Showing posts with label Silurians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silurians. Show all posts

Friday, 25 February 2022

Toybox REVIEW: Doctor Who 'Warriors of the Deep' Collector Figure Set

Doctor Who 'Warriors of the Deep' Set 01

Release Date: February 2022
RRP: £29.99

While the various B&M store exclusive figures released by Character Options continue to excite Doctor Who fans, it's whenever they announce their next website exclusive that things get really exciting. Though there's only usually one a year (the 'Jungles of Mechanus' Dalek set in 2020 and then the Abominable Snowman Second Doctor/TARDIS set in 2021), it's a release slot reserved for some of the line's more remarkable releases. And in 2022 Character have produced the most remarkable one so far, with the Warriors of the Deep Collector Figure Set. Based on the 1984 story from the Fifth Doctor's tenure, this three-figure set includes the three Silurians featured in the story – Ichtar, Scibus and Tarpok. Not only was it released exclusively through the Character Online website, but the set is also limited to only 3000 pieces.

Thursday, 30 December 2010

Game REVIEW: Doctor Who: Evacuation Earth (DS)

Ever wondered what you get when you cross Doctor Who with a cheap imitation of Professor Layton? The answer is, unsurprisingly, an appalling game.

Evacuation Earth begins with a fairly interesting plot - The Doctor and Amy arrive in the Lake District in the far future, where the last remnants of humanity are preparing the leave the planet due to the incoming solar flares (the same ones mentioned in the season 5 episode The Beast Below) and get caught up in the evacuation due to the TARDIS going missing on-board the ship. Meanwhile the Silurians also have plans to evacuate the Earth and later some Daleks (who seem to be from the games Wii-counterpart Return to Earth) who are also in need of the Doctor's help/have their own dastardly plans. It'd be a plot that could carry an episode of the series - if it wasn't so damn short. The game is made up of a measly four chapters - the Daleks are beaten almost as soon as they turn up and the game can easily be completed in three hours (well, that's the time it took me, and I was playing it at a rather leisurely pace).

The gameplay, as I mentioned earlier, is nothing more than a cheap imitation of Level-5's Professor Layton series - so much it almost feels like plagiarism. You walk around areas, solving puzzles with give a set amount of points (which decrease every time you get the puzzle wrong). These puzzles are have three hints you can unlock spending these points and the answer is accompanied by a little 3-step animation (but instead of Layton or Luke, it's a materialising TARDIS). Of course these puzzles aren't half as engaging as the ones present in Layton - most of the time they amount to spot the difference or put some puzzle pieces back together. The only difficult puzzles are four sliding tile type ones - and they aren't even compulsory ones! Half the time the puzzles have little to do with the plot (picking out a fish for a crew member, rearranging a work rota etc.) and are really jarring to the story. Sometimes there'll be a few puzzles that feel like they belong in a Doctor Who game, such as charting a spaceship course or avoiding some patrolling Daleks, but its rather scarce. The game's main problem isn't how easy it is though, it's how poorly made it is. Controls are glitchy (things flash onto screen without pressing them, you'll press one side of the screen with the stylus and it'll select the other which makes the Sonic Screwdriver steady hand games really frustrating) and the puzzles are poorly worded (there's at least one instance where the answer doesn't match the question, therefore completely wrong, and that is downright unacceptable for a mass produced game).

To be honest I shouldn't have expected much from a game by Asylum Entertainment (responsible for games starring the likes of Peppa Pig and the Teletubbies) but I expected something at least relatively professional. Other sites have said that this game is great for younger children, but to be honest unless I was about 5 I'd feel exactly the same about this game as I do now. The only thing is game has going for it is a semi decent plot (and the cutscenes are probably up on youtube by now anyway) and some good 11th Doctor-esque dialogue. If this is this bad, I hate to see what Return to Earth is like, because apparently Evacuation Earth is a masterpiece by comparison...

My wait for a decent Doctor Who game continues.



Sunday, 27 June 2010

Reviews in Time & Space: Doctor Who Season 5 - An overview.


After 4 years of David Tennant and 5 years of Russel T Davies as head writer, 2010 saw Doctor Who rebranded and reborn with Matt Smith taking up the role of 11th Doctor and Steven Moffat moving up to head writer for the series. While fan opinions seems generally positive and optimistic for the change on the writing side of things opinions remained divided on whether Smith could deliver in the lead role and fill the shoes left by his predecessor. And he did it. Remarkably.

Bursting in with The Eleventh Hour (★★★★★) Matt Smith made his presence known as the Doctor while simultaneously sticking somewhat to Tennant's Doctor template in order to smooth the transition. Karen Gillan's debut as companion Amy Pond proved just as successful in creating a dynamic that would be crucial in helping carry the series - the relationship between Doctor and companion. Throw in some clip footage of previous Doctors, the first of what would be many references/homages to the classic series (something I felt the RTD era was lacking) and foreshadowing of future events and we were given a story that didn't grate like usual new Doctor/ companion stories do, even if it had some of the BBC's standard dodgy CGI.

Next came The Beast Below (★★★★★), a seemingly more low key story that really gave Matt Smith a chance to flesh out his Doctor's character. And that he did. Smith's Doctor is the perfect blend of Troughton and Tom Baker, with a little hint of McCoy's dark side - all wrapped up with some brilliant acting. Smith's Doctor is the first in a while that has really felt alien, and his outburst at the episodes conclusion really demonstrated some of the range he's capable of.

Victory of the Daleks (★★★) promised big things, but ultimately was the first decidedly average episode of the season. Despite some great acting from the cast (especially Ian McNeice as Winston Churchill) this story felt incredibly rushed and really could have benefitted from the multiple part format of old. The WW2/Ironside scenario lasted all of 5 minutes (feeling more like a brief homage to Power of the Daleks than an actual story set up), and all the story served to do was introduce the newly designed Daleks (in a variety of different flavours). Fan reception is certainly mixed on the redesign, but there was nothing really action-wise to judge them on. The highlight of this episode was certainly Smith holding the Daleks back with a single Jammy Dodger.

The Time of the Angels (★★★★) saw the return of both Moffat's Weeping Angels and the character of River Song. While I love the concept of this character, I find the execution very poor and she comes off as little more than smug and annoying. Despite this, as promised the episode felt very much like the Aliens to Blink's Alien - complete with Marines! As the first 2-parter of the season it left with a very good cliffhanger and Flesh and Stone (★★★★★) continued the story feeling even better than its predecessor. We gain some valuable information about the cracks present throughout the series, Gillan and Smith keep going from strength to strength and those with a keen eye will notice an 'incorrect' scene that perhaps isn't all that it seemed.

After a thrilling 2-parter, Vampires of Venice (★★) feels like a huge let down. The story really felt like it was written for Tennant's Doctor rather than Smith's, and featured a resolution that wouldn't have felt out of place in the RTD era, along with some terrible looking CGI fish aliens. The episode's only saving graces were its opening sequence and a proper introduction to the character of Rory Williams - present in The Eleventh Hour but here we get a proper look at him.

Amy's Choice (★★★★★) seemed like it was going to be the first proper dud of the series from the previews, but it proved to be anything but. Rory began to feel more and more at home in the Smith/Gillan dynamic and the episode contained some fantastic insight into both the minds of Rory and the Doctor. It's only let down was the explaination of the chain of events at the very end - which felt very much like an after thought, especially with such a great character like the Dream Lord.

The Hungry Earth (★★★) boasted the return of the Silurians, but it came at the cost of them being reinvented into something almost indistinguishable from the Silurians of old. This was explained in-show as them being a different sub-division to the originals and out-show as an attempt to make them more emotive, but giving them human features made them more ape-like, which in turn felt contradictory to the whole premise of Silurians in the first place. Hungry Earth was boring and slow paced, feeling like a very drawn out set up to the far better second part Cold Blood (★★★★★). Character-wise the Silurians felt right and the emotion was high as we said goodbye to Rory, who by now had more than earned his place in the TARDIS despite having early reservations about his lastabiliy. Despite Rory fading out of time, having never existed and his finacee Amy forgetting he ever existed, I was sure this wouldn't be the last we saw of him. At this stage, what interested me more was the 'shrapnel' the Doctor found in the crack in time....

Next came what many will likely consider the standout episode of the series, Vincent and the Doctor (★★★★) Some truly magnificent acting from Tony Curran as Van Gogh and a great attempt at an earnest mental health commentary, with a monster that feels surface-level but becomes far more poignant when considering what it represents. While the sentiment of its ending certainly can’t be faulted, it perhaps tries a little too hard to pull at the viewer’s heartstrings - the choice of music particularly feeling like signposting when something orchestral would have felt far more fitting. Though maybe not entirely perfect, the episode will forever be remembered for its intent and that’s something writer Richard Curtis should be proud of.

Featuring James Corden in an episode was never going to amount to much, but a chance for Matt Smith to be his Doctor and live among humans gave The Lodger (★★★★) worthwhile status. Sure the plot amounts to two people saving the planet by the power of love, and James Corden is as annoying as ever, but seeing the Doctor play football, run around in just a towel and generally be awkward around people rocketed Matt Smith to the position of my second favourite Doctor (just after Jon Pertwee).

The came the finale. The Pandorica Opens (★★★★★) set the stakes pretty darn high. A story with a lot of great twists and turns and a cliffhanger to rival even the best among the huge history of Doctor Who. River Song returned but felt far less annoying among a bigger cast, and Rory's 'miraculous' return created some great exchanges between Darvill and Smith. The Big Bang (★★★★★) on the other hand didn't feel quite so epic in terms of scale, but after endless 'big' finales from RTD that had fallen flat on their face in the last 5 minutes this really was a case of less is more. Jumping back and forth in time in order to create a consistent chain of events felt like something Who should have covered long ago, and the main plot of the story was so Red Dwarf I find it hard to believe it wasn't deliberate ("Jumpstart the second Big Bang?"). After a teary goodbye to the Doctor a happy ending with Amy and Rory finally getting married was well deserved. The episode served to answer many of the questions raised both in and out of the plot throughout the series (including the infamous sequence in Flesh and Stone) but also managed to leave a few hanging to add some more anticipation to season six. The mystery of River Song won't be staying a mystery for much longer. Speaking of River Song, Daleks don't beg for mercy. Ever. That's all I have to say on the matter.

So there we have, Matt Smith proved himself to be undoubtedly the best Doctor since the show's relaunch, the Smith/Gillan/Darvill team is a perfect formula which will continue into the Christmas special and the next season and TV has just said goodbye to the best season of Doctor Who in a long time. Long live Moffat's reign, long live the Eleventh Doctor.