Tuesday, 31 December 2019

Season 19 Autopsy

Janet Fielding is fond of claiming that Season 19 saw an increase in UK ratings and that this justifies every change that was made.

It's true the UK ratings were both increased and more consistent.

So here's the data.

Season 19 has the highest average since since 1979/80 and a standard deviation under 1.

Notes for statistically challenged.

avg is the mean - sum of all values divided by the quantity of values.

St Dev is standard deviation -  a measure of the variation of a set of values.
  • Low standard deviation shows values are close to the mean. 
  • High standard deviation shows values are spread over a wider range.

There are many factors that may account for this: not least of which is the time-slot change (Mon/Tue instead of Saturdays) and the all post Xmas dates (i.e. Jan start).

But mostly anything would have looked good after Season 18 (which was a disaster.)


Story UK Viewers (millions) Season statistics UK viewers (millions)
Episode
4M 9.5 S14 avg 11.1
4N 11.0 S14 peak 13.1 4Y p4
4P 12.2 S14 low 8.3 4X p1
4Q 11.2 S14 St Dev. 1.3
4R 12.7


4S 10.4







4V 8.4 S15 avg 9.0
4T 7.9 S15 peak 11.7 4Y p4
4X 7.8 S15 low 6.7 4X p1
4W 8.8 S15 St Dev. 1.4
4Y 9.7


4Z 10.5







5A 8.1 S16 avg 8.6
5B 8.3 S16 peak 12.4 5E p2
5C 8.0 S16 low 6.5 5E p1
5D 9.4 S16 St Dev. 1.2
5E 9.4


5F 8.5







5J 13.5 S17 avg 11.2
5H 14.5 S17 peak 16.1 5H p4
5G 10.0 S17 low 6.0 5L p1
5K 9.3 S17 St Dev. 2.6
5L 8.8







5N 5.1 S18 avg 5.8
5Q 4.7 S18 peak 8.3 5S p3
5R 5.2 S18 low 3.7 5R p2
5P 5.2 S18 St Dev. 1.2
5S 7.5


5T 6.3


5V 6.8







5Z 9.6 S19 avg 9.2
5W 8.9 S19 peak 10.4 5Z p4
5Y 8.8 S19 low 8.1 6C p4
5X 9.6 S19 St Dev. 0.7
6A 10.0


6B 9.3


6C 8.9



Thursday, 26 December 2019

122 Time Flight


Started 26-Dec-2019

Horrible.

Amazingly the British Airways Concord access did not save anything.

The concept was very flawed from the start. How the raw flying fruit does a modern jet airliner land on a rocky unprepared Jurassic paddock and then take off again? That just about ruins the story's credibility completely. Add a bunch of BS about telepathy, mind control and willing the Xeraphins to not take over the Master's TARDIS by 'concentrating' is just taking the p*ss.

The story has about 1.5 eps of plot spread out to 4 eps.

The budget is end of season poor-house standard.
Costuming and monsters/special effects are poorly realised.

Performances are valiant failures. Peter Davison and the other two regulars deserve a medal each just for taking this seriously. The G-BOAC crew (Easton, Cashman, and Drinkel) aren't far behind. Anthony Ainley does serious damage to his Master characterisation. Nigel Stock's death scene has to be seen to be believed.

Direction by newcomer Ron Jones is adequate but fails to add anything helpful. Some directors might  have tried to rewrite this badly conceived rubbish.. Imagine Paul Joyce's version of Time-Flight? Ron is clearly a thoughtless, workmanlike plodder.

JNT is responsible for this since he is producer. But he is clearly not served well by Script Editor Eric Saward who let this happen also.

Watching this in 2019 I actually fell asleep in ep 2. Total waste of time and an awful insult to the audience.

A clear candidate for worst ever DW serial.


ABM Rating 0.74/4.00
LJM Rating 1.99/5.00
SPJ Rating 1.51/10   

No. 120 (out of 122)

Link to Cumulative Rankings

Rankings Scoreboard


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
from.....
And it all comes crashing down 
by Thomas Cookson http://www.pagefillers.com/dwrg/timef.htm

In terms of story, what we have is just a very uninvolving rehash of The Three Doctors with its own Gel guards, except they look worse now than they did in 1973. The cliffhanger to part one, where the Gel guards are first unveiled and unleashed on the heroes and the crew is shoddily directed and acted, and even Peter Davison looks embarrassed (and indeed this is more of a certainty in the third cliffhanger where he has to deliver that awful line "The Master has finally defeated me"). It's one of those moments that defies belief at how embarrassing and atrocious it is (see also Warriors of the Deep, Twin Dilemma, Time and the Rani and Love & Monsters).

Alas when the show carried on without Williams, one of its first casualties was a sense of humour. It was no longer cheap and cheerful entertainment. By this point, of course, it was going cheap but it wasn't getting any more cheerful. For all its dullness and embarrassing effects Time-Flight might have been halfway entertaining if it had been done with a bit of tongue in cheek. It might be remembered as having the same kind of cheesy charm as Horns of Nimon, but its deadly earnestness - complete with buttoned shirt, stiff professional flight crew characters seemingly held hostage in children's television at its worst - makes it simply embarrassing and painful to watch. Now fair enough, the bubble wrap in The Ark in Space wasn't done for laughs, but somehow it works on a conceptual level to be genuinely disturbing. By this point, the show seems to have lost its touch for making the cheap effects symbiotic with the whole, and the effect is akin to car-crash television.

It really is the point where the show suffers the worst of John Nathan-Turner's tick box approach to seasons (an approach that hasn't gone away today). So Concorde was inserted into the story because it was something to modernise the show and say '1980's'. So never mind how the show could cover abstract alien worlds and universe-reaching concepts or voyages into history or the future that could speak to any generation inclined to have their mind expanded. All things considered about how Doctor Who is getting repeats and home video is coming out in this period, let's do something that is going to date the show in decades to come anyway.

In principle though the idea of a plane literally vanishing from the present was a potentially spooky idea and in keeping with the show's remit of taking the ordinary and familiar and dipping it head first into the strange and dangerous. But there seems no effort to capitalise on that. The mystery of where the plane disappeared to is revealed in episode one, and its prehistoric Earth which, to be fair, feels very redundant and hardly otherworldly. The story feels far too much like business as usual in order to work. They're all alive and merely have the Master's hold of hypnotism to deal with, and all you have to do is talk to the slaves and they snap out of the trance. It should be easy enough to just stroll through this adventure then. The Doctor has a TARDIS, so all he has to do is get everyone in and take them all home. Except that the Master has sabotaged the TARDIS and so the Doctor is called upon to trade parts with the Master.

Not exactly the height of excitement is it? Not exactly universe shattering. Once it's revealed that its just the Master's old tricks that took the plane out of time, it loses all its intrigue and potential wow factor. When we meet the lobotomised cast of cipher characters performed atrociously we have even less reason to care, or feel involved in this supposed battle of mind over matter.

And of course there is the Master. And now it's time for me to rant.

Let me stress this first. Anthony Ainley was actually rather good as the Master, but he was cursed by a mass of redundant and poor stories that caused familiarity to breed contempt.

Nevertheless, this is one of those stories that makes me wonder why no-one thought and realised that the Master was actually never originally intended to outlive the Pertwee era, and certainly shouldn't have outlived the Tom Baker era. It makes me think of how Deadly Assassin could have been a great story for the Master to go out in, or how if Graham Williams disliked the Master, instead of spending his entire era avoiding the character, perhaps Williams should have given him one story for the sake of killing him off for good.

The thing is that the Master Returns Trilogy was impressive stuff (a story arc that I respect rather than like) and seems to indicate that the writers understand from the example of Deadly Assassin that the Master works best after a long hiatus of rethinking the villain, and hatching up the kind of grand story that makes him seem more powerful and dangerous. And yet, come this story they're already squandering that completely, and it's been barely a season on. Logopolis really had upped the ante by making the Master a force of annihilation on a galactic scale, and that should really have changed everything, and would be very hard to follow up and such a follow up should have been done with proper care. But they didn't even bother acknowledging any of that.

All part of the checklist of course. That's why there's no adequate explanation for how the Master survived Castrovalva, and why the Master was disguised as Kalid. Originally Kalid was supposed to be a character in his own right but the writer was forced to include the Master and so that's why the disguise comes off as so contrived. There is a cost to using the Master here. Perhaps if they hadn't used him and had saved him for next year instead, maybe fans would be less inclined to see him as overused. Maybe his escape from death in Mark of the Rani would have made him seem genuinely indestructible and frightening rather than a cop-out.

Personally though I think if they weren't going to leave the character for dead after Castrovalva, they should have only brought him back twice again, namely in The Five Doctors and Survival. The fact is that after Logopolis, the rules should have changed. The Doctor and Master can't have their amiable little gentlemen's duel anymore like they did in the Pertwee era. That's why I think the Master should have been used sparingly. They both have to be poised to kill one other, and they both should seem convincingly able to. Once the Master has caused the atrocities of Logopolis, the Doctor should really consider him to be an enemy to urgently eliminate, just like he did with Sutekh and Morbius. Sadly, that becomes forgotten by the Doctor, but then again the Master forgets the Doctor's actions in Planet of Fire and that should have changed everything too.

Throughout most of Season 19, the Fifth Doctor came across as fairly tough and capable. He did manage to vanquish the Master with the power of words in Castrovalva (encouraging the people of Castrovalva to think as individuals and rebel against him), he seems to have lost none of his wisdom in Kinda, and in Earthshock he is still able to make quick calculations and take decisive action with lightening speed, and seems to know when violence is called for. But here he could easily tackle and vanquish the Master but doesn't seem up to the job. A contrived excuse so that the Master can escape for his next story.

The Master himself seems completely harmless (unlike the Pertwee era where he was resourceful at finding powerful allies) and you never feel he's a real threat to the passengers. But then this story contrives an off-screen reason for the Master to be not quite up to his capabilities. See, his TARDIS is depleted and he needs the extra power to escape. Last time we saw him he was the great destroyer, bringing worlds to ruin. But they've kept him around and made him a more comfortable harmless villain who isn't all powerful anymore, but isn't out of the picture either. They want to have their cake and eat it too and it doesn't work. And it would get worse in Planet of Fire where the Master has shrunken himself and needs an elixir of life, making it fairly handy for the Doctor if he happens to be in a position to burn him to death. Really, outside of Castrovalva and The Five Doctors, the Davison eras made the worst Master stories with the most contrived elements.

Though for the record, in the Colin Baker era, the Master was only enjoyable because he was sidelined, and the stories were so bad he couldn't have been anything less than a highlight.

Now, granted, in Deadly Assassin the Master was emaciated and disfigured, but if anything, this made the Master more dangerous and savage, like a wounded animal. Survival would use the same approach. That's why I think it should have been a case that after the genocide of Logopolis, the Doctor has to make sure the Master is imprisoned in Castrovalva, and then must continually thwart his escapes, and when the Master does escape the collateral should be distressing. This is why I like the idea of following it up with only The Five Doctors and Survival. That way the Time Lords release him from Castrovalva but keep him on a leash. Then Rassilon exiles the Master to the Cheetah planet and the Doctor has to prevent him from escaping to modern-day Earth. I'm kind of tempted to add Mark of the Rani, because it's one story where the Doctor puts up a proper fight against his foe, but that would bugger up the continuity, unless we used the idea that this was a Master from a previous timeline.

All that considered though, it's still a terrible face-off in its own right. It's not just that the Master's plans are incoherent, but the Doctor's plan with which to thwart him is even worse. The Doctor manages to beat the Master with a bit of unconvincing technobabble that doesn't make sense or engage because he simply describes a solution with a lot of 'ifs' in it and expects us to be content (and my father always used to say that 'if' was the most important word in the world). He doesn't even bother to go to Xeraphus to make sure the Xeraphins escaped and that the Master's TARDIS stays broken. We become invested in the fate of the Xeraphus but we never see the outcome for them, which is so frustrating. These things aren't resolved, they're simply turned off with a flick of the switch and talked away very ineptly.

80's stories were supposedly full of fresh ideas from the Season 18 rennaissance, but boy were they done in such a cumbersome way. But there's a sense here that there's actually nothing beneath its stuffy dialogue and protracted parts exchanges.

I don't really know what to say. As I've said before of the Davison era, not only is this a bad story, but it's one we're not allowed to forget the same way as we could if this were The Time Monster or Creature from the Pit because it's tied in with the linear lore of the now soap-like show. Tegan leaves, and comes back in Arc of Infinity, as a seemingly more upbeat and fun character leading many fans to speculate that she found herself a decent sex life between seasons. The Master supposedly meets Kamelion because of the events in this story, and that leaves quite a plot arc. That's why much of the bad stories of the Davison era tend to weigh down the era as a whole as if the stories are chained together on a sinking boat. In which case this is the deadest weight of them all.

It's the kind of thing that makes me wish that someone had watched this before broadcast and realised that it couldn't go out and that the show was losing the plot. If only they'd ditched this story, and in its place done a final story where the Doctor takes Tegan home. You could have the TARDIS land on Concorde mid flight if you really wanted to use the gimmick. Then the Doctor and Nyssa retire to Gallifrey where the Doctor vows he will never place his friends in danger again and he will become president and encourage his people to take action against the evils of the universe. The end.

And then have Eric Saward join forces with Terry Nation to do a Dalek spinoff series, and maybe do the odd one-off story like The Five Doctors and Remembrance of the Daleks at anniversary intervals.

I can dream.

Well, in conclusion, all thumbs down. If I was watching this back in 1982, I'd have tolerated the bitchy companions up until this story but this is really where my patience would run out and I'd see the show as a dead loss. Time-Flight is one of the worst, most demoralising stories of Doctor Who ever.

Wednesday, 25 December 2019

121 Earthshock


Started 25-Dec
We watched all 4 parts in one go off the BluRay on the big screen.

The pace is incredible. Whole episodes go by while the viewer hardly notices. The story rocks along, the tension is great, the drama intense.

The production subtitles point out many of the continuity flaws... Lt Scott's goggles, the mix-ups of the troopers and the Cybs, the random AFM's caught in the sides of the sets, the levers and buttons that change position mysteriously between shots.

Importantly the editing is tight, the shots are imaginative and the lighting is low and effective.

Some performances are iffy (Snyder, Kyle, Walters) but others are superb (The Cyberleader, Ringway and Berger).

Beryl Reid is not a perfect boss or an ideal cliche of a space freighter captain but (as David Banks points out in a DVD extras interview) this emphasizes a human and fallible aspect which contrasts strongly with Cyber rigid, impassivity.

In 2019 this looks messy and under-produced. At the time this was a major achievement as a DW serial simply because of its ambition. The scene in part 2 with the old clips is not a first but it's a significant fan pleasing innovation.


Evident in this is the squelchy ooze and the violence (shooting, horrible pools of death ooze e.g. 'stuff' leaking from damaged Cybs, lots of cynical shots of casual killing and death). This is the thing that comes to the fore in Season 22 but it kinda starts here. This will become the Eric Saward 'touch'.

Even 38 years after it was made Earthshock stands out as a dramatic, high impact action story with more than a few shocks and high stakes.

But obviously, if this had more time and budget lavished on it it would have been much better. Several extras interviewees (particularly Matthew "Boom-Boom" Waterhouse) proclaim that Peter Grimwade was a technical director and not an actor's director. Given the demands of the shoot and the production I'm not so sure that this is not just a result of circumstance. But it's a frank and revealing new take on the show. If this was a proper movie for instance then there would be an assistant director or a directing camera operator which would likely have alleviated this somewhat.

Like Kinda this could benefit from a redux version. Since so many extra scenes are available from the studio tapes (even though I suspect a lot of it is inferior VHS tape standard only) this may be possible one day.

Though maybe it would be better a candidate for a remake.




ABM Rating 3.70/4.00
LJM Rating 3.99/5.00
SPJ Rating 8.25/10   

No. 29 (out of 121)

Link to Cumulative Rankings

Rankings Scoreboard




From http://thefancan.com/fancandy/features/whofeatures/earthshock.html


16 Reasons Why We Love Earthshock
Everybody go, "Way-oh!"

1. The Death of Adric

 It's fair to say that fandom - and, let's be fair, humanity in general – never really took to the Alzarian boy genius. Earthshock takes what we've been begging for since his first awkward amble into frame, and hurls the little wally headfirst into prehistoric earth, cotton pyjamas and all. Not only does dispatching him escalate the potential threat for adventures to come (nobody's safe!), but also allows an essentially cowardly character a dignified, heroic exit. And even if you loved him – he gets the most memorable leaving scene of any companion! Everybody wins (but mostly the people who hated him, yeah?).

2. Cyberman stuck in door in Earthshock

Not since Return of the Jedi has a guy caught in the moment looked so damn cool.

3. A man with a lot of electricks

 Startling, dischordant chops of angry Roland synth' aurally penetrate this adventure's soundtrack at every juncture, reminding us that, hey, these robot blokes are right scary knobwanks.

4. The DVD

 Steve O'Brien embarasses himself and raises the rating to PG on the Earthshock DVD
Boasting the series' funniest ever commentary, (in which Matthew Waterhouse somewhat uncharitably mocks his fellow thesps without a hint of irony), it also makes room for unquestionably eighties treat, Did You See?, starring git-faced clerk-a-like, Gavin Scott, who's the answer to the question, "What if smug had a spokesperson?" Top of the bill, though, is the terrific talking heads feature Putting the Shock in Earthshock, featuring contributions from lofty future Whominaries such as Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat, and leftfield but inspired choices such as some Tory MP, and The Fan Can's very own, Mr Steve O'Brien*! Oh, and Ian Levine.
*Who's probably responsible for the disc's PG rating, thanks to his blurting of the word "shit!" The potty-mouthed fuck.

5. David Banks as the cool Cyberman leader in Earthshock

 Lanky bugger and sardonic sod, his cyberleader positively swaggers into that initial confrontation with the Doctor. It's the coolest a Mondasian is ever likely to get.

6. Peter Davison does a fine job in Earthshock

Solidly acted but variable in tone thus far, it was not until this story that Davison really nailed the part. Thanks to the script's requirement of emotional range, he pelts through his scenes with a breathless persistence and highly-strung manner that would come to typify his often put-upon Doctor.
 

7. It Thinks It's a Movie
 Director Peter Grimwade squeezes his camera into holes that even John Holmes wouldn't dare to venture. It's an ambitious vision that magnifies each set to its full capacity, with looming monstrous Cyberbastards tramping over kids' nightmares in triplicate thanks to some simple but effective video effects. ECU's, zooms and tight edits present both an economic and visually gripping method of story-telling.

8. More Specifically, It Thinks It's Alien

Everyone knows that the first, largely Cyberman-free, episode is the best, especially the scene nicked off've Ridley Scott's peerless 1979 thriller, in which Captain Dallas' tragic crawl through air shafts is represented by a laughably primitive pixel VDU. Swap Dallas for Snyder ("Snyder!") and you've got yourself a tense bit of light-fingered, cinematic thievery. RTD even lifted the concept again for Parting of the Ways. Sort of.

9. Alec Sabin as Ringway

Ringway's Deception - Not an STD, but Alec Sabin's treacherous about-turn. Every base-under-siege story needs one of these traitors, and this creepy, nervous stooge adds another layer to this delicious Who-shaped cake.

10. Cyber strangling
Screw Temporal Grace - Forget that console-huggin' bunkum, let's choke the worthless life out of the Cybersod right next to where Dodo always bemoaned the fact that she never got any (probably).


11. Oh! I Get It!

Early 80's Who had a habit of confounding the tits off've its audience (or perhaps it's just us thickos) but here, simplicity sells the story like tits sell a shit action film. Only better.

12. Beryl Reid in Earthshock
 Furrow-browed fandom can go perm their hair for all we care; Beryl's never less than compulsive on-screen for this adventure's duration. Away with your pre-conceptions – the Captain is a tangerine-haired stick of lippy-wearing dynamite, as short on stature as she is on temper. Don't just deal with it – embrace it.

13. Danny Kendall Credits  The Credits to Earthshock p4

As brave as it is stupid, running the closing scrolling text to uncomfortable silence is weirdly eerie, rather than emotional. Tonally, it's a better accompaniment to an unruly, dead school kid being discovered inside of his tyrannical French teacher's stolen Austin Maestro. However, we'd like to believe that in muting Peter Howell's piercing rendition from the end credits, Dads up and down the country mistakenly believed their sets were on the blink, and gave them a swift slap.

14. Scott from Earthshock. "I realise going down again must be hard."Fnaar, Fnaar.

15. Candy stripes grace the screen in Earthshock

Pink/White Striped Projectiles
Who needs bullets when you've got tubular candy?


16. Old Doctor Who clips

Not for the nostalgia factor - God knows we'll have enough of that in the months to come - but because it shows that the Cybermen have a stash of past adventures at their silvery fingertips, and are clearly fans. The Cyber Leader's condescending continuity commentary is the mark of a boorish forum poster, and likely has his own secret copy of Tenth Planet Part 4. Hell, they're probably only so cross all the time because, as Cybermen, they don't have scrotums, and aren't able to squeeze them until they resemble the cloth brain from Time & The Rani. Something all us humans fans do fairly regularly, yeah fellas?


Miles Hamer

Thursday, 12 December 2019

120 Black Orchid

Started 12-Dec


This is clumsy and depends on style and charisma of the leads for its appeal.

And it reveals that there are some weaknesses. Matthew Waterhouse as Adric is looking very watery, Sarah Sutton looks stretched by the technical side of double filming, Janet displays some fun but also some pretension. Peter is not as good at cricket as he thinks.

On BluRay this serial shows some limitations. Vanessa Paine as Sarah Sutton's double becomes very easy to pick. The rescanned location film elements make a noticeable improvement to the technical quality of the serial.


Black Orchid is made as an homage to Dorothy L. Sayers' Lord Peter Whimsey series of novels. It is not Agatha Christie-ish (very much) There is no "whodunnit?". There is no Hercule or Miss Marple. There is no "someone in zis house is a murderer...".


The cricket is twee and unrealistic. The Doctor runs on the wicket while batting. The pitch is kinda wet and underprepared. The umpire keeps doing a 'wide signal' for boundaries.

George Cranleigh's makeup is not the most believable... and there is no mention of why he is so disfigured. Was it congenital or the result of some horrible war wounds? There's a story background that could/should be explored there.

The timeline is extraordinary in this. The cricket is well underway when the Doctor arrives (so it's at least late morning), then there's a drinkies, then a fancy dress party (with catering and dancing) and then all the crime investigation/corridor sneakery/visits to the police station and the George/Charles confrontation/fire/tragedy to fit in before bedtime.

The last scene is a week or more later post funeral.

It's the first of director Ron Jones 6 serials. It's not his worst effort. (Time-Flight alert...)

Terence Dudley adds to his list of dull DW efforts with a plot light, historical only story that has casual visits to the TARDIS by minor characters and also seems casual about dropping the Doctor's true identity (and said minor characters seem to believe it rather too readily.) I feel this is a sign of poor storytelling.

Scriptwriter Terence Dudley has done his 2nd of 3 stories for DW. He also directed Meglos, authored two Target books and had turned down the producership of Blakes 7 in 1980.


Luckily this is only 2 episodes. But it's fluff.


ABM Rating 2.49/4.00
LJM Rating 2.90/5.00
SPJ Rating 4.00/10   

No. 93 (out of 120)

Link to Cumulative Rankings

Rankings Scoreboard

Saturday, 7 December 2019

119 The Visitation

Started 7-Dec

Overrated by some people a bit. The plot is very familiar, the Terileptil costumes are messy looking. (They might be clever or expensive but they look slobby.)

Michael Robbins as Richard Mace is doing the role of his career. He mostly plays "On The Buses" guys but in this he lays down a character for the ages.

The companions are a mess of costumes and image. The characters are simplistic and shallow, like a cartoon.

The Doctor is all over the place. This suffers from the scrambled production/screening order. Haircuts and character traits are jumbled. The next few stories in production block are Black Orchid to Snakedance (and are by comparison, more stable.)

ABM Rating 3.15/4.00
LJM Rating 3.85/5.00
SPJ Rating 6.60/10   

Link to Cumulative Rankings
No. 56 (out of 119)

Rankings Scoreboard

Tuesday, 3 December 2019

118 Kinda


Started 3-Dec


Kinda is a very good piece of modern science fiction, with metaphor and symbolism and genuine characters. Add to that several extraordinary acting performances (Rouse, Fielding, Prince, Stewart, Todd, Hughes) and some committed direction and you have one of a few DW's that seemed to happen almost accidentally during JNT's era. (Other examples are Warriors Gate, Survival, Androzani and Frontios). There's something classic in this show seems to get past the producers and is very good despite all the production "input".

It is not a surpirse to hear that JNT didn't "get" this story. It is also not a surprise to hear Eric Saward say taht.

This show is made on a cheap budget. And it shows in nearly every scene. But the ideas are new and the story is challenging. It confounded many fans at the time of original broadcast but looking at it today it remains a layered, and convincing trip into the "dark places of the inside.' It leaves Star Trek efforts at metaphysical drama in the dust.

It is a little perplexing to see Chris Bailey reiterate his complaints about the BBC process and the 'unsatisfying' script development process. What he needs to have pointed out to him is that despite all that 'drag' on his creative process he's dragged a hard SF epic into a crappy BBC DW studio and, f**k me, it flies anyway.

That is a compromise but it's far from failure.

We watched the 2019 BBC Bluray with the info text subitles.  This story REALLY needs a Kinda Redux version with all the scene trims jammed back in, bugger the running time.


ABM Rating 3.71/4.00
LJM Rating 4.32/5.00
SPJ Rating 9.65/10   

Link to Cumulative Rankings
No. 12 (out of 118)

Rankings Scoreboard


Note on Sat 7-Dec Kinda p4 is ep 565 of day 586 of the marathon.