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This review contains spoilers!

The Monthly Adventures #96 - "Valhalla" by Marc Platt

Sometimes you get a story where there is simply so little to talk about that you end up filling your word count with rants about how little there is to talk about. Valhalla is very much one of these stories. Platt is a bizarre writer to me because he both lurks in the legendary annals of fandom, being a key figure in the Wilderness Years, and frequently pens utterly lambasted scripts; for every Spare Parts or Lungbarrow, there’s about five Valhallas. And that makes it seem like this is some travesty, but it's really not. It’s a lot worse. It’s painfully alright.

The lunar colony of Valhalla is a dead end, a commercial centre selling junk and broken dreams. But there’s a new seller in town: he calls himself the Doctor and he’s here about the colony’s bizarre termite infestation.

(CONTAINS SPOILERS)

If there’s one thing that Platt does undeniably well, it’s atmosphere. From the gothic shroud that encircles Ghost Light to the chilling coldness of the corrupted TARDIS in Time’s Crucible, all his work has a very specific tone to them that helps them stand out from the crowd. And Valhalla is no different, its titular colony being easily its biggest pro. The slapdash, rotting world is brilliantly realised on audio but the script definitely doesn’t slack off either. From the bookable riots to the casual indifference of all the miserable residents, Platt manages to build a powerful setting that truly does envelop you. But that’s also where the problem for me lies, because this audio is utterly, undeniably competent. It’s incredibly well put together in my opinion and there’s very little that’s actively bad, but there’s also very little that’s actively good.

This is a creature feature at heart and it really struggles to be more than that. I find its downfall comes in the fact that rather than go all in on the b-movie aspect of its plot, it tries to make it a more serious and nuanced story about slavery and purpose. In summary, the termites underneath the colony have become intelligent and are planning to enslave and sell the colonists. The Doctor saw an advert for their trade a year in the future and decided to go back and stop them. Now, where this could be a big, shouty, shallow but endlessly fun monster flick, it instead chooses to try and be something deeper, which really shoots it in the foot. The termites, when they’re big scary monsters, are just that: big, scary and monsters. However, during Part Three it’s revealed that they possess human level intelligence, including speech. And it’s here where things really go wrong for me because I find them so boring. There is another story that has faceless, dull, amorphous insects as its antagonist and that story is The Creed of the Kromon so that’s how you know Valhalla f**ked up. I’m not interested in a bunch of personalityless bugs and for the most part, I found them annoying.

Not to mention that the story feels like it's going through the motions the whole time; there is not an original bone in this script’s body, it just trundles along through familiar beat after familiar beat as we wait for the inevitable outsmarting to happen. Not to say that there isn’t something to be enjoyed here: Platt’s pacing is excellent and there’s a very nice rise and fall of action, the momentum never gives up and the story never feels stilted. However, there’s nothing to actually interest me within that movement, the story is completely banal in every way. There’s also an attempt at introspection on the Doctor’s character, with him considering settling down, but it goes nowhere and is basically just window dressing. 

There’s a lot I simply don’t know how to talk about because I felt so apathetic towards it. Michelle Gomez is in this story as a one-time companion but her performance is utterly fine, the character is utterly fine, it doesn’t interest me or enrage me, which is what can be said about a majority of this audio play. It’s a story seeped in derivation with very little making it stand out and that’s super unfortunate, because Platt is a writer who absolutely can do great stuff, this just doesn’t know what it ought to be.

Valhalla is a forgettable story, it’s a story with very little that makes it worth a listen. In fact, the only thing I can think of is the inclusion of Michelle Gomez years before her debut as Missy and if your only claim to fame is the inclusion of a soon-to-be well-known actor, that’s probably not really a positive. There’s very little to say on Valhalla, it’s not actively bad, but it is actively mediocre.

5/10


Pros:

+ Rich and fleshed out world

+ Good pace and momentum

 

Cons:

- Incredibly generic and unthreatening antagonist

- Plot points are derivative and boring


Speechless

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This review contains spoilers!

Esse é mais um daqueles áudios da BIG FINISH que entra na categoria que intitulo como “Quem foi que aprovou esse roteiro?”. Confesso que ainda estou sem acreditar que isso realmente foi escrito pelo Marc Platt, roteirista conhecido pelos seus ótimos conceitos e ideias criativas e complexas como vemos em “Ghost Light”, “Spare Parts”, “The Silver Turk”. O enredo de Valhalla é tão raso, genérico, repetitivo e previsível que ao termino da experiência não pensei duas vezes para considera-la como uma grande perda de tempo. Basicamente o Doutor chega a uma colônia habitada por humanos chamada “Calisto”, mais precisamente na cidade de Valhalla a capital da colônia. O local vive uma grande crise que está beirando ao caos, os humanos estão sendo oprimidos pela sua líder a “Our Mother”, ela pretende dominar todos com sua tirania juntamente com ajuda de outros da sua espécie de aparência física muito semelhante à de Cupins. Acho que não preciso explicar o desenrolar disso tudo, totalmente previsível – O único proveito que pude tirar foi da dinâmica maravilhosa entre o Sylvester McCoy e a Michelle Gomez que interpreta a ótima personagem “Jevvan“, porém o Marc Platt não soube aproveitar a dupla inserindo os dois em um sub plot bem manjado que consiste em ficar fugindo das criaturas Cupins gigantes aliadas a Our Mother. [⚠ SPOILERS] A história chega a piorar na transição da terceira para quarta parte, onde o Doutor decide usar uma espécie de mecanismo de camuflagem, fingindo ser um Cupim para enganar a Líder. [⚠ FIM DE SPOILERS]. Depois disso a trama se torna beeem patética, finalizando com uma conclusão bem ruim sem nenhum impacto. Em resumo não há muito o que dizer de Valhalla, o áudio não proporciona nada de interessante, possui uma trama manjada e previsível se resultando em uma experiência esquecível.

This is yet another one of those BIG FINISH audios that falls into the category I like to call "Who approved this script?". I confess I still can't believe this was actually written by Marc Platt, a screenwriter known for his great concepts and creative, complex ideas as seen in “Ghost Light”, “Spare Parts”, “The Silver Turk”. The plot of Valhalla is so shallow, generic, repetitive, and predictable that at the end of the experience I didn't think twice about considering it a big waste of time. Basically, the Doctor arrives at a human-inhabited colony named “Callisto”, more precisely in the city of Valhalla, the capital of the colony. The place is experiencing a major crisis that is bordering on chaos, the humans are being oppressed by their leader "Our Mother", she intends to dominate everyone with her tyranny along with help from others of her species who physically resemble Termites very much. I think I don't need to explain how all this unfolds, totally predictable – The only benefit I could take was from the wonderful dynamics between Sylvester McCoy and Michelle Gomez who plays the great character "Jevvan", but Marc Platt did not know how to make the most of the pair by putting them in a very cliched subplot that consists of running away from the giant Termite creatures allied with Our Mother. [⚠ SPOILERS] The story even worsens in the transition from the third to fourth part, where the Doctor decides to use a kind of camouflage mechanism, pretending to be a Termite to deceive the Leader. [⚠ END OF SPOILERS]. After that, the plot becomes very pathetic, ending with a really poor conclusion with no impact. In summary, there's not much to say about Valhalla, the audio doesn't provide anything interesting, it has a cliched and predictable plot resulting in a forgettable experience.

(Translation generated by AI, so mistakes are possible).


KnuppMello

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