Will Brooks’ 50 Year Diary - watching Doctor Who one episode a day from the very start...
Day 378: The Time Warrior, Episode Four
Dear diary,
Over the course of the last few series, I’ve spent a lot of time being impressed by the model shots in this era of Doctor Who. The ones that have been the most impressive are occasions when buildings blow up (and it always seems to fall in the final episode - The Dæmons, Day of the Daleks, The Green Death, Letts and Dicks like blowing the setting up when they’re done with it!). It seems fitting then that we end today’s episode with the castle blowing up. It’s been heralded for ages now, and the threat of the castle exploding when Lynx manages to fix his ship has been one of the key threats throughout the story, so it was clear based on past form that we’d be getting some fireworks in this episode.
Sadly, it’s nowhere near as good as the prior occasions that they’ve pulled the same trick. We see the Doctor, Sarah, and Hal dash away from the castle, giving us plenty of opportunity to enjoy the beautiful location, before we cut away to what appears to be an explosion in a quarry. It could almost work as a close up spliced in with footage of a model castle blowing up, but as the only representation of the explosion… it’s rubbish, frankly. And it’s a huge let down after the quality of everything else in the story.
Having finished the episode today, I decided to take a flick through the special features on the DVD (I try to avoid them until after watching the full story if I’ve never seen it before), and noticed that this is one of those stories to contain optional CGI enhancements. I didn’t bother to check out anywhere else that the effects might have been tweaked (on the whole, the story is fairly effects-light in ways that CGI could ‘improve’), but skipped right to the end of this episode again.
To begin with, I instantly thought ‘well that’s better’, as we cut from our location shots to a new image of the castle gates. It’s nicely framed, fits in well with the footage around it, and seems like a good starting point for an improved climax. Then the CGI flames turn up and… Ah. Well. You can’t win them all, I guess! I’m not sure I can say whether I preferred the original version or the CGI one – they’re both rubbish in different ways!
Elsewhere in this episode, the filmed segments have the effect of making me wish that all Doctor Who had been made this way. I’ve been saying that since as far back as the Hartnell years, but incidents like today’s ‘swinging on the chandelier’, where you cut from the set being shot on tape to the same set, actors, and action, all being mounted on film, really does highlight how much better the series could look. We’ve not had a cut this noticeable in a while, and I think that’s why it’s made me so keen to see an increase in film work again. Even the final shot, in which the Doctor and Sarah depart in the TARDIS looks great – the prop still looks quite tatty, but in an effective way!
Speaking of the pair, I’m really impressed by the way that the Doctor and Sarah have been handled in this story. It’s nice to see a more ‘traditional’ companion introduction (both Liz and Jo were forced on the Doctor, no matter how much he grew to enjoy their company), and I loved that she didn’t trust him completely right from the start. It adds a great dimension to the relationship, but by the end they’re completely smitten. The Doctor’s parting quip that he’s not a magician is nicely shot through by Sarah’s response, and they’re really clicking well. I know she’s around for a good while yet, and if it’s as lovely as this throughout, then I’m in for a real treat. Just as the arrival of the updated title sequence heralded the beginning of the end for the Third Doctor, the arrival of Sarah Jane Smith marks the start of what many fans call the ‘Golden Age’ of Doctor Who…
