in the second, this now begins to weave together the side plots into the main story, with Palmerdale’s greed and Skinsale’s attempts to foil him escalating the crisis on Fang Rock, further isolating the characters. Meanwhile, the Doctor’s attempts to fight back against their mysterious assailant hit a stumbling block when he realises, too late, that it is a shape-changer, and, in one of the greatest of all cliffhangers, tells Leela, ‘I’ve made a terrible mistake. I thought I’d locked the enemy out. Instead, I’ve locked it in, with us.’
Doctor Who episode 455: Horror of Fang Rock – Part Two (10/9/1977)
My favourite thing about this story is that the monster isn’t just green, it’s a bubbling lump of purest green. It’s also treated quite straightforwardly as an actively malevolent entity, which started off moving about Fang Rock cautiously, understanding the lie of the land, the defensive capabilities of the locals, and their biology (it conducts a post mortem on Ben, which makes it a sort of outer-space Litefoot). It ‘contrived to isolate us’ and now it’s waiting to strike. Before the night ends, every human being on Fang Rock might be dead.
Doctor Who episode 454: Horror of Fang Rock – Part One (3/9/1977)
This opens almost exactly like The Time Warrior with yokels watching a falling star land somewhere nearby. Given this introduces the Sontarans’ arch-enemy, the Rutans, it has to be an in joke between Terrance Dicks and Robert Holmes, and it remains one of the most beautifully subtle kisses to the past in the series’ history. The difference is that when Holmes wrote The Time Warrior back in 1973, the concept of the Doctor Who historical had been more or less dead for half a decade, but since Hinchcliffe took over it’s become, if not the norm, then very much one of the main types of story. It almost feels as if this picks up where The Talons of Weng-Chiang left off, with Leela in period costume arriving in turn-of-the-20th-Century fog to learn more about her human ancestors.
Doctor Who episode 453: The Talons of Weng-Chiang – Part Six (2/4/1977)
Once again, this isn’t exactly the most satisfactory conclusion. The Doctor talks about Greel’s vampirism as ‘a postponement of the inevitable’, and that could sum up this episode, which would have ended very differently had Greel been slightly more ruthless towards Leela at Litefoot’s house, or if he’d talked less and acted more at the House of the Dragon. Instead, there’s lots of frantic running about, wrestling, and explosions that mask the fact that Holmes, once again, hasn’t thought of anything more elegant.