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Review of Just War by deltaandthebannermen

16 July 2024

This review comes with a large helping of nostalgia and I don’t know how I feel about that. Big Finish still, weirdly, seems like a ‘new thing’. It just feels current. But then, you look at the month and year they first released an audio – the audio adaptation of the Bernice Summerfield novel Oh No It Isn’t and realise it was September 1998. That’s the month and year I started my teaching career. I’ve been teaching for 24 years. That means Big Finish has been a going concern for 24 years. That’s only two year shy of Doctor Who’s original run. Big Finish isn’t a new thing at all. Therefore, even though it feels really weird, I think I’m allowed to see those early audios in a nostalgic light.

I was young, single and had cash to spend. I lapped up those early Big Finish releases with Benny and can still remember the excitement of the first Doctor Who release, The Sirens of Time. It was an exciting time to be a fan even though the prospect of a new TV series was so much pie in the sky.

In that first series of Bernice Summerfield was what was grandly-titled the Time Ring Trilogy. After only two other releases, BF decided to adapt three unrelated New Adventure novels – a Bernice Summerfield solo release (from after Virgin lost the licence to Doctor Who in the wake of the Paul McGann TV Movie), Walking to Babylon; the Doctor-lite Birthright; and the Doctor, Benny, Chris and Roz-lead Just War. All three were majorly rewritten to tie them together into a, fairly loose, trilogy. Characters such as the Doctor, Ace, Chris and Roz disappeared to be replaced, mainly, by Benny’s erstwhile husband Jason Kane.

I’ve already reviewed the first two releases in this trilogy I’ve finally arrived at the final part, Just War.

I remember the first time I listened to this audio. One sequence of scenes have stuck with me and those are of Bernice’s torture at the hands of Mark Gatiss’s sadistic Nazi officer, Standartenfuhrer Joachim Wolff. It is harrowing and perfectly played by Lisa Bowerman and Gatiss. I also remember enjoying the performance of the actress playing Bernice’s foster mother in this time and place, Ma Doras – an unknown actress going by the name of Maggie Stables.

Just War is absolutely superb and easily the best of the Time Ring Trilogy, and also one of the best of the entire Bernice Summerfield audio range. (It was also one of the very best New Adventures too and, considering it was Lance Parkin’s first novel, that’s no mean feat). Ironically, it’s link to the Time Ring Trilogy are tenuous at best and as a conclusion to that arc it may lack something, but as an audio adventure in its own right, it is difficult to beat.

The memorable torture scenes really are only the tip of the iceberg. Every scene featuring Lisa Bowerman is gold. From her awkward relationship with the young Nazi, Gerhard, which Bernice guiltily uses to her own advantage to the point where that relationship leads to Bernice having to make a terrible decision. The terrifying scene where six innocent residents are executed because of a crime Bernice has committed. The perfectly reasonable and yet chilling conversations Bernice and Jason have with Oberst Steinmann (played perfectly by Michael Wade) about the future of the Third Reich. The brief glimmers of comedy of Jason working in British Intelligence and the tangible sense of relief when they are finally reunited. Bernice posing – complete with ‘country’ accent – as Celia Doras, the long-lost daughter of Ma Doras (the owner of the local guest house where Nazi soldiers are billetted). The gentle heartbreak of Maggie Stables Ma Doras as she loses her daughter for a second time. This, of course, was long before Maggie Stables was taken to fandom’s heart as Old Sixie’s greatest audio companion, Evelyn Smythe – but the seeds of Evelyn are audible in Stables’ performance.

Mark Gatiss gives a great nasty Nazi and would go on to play a German naval officer in the 1915-set segment of The Sirens of Time. He had also played a Nazi officer in the BBV production, Island of Lost Souls (which he also wrote), which I will be reviewing in the near future (it has an indeterminant ‘Second World War’ setting so I am leaving it until a little later in the marathon). It would seem that around this time in the late 90s, Mark Gatiss was the go to guy for audio Nazis.

Alongside Stables and Gatiss is another familiar face from this period of Doctor Who. Michael Wade plays Oskar Steinmann, the reasonable face of facism. Wade had featured in the lead role of the Auton trilogy, a series of videos released by BBV in the 90s which saw the return of the Nestene and the Autons. He, like Gatiss, would return for The Sirens of Time playing the Lord President of Gallifrey; a role he would play again in The Apocalypse Element.

Steinmann’s dialogues with both Benny and Jason are chilling in their normality and reason. He does not believe Benny can be from the future because he cannot fathom a future where the Nazis do not win, so convinced is he of their superiority and righteousness. His whole-hearted belief in his values and vision is scarily convincing until you remember the less appealing aspects of Nazi idealism.

If Just War has a fault it lies within the final scenes which go a little silly with Jason and Benny flying a German super stealth jet across the English Channel. But this is a tiny niggle at the end of a truly memorable and moving audio. A cast and production team that are near-faultless provide an audio which clearly shows why the BBC granted Big Finish the licence to produce Doctor Who on audio and why Big Finish are still going 24 years later.

If you have never listened to Just War, beg, borrow or steal yourself a copy.

Review created on 16-07-24