Right this is actually a bit of laziness as this post originally came from my other blog, but since it was deeply embedded in tennis posts, I decided to rescue it and post it over here to give this blog a few more posts. So its a review of the Jon Pertwee Doctor who story, The Daemons, which is widely regarded as one of Pertwee's very best stories, so withoot further ado, here we go!
The story starts with one of the residents of Devil's End, a small
village in Wiltshire, dying of fright from seeing something in the local
graveyard. The local village doctor says that the man simply died of a
heart attack, but the local white witch Miss Hawthorne (Damaris Hayman)
insists there is evil afoot. The BBC are also at this time doing
coverage of the excavation of the Devil's hump, an ancient burial
ground. Miss Hawthorne also interrupts the broadcast and warns the
archaeologist, Professor Horner (Robin Wentworth) that if he opens the
tomb then he will bring death and disaster upon the village. The Doctor
at this time having been watching the live coverage on TV, decides to
go to the dig himself with Jo (Katy Manning, probably looking at her
best in this story). On arriving at the dig, the Doctor is too late to
stop Horner from opening the tomb and there is a freak gust of snow and
ice that blows out of the tomb, apparently killing the Doctor and
Professor Horner. The Doctor is soon dug out (or excavated) off the
earth and snow and taken to the local pub, the Cloven Hoof, where he
lies in a coma.
In the meantime however, a certain
familiar looking figure who goes by the name of the Magister, dressed as
a Reverend, has been holding ritual ceremonies to try and bring about
the appearance of a demon called Azal (Stephen Thorne). This is of
course the Master (Roger Delgado) who has been at work trying to raise
the demon Azal, who in actual fact is a creature from another world, who
has been lying dormant but has been on Earth for over 100,000 years.
The Doctor soon recovers from his coma, after a freak heat wave hits the
village, and he then explains his theory to the locals, and he is
accompanied by Sergeant Benton (John Levine) and Captain Mike Yates
(Richard Franklin). The Doctor tells them that Azal is a daemon from
the planet Damos, who came to Earth to try and advance the human race
and pass on their knowledge as part of an experiment, however, man is in
danger of being destroyed if Azal chooses to. The Master also finally
summons Azal and speaks with him, and he asks that Azal pass on his
power to him in order to fulfil his desire to rule the Earth. Azal
considers this but says there is another one of the Master's race here,
referring to the Doctor, he said he will speak with him also before
making up his mind, and that he will appear once more, but he says he
will either choose to pass on his power or to destroy the Earth.
And
another problem arising from these circumstances is that Azal's
awakening causes a heat barrier to be place around the village,
preventing anyone from leaving the village or from any one to enter it,
as the UNIT commander Brigadier Lethbridge Stewart (Nicholas Courtney)
soon finds out when he tries to get to the village. The Doctor contacts
the Brigadier and tells him there might be a way for him to gain access
to the village, but it will involve building heat exchanger energy
machine that will help bypass the barrier, and the Doctor soon comes to
the Brig (within resonable distance of the barrier) to help them build
it. As this is all going on the Master then through his hypnotic powers
of persuasion gets quite a few of the village locals on his side, and
to help him with this ritual ceremony in the cavern's of the church, in
order to summon Azal once more and so he can control the daemon. The
Master soon successfully summons Azal for the last time, just as he
does, Jo and Mike enter the cavern and witness Azal grow to huge size
right infront of them. The Doctor also manages to get into the cavern
and past the Master's gargoyle and heavy Bok (Stanley Mason) whom he has
been using throughout the story for his own evil ends. The Doctor once
in the cavern confronts the Master and Azal in deciding the fate of the
planet.
The Daemons is without a doubt one of Jon
Pertwee's best stories, made back in 1971, when the series made the
crucial change in tone from the doomish Quatermass style that appeared
in Pertwee's first season. The story which was written under the
psuedonym of Guy Leopold, was actually written by Barry Letts and Robert
Sloman, and its a fine example of how good the scripts could be in the
show. Letts and Sloman make very clever use of the themes of
witchcraft, demonism, religion, faith and duplicity, and I also like how
they explain the background of the daemons helping man throughout the
ages in advancing their knowledge. You could almost say that the
Daemons were babysitters for mankind and they helped instruct them in
how to grow, although the Doctor at one point does state to Azal, that
thanks to him now man can blow up the world and probably will, which is
something Azal says that the planet smells of failure. This ultimately
points to man being his own downfall, and to Azal the Earth is just a
failed experiment which he is in danger of destroying.
The
characters in the show are all well catered for, especially the UNIT
members, Benton and Yates, who are given more to do here than usual in a
Doctor Who story. Yates and Benton make their way to the village and
get tangled up in the choas of what happens there, being beaten,
abducted, and giving chase to the baddies. Benton particularly is given
plenty to do in helping out Miss Hawthorne, in the church where he
beaten up telekinetically on a marked stone, and staving off an attacker
in the pub, as well as finally giving in to having a dance with her at
the end! It also makes a nice change of pace to have the Brigadier
separated from his team, as he goes off to a dinner at the start of the
show, but later comes into the show when he is informed that his
helicopter has been taken by Yates and Benton, and the heat keeps him
apart from the Doctor and the others.
In terms of the
performances, the regular cast are on fine form here, Jon Pertwee had
wonderfully grown into his part of the Doctor by then and plays him as
well in this story as he ever has, and his relationship with Jo has
blossomed very nicely by the end of the season. And by then the Doctor
and Jo really have formed their partnership well, and Katy Manning, who
looks rather fetching in this story (with her outfit, which apparently
she didn't like!) over the space of that one season has matured nicely
from the young lassie who first stepped into UNIT office, where the
Doctor patronisingly said to her "no tea today, thank you!". If there
is however on aspect of their relationship that seems a bit off then
that is the Doctor's way in which he puts down Jo or puts her in her
place quite a bit, like a father telling off their child. This is
conveyed in the scene where the Doctor tells the Brigadier how stupid it
would be to organise an aerial assault on the barrier surrounding the
village, and Jo agrees with the Doctor afterward who says "Jo, the
Brigadier is doing his best cope with an almost impossible situation and
seeing that he is your superior officer, you should try and show him a
little respect." Its like Jo is trying to win over the Doctor's respect
but he just rebuffs her and tells her off rather than agrees.
John
Levine and Richard Frankling are also both very good in their
respective roles of Sergeant Benton and Captain Yates, as they too have
comfortably grown into their roles, and they share a nice bit of banter
with each other, especially in the scene where Benton moans while
watching the TV that his football team lost in the first episode, and he
flicks a coin he lost in a bet to Yates. And Roger Delgado as the
Master is great as ever in his role as the charming, suave and
incredibly evil character, who has a hold over the village and poses as
the local reverend, although by then in the 8th season, he had appeared
in every single story, so it was no longer much of a surprise when he
showed up. Perhaps at the time of the show there was a bit of
controversy over the user of the incantations used to raise Azal as they
might appear to be a temptation for children to copy (well maybe there
wasn't!), but amusingly enough Delgado only really used the nursery
rhyme "Mary had a little lamb" backwards, and at one point he even says
Damaris Hayman's name backwards when he wards off Azal.
As
for the supporting cast Damaris Hayman does fine with her character of
Miss Hawthorne, the headstrong and stubborn white witch who forecasts
doom and disaster on the village, although her performance is a bit
cheesy overall. Stephen Thorne as Azal is quite impressive although his
appearance is rather brief as you only really see him in the last
episode, but the effects and make-up for his character are actually very
good, and yes those are tights he is wearing in the scenes where you
see his hooves! The only really silly addition in the cast is Stanley
Mason as Bok, the Master's gargoyle, which he uses to bump off the
villagers that oppose him, as prances around in the white lycra suit,
and the face make-up for Bok appears to have his tounge sticking out for
some strange reason!
The story itself has plenty of
enjoyable scenes including the scene where the Master tries to persuade
the villagers to his way of thinking, the scene where Benton fights of a
thug in the cavern and is attack invisibly by an unknown force when he
lands on a paving stone. I also quite like the scene where the Doctor
is tied up and about to burned alive by the locals for being a "witch"
and Miss Hawthorne pretends he is a great magician, and she uses Benton
to make it look like the Doctor can use his magic to shatter a street
lamp or shoot the weathercock. And there is of course the final
confrontation between the Doctor, the Master and Azal, which is well
performed. The heatwave barrier effect is also quite well done, and
nicely directed, as we see a milkman in his van, jump out as the
thunderish noise crashes in and we see his van go up in flames, and
later the Brigadier throwing bits of rock or wood at the barrier and it
disintegrates. And one of the story's most memorable pieces of dialogue
in the story comes from the Brigadier who once he has gotten into the
village addresses on one of his soldiers to shoot Bok, "Jenkins, chap
with the wings there, five rounds rapid!".
My only
slight niggle about the story however is the end where (SPOILER ONCE
AGAIN) Azal cannot understand Jo's decision to save the Doctor from
being killed by him, by offering herself as a sacrifice instead. The
decision seems to totally baffle Azal and send him into self destruct
mode, but I suppose that Azal is a creature that only deals in absolutes
and can't handle the notion of such an intervention of selfless-ness.
But you can't help but think, wait a minute, in order to defeat this guy
all we had to do is just confuse him????? And that's it???? Surely we
should have thought of that sooner! The resolution of ridding the
world of Azal seems just a bit pat and convenient that all it takes is
one action to confuse him and that's him taken care of.
As
for the DVD extras, there is a very good new documentary, which covers
the making of the story, and its revealed the pub, The Cloven Hoof,
which in reality was called something else, still have the sign that was
outside the pub, which the owners proudly have kept behind the bar.
There is also a really funny bit in the documentary where Katy Manning
refers to the scene with the Brigadier and Mike Yates, where Mike asks
the Brig for a dance who says "I'd rather have a pint", and she said
that Nick Courtney at the time said "Well that's settles it, the
Brigadier is an alcoholic and Mike Yates is gay!". The DVD commentary
of the story itself is also quite enjoyable as some of the cast Katy
Manning, Richard Franklin and Damaris Hayman all reminisce of their time
making the story.
So the Damons remains a classic
Doctor Who story which rightfully remains one of the most fondly
remembered from the classic series. And it also reflected the time
where the UNIT family was at its peak and one of Jon Pertwee's finest.
And that's it. (ahhh all that typing was so tough this time round, chortle chortle!). ;-)
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