Gallifrey S2 • Episode 3
Pandora
Sets:
Gallifrey
Reviews and links from the Community
This review contains spoilers
Review of Pandora by Speechless
Gallifrey; Chapter VII - “Pandora" by Justin Richards
So, halfway into Series 2 of Gallifrey, what am I thinking? Well, whilst the season itself might be a little more cohesive and less directionless than its predecessor, I’m finding it a little hard to tell these stories apart. This more feels like one, big story split into five parts because some episodes will just spend their runtime wandering around the Capitol, exploring plot threads here and there, having some nice interactions too, but never really settling down to do one thing, there isn’t really a surmisable plot to most of these stories. Pandora falls, once again, into this camp, half the story being nearly unrelated to the second half, focusing on the characters rather than the plot. And whilst I think it did it well, I can’t help but wonder if I’d prefer a more episodic approach.
Returning from the fateful trip to Davidia, Romana and Leela try to discover more about the identity of the Broken Man, all whilst an enemy from within the Capitol tries to shape things to their own agenda.
(CONTAINS SPOILERS)
Pandora follows directly on from Spirit, beginning immediately after Romana and Leela make it back to Gallifrey. This is what I’m saying about this whole series feeling like one big episode arbitrarily split up, everything kind of flows into one another. However, despite this flow, the first half of this story deviates a little so it can spend some time expanding on our main cast. The way it manages to set up different alignments within the High Council is pretty great, giving us tons more insight into how each member thinks of each other. Brax’s ambitions are revealed, Narvin shows his first signs of the redemption everybody keeps talking about when he remains loyal to Roman over Darkel, who shows her true colours as a devious backstabber that serves as this story’s (and a number of following episodes’) main antagonist, a role at which she handles marvellously. Not only is the character utterly dreadful in her slimy, self-righteous portrayal but performed magnificently by Lynda Bellingham, who gives the Inquisitor a sharp, venomous edge that really cements her as a proper threat, especially when she manipulates poor, gullible Wynter. This is the point in which we move into our second half, which all revolves around the mystery of the Broken Man and the reveal that he is, in fact, Wynter after a fateful possession by Pandora. The way the mystery is built up and unexpectedly dropped on the listener like a wrecking ball is incredibly effective. I’ve already explained why I find the concept of Wynter’s death so horrifying but actually seeing it happen in real time makes it all the more devastating. Especially when we get a little found footage (or, I guess, found audio) sequence where we listen to Wynter’s fate through K9 in a scene that genuinely gave me chills the first time around. Sure, it kind of ruins the ambiguity I was so fond of but it’s masterfully done and probably my highlight of this audio.
However, my big problem with Pandora is that it just doesn’t feel like much. There’s nothing I can really define it as, it’s sort of an episode of tying up loose threads and building on pre-established characters. Sure, we get the conclusion to the Broken Man mystery but past that, this just feels like another day on Gallifrey and perhaps that’s enough for people but when episodes of a show all start blending together into one things get a little foggy for me. Plus, the whole conclusion of Brax having a telepathic battle with Pandora truly falls short, mostly because it happened off screen. His final declaration against Darkel was pretty good, sure, but the whole final fifteen minutes felt like such a rushed conclusion when I think this plot should’ve taken up the whole audio rather than the back half, letting the character stuff happen between scenes rather than entirely separate from them.
The best way I can describe Pandora is just another episode of Gallifrey. It was good, yes, but the thing is I just don’t have much love for something so inbetweeny. I need some impact, I need some great ideas, I need some stand out moments. I need the episodes to have a little more purpose because right now everything feels a little muddled. This may just be my sentiment but I think the thing Gallifrey really needs right now is a little more definition, even if it’s still got a heck of a lot of quality
8/10
Pros:
+ Effective mystery with some nice tension
+ Good building of power dynamics within the Capitol
+ Darkel reveals herself as a cunning and duplicitous antagonist
+ The scene revealing the identity of the Broken Man was genuinely chilling
Cons:
- Somewhat lacking in concrete plot
- The conclusion was incredibly lacklustre
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