Good goodness me,
Russell T Davies, David Tennant and Catherine Tate are back, Back, BACK!! Like
some multi- million selling band that split for a while they have reformed for
a limited time only kickstarting a period that someone amusingly dubbed RTD2
which is just something we all wish we’d thought of, right? This opening
episode of a Tennant trilogy doesn’t even have to be that good really. It just
has to exist and people are happy before they’ve seen a second of it. I know I
am. Yet I’m also a little puzzled. What can this team do that they didn’t do
thirteen or more years back? Subsequent showrunners and many other programmes
have tried their best to match the sheer brio which RTD1 gave Doctor Who
yet none have quite been able to match the thrills, spectacle, emotion and character.
So just like that great old band getting back together again for a victory lap
do our triumphant trio focus on that illustrious past or try out some new
material?
Lots of spoilers after
the break…
To be honest `The Star
Beast` doesn’t rock the boat too much being a sturdy, solid slice of modern Doctor
Who. Everything you would expect is present especially the banter between
the characters, the contemporary setting playing host to aliens and the familial
aspects that ground even the most unlikely events. In the RTD opening episode tradition it doesn’t
have too detailed a plot because the emphasis is on re-introducing us to the
situation and characters. When the recently regenerated Doctor, for the first
time wearing the face of a previous incarnation, lands on Earth and bumps into a
clueless as usual Donna straight away he realises there is unfinished business.
Destiny is once again knocking on Donna Noble’s door.
Moments later a
spaceship crashes, UNIT are all over it and Donna’s daughter meets the alien
that escaped from it though things are not quite what they seem. Plus- what
will happen to Donna if she does remember the Doctor? And that’s enough really because
it is always a joy to watch David Tennant and Catherine Tate themselves clearly
having fun with this lively material. The chemistry is right back as soon as
they meet and despite the potentially tragic undertones of Donna remembering her
adventures, they manage to treat it as lightly as possible. The way out of this
seemingly lethal situation has been staring us in the face the whole episode
and is niftily wrapped up in present day themes of gender self-identity. This could feel forced but it’s done with a
light touch.
David Tennant plays the episode with perhaps a little less abandon as he is a different Doctor technically but he and Catherine Tate are such a good team. This is her episode really, she manages to be silly, slapstick and yet sincere and occasionally serious. She is so versatile as a performer she can manage the range of emotions Donna has in this episode so well. Yasmin Finney playing
Donna’s trans daughter Rose is a serene presence and a good counterpart to the
more manic Doctor and Donna. Another new character is Shirley Ann Bingham played
by Ruth Madeley who proudly reveals she is UNIT’S fifty sixth scientific advisor
which is some turnover for a job. She has a weaponised wheelchair which is one
of those ideas you see and wish you’d thought of. Plus it is great to welcome
back Jacqueline King as Donna’s feisty mother. In another time line the Nobles
would be a great sitcom family. Just getting back into the bustle of their lives
is a joy.
The suburban setting with
space battles taking place next to ordinary houses, crashing spaceship, a story
twist half way and something that starts to split London’s streets into lava
fuelled crevices are typical RTD scenarios drawn from big screen movies showing the
same scale of ambition as ever. What has clearly changed though is the
amount of money being spent on the production. I’d hazard a guess this is the
most expensive episode yet because it certainly looks it. Everything goes just
that bit bigger notably the large scale battle in the Noble’s street as the tall
Wrarth warriors take on the now considerably more resourced UNIT. Remember when
Seventies UNIT was literally just a unit with about six troops? Now there’s trucks
full of them touting the latest high tech weapons. Rachel Talalay directs this
busy traffic with finesse including some impressive aerial angles.
Beep the Meep, the beloved
`Doctor Who Weekly` comic strip creation whom you imaged would be fully digitally
generated is actually mostly a real life costume with a range of expressions to
boot. Has a creature ever gone from looking as cute as its initial appearance
to being as scary as it’s real countenance with sharp teeth and manic eyes? The
Meep (that’s the pronoun) is a great creation and has risen from the pages impressively
and that also owes much to the vocal talents of Miriam Margolyes who really
gets into the spirit of things. Her evil Meep is deliciously bad and I kept
expecting a swear word or two!
We also get a new
TARDIS console, well I was going to call it a room, but it’s a freaking gallery!
The biggest yet, it mimics the plainer white walled originals albeit on a grand
scale with walkways aplenty. Unlike the last TARDIS set it has space to breath
and plenty of places for characters to go. It’s interesting that they’ve gone
back to the less mechanical concept; this is more abstract and mysterious. All
of the modern day TARDISs have shown their workings if you like from the
`grown` coral room to Peter Capaldi’s Star Trek looking one and beyond. This
is, apart from the console, a massive space with lots of roundels.
Different people like
different periods of the programme and for me one of the best times was the 2005-10
iteration so I’m pleased to have that energy, that joi de vivre back. It sounds
likely that the other two Specials are more unusual and experimental but
hopefully there’s always going to be space for episodes like `The Star Beast` which
is just a big bag of fun!
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