Following up Home Truths with a story is of course a
must and The Drowned World continues
the story. As that is the case this
review will contain spoilers for Home
Truths so do not read on unless you’ve listened to Home Truths. There will also
be spoilers for The Drowned World in
this review. The problem with following
up Home Truths is that listeners will
be more interested in the story of the House and Robert. You will want to know what the world will
decide to do with the House, as Sara Kingdom’s ghost exist and grants wishes. Guerrier it seems wrote the storyline with
the House first and tacked on the story of the drowning world on as an
afterthought. This makes the pacing just
drag in places whenever we cut back to the flashbacks that the House is
recording for Robert. It isn’t a bad
story by any means, being an homage to the base under siege that really lets
Sara Kingdom shine while the Doctor is out of action for a while. There are points where peril is definitely
felt during this portion of the story and Marsh does a good job of narrating the
story, it just doesn’t engage you as well as the mystery of Home Truths. This really is apparent in the first half of
the story when it is Sara narrating, but moving into the second half Robert
actually gets to narrate the story to his sleeping daughter.
Most of the story is
focusing on the ‘present’ day with Robert having to go back to the house with
an old fashioned phonograph to record Sara Kingdom telling a story. The powers that be, possibly a police state
with a council dealing with administration of justice, want to shut down the
House, but are allowing Robert to prove his case that Sara isn’t
dangerous. Here’s the problem for
Robert, Sara or more specifically the House is dangerous. It wants to grant everyone’s wishes with no
real moral compass for right and wrong and we really see in The Drowned World, the cliffhanger of
the story sees Robert humiliated as Sara used her powers to wipe the phonograph
cylinders. She’s doing this just so she
can lure the council so she can grant their wishes. She allows Robert’s wife to become pregnant,
but Robert realizes what he’s done. He
has given her power and makes the House go quiet. It’s a passionate scene and the second
episode actually only picks up eleven years on with Robert travelling with his
daughter, and stumbling on the House in a storm. He realizes where he is, but it seems the
House is dead so he tells his sleeping daughter more of the story before Sara wakes
up. The conclusion of the plotline with
Robert sees Sara offering Robert and his daughter to stay in the House. It’s this poignant ending to the story and
makes up, in part at least, for the boring focus of the drowned world problem.
Jean Marsh as Sara
Kingdom I’ve noticed especially in this one is how different she sounds when
speaking and acting. Speaking as herself
she is very casual and allows for jokes with her cast mates and crew. She’s very cynical and doesn’t see herself as
a companion (but Robert can be Sara’s friend).
Acting changes Marsh into the character she’s playing, always pitching
her voice up a bit and giving off an attitude of no nonsense about
everything. It’s a transformation into
the character that can just captivate a listener and she does brilliantly at
making the House feel different from Sara Kingdom. Her performance as the House feels like Sara
Kingdom with a very dark edge that it means well, but just lands in the uncanny
valley and this feeling of dread with the inner workings only caring about the
directive of satisfying needs. Lisa
Bowerman is also great at directing the story as always with some nice 1960s
era futuristic music.
To summarize, The Drowned World is a story that
doesn’t really hold up the quality of Home
Truths with some of its parts being rather bland. The overall quality is great with two
performers who have a great gasp of the characters. The A plot, which is the title of the story,
doesn’t do anything interesting with the material while Simon Guerrier is too
busy writing out the story of Robert and Sara Kingdom in the far future. The directing is great and the story will
bring emotions with the characters who are brilliantly written in a piece of
character drama. 80/100.
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