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Friday, January 13, 2017

The Ribos Operation by: Robert Holmes directed by: George Spenton-Foster: Only One Will Make It Out Alive

The Ribos Operation stars Tom Baker as the Doctor, Mary Tamm as Romana, and John Leeson as the Voice of K9 with Cyril Luckham as the White Guardian, Iain Cuthbertson as Garron, Nigel Plaskitt as Unstoff, and Paul Seed as Graff Vynda-K.  It was written by Robert Holmes and directed by George Spenton-Foster with Anthony Read as Script Editor and Graham Williams as Producer.  It was originally broadcast on Saturdays from 2 to 23 September 1978 on BBC1.

 

Writing a story arc into Doctor Who that would last an entire season seemed like a revolutionary concept back in 1978 when the Key to Time arc began production.  While now it’s something that happens every season but before then there had really only been one season with a central theme connecting the stories, which was Season 8 with the Master appearing in every story as the villain.  Graham Williams had an enormous task on his shoulders getting a writer to open the arc and do so in a manner that would keep the audience coming back for more.  So he got Robert Holmes in with one of his more underrated efforts to open the season with The Ribos Operation.  The opening ten minutes of the story are dedicated to the setting up of the arc with the TARDIS being dragged off course by the White Guardian who has a task for the Doctor.  The forces that run the universe have decided that it is time for just a moment the universe must stop and have a reset.  So this can happen the Doctor must travel the six segments of the Key to Time, a perfect cube, which are hidden across time and space.  He is given a young Time Lady, Romana, as an assistant and sent off to find the first segment, which is hidden on the planet Ribos.

 

Ribos as a planet is interesting as it goes through two seasons after several years, one that is warm and one that is cold.  Now most of the story really just has the Doctor and Romana being interested in their mission to collect the first segment of the Key to Time while political drama is playing out around them.  The plot I said was one of Robert Holmes’s more underrated scripts as its simplicity and easy to see goals along with a script brimming with a good mix of comedy and drama that allows the four episodes of the story to fly by without much notice.  There really are only two big problems with the story, and they are still pretty small in comparison to the rest of the story.  First of all the opening scenes introducing Romana to the Doctor are a bit poorly directed.  One moment Romana is standing, the next kneeling down, and the next standing again.  It’s the editing that really makes the scene’s pace feel very much off from the rest of the episode and jars from shot to shot with some of the jokes landing and others missing the mark.  Second the effects for the Shrivenzale or however you spell it just reeks of Doctor Who needs monsters so let’s just stuff in a monster for good measure.  That’s really the big problem as the costume’s talons and claws look like they’re ready to fall off.

 


Tom Baker as the Doctor and Mary Tamm as Romana are really the ones having the time of their lives as the search for the first segment of the Key to Time is the main plot of the episode.  They’re the ones investigating Ribos and looking for it, while the con artistry goes on around them.  Part One has the Doctor and Romana really go off at each other as they don’t want to admit they’re just as smart as one another.  It’s this great dynamic that allows the characters to grow into the standard Doctor/companion relationship without really having any of the traditional trappings of those types of stories.  The Doctor also interacts with the rest of the cast extremely well just by using his manic eyes.  The Doctor also gets to have the last word when it comes to the end of the story which is extremely interesting as he has to actively kill the villain which is taken very lightly and defiantly.  Mary Tamm’s first impression as Romana is also great as she comes across as extremely pompous.  That was the point of the production and she has her ego deflated over the course of the story which really does make her feel like a deep character, even if the best of her is yet to come.  John Leeson voicing K9 doesn’t have too much to do in this story which works pretty well considering this is an icy cold planet so there isn’t any reason to bring him out too much.  The White Guardian played by Cyril Luckham also gets to have his one scene that is genuinely good.  The costume design by June Hudson must be applauded as the Guardian has this otherworldly atmosphere which is down to the odd costuming decisions.

 


The plot on Ribos involves Garron and Unstoffe, two con artists, conning the Graff Vynda-K, an alien prince disinherited from a galactic war, into thinking Ribos is great in Jethrik, the most valuable mineral in the universe.  The con artist plot is again very simple and easy to follow, but is filled with brilliant characters that allow for a good story.  Garron and Unstoffe, played by Iain Cuthbertson and Nigel Plaskitt respectively, are one of Holmes’s famous double acts that stick in your minds.  They’re con artists, yet they almost think they’ve got this heart of gold and are really just pulling the wool over the eyes of the extremely gullible.  They don’t mean any harm and end the story very much alive, but without anything to their name. Unstoffe also gets to interact with this minor character, Binro, who is an example of how backwards Ribos is, that just gets this emotional scene that is excellent.  The villain of the story is the Graff Vynda-K who is extremely shouty and a hammy delight.  He’s a spoiled brat who slowly becomes unhinged over the course of the story into a complete madman which is just fun to watch.

 

To summarize, The Ribos Operation is a classic story that is often overlooked by a lot of people and opens the Key to Time with brilliance.  There are some minor flaws, but quite a lot of things really do make up for a lot of the lackluster stuff in the story.  The acting is great, the story is simple and effective, Dudley Simpson’s score is actually pretty good for a late Tom Baker score, and the characters will make you wish to come back for more.  If only some of the effects were better and the first episode had the magic of computer editing.  92/100.

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