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20 May 2024
This review contains spoilers!
This is part of a series of reviews of Doctor Who in chronological timeline order.
Previous Story: The Dalek Protocol
What a finale to a brilliant season, while it definitely had it's faults I think that it balanced the silly and the suspense quite well. Well maybe it was a touch sillier than suspenseful.
The first episode started bold, with the Doctor arriving in Gallifrey to claim his presidency. An absolute masterclass in acting from Tom Baker where you could never tell what was really going on with him, was he possessed, was he betraying the Time Lords, did he have a plan? It turns out, he was acting as a triple agent for the Vardans. The suspense in this and the second episode was absolutely brilliant. It had it's comedic moments and an infamous fourth-wall break.
I think the Vardans were underutilised in this one. Big Finish has showed that they could be a strong adversary for the Doctor. Unfortunately I think the production team at the time took on a fairly big challenge in the form of their design and the reveal of them being fairly normal once arrived makes them a little hard to take seriously.
I knew the Sontarans were supposed to be in an episode with Gallifrey but because of the Vardans taking up the majority of the first three parts, I had completely forgot about them so I think the twist of them appearing worked really well on me. Their silent appearance as the Doctor stares on in horror was much more effective than a regular cliffhanger.
This story was quite surreal and witty, which are two things I'm very much biased to. Since I'm reviewing these stories as part of a timeline including audio stories, I don't have as much of an issue with Leela leaving the TARDIS in the way she did. Her growing desire to leave was hinted at vaguely in a few stories and the precedent was already set for her falling in love. However, bringing up the timeline, this is surprisingly the first time I've encountered a contradiction that took me out of the story for a bit. Leela claims not to know who the Sontarans are despite meeting them in 'The King of Sontar'.
Obviously I can't fault the serial for this, as it was released years before the audio, so in that regard it's more of a critique of the audio not keeping in line with continuity, even then, it's a very short line so I really don't blame the writers for forgetting it, nor do I think it de-canonises either story.
"Even the sonic screwdriver won't get me out of this one."
Next Story: The Sinestran Kill
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