Something I wrote up last night about "
THE TWO DOCTORS"...
Just finished watching one of my all-time favorite
DOCTOR WHO stories. This might be comparable to "
Day of the Dove" or "
The Tholien Web'. In the midst of growing chaos and insanity, one of the brightest lights in the entire history of the show (in my view).
Although I have been trying to watch these stories in 25-min. segments, in this case I got through the whole thing in only 2 days. I just couldn't help it!
This was the only 6-parter in John Nathan-Turner's entire long run as producer (never mind that it was run as 3 45-min. episodes). While I had trouble maintaining interest in "
Attack of the Cybermen", found "
Vengeance On Varos" pointlessly viscious for its own sake, and "
The Mark of the Rani" simply directionless, plotless and boring as hell (despite an over-abundance of "clever" moments), "
The Two Doctors" was really able to relax, take its time, and slowly build a story, a set of fascinating characters, and combine moments of "horror movie" incidents with wonderful bits of humor. Also, Colin Baker & Nicola Bryant were written better than ever. In a better world, Robert Holmes would have been invited back much earlier to write at least one story each season. Boy, he was good.
Among my favorite bits...
Patrick Troughton & Frazer Hines:
"What are you laughing at?" "Just marvelling at your expert diplomatic skills."Nicola Bryant & Colin Baker:
"Maybe you should see a doctor." "Are you trying to be funny??""Oscar" talking to Colin Baker:
"Officer, I see by your rainment you are of the plain-clothes branch." ""Not only are the 6th Doctor & Peri written better than perhaps in any other story, but we also get to have the 2nd Doctor and Jamie back together as well. On his blog, Philip Sandifer suggests Troughton was doing his own Doctor far more authentically here than he was in either "
The Three Doctors" or "
The Five Doctors" (although he stole every scene he was in, in those stories, as well).
It took me quite a few years before I connected that Laurence Payne, who played the scientist gone bad "Dastari", was in 2 of my favorite stories. He also played "Johnny Ringo" in "
The Gunfighters".
Jacqueline Pierce is at times both mesmerizing and scary as hell in this one as "Chesini", what "Dastari" finally admits at the end of the story was "an unthinking beast he tried to raise to the level of the gods". She certainly did a vastly-better job here than her fellow
BLAKE'S 7 co-star Paul Darrow did in "
Timelash" (which aired next). Speaking of which, I have now twice sworn I would never watch "
Timelash" again. And I mean it this time. So, up next... "
Revelation of the Daleks".