Thursday, December 19, 2019

Planet of Evil Part Four


The one where Sorenson goes full-on Mr Hyde...

Just look at the way director David Maloney and lighting guy Brian Clemett handle the death of Reig: it's stunning! Some of the directorial and lighting choices made by the production team in Planet of Evil - indeed, in many of the stories of this era - are just as ambitious, creative and ultimately effective as those made by Hollywood. Maloney's camera looks down from up high, giving size and scale to the unseen monster that bears down on Reig. And the use of that huge, monstrous shadow looming over the cowering Melvyn Bedford adds to the brutality of Reig's demise.

At long last, Vishinsky wrests command from the annoying Salamar, who doesn't give up too much of a fight at all. When Vishinsky declares: "I'm taking command!", Salamar just accepts the coup immediately, says something about Vishinsky regretting it, and slumps obediently into second position. It's another example of why Salamar should never have been in control in the first place: he doesn't even put up a fight for his job!

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

Planet of Evil Part Three


The one where Sorenson goes all Jekyll and Hyde...

Every time I watch Planet of Evil, I see it. I've never seen or heard of anybody else having seen what I always see. It's like a ghost hidden in the machine, a creature trapped in the master tapes. It's there - and to me it's as plain as day - in the cliffhanger to part 2 and the reprise in part 3. It's in the shot where the Morestrans and Sarah are watching the Doctor fall into the abyss via the oculoid tracker. They're watching the Doctor, but all I see is a strange, unsettling alien face looking back at them, as if trapped in the reflection. It's like something from The Outer Limits, or reminiscent of Marvel's Green Goblin or 2000AD's Mighty Tharg. Has anybody else ever seen it?

It's tricky to capture it clearly with a freeze-frame screengrab, but it's there: an eerie pointy-headed, long-faced creature (perhaps wearing a hat?) leering out of the screen. Am I going crazy? Am I seeing things nobody else can? If you see it, please leave a comment and let me know I'm not going totally bonkers.

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Planet of Evil Part Two


The one where the planet refuses to let go of its minerals...

I love it when a minor player gets the chance to be noticed, and I particularly love it when that chance takes the form of a tremendously well-milked death scene. O'Hara is killed early in this episode by the anti-matter monster, and actor Haydn Wood takes the opportunity full-throttle and executes a delightfully melodramatic death, very different and much more energetic than those of his predecessors. And as with the death of Baldwin in part 1, evidence of the mechanics behind the scene are evident, when we see that the jungle floor is richly carpeted for him to fall on!

And still that jungle remains the star of this particular show. It can't be over-emphasised just how beautiful Roger Murray-Leach's set is, how rich, detailed and textured it all is. Carpeting aside, it's a faultless creation, and coupled with Brian Clemett's intelligent lighting, it makes for a totally convincing environment (in fact, Clemett's lighting is among some of the very best I've seen in the classic series). And Peter Howell's special sound when the creature passes by - a kind of glassy, tinkling, chattering effect - only adds to the creep factor.

Monday, December 16, 2019

Planet of Evil Part One


The one where the Doctor and Sarah are accused of murder... again!

The opening five minutes of Planet of Evil are highly reminiscent of Planet of the Daleks, what with its dense alien jungle and a spaceship with MFI door handles. We discover straight away that the year is the mind-boggling 37,166, and that several people have died, as Braun places a grave marker for the latest in a line of deceased, called Egard Lumb (what a wonderfully weird name!).

We join interplanetary geologists Baldwin and Professor Sorenson as they apparently refine crystals found on the ground into another, presumably more useful, substance. Sorenson is pleased with his discovery of some kind of seam, but Baldwin is anxious that there's not long left 'til nightfall, and is keen to get back to base. In true horror film style, bad things must happen at night here. But Sorenson seems unconcerned, more focused on the fact he's found a rich seam which may not be there tomorrow because, he thinks, the planet is sentient. It moves, it knows, it watches. Spooky!