Sunday, January 29, 2017

Solitaire by: John Dorney directed by: Nicholas Briggs: I Went to the Moon and Took Charley Pollard, But I Didn't Take the Doctor

Solitaire is performed by India Fisher as Charley Pollard with David Bailie as The Celestial Toymaker.  It was written by John Dorney, directed by Nicholas Briggs, and released in June 2010 by Big Finish Productions.

 

Oh Charley Pollard, a character with an extremely tight character arc.  Any stories that would have been inserted into the arc would possibly loosen everything if it was deep in the story.  Solitaire however is a story that nicely inserts itself just after Embrace the Darkness, but not before The Time of the Daleks making for at least some interesting results.  The story also works as a pilot for a series of adventures staring India Fisher as Charley on her own without the Doctor.  John Dorney does this by only allowing the Doctor to appear as a ventriloquist’s dummy in the corner with Fisher providing a voice through the side of her mouth while events unfold become necessary for the intervention.  Many stories from Big Finish bring back past villains and this story is Charley versus the Celestial Toymaker in a game set in a toy shop.

 

Sometime before the audio opens the Eighth Doctor, who has complete faith in Charley, makes a deal with the Celestial Toymaker to be turned into a doll and to let Charley play a game without any of his help.  If Charley wins they can go free and continue to travel, but if she loses they have to stay there forever.  The action of the plot mimics the premise of The Celestial Toymaker, but unlike the Trilogic Game which was a puzzle that the Doctor could easily figure out in the allotted moves, the game of Solitaire is much more dastardly.  Charley doesn’t know what the name of the game is, nor the rules or objective so she can win.  It’s an impossible task as Charley and by extension the listener don’t know if what she’s doing is in the right direction or if it’s completely far off from everything that has to be accomplished.  It creates a real sense of chaos that at any moment she could lose the game, but what John Dorney adds to the story is the toyshop being alive.  After a period of time the shop will decrease by 10% and continue increasing until Charley is crushed to death.  This adds a real sense of tension to the story as it refuses to say when the building will shrink again.

 

Charley Pollard has a great characterization here as she and David Bailie really are doing a full cast audio that just happens to have two characters.  Charley is resourceful in her own situation with the Toymaker, applying basic logic and analyzing the Toymaker’s answers to her questions to find solutions.  Dorney also allows her to make missteps while allowing the audience to guess where the story will go next.  What improves is how sometimes once Charley thinks she has a solution it turns out that, yes, she was several steps in the wrong direction and has to back up if she wishes to continue.  India Fisher steals the show as she refuses to be broken until the very end when it is absolutely necessary for her to win, not even when she thinks she’s killed the Doctor by throwing him into a disintegration cabinet, which is actually the TARDIS.  David Bailie as the Celestial Toymaker is also great in this story as he brings menace to the role.  This is his chance to really imitate Michael Gough in this audio which really makes the character work.  You see the Toys rebel against the Toymaker yet Bailie always keeps a mood of coolness that is chilling when listened to.

 

To summarize, Solitaire is really just a story for Charley to be Charley and go against a foe for all ages.  The writing and acting of this story form a perfect combination to allow one of the best stories for Paul McGann even if McGann isn’t in the story.  Fisher and Bailie are guided under Nick Briggs’s excellent direction to create a story with a surreal tone and just a lot of great imagery that stays in the mind long after the closing theme plays.  100/100

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