REVIEW: The Monster of Peladon by Brian Hayles
SERIAL: YYY, 6X25 minute episodes
SEEN IT BEFORE?: Yes.
Direct sequels are surprisingly rare in Doctor Who, Dalek and Cybermen stories notwithstanding. But the makers of Doctor Who during Jon Pertwee's time considered The Curse of Peladon a success, and for Pertwee's final season as the Doctor, commissioned a sequel. Unfortunately, this wasn't the success that they hoped for...
Fifty years after the Doctor's last visit to Peladon, he returns with Sarah Jane Smith in tow. Things have changed, and not all for the better. Peladon is now ruled by Queen Thalira, the daughter of King Peladon. The Galactic Federation is at war, needing vast quantities of trisilicate mined on Peladon, and there is conflict between the nobility, and the miners whose leader, Gebek, is trying to hold back the hot-headed Ettis and other rebels. With Thalira's chancellor Ortron determined to keep the status quo, the situation is bad enough, but when an apparition of Aggedor, sacred beast of Peladon, appears and kills miners and offworld technicians alike, the situation gets worse. Accused of being saboteurs, the Doctor and Sarah must work with old friend Alpha Centauri and mining engineer Eckersley trying to prevent civil war, but soon, the situation is going from bad to worse. A peacekeeping force of Ice Warriors land to restore order, but are their heavy-handed tactics part of the Federation's war-footing, or are they acting of their own accord?
Let's get the good stuff out of the way. The production design and special effects for this story are pretty damn good, and the plot proper looks good on paper. Jon Pertwee as the Doctor and (the now, unfortunately, recently deceased) Elizabeth Sladen as Sarah do well. The Ice Warriors are a welcome addition to the story and help give it some life. And Alpha Centauri, as well as the mining engineer Eckersley, are also done well.
The problem is, though, that this is an overstretched and poorly characterised story. Of the Peladonian characters, only Gebek holds much interest and even any degree of complexity. Queen Thalira is even more useless than her father, although given that she has grown up Queen in an intensely patriarchal and misogynistic society, that can be forgiven, a little. Ortron, however, while having initial promise, is a fool who seems to believe that he is in charge on Peladon, with only his character post-Ice Warrior invasion showing any improvement. Even his predecessor, Hepesh, while dogmatic, had better reasons than being suspicious of every alien or lower class miner, and was a pragmatist, mostly. And Ettis is just a raving lunatic idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
The plot would have served four episodes better than six, and even then, it would still have been stretched. There's no real politics in this story, just stupidity on both sides of the mining dispute. While this was meant to be an analogy of the coal strike at the time, I don't think that Brian Hayles' heart was quite in it when he wrote this story. There were some good concepts here, and if a lot more effort was put into it, it could have been an excellent story. As it is, it is somewhere between 'average' and 'mediocre'.
The Monster of Peladon isn't abysmal. If only it was written better, and some good characterisation was put in, it could have surpassed its predecessor. Instead, it fell victim to a bad case of sequelitis, and as such, falls below average. A pity, then, that this is the last Pertwee story that I review.
SCORE: 7/10
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