Archive for April, 2008

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26 April 2008

Doctor Who – The Sontaran Stratagem

[SPOILER WARNING AS USUAL]

The Sontarans are back – not that you could have guessed (the episode title did kind of give that one away). But so is Martha Jones, and UNIT too! A whole heap of old things in a brand new episode.

The Doctor has been called back to Earth by Martha, who’s now working for UNIT. They’re investigating Atmos, a system which removes all CO2 emisions from car exhausts, and comes with a handy free sat-nav (Although I’ll never trust my sat-nav again after this). It’s been masterminded by a child genius, Rattigan, who turns out to be working for the Sontarans.

As well as the child genius, there were some other good sci-fi staples in there – cloning, mind control, and the evil double of Martha. I think there’s some good stuff to come in part two next week. And there was a great cliffhanger – Bernard Cribbins trapped in a car choking on fumes. Will he escape, and will the Doctor save the world?

There was also some fun stuff. I did enjoy the Doctor’s comments on having worked for UNIT “sometime during the 1970s, or was it the 1980s?”. I love how no one’s ever quite worked out that story dating mystery. And Donna being ‘Supertemp’ and checking the company files while everyone else is busy looking for aliens under the bed.

No mention of the bees this week. Maybe they’re not signficant? Or maybe they are …

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Humph

26 April 2008

HumphHumphrey Lyttelton was chairman of my very favourite radio show. He always made me laugh, whether it was by reading his script, a witty ad-lib or just a look. And he always made time to say hello at the stage door when I was lucky enough to go to recordings or the tour. He was also a wonderful jazz musician and played his trumpet with such beauty, heart and soul.

Yesterday, sadly, he died.

He will be missed.

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I’d like to teach the world to sing

19 April 2008

Doctor Who – Planet of the Ood

[SPOILER WARNING]

The return of the Ood, last seen in The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit (why do two parters have to have seperate titles??) was something that I was a bit puzzled by. They hadn’t been that striking the first time, and they certainly weren’t a malevolent force in the same was as some other recurring monsters. But The Doctor takes Donna to her first alien planet – the Oodsphere, from where all Ood are sold across the empire.

It’s Donna who points out to the Doctor that the Ood aren’t merely servants, but are slaves and are treated inhumanely by their masters. The Doctor admits he hadn’t really paid that much attention to them before, and it’s Donna who questions them about their desire for freedom, showing again her sympathy for others and her humanity. It’s a characteristic which really seems to be developing over the episodes and making her very likeable.

But the Ood distribution have a problem in the form of ‘red eye’ and everyone wants to know why. The Doctor goes off to find out about unprocessed Ood and helps Donna to hear the song of captivity which he says he always hears. But it takes an infiltration from the ‘Friends of the Ood’ to find helps them find out why “the circle must be broken”

It turned out in the end the real big bad wasn’t the Ood after all, but Halpern (wonderfully played by Tim McIinnery), who was trying desperately to hold on to his family’s trade in Ood and the control over them. He got his comeuppance in the end – he was turned into an Ood in probably the most gruesome scene of the entire revived series.

A special mention must be made for composer Murray Gold. His incidental music is always good, but this week’s was especially so as it was so intrinsic to the plot. The song of the captive Ood was so beautifully sad and captured that essence of plaintive song that a race enslaved for over two hundred years would be singing. It wasn’t only Donna who was moved to tears by it. Then he strikes again with a wonderfully uplifting song when the Ood are free which celebrates their emancipation.

And finally, a puzzle – why is Donna so obsessed with the bees disappearing? Obviously it’s something that should concern us all, but she does keep mentioning it. (also mentioned in Partners in Crime) Or is this this year’s Bad Wolf??

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Volcano Day

12 April 2008

Doctor Who – The Fires of Pompeii

[USUAL SPOILER WARNING]

The Doctor takes Donna supposedly to Ancient Rome, only it turns out they’ve landed in Pompeii instead (usual lack of control over the Tardis there?). It’s the day before the Vesuvius is due to erupt and Donna wants to warn everyone, but no one understands. There’s an alien threat trying to alter history by stopping the eruption and controlling the visions of the soothsayers.

I’m warming to the character of Donna with each story so far. She really seemed to have hear heart in the right place when she realised that she and the Doctor could potentially save all the people from dying in Pompeii. She also really showed the Doctor what it is to be human when faced with possibilities like that; he seemed all distant and Time Lordy, going on about fixed points in history. In the end, the only way to save the world was to kill all the people in the town.

I really loved the humour and in-jokes that appeared in the episode – the additions of Caecilius, Metella and Quintus from the Cambridge Latin Course I did at school (and according to Doctor Who Confidential, so did Russell T Davies and Phil Collinson)! Interestingly, for the books, they were based on real people who lived in Pompeii and I appreciated that Donna persuaded the Doctor to save them. And then there were the Asterix (whom I also love) type gags of TX Maxximus and having all the Pompeiians thinking the Doctor and Donna were Celtic (or was it that they were speaking Welsh?) when they spoke Latin.

And the “I’m Spartacus” “Me too” line made me laugh too.

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A trip through time and space

10 April 2008

I’m struggling to get my Who fix, as the Doctor Who Forum is broken at the moment!

But I thought I’d share a video with you which one of my lovely KInDA friends posted earlier today.

It’s amazing to see how things have changed since the days of Delia Derbyshire

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Together again

5 April 2008

Doctor WhoPartners in Crime

[USUAL SPOILER ALERT]

The new series kicked off with a lighthearted and fun story, which I really enjoyed. I was a little bit concerned that it wouldn’t be so good with the return of Donna Noble, a character I hadn’t really liked during her appearance in the Christmas special, The Runaway Bride. But she seems to have changed, for the better and although still mouthy and slightly annoying could prove to be a good foil for the Doctor.

The story concerned Donna finding the Doctor by looking for trouble and them both stumbling across the very strange new fat busting drug called Adipose. This turned out to be a strange seeding and birthing scheme for the Adipose aliens. The little baby Adipose were formed from the fat of the human hosts, which sounds very yukky, but they were quite cute.

I loved the CGI on the Adipose themselves (The Mill doing fantastic work, as always). And there were some nice little touches, such as the one that was skipping along as they all waddled down the street, the one sliding down the bonnet of the taxi and the squshing noise as the taxi stopped and seemed to run over a few!

And I must mention the return of the great Bernard Cribbins (voice of The Wombles, storyteller and, of course, from the second JackanoryDoctor Who film), who appeared in Voyage of the Damned at Christmas. It turns out his character is Donna’s grandfather, so I’m hoping that he’ll turn up again in the series sometime soon.