You thought that you were the bomb, yeah, well so did I. -- Tori Amos, Spark

Deep Ice: That is my conjecture of the origin of the heat ray. (Big Finish’s Doctor Who: Invaders From Mars, Part 2)

Previously on A Mind Occasionally Voyaging…

“I forgot to mention, I ran by the White House in this gorgeous lilac suit I had a little man run up for me. Later on, he ran down it again.”

Where the hell were we? Orson Welles and John Houseman are getting ready to adapt The War of the Worlds for radio. Their CBS boss, Bix Biro (yes, really) is being blackmailed into working for Cosmo Devine, a campy gossip columnist who is… No, still not going to spoil the surprise. While they haven’t yet, these plots are eventually going to link up with the intrigue in which the Doctor and Charlie find themselves. They stumbled upon the corpse of private detective J.C. Halliday, and after determining that he was killed by a radiation weapon, the Doctor stole the dead man’s identity and offered his services to femme fatale Glory Bee, who is looking for her missing nuclear scientist uncle. Halliday was killed by a pair of gangsters who were in the process of cheating their boss, Don Cheney. Confused? You won’t be, after this week’s episode of… Actually, no, wait. You’re totally going to be confused, because we’ve got at least two major twists coming up, and there’s a whole plot thread that hasn’t even started yet.

So Don Cheney’s deal is that he found a crashed alien, which he’s keeping locked up in his lair, and said alien is supplying him with energy weapons. Cheney actually does have a strategic plan for these, but at the moment, it seems like he’s just using them for the ordinary sort of dominance in a violent trade.

They haven’t done a great job yet of selling me on why these alien heaters provide such a tactical advantage to the gangsters. I mean, sure, they can kill you right good. But an ordinary sort of gun seems fairly adequate to the task already. The two times we’ve seen them used, it was at close range, against an unarmored target, who already had a gun drawn, and it seems to have helped only in that the would-be shooter was startled by the sight of it, giving the user time to shoot first. The sound effect of the gun — deliberately similar to the heat rays in the 1953 film — lasts several seconds, which suggests to me that it’s not markedly faster than a regular gun to fire, plus it seems like it has to power up before it can be used. Now, in a non-visual medium, we can easily imagine there being more to it than we’re told explicitly. But I’ve still got the laser weapon from the TV series in my head, remember? Where the aliens made a huge deal of how laser pistols would definitely win them this war, only when they show us one, it takes like 10 seconds to kill one person who’s tied up at the time?

This isn’t an uncommon problem in sci-fi stories that use alien weapons as a plot point. They confuse being viscerally terrifying with providing a concrete tactical advantage. Before I watched Stargate SG-1, I probably wouldn’t have noticed myself. That show did, I think, a good job of demonstrating that while, sure, the Goa’uld had scary-looking sci-fi weapons, you weren’t any less dead if you got shot by a USAF-issue submachine gun, and, ironically, visually flashy sci-fi beam weapons in TV shows tend to have much slower firing rates than actual automatic firearms on account of you want to be able to actually see them. But here, it just sort of goes without saying here that energy weapons are better than guns because they just are. Compare that to, oh, let’s say, The War of the Worlds. The Martian heat rays are certainly terrifying from the start, but even there, once the initial panic has worn off, the narrator doesn’t see them as an insurmountable technological advantage on their own. Against soft targets, the heat ray isn’t much different in efficacy than a machine gun: you can sweep it across a group of people and kill them all. It’s only when you couple it with the fact that it can destroy vehicles, buildings, artillery, that it’s mobile, and that on top of that, the Martian war machines are far less vulnerable to human weapons that the Martian weapons become properly dangerous. Once the rest of the New York underworld learns not to panic at the sight of the Cheney gang’s alien weapons, “Just shoot first,” is going to go a long way to neutralize their advantage.

I guess we should talk about the voice work. Strictly speaking, I should’ve brought this up sooner, but last week’s article was already close to five thousand words. I can comfortably say that these are some of the most convincing American accents Big Finish has ever produced. This should not be mistaken for them being good. They get a boost here from the fact that the previous eighth Doctor adventure, “Minuet in Hell”, was also set in the US. While “Invaders From Mars” is set in 1930s New York, “Minuet in Hell” was set in the near-future bible belt, in a hypothetical future state named, in a rather shocking level of Big Finish not having a clue of what is a realistic thing to happen in America, “Malebolgia”. That story, adapted from an old Audio-Visual of the same name, was full of fake Americans faking non-specific or vaguely southern accents poorly. “Invaders From Mars” has the advantage here that no one’s doing “generic American”; they’re all doing various shticks. David Benson voices Orson Welles, and he doesn’t quite manage to accurately reproduce a Mercury Theater-era Welles so much as he does a shockingly faithful reproduction of Maurice LaMarche’s Orson Welles voice, enough that I almost expect Houseman to ask him, “Gee, Brain, what’re we going to do tonight?” And I think it’s a strong choice for the role; being strictly accurate to Welles isn’t nearly so important here as evoking the zeitgeist of Welles, which this voice absolutely does. Benson also voices Halliday’s brief appearance, which is basically just his Welles toned down a bit. Later, we’ll also hear him affect a thick accent as Professor Stepashin, the missing uncle. Jonathan Rigby is similarly good as John Houseman. It’s distinctive enough that you can tell who he’s supposed to be, with a very distinctively “British Ex-pat” accent. He does come off a lot more British than the “classic” John Houseman accent, but I can’t say if that’s ahistorical; Houseman had been living in the US for about a decade at this point in his life, but it wouldn’t be until the 1970s that he would become well-known in front of the camera, so the Houseman voice we associate with Smith Barney commercials and his posthumous cameo in Scrooged is the voice of a man who’s spent another fifty years on this side of the Atlantic. Rigby does lay it on maybe just a bit thick with his tendency to end every other sentence with “, my boy.”

Jessica Hynes (nee Stevenson) — you may know her as Joan Redfern and her identical granddaughter Verity Newman in televised Doctor Who — plays Glory Bee with a considerable dose of Mae West. Her most consistent slip is that she pronounces Charlie’s last name, “Pollard” correctly, as Po-lard, where a legitimate American would change it to Pahl-ard. As with everyone, she’s more “Person trying to sound like archetype” than “Archetype”, though for reasons which become clear later, it makes sense for her character. WHat really makes these fake Americans more palatable than what Big Finish (or Doctor Who in general) usually provides in the way of “Americans” is that a lot of these performances are performances of performances. Orson Welles is an actor; John Houseman is a Romanian-born half-French half-Irish Brit trying to make it in America; Cosmo Devine is playing a public persona of a camp gay celebrity. So it’s expected that everyone should sound a little fake. The gangsters too, sound like characters out of a gangster movie. Simon Pegg voices Don Cheney, which is a surprise. His accent slips quite a lot, but even when he does, he doesn’t sound like Simon Pegg. John Arthur’s Cosmo Devine also slips out of his accent a lot, but I’m not sure that’s accidental; maybe they’re intentionally trying to signal that his exaggerated effeminate tone and mannerisms are an affect for public consumption. The gangsters, Pegg’s Cheney included, are all going for a generic sort of thuggish lout type; these are more your Cagney style gangsters than your Brando style. Ian Hallard’s Mouse is a fun contrast as the nervous-weaselly one, though it would get pretty grating if he lasted past episode one. Hallard returns with a more subtle accent as Jimmy Winkler in this episode.

We return to the story the next morning, where Charlie finds that the Doctor has stayed up all night reviewing Halliday’s files. This is a weird Wilderness Years Expanded Universe thing where the Doctor only sleeps when he’s sick or injured. He’s discovered that Halliday was already investigating the Excelsior Hotel, where Professor Stepashin was last seen. I don’t think we’re ever going to find out why Halliday had been involved with this business, since he doesn’t seem to have been hired by any of the other players. The Doctor and Charlie have to slip out on the fire escape when the police turn up, having found Halliday’s body, and in the chase, it takes the Doctor a minute to notice when Charlie gets kidnapped by Ellis.

When he reunites with Glory Bee, she convince him that Charlie’s abduction must be linked to Stepashin’s, and they proceed together to the Excelsior. Again they deny any knowledge, but a contrived distraction by Glory Bee gives the Doctor a moment to check the guest register. Based on the sound effect, he seems to speed-read it flipbook-style, as the televised Doctor would go on to do with The Lovely Bones in “Rose”. He finds an altered page where Stepashin’s name has been removed and leads Glory Bee to room 1504 based on the mismatch between the replaced page and the pen impressions on the page beneath. I’m not an expert in pens. But I object to this on the grounds that it’s 1938 and the first commercially viable ballpoint pen was only invented four months ago, and wouldn’t be on the market until the mid-forties. I can’t swear to it, but I don’t think you can apply enough pressure with a nib pen to leave marks that would be visible to the naked eye on the page beneath, particularly on the sturdy sort of paper used in guest registers. The Doctor picks the lock, only to be greeted by a gangster, who informs them that, “Glad youse could join us. Da boss would like a word. I understand youse been askin’… questions…”

Their arrival at the hotel and interest in Stepashin is overseen by Ellis, who is in the middle of connecting this plot thread to another via a clandestine meeting with Cosmo Devine. It was an agent of Devine’s who Mouse and Ellis had expected to meet the previous night when Halliday intervened. Given that Don Cheney is having the Excelsior watched, this seems like a dumb place for Ellis to meet with the guy he’s selling out to. Ellis was also behind Charlie’s kidnapping, and has delivered her to Cosmo’s New Jersey lair. Despite his divided loyalties, Ellis refuses to reveal to Devine where the alien weapons came from. He does allude, though, to Cheney’s involvement in the disappearance of Stepashin.

Continue reading Deep Ice: That is my conjecture of the origin of the heat ray. (Big Finish’s Doctor Who: Invaders From Mars, Part 2)

Deep Ice: This is Orson Welles (Big Finish’s Doctor Who: Invaders From Mars, Part 1)

NEVER play the same game three times running!” — Anthony Shaffer, Sleuth, Act II.

It is January, 2002. The Euro becomes legal tender in 12 EU nations. Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle accuses the GOP of causing, “The most dramatic fiscal deterioration in our nation’s history,” to which the Republicans respond, “Hold our beer,” and proceed to reorient the economy primarily around credit default swaps. Brewer Freddy Heineken, restaurateur Dave Thomas, and singer Peggy Lee die. Apple introduces the iMac G4. I turn twenty-three.

Out this month on the Playstation 2 is Rez, a rhythm-based rail shooter inspired by the works of Wassily Kandinsky. It’s notable for the fact that in Japan, it came with a sex toy. I mean, not deliberately, but the designers wanted more powerful haptic feedback than the Dualshock controllers could provide, so they included a USB-controlled rumble-pack called — because Japan — the “Trance Vibrator”. And it came with a washable sleeve so it’s not like they didn’t know what the deal was or anything. It’s a fun and really trippy game even if you choose not to let it reward you with orgasms for playing.

Nickelback holds the top spout on the charts for half the month with “How U Remind Me”. It’s hard to believe now, but there was indeed a time when people actually liked Nickelback. Usher will take the spot from them for the second half of the month with “U Got it Bad”, part of a Bush-Era austerity drive that forbade songs in the top 10 from wasting three letters to spell the word “You” correctly. U think I’m making that up, but this is the fourth time a “U” song has been in the number one spot since 2001. “You” hasn’t been spelled correctly by a #1 song since last May’s “All For You”, and won’t be again until 2004, while two of 2003’s number ones will spell it “Ya”.

Disney’s Beauty and the Beast — the 1991 animated one — is back in theaters, at least those which support the IMAX format, to which it’s just been converted. Disney’s Snow Dogs also comes out this month, and the Hong Kong Cinema parody Kung Pow: Enter the Fist.

Television this month will give us a fiftieth anniversary special for I Love Lucy, a sixtieth birthday special for Muhammad Ali, the thirtieth anniversary special for The Price is Right and the thousandth episode of Soul Train. Conspicuously Absent Franchise Title: Enterprise returns from its fall break with several new episodes, including “Dear Doctor”, justly maligned as the worst mangling of the theory of evolution Star Trek ever did. And if you don’t appreciate how much that is saying, remember: there’s an episode of Voyager where going faster than warp 10 causes Paris and Janeway to “evolve” into giant salamanders with Fu Manchu mustaches, and then fuck. The West Wing has three new episodes this month, and The X-Files is still on somehow, which surprises me. So is Dark Angel, which, it turns out, got way better after the six episodes I watched, and I will try hard not to slam it in the future.

Fun fact: I started writing this article almost exactly a year ago. Only I decided for some reason that I should do Howard Koch’s War of the Worlds II: Electric Boogaloo first, and things kinda spun out of control from there, with me repeatedly losing my will to continue this project, or, indeed, do anything at all ever again. But we’re back now, I guess, and I won’t blame you if you’re confused.

So yes, I’ll cop to the fact that last summer, I ran a pair of articles which crossed over between our years-long meander through adaptations of The War of the Worlds with my years-long art project positing an alternative version of Doctor Who. And it followed the premise that the Doctor and his companion happened upon a plot to invade the Earth in October of 1938, and took advantage of the Orson Welles broadcast to trick the aliens.

And because I’m a hack, I lifted the broad concept of the thing from something which is real. To be clear, my version of “Invaders From Mars!” is not a straight lift from the twenty-eighth Big Finish audio drama. I had to make room for poorly colorized newspaper archive photos, poorly edited screenshots from the 1999 made-for-TV movie RKO 281, and dick jokes. But certainly, the general gist is there.

So, Big Finish. Is this the first time we talked about them? Big Finish is a British company that has been producing audio dramas for the past 20 years. Their focus is audio plays based on British cult media, mostly TV, and they’re best known specifically for their Doctor Who line, which started out by picking up out-of-work Doctor Who actors and having them reprise their TV roles in plays based mostly on Virgin’s New Adventures and Missing Adventures novel lines, along with some remakes of a late-90s series of fan productions that the producers had been involved with. But after a couple of years of that, they decided to try something bold and got Paul McGann to reprise his role from the ill-fated 1996 American TV movie, taking a stab at being the “official” continuation of the Doctor’s adventures.

This was, in the real world, basically peak “wilderness years”, when it seemed basically impossible that Doctor Who would ever come back to TV. It was just about believable that the future of the franchise might just be low-budget licensed spin-offs in other media. And — this all seems like a weird fever-dream now — some people in fandom welcomed this. At last, they said, Doctor Who belongs to us, the fans, and we can finally do it properly, the way it should always have been, with a slavish adherence to continuity, and nothing even vaguely American, and long expository segments to canonize our pet theories, and NO GIRLS. And it would be great and show all those corporate suits that we know best and that living in our mom’s basements is too cool!

Draw what conclusions you like. Here’s the thing: Big Finish Productions are entirely competent at making high-quality audio dramas with talented actors and competent writing and entirely professional production values. And their series have produced many really fun and enjoyable things like Doctor Who and the Pirates and …Ish and Colin Baker getting to redeem his reputation by playing the Doctor in a period when everyone involved in the production didn’t clearly hate the show and want it to die, and they gave Paul McGann the chance to actually develop the character for himself, and really the only problem with Big Finish’s Doctor Who at a basic level is that the basic concept of what it is isn’t all that worthwhile of an idea. I mean, the target audience for Big Finish Doctor Who consists of 40-year-old men who desperately want an exact reproduction of a show that was cancelled thirty years ago, and are willing to pay a bunch of money to indulge their nostalgia. On the one hand, they’re free to do things that are innovative and new, because they effectively have a captive audience who will buy any old crap they put out. But on the other hand, their target audience profoundly isn’t interested in something innovative and new. They want something familiar and comfortable. Something that has cliffhangers every thirty minutes even if they don’t actually make any sense and fuck up the narrative flow of the story and reassures us that the Doctor never ever has sex and does not have any biological children, and takes time out of an audio-only narrative to assure us that they switched back to jaunting belts because no one liked the jaunting bracelets (that last one was The Tomorrow People).

What I’m trying to say is that the Big Finish Doctor Who audios are fine. Some of them are even good. But at no point do they ever really make any serious attempt to justify their existence. It’s a series that was tailor-made for a very specific audience who effectively had no real choice if they wanted to get their Doctor Who fix. It was the closest thing you could get to more Doctor Who (There was a line of novels produced by BBC Books at the same time, of course, but the novels never had any real claim to being the “legitimate continuation” of the series proper — they were, if anything, the successor to the series of novelizations produced alongside the classic series, and by extension were inherently positioned as supplementary). So nothing Big Finish did prior to 2005 ever had to answer, or even address, the question, “Why should I consume this particular media instead of one of the myriad other options I had.” And then 2005 came around and… honestly, they never managed to give a fully satisfying answer to why we should bother with them now either, but at the least, they didn’t take the presumably attractive option of hardcore catering to 40-year-old men who ragequit the new series because of the kissing and the women who serve narrative functions other than to twist their ankles and get captured. I assume. I mean, I haven’t really listened to much of their post-2005 output because why bother when there’s real Doctor Who to watch now.

Big Finish, at this point in their history, had sort of stumbled into being the de facto “main” continuation of the series. But it’s not like they’d won that title somehow; they were just the only viable option. And even today, it’s their version of the eighth Doctor, the sardonic one with short hair who doesn’t wear a Wild Bill Hickok Halloween costume, which is accepted as mostly-canonical. On paper, the BBC Books would seem to have the stronger claim, being actually produced by the BBC. But it’s the Big Finish companions Paul McGann names when toasting his own regeneration in “Night of the Doctor”.

Now, if I haven’t already set us up for failure sufficiently, I’ll reveal that the real Invaders from Mars was written by Mark Gatiss. If somehow you’re not familiar with him, Mark Gatiss is a writer, actor and comedian, who’s probably best known for his work on The League of Gentlemen and for playing Mycroft in Sherlock. Or maybe for his role in Game of Thrones, I have no idea. He’s one of those long-time ascended fanboys in the Doctor Who universe, having gotten his start as a professional writer in the New Adventures novel line, and his start in “TV” writing P.R.O.B.E., a direct-to-video Doctor Who spinoff that he would really prefer you not track down and watch because it’s terrible. He also wrote a number of episodes of the current television incarnation of Doctor Who and starred in several episodes, most recently as The Captain in “Twice Upon a Time”.

And, well… Mark Gatiss is a competent writer. Perfectly competent. But he’s… He’s got this kind of style to him. And it’s a style that can be a bit problematic. Let me put it this way: at one point, Mark Gatiss converted one of the rooms in his house into a Jules Verne-style Victorian Scientist’s laboratory. The kind way to put it is that he’s big on nostalgia. The less kind way of putting it is that he is kind of uncomfortably obsessed with an utterly undeconstructed love of the grandeur the imperial age of Great Britain with absolutely no apparent acknowledgement of just how incredibly skeevy that imperial past could be. To the point of occasionally blindly walking into things like speaking with a wistful longing for the days when foreigners knew their place, casually dropping racial slurs, and, on occasion, parroting the talking points of the British National Party. Which is strange for literally anyone, much less an openly gay man. He’s also almost serenely bad at writing women. I mean, you may think that his frequent collaborator Steven Moffat has some problems when it comes to writing women. But Moffat at his worst does still appear to have actually met a woman at some point in his life.

So Invaders From Mars is not necessarily an obvious brief from Gatiss. I mean, sure, it’s nostalgic, essentially Big Finish’s homage to the golden age of radio. But it’s an homage to the golden age of American radio. And that’s not really Gatiss’s particular thing. If you look at the rest of his Doctor Who output, it’s like, yeah, he wrote the one where the Doctor met Charles Dickens and he wrote the one where the Doctor hung out with Winston Churchill without a single bad word to say about him, and he wrote the one which is basically Moonraker in Victorian London, and he wrote the one where the Doctor met Robin Hood and he wrote the one where Victorian soldiers go to Mars and treat an Ice Warrior as Friday. On the one hand, “The Doctor fanboys over a historical figure” is very much a Gatiss thing to do, but on the other hand, the Doctor fanboying over someone who isn’t Victorian or at least British is odd. But okay, it’s not like “Mark Gatiss also likes American Golden Age Radio” is much of a stretch to believe. I mean, I like American Golden Age Radio and also post apocalyptic children’s television, so who am I to judge?

I like genre collisions, on principle. I’ve said this before. So Doctor Who-meets-Golden-Age-Radio should be a winner, even with Mark Gatiss to deal with. And in practice, we can expect that Big Finish won’t produce a complete train wreck at this stage in their creative output. But enough damning with faint praise. What’s the damn story about?

The Doctor is traveling with his companion Charlie Pollard, a self-described Edwardian Adventuress who he rescued from the dirigible R-101 (Internet personality Bill “The Engineer Guy” Hammick wrote a book on the subject), a doomed British airship which would probably be a lot more famous if it weren’t for that other doomed airship. Rescuing Charlie is in the process of destroying the universe, on account of it having changed history, since no one is supposed to have survived the R-101 crash.

I mean except that people did survive as a matter of historical record, and as Charlie was a stowaway, there wouldn’t have been any record of her being there in the first place so history wouldn’t notice her not dying anyway. And also the whole “You can’t change history!” thing is bullshit anyway, and treating it like an inviolate concept due to one line in “The Aztecs” back in 1964 is part of the fanwankish bullshit that is the hallmark of the worst excesses of the wilderness years, and I’m getting off topic. The point is that the current plot arc in the Paul McGann adventures is that the web of time is in serious peril. This is going to take the whole season to unfurl, so for the moment, it’s pretty subtle.

There’s no cold open. The theme music is a not-especially-good techno mix of the Doctor Who theme (I wonder a bit whether this is a deliberate rejection of the more orchestral arrangement of the John Debney version of the theme music used for the 1996 TV movie. Actually, I don’t wonder. Making a point to do something stupid and petty just to reject a thing that the fans didn’t like is basically peak Big Finish) which plays without any spoken titles. Given Big Finish’s distribution model — CDs at the time — this is a defensible choice, but given that I remember a guy from rec.arts.drwho who sent the BBC increasingly threatening letters raging at them about how intrusive their corner-of-the-screen channel bugs were once a week for six months until they told him to stop, I feel like probably what they’ve actually done here is broken with audio convention to avoid the fanboys complaining about them ruining the shitty techno cover of the Doctor Who theme by talking over it. Sorry. I shouldn’t be this bitter.

Continue reading Deep Ice: This is Orson Welles (Big Finish’s Doctor Who: Invaders From Mars, Part 1)

Tales From /lost+found 154: Easter Special

And a happy Easter to you at home as well.

Click to Embiggen

5×1 In Harm’s Way: Presented with a mysterious box that carries a distress signal from an old friend, the Doctor makes a perilous trip outside the universe. When they arrive on a junkyard planet, the TARDIS seems to die, leaving the Doctor and Harmony at the mercy of a sentient, sinister planet, his only hope an strange, disturbed woman who claims to be his oldest companion…

Tales From the Found and Lost: Fun with Fonts

So last week, the BBC rolled out (after a couple of false alarms where fan art was mistaken for the real thing) a teaser of the title sequence for the Chris Chibnall era of Doctor Who, starring Jodie Whitaker. It’s fairly minimalist, with a touch of what some people who I think are stretching are calling symbolism (Some think the extension of the bar from the H to the O is forming a Venus symbol. It’s a stretch).

But I couldn’t help but notice, with its simple, very round font with prominent serifs  lightly decorated with extended cross-bars…

Click to embiggen

It’s nothing, really. Coincidence at best. Not even all that similar…