"If you could touch the alien sand and hear the cries of strange birds, and watch them wheel in another sky, would that satisfy you?" - The Doctor, "An Unearthly Child"

Touch the alien sand....

Touch the alien sand....
Copyright BBC

Friday, February 19, 2016

Time Stream #24 - The Celestial Toymaker



          I’ve never been a huge game player. There are board games that I absolutely love – Scrabble, Monopoly, Trivial Pursuit – and I grew up playing all sorts of them. Video games were always fun, but I’m not particularly good at them. I didn’t play a lot of the “traditional” kid games when I was younger, things like Red Rover, Blind Man’s Bluff, etc. As an adult, I have friends who are HUGE into gaming – board, tabletop roleplay, video, you name it, but I haven’t really gotten into any new ones. This is all a prelude to say that “The Celestial Toymaker” as a story was never going to be thematically my cup of tea. The game angle is interesting, but it was not enough for me. Unfortunately, even with my game bias aside, this story just didn’t work for me. It’s not “bad”, but it is uneven and slow.



          “The Celestial Toymaker” is not the worst of Doctor Who, not by a long shot. There are ideas here that are absolutely genius, not least of which is the Toymaker himself. A seemingly eternal being, immensely powerful, and most interestingly, someone who has encountered the Doctor before turn what could have been a silly concept into something really quite sinister. Michael Gough’s portrayal of the Toymaker is a joy to watch, coming so close to being over the top, but not ever stepping over that line. If my memory serves this is also the first instance of the Doctor facing an adversary who is seemingly all-powerful to the point of being god-like, even if it’s only in a limited domain. This will show up again and again in the series, but the Toymaker was here first. The very end of the story even hints at a return for the Toymaker, which was never to be.

          The first three episodes of the story are missing, so I watched them as reconstructions. I don’t know if that affected my response or not, but I will admit that the existing episode 4 was probably my favorite. Cyril the Schoolboy was a much more interesting opponent for Steven and Dodo than any of the characters in the previous three episodes, as he seemed much more engaged in their game. I have in my notes that the whole story seemed like something from the Theater of the Absurd, and the opponents of Steven and Dodo were just being kind of, well, weird. Cyril was *nasty*, where say, the playing cards were kind of ridiculous.

          This story was made at a time when the higher-ups in the production team were trying to come up with a way to replace, or at least remove, William Hartnell. The Doctor is invisible for most of this story, invisible AND voiceless for a chunk, and never really does anything until the very end of Episode 4. If it had just been Hartnell’s week for vacation, I might be a little more forgiving, but it’s kind of clear that the plan was to see how little of the Doctor was necessary. Peter Purves as Steven does his usual great job, but he’s saddled with Dodo, who has quickly become my least favorite companion. She’s shrill, inconsistently written, inconsistently performed, and kind of unlikable.

          “The Celestial Toymaker” is a great high concept idea, that I really think got let down in the scripting department. The design isn’t bad, and a lot of use was made of the limited cast, but it feels that the game/competition elements weren’t really thought out well. The script just doesn’t come together for me, the puzzles that need to be solved are just uninteresting and not at all clever, and the character of the Doctor here is simply wasted. The character of the Toymaker is wonderful, and I’d love to see it revisited in the new series, where they could maybe do it a little more justice. (Free story idea for Messrs. Moffat and Chibnall: Have the Toymaker appear in a Christmas Special. You’re welcome.) Like I said earlier, it’s not a bad episode, but it is proof that high concept story idea can only go so far.


NEXT EPISODE: The Gunfighters

"The Celestial Toymaker" novelization cover, courtesy The TARDIS Data Core at tardis.wikia.com

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