Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Doctor Who: "The Reign of Terror"

The Doctor masquerades as a French Revolutionary dignitary
Screencap from 'The Reign of Terror'

"A Land of Fear", 8 August 1964
"Guests of Madame Guillotine", 15 August 1964
"A Change of Identity", 22 August 1964
"The Tyrant of France", 29 August 1964
"A Bargain of Necessity", 5 September 1964

"Prisoners of Conciergerie", 12 September 1964

Episodes in italics no longer exist.

Written by Dennis Spooner
Directed by Henric Hirsch
Script editor: David Whitaker
Produced by Verity Lambert
Associate producer: Mervyn Pinfield

William Hartnell as the Doctor
William Russell as Ian Chesterton
Jacqueline Hill as Barbara Wright
Carole Ann Ford as Susan Foreman

Ian makes a joke about the Doctor never being able to get the TARDIS to go where he wants it to go, and the Doctor--despite the fact he's been trying for nine months to drop Ian and Barbara off in 1963 Britain but has yet to get any closer than fifteenth-century Mexico--takes mortal offence at this and declares he's kicking Ian off the ship at their next stop.

(You can tell I've been watching a lot of Hartnell Who lately because it sounded perfectly natural to me in that sentence to refer to the TARDIS as "the ship".)

The TARDIS materialises in a wooded copse, which the Doctor declares is twentieth-century England. Ian is sceptical and asks that the Doctor come with them to confirm that before leaving them, but he refuses. Ian instead turns his request into an offer of a pint at the pub, to say good bye, and this entices the Doctor and Susan to accompany him and Barbara into the woods.

And they're not in Britain, or the twentieth century--they know that when they catch a filthy twelve-year-old boy in a tunic and breeks, who's been stalking them. The boy reveals that they're about twelve kilometres north of Paris, and it's the 1790s. They're in the middle of the French Revolution--and, in fact, in its bloodiest and most dangerous period, the Reign of Terror.

The boy runs off into the wood, and the TARDIS team happen across a farm house. The house is deserted, but it's not abandoned--people have been here recently. Because the first thing you do when you knock on a front door and get no answer is go inside, the Doctor heads upstairs to explore, while Ian, Barbara and Susan check out the ground floor. They find a stack of blank passports signed by none other than Robespierre, and also a chest full of clothes of all different sizes. Ian, Barbara and Susan therefore change into period garb, because--again--that's the sort of thing you do when prowling around a stranger's empty house, isn't? Change into their clothes? We'll let the logic go here, since the close-bodiced, square-necklined dresses that the women don are rather sexy, particularly Barbara's.

But it turns out the house isn't empty. While the Doctor is upstairs, two men sneak up behind him and knock him out with a blow to the neck. They then head downstairs and confront the other three. The two men have been condemned to death by guillotine for the crime of being aristocrats, but they've escaped. This house is (unsurprisingly) part of a prepared route, a stop on an Underground Railroad for French aristocrats fleeing to England.

The two men seem friendly, braining the Doctor notwithstanding, but they're interrupted by the arrival of a company of French infantry sent to recapture them. A gunfight ensues, and the two men are killed; the infantrymen arrest Ian, Barbara and Susan and then, unaware of the Doctor unconscious upstairs, set fire to the building and lead their new prisoners back to Paris.

After the others have been led away, the young boy from the woods rescues the Doctor from the flames and tells him that his friends will have been taken to the Conciergerie prison in Paris. The Doctor heads after them.

Upon arriving in Paris, Ian, Barbara and Susan are taken before a magistrate and summarily sentenced to the guillotine. They're put in gaol to await their fate. Barbara and Susan share a cell; Ian is given a cell with a prisoner who turns out to be a British spy. The spy, however, is near death, and with his dying breath he makes Ian promise to undertake his mission for him: Ian must find another British agent, one James Sterling. Sterling has information that will be vital to Britain in the coming war with France, and Ian must tell Sterling that it's time for him to return to England so he can relate that information.

A while later, a dignitary named Lemaitre visits Ian and his fellow prisoner. Discovering that the other prisoner has died, he demands to know if he said anything before he died; Ian insists that he did not. Lemaitre is not convinced, and after he leaves the cell, he demands from the prison warden the list of all prisoners who are due to be guillotined. He crosses Ian's name off the execution list. Ian is therefore left behind when the guards come for Barbara and Susan; the two women are loaded onto a tumbril and carted off to meet the guillotine at the centre of the city.

The Doctor, meanwhile, has arrived in the city. He trades his clothing and a magnificent jewelled ring to a tailor, who in return gives him the ostentatious uniform of a Regional Officer of the Provinces. Back at the prison, Ian manages to escape while the prison warden is in a drunken stupor. He doesn't know that his escape has been orchestrated by Lemaitre; nor does he know that Lemaitre is following him, reasoning that it's the only way to find out if the dead prisoner gave Ian a message for James Sterling.

Barbara and Susan's procession through the streets is intercepted by two men, Jules and Jean, who kill their guards and spirit the women back to their own safehouse. When Jules and Jean hear the women's story, they are shocked to hear of the burning of the farmhouse outside Paris and the death of the two escapees who were hiding there; it was Jules and Jean who had freed the two men and sent them to the farmhouse. They conclude that there must be a mole in their organisation, leaking details of their rescues and escape routes to the Revolutionary government.

The Doctor arrives at the prison, hoping to use his disguise as a Regional Officer to secure the release of the others. But of course he's too late; they've all already left. Before he himself can leave, though, Lemaitre arrives. He's on his way to a meeting with Robespierre, and he insists the Doctor come with him, so that he can report on his province. After the Doctor and Lemaitre leave, the tailor who sold the Doctor his disguise arrives at the prison. He tells the warden that he wishes to a report a traitor, and he has proof. When the warden demands to see the proof, the traitor holds out the Doctor's jewelled ring.

And then,

... And then, we run into an unfortunate truth of Doctor Who from the 1960s, namely that a good solid chunk of the decade's episodes no longer exist. It didn't become BBC policy to retain a copy of everything it aired until the late 1970s, and despite a lot of hard work by a lot of people all around the world, there are still to date over a hundred 25-minute Who episodes that have never been recovered, including episodes four and five of "The Reign of Terror". We've already had to skip "Marco Polo" because that story has vanished in its entirety (though its soundtrack, like the soundtracks of every lost episode, are still extant, and in most cases available on CD from BBC audio).

The problem's only going to become worse as we continue; seasons four and five have only one fully extant story apiece, of which one ("The War Machines") is only "fully extants" because a few segments have been reconstructed with images drawn from elsewhere in the story, and the other ("Tomb of the Cybermen") was thought lost for a generation, until a complete copy was found in Hong Kong in 1992. The second Doctor, Patrick Troughton, has only six fully extant stories from his three seasons--in other words, if we'd skipped William Hartnell and started our rewatch with Patrick Troughton, we would by now already have moved on to Jon Pertwee.

Rather than listen to the audios of the missing episodes, in this rewatch we're going to skip ahead to episode six. (We'll also only be watching those stories that have more than half their episodes extant, not orphaned episodes from stories that are mostly missing. All the orphan episodes, though, have been released on DVD, as part of the Lost in Time collection.)

By now, Barbara and Ian are at Jean and Jules's safehouse, but Susan is back in prison. The Doctor has been in prison, too--we've missed his meeting with Robespierre entirely--but Lemaitre has secured his release, and now the Doctor leads him straight back to the safehouse. Once there, Lemaitre reveals his secret--that he, in fact, is James Sterling, the British spy that Ian has been seeking. Ian relays the dead prisoner's message, that it's time for Sterling to return to England.

But Sterling refuses. He's learnt that a politician, Paul Barras, is planning a coup to overthrow Robespierre, and tonight he's meeting with a general to plot. Sterling can't leave until he finds out which general Barras will be meeting with, as that general will likely be the next ruler of France. But he can't infiltrate the meeting without help from the TARDIS team. They agree to help him, so long as he first helps them by securing Susan's release from prison. He agrees, and soon Susan is back at the safehouse too.

(It's at this point that anyone with even a cursory knowledge of the French Revolution should, of course, be screaming at the television, wondering how it is that none of the TARDIS team even attempts a guess at whom Barras is meeting with. Barbara is a high school history teacher, and one with enough interest in the French Revolution that she loans books about it to her favourite students. Susan already has enough experience of the Revolution that when she opened the book Barbara gave her about it, her first reaction was to laugh and declare that the author had got something wrong. And the French Revolution is, according to Susan, the Doctor's favourite period of Earth history. It's inconceivable that none of them don't instantly know exactly with whom Barras will be meeting to plot the Thermidorian Reaction tonight.)

But whatever. After Susan has been replaced, Ian and Barbara head to the inn where Barras has his meeting. Lemaitre has seen to it that the staff have been tied up in the back, so Ian masquerades as the innkeeper and Barbara as his barmaid. Barras arrives, and so too does his co-conspirator, who is, of course, one Napoleon Bonaparte. Barras lays out his plan to Bonaparte: with Napoleon's military support, Robespierre will be arrested and summarily executed the following day, and a triumvirate of Consuls will take power in France, with Bonaparte as First Consul. Napoleon, of course, agrees.

(The story actually leaves out couple of historical steps here. Barras overthrew Roberspierre's Committee of Public Safety in 1794, and in 1795 he and Napoleon staged a coup that established the Directory, not the Consulate--this was when Bonaparte dispersed the crowds with his famous "whiff of grapeshot". It wasn't until 1799 that Napoleon and the Abbé Sieyès overthrew Barras and the Directory, replacing them with the Consulate; at that time, Napoleon took office as First Consul.)

The coup goes off without a hitch the following day, but by that time, the TARDIS team are twelve kilometres outside Paris, in the woods where they first arrived. They head back into the TARDIS and take off, and we've finished Doctor Who's first season.

What Lisa thought: She wasn't too thrilled with this one, and that was true even in the early episodes, before we missed fifty minutes of story. Maybe it's because it's a straight historical. The Hartnell historicals, without any monsters or any science fiction elements whatsoever (beyond the presence of the main characters) are a beast unlike anything else the Doctor Who viewer can find in the programme's corpus; since the early part of season four, Doctor Who has only ever attempted one straight historical, 1982's "Black Orchid", and even that still had a clumsy attempt to create a "natural" monster.

The next story is "Planet of Giants".

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