Sunday 16 September 2012

The Exciting Guide to The Reign of Terror

So, back in 1999, I made it to the end of Season 1, which means that if you scroll down to the bottom of this post, you'll see my summary of the whole season. Meanwhile, there's "The Reign of Terror". It would be nice to draw parallels with last night's showing of "A Town Called Mercy"...well, they both take place in the past. Will that do?

Quick reminder:
For previous posts, you can scroll around this site, or go to my Facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/ExcitingGuide) which will link only to those parts of my blog devoted to the Exciting Guide. If you need to understand what I'm doing here, there's a link to my intro here: http://chapwithwings.blogspot.co.uk/2012/02/watching-every-tv-adventure-of-doctor.html



Story Eight
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Story Code
H

Title
The Reign Of Terror

“Friends” Title
The One With The French Revolution
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Episode Titles
A Land Of Fear
Guests Of Madame Guillotine
A Change Of Identity
The Tyrant Of France
A Bargain Of Necessity
Prisoners Of Conciergerie

Current availability
Episodes 1-3 and episode 6 exist, but there is no sign of episodes 4-5.

Sources
Doctor Who Magazine Archive, Issue 204.  As with Marco Polo, certain elements have also been taken from the novelisation The Reign Of Terror by Ian Marter.

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Date
1794.
The downfall of Robespierre occurred on 27th July 1794 (the Ninth Thermidor).  This story therefore begins on 24th July and takes place in the days up to that event (which happens in episode 6).

Genre
Historical

Plot synopsis
1.         The Doctor tries to put his human companions out of the ship on what he believes to be twentieth century Earth, but they persuade him to come for a farewell drink.  Evidence soon reveals they are near Paris during the “Reign of Terror” that followed the French Revolution.  They reach an abandoned farmhouse, and encounter first two escaping royalists - Rouvray and d’Argenson - then a group of revolutionary soldiers come to get them.  The royalists are killed, and Ian, Barbara and Susan taken away to Paris.  The Doctor has been knocked unconscious by the royalists, and remains in the farmhouse as the soldiers set light to it.
2.         The Doctor is rescued from the farmhouse by Jean-Pierre, the ragged boy they met.  He makes for Paris, interrupted en route by a road works overseer, whom he soon outwits with a shovel.  His three companions, meanwhile, are imprisoned at the Conciergerie prison where Ian meets a dying man called Webster, who gives him a message to pass on to English spy James Stirling.  The encounter causes Ian’s name to be struck off the execution list by the fearsome Citizen Lemaitre for further questioning, but the two women are taken off to the guillotine.
3.         Ian escapes from the Conciergerie, not realising he has been helped on his way by Lemaitre.  Barbara and Susan are rescued by a counter-revolutionary named Jules.  He is dismayed that the farmhouse - vital to their escape route - has been discovered, and his comrade Leon says there is a stranger at the inn Le Chien Gris asking for him.  The Doctor, in Paris, disguises himself as a Provincial Officer with the aid of a shopkeeper, and visits the Conciergerie with a mind to freeing his companions, but instead meets Lemaitre, who forces him to accompany him to see Robespierre.  The shopkeeper, however, comes to the Conciergerie jailer with evidence of the Doctor’s deception.
4.         The Doctor bluffs his way through his meeting with Robespierre, but Lemaitre forces him to stay a night in the Conciergerie.  He hears the shopkeeper’s evidence, but instructs him to keep quiet about it.  Jules kidnaps the stranger at the inn, but it is Ian, following Webster’s instructions.  He is reunited with Barbara and Susan, but Susan is now feeling unwell, and the two women go to a physician, who promptly turns them in.  They wind up back at the prison, where Barbara is to be questioned...by the Doctor!  Hoping to find James Stirling, Ian meets Leon in a deserted crypt, only to find soldiers there - Leon is a traitor and has led him into a trap.
5.         Jules arrives in the nick of time, Ian is rescued and Leon killed.  The Doctor arranges for Barbara to escape, but is unable to perform the same trick for Susan.  He attacks the jailer, but is interrupted by the return of Lemaitre, who reveals he knows the Doctor is an impostor, and demands to be taken to Jules Renan.  That evening, the Doctor and Lemaitre turn up at Jules’ house, and Jules labels the Doctor a traitor.
6.         Lemaitre reveals himself as James Stirling, and Ian delivers his message.  The various parties agree to help each other, and Ian and Barbara spy on a meeting between Robespierre’s deputy, Paul Barrass, and Napoleon Bonaparte, where they plan Robespierre’s downfall the following day.  As the tyrant is shot in the mouth and dragged to the Conciergerie, the Doctor manages to free Susan, and the travellers return to the TARDIS.

Pitch
Like Danton, but bloodier.

The Money Shot
Impossible to say, really.  But perhaps the allegedly spectacular starscape that accompanied the closing lines.  Or if the guillotine actually makes an appearance on screen.  Or something.

The Doctor and his kind
• It is claimed that the French Revolution is the Doctor’s favourite period of history.  (This possibly being why Susan borrowed a book on the subject from Barbara in An Unearthly Child).  Seems odd.  Why?  Rather a violent and nasty period, after all.
• Then again, the Doctor himself is more violent here than we’ve seen him since prehistoric times.  He hits one man with a shovel, and another with a cognac bottle.

The history of Earth
• In 1789, a Revolution sprang up in France, the King was executed, and a man named Robespierre became First Deputy of the new revolutionary government.  Thus began a five-year Reign of Terror, with counter-revolutionaries and royalists executed by the thousand - in one scene, Robespierre claims that 342 executions have taken place in nine days in Paris alone.  In 1794, his deputy, Paul Barrass, led a revolt against Robespierre, and the tyrant was sent to his own Conciergerie prison to await execution.  Barrass intended to amend the constitution to allow for rule by three Consuls, one of whom would be Corsican General Napoleon Bonaparte.  We do not see the outcome of these plans, although they are well known to Barbara - she suggests to Jules that Bonaparte will one day rule France alone.
• It is not thought that (in our world) Bonaparte could possibly have met Barrass as depicted here.  So what?  He does in this world!

Script Heaven
• Barbara “But think of all the times we’ve been in danger before.  We’ve always found a way out in the end.” Susan “Oh yes, we’ve had our share of luck.  But you can’t go on and on being lucky.  One day things are bound to catch up with you.”  Is this foreshadowing something?  Or not?
• Foreman “I suppose you think you’re very clever.” The Doctor “Well, without any undue modesty, yes!”
• The Doctor “Now do stop arguing, Barbara.  You know perfectly well that my schemes always work.”
• The Doctor “Our destiny is in the stars, so let’s go and search for it!” (Note:  According to the novelisation, the Doctor’s final words are “Where to?  Who knows, Chesterton?  Who knows?  Because I certainly don’t!”  Which is also a good line.)

Catchphrase
• Jailer “Who are you?” The Doctor “Exactly.”

The Doctor’s Achievement
• Once again, in a historical, not much can be achieved.  Ian warned Stirling to flee:  he was going to anyway.  Ian and Barbara learn of Barrass’ and Bonaparte’s plans:  but no-one does anything about them.  Susan gets captured a lot, and the Doctor’s marching about is all in aid of rescuing his companions.  Perhaps the only concrete achievement is that the Doctor rescues some “tax dodgers” from a rather unpleasant and greedy road works overseer!

Things I learned from Doctor Who
• Much of the history of the latter stages of the French Revolution, of course.

Body Count
Rouvray and d’Argenson.  Leon and his two soldiers.  Webster.  That’s all the definites, but of course, death was going on all the time off screen:
6.

Screams / Twists Ankle
• One bit of the novelisation I can quite easily believe is Ian Marter’s depiction of Susan.  “Susan broke away from her escort and ran across to peer through the small window in the door of Ian’s cell.  ‘Ian...Oh, Ian...’ she cried, tugging uselessly at the lock with her frail fingers.”  Yep, sounds about annoying enough.
Oh, I’ve Been Captured Tally:  2.  People keep getting locked up in this one.  Principally, however, we have the classic moment where Barbara and Susan go to the doctor and are promptly captured, only to find the Doctor ready to release (one of) them!

Checkov’s Plot Device
Checkov’s James Stirling (no he isn’t).  But we’re really stretching it now.

The TARDIS wardrobe
• The Doctor’s usual costume remains in Paris, though he retrieves his ring from James Stirling.  He now gains the uniform of a French Provincial Officer, which I’m sure will come in useful.  Still, as we know, he’s got lots of outfits similar to his regular one, hasn’t he?  He said so in The Sensorites.  Funny, you’d think his taste in clothes might be a little more varied.  Still, at least now we know why he doesn’t smell.

Whoops
• Locked up in the Conciergerie, Barbara says it reminds her of “the last time we were imprisoned...in prehistoric times.”  So, does the Dalek cell not count, then?  (This may just be a feature of the novelisation).
• Ian gives Jules a message all about Paul Barrass and The Sinking Ship.  Er, when exactly did Webster mention all that?  I don’t notice it in the novel.

Notes
• Presumably, half the cast are speaking French in this story.  I would dearly like to see the surviving episodes to find out how they got around this one without turning into an episode of ‘Allo ‘Allo.  At any rate, it can’t have been done the way it was in the book, with the travellers breaking into O Level French whenever they had to.  Besides which, if the Doctor and his companions can understand Dalek, Mongol and Sensorite, surely they can cope with French?
• It was a violent time, but even so, Ian Marter’s novelisation gives us some rather gruesome scenes, notably the multiple bayonetting of d’Argenson in the first episode.  Surely it can’t quite have been like this on TV?
• Scenes of the Doctor approaching Paris in Guests Of Madame Guillotine are the series’ first pieces of location filming.  Of course, it isn’t really William Hartnell at all...it’s actor Brian Proudfoot in a wig.
• The final regular castmember goes on holiday - William Russell gets very little to do in episodes 2 and 3 as a result.

Queries
• What’s the attraction of the French Revolution for the Doctor?

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On-screen Credits
Taken from DWM.
CAST
Dr. Who - William Hartnell, Ian Chesterton - William Russell, Barbara Wright - Jacqueline Hill, Susan Foreman - Carole Ann Ford, Lemaitre - James Cairncross (2-6), Jailer - Jack Cunningham (2-6), Jules - Donald Morley (2-6), Small Boy - Peter Walker (1-2), Rouvray - Laidlaw Dalling (1), D’Argenson - Neville Smith (1), Sergeant - Robert Hunter (1), Lieutenant - Ken Lawrence (1), Soldier - James Hall (1), Judge - Howard Charlton (2), Webster - Jeffry Wickham (2), Road Works Overseer - Dallas Cavell (2), Peasant - Denis Cleary (2), Jean - Roy Herrick (3-4), Shopkeeper - John Barrard (3-4), Danielle - Caroline Hunt (3-4), Leon - Edward Brayshaw (3-5), Robespierre - Keith Anderson (4-6), Physician - Ronald Pickup (4), Soldier - Terry Bale (5), Paul Barrass - John Law (6), Napoleon - Tony Wall (6), Soldier - Patrick Marley (6).
CREW
Written by Dennis Spooner.  Title Music by Ron Grainer with the BBC Radiophonic Workshop.  Incidental Music composed and conducted by Stanley Myers.  Costume Supervised by Daphne Dare (6).  Make-up Supervised by Sonia Markham (6).  Film Cameraman - Peter Hamilton (2-3).  Film Editor - Caroline Shields (2-3).  Lighting by Howard King (6).  Story Editor - David Whitaker.  Designer - Roderick Laing.  Associate Producer - Mervyn Pinfield.  Producer - Verity Lambert.  Directed by Henric Hirsch (1-2,4-6).

Familiar Faces
Ronald Pickup, who played the Physician, was later to become quite a well-known actor.  More impressively, Edward Brayshaw (Leon Colbert) was to become Mr Meeker in Rentaghost!

Review
Well, from what I can see, it looks like a pretty classy historical adventure to me.  All right, there’s a bit of a reliance on capture/rescue scenarios, but you’ve got to admit the show has guts, shoving an alleged children’s serial into the middle of the Reign of Terror.  It’s interesting that we more or less remain around the edges of the action, the Doctor’s encounter with Robespierre notwithstanding.  And the scene at the Sinking Ship is just there because Dennis Spooner couldn’t resist the temptation to stick Napoleon in.  Otherwise, though, we are mainly concerned with restoring the TARDIS crew to freedom (a perennial theme in the show so far) and with Lemaitre, who is clearly an excellent character, and I can only hope that James Cairncross was an excellent actor.  The revelations about him in episode six are a shock, and merely make the character better.  Other interesting aspects of this story include the increased amount of comedy, especially in the character of the jailer...although, in the novelisation at any rate, these come across as comedy in the same way as, for instance, the porter in Macbeth - it’s not funny as such, but you can see how it’s supposed to be comedy.  Also, take a look at Script Heaven.  This early on, the show’s really getting self-referential, mocking its own barely established conventions - e.g. they always get out of tight spots.  The only real problem with these historicals, though, is that while there’s plenty to look at, the plot is largely limited to people dashing in and out and getting shot every other episode so that we don’t notice that all the travellers are doing is being captured and escaping.  They can’t affect history, so there’s no real plot.  Not to worry, though.  It’s enjoyable enough on paper, now can someone show me a real version please?

 Rating
 7 / 10

Season One in Review
            The series has set out its stall and it hasn’t done it by halves.  These eight stories provide an impressive intro, and you have to keep watching to see if they can maintain this high standard.  The series’ strengths and weaknesses are plain - historicals such as Marco Polo, The Aztecs, The Reign Of Terror and even An Unearthly Child (and OK, I haven’t seen all of these) shine amongst slightly dodgier outer space-set stories (The Sensorites, The Keys Of Marinus).  Perhaps least memorable in the season (though by far not the worst story) is the two-parter The Edge Of Destruction, but the season’s apogee must be The Daleks - whatever its shortcomings as a story, you can’t deny that it and its villains stick in the mind.  And someone at the BBC has a tidy mind - the elaborate societies created for Skaro and the Sense-Sphere are remarkable, and it’s a lot of effort to put into a group of aliens that (at least in the case of the Sensorites) we’re unlikely to encounter again.  Someone cares, which is good.  The central cast are mostly strong, especially when given good material - let’s face it, no-one could do much with the middle episodes of The Keys Of Marinus, but get a load of Jacqueline Hill in The Aztecs.  For the next season, I can only hope that some of the writing talent poured into the historicals gets allocated to the more SF stories, as there’s surely more mileage in these.

 

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