The Ark in Space stars
Tom Baker as the Doctor, Elisabeth Sladen as Sarah Jane Smith, and Ian Marter
as Harry Sullivan with Wendy Williams as Vira and Kenton Moore as Noah and the
Wirrn. It was written by: Robert Holmes
and directed by: Rodney Bennett with Robert Holmes as Script Editor and Philip
Hinchcliffe as Producer. It was
originally broadcast on Saturdays from 25 January to 15 February 1975 on BBC1.
The start of Season 12 included the final story under
producer Barry Letts, who before his run had already directed a serial during Patrick
Troughton’s run, The Enemy of the World, and essentially led the show through
1974, leaving after Robot and the end of the eleventh production block
and handing it over to Philip Hinchcliffe.
Hinchcliffe was entirely new to the program, working closely with script
editor and writer Robert Holmes to craft their 22 episode block, splitting it
into five stories: three four part stories, one six part story, and one two
part story. The two-part story coming
about only because Hinchcliffe and Holmes made the decision to decrease the
number of six part stories to a single story per season, something which would
become the norm until the end of Season 17 and the dismissal of six part
stories overall. This meant that in
crafting the season the initial plans for production block 4B had to be split
into 4B and 4C, in production a two-part story followed by a four part story,
however their running order would be switched.
A further cost saving measure would commission serial 4D, what would be
the season finale, to be set on the same space station sets of serial 4C. The story was originally commissioned by
Letts, Space Station by Christopher Langley in late 1973, however within
five months Hinchcliffe and Holmes found that these scripts would be
unusable. Holmes turned to John Lucarotti
who had penned three serials during William Hartnell’s time as the Doctor and commissioned
The Ark in Space.
The Ark in Space
under Lucarotti would have been a similar, yet surprisingly different story
from what eventually was seen on screen.
Lucarotti’s scripts were similar in that they involved a space ark
containing the last of humanity invaded by a parasitic alien, though this time
it would be a fungus which was impervious to harm and multiplied rapidly. These scripts would be abandoned due to
transportation of the scripts from Corsica where Lucarotti lived, to the
production office and the need for quick rewrites. Script editor, Robert Holmes, would receive
special permission to take over writing duties with Lucarotti losing credit,
but being paid in full for his work.
Holmes’ story is entirely studio bound and was assigned along with 4B to
Rodney Bennett in the first two of three serials of which he would contribute
direction. Bennett’s direction is perhaps
a highlight as The Ark in Space could easily have become a serial famous
for Doctor Who’s inability to subtly light sets, especially as Space
Station Nerva is built with stark white walls, but the simple decision to start
with the power off when the TARDIS arrives means that there is enough
atmosphere built up through that first episode which lasts once the power is
on. There are also quite a few sets,
especially below decks as it were, which are kept mostly in the dark without
the white walls. There are also some
shots done from the overhead allowing some forced perspective in the cryogenics
chamber to make it feel taller than it actually is.
The Wirrn themselves are already an interesting idea
for a villain, something that Big Finish and the Eighth Doctor Adventures
novels would use in future stories.
Having an alien species of essentially refugees makes them sympathetic,
even if they take over a man and essentially wish to use the rest of humanity while
each of the cliffhangers take advantage of the parasitic nature of the
Wirrn. The first is of the dead queen
which entered the Ark in the past, the second being the character of Noah’s
hand being taken over, while the third is Noah being completely taken over. This makes for an exciting escalation of
stakes as the first half of the story is allowed to deal with the awakening of
humanity while the Wirrn remains a mostly off-screen threat, with the paranoia
being directed at the Doctor, Sarah Jane, and Harry Sullivan as the interlopers
in their carefully made plans. The Wirrn
transformations themselves have mostly aged pretty well, however, between the
end of Part Two and Part Three there is copious use of bubble wrap to represent
the transformation, though that wouldn’t have necessarily been well in use by
the public at the time. It also doesn’t
look as cheap while Kenton Moore’s performance is selling losing his mind to
this alien creature.
While Barry Letts was responsible for setting up most
of this season, the eventual decision to have Robert Holmes writing this serial
allows for the new team to make their mark.
Holmes’ script already plays to the strengths of Baker, Sladen, and
Marter. Tom Baker’s Doctor here already
overcomes whatever shortcomings were in Robot being essentially a Jon Pertwee
story, dialing up the charm with the mania while berating Harry for his poor
decisions on his very first spaceship and caring for Sarah Jane. Baker gets one of his iconic moments in this
story, giving a speech on the persistent nature of humanity and there is a
famous moment where the Doctor uses minor cruelty as a motivator to get Sarah
Jane through the vents. Ian Marter’s
Harry Sullivan is essentially the audience insert character here, allowing viewers
to ease their way into the gothic horror that this serial establishes for the
new era as the newest companion. Harry
also shines perhaps at the detriment for Sarah Jane, who for the first half is
sadly sidelined in places, though the second half allows Elisabeth Sladen to
shine as well. While Kenton Moore’s Noah
makes a great villain, the Ark’s crew is supported mostly through Vira, played by
Wendy Williams, who plays the role as this very cold and clinical
scientist. Holmes makes the humans of
the future feel genuinely aliens to the way that people behave, as Vira and
Noah are concerned about their genetic purity as they are responsible for
repopulating an empty Earth.
Overall, The Ark in Space has all the makings
of a classic Doctor Who story, bringing in a new production team with
their own goals by putting to life a fantastic script. This is a story that looks excellent in its
restoration as well, being mostly on videotape so while the Blu-ray isn’t true
HD, it is a consistent viewing experience like much of Season 12. While some of the effects may not hold up on
modern day viewing, the performances sell a script about the remnants of humanity
living on and waking up after disaster to another possible extinction event. This is a classic story which New Series fans
can take delight in as an entry point into the classic series, and those who
haven’t seen it in a while can perhaps delight in the Blu-ray release giving it
new life. 9/10.
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