Frontios was
written by Christopher H. Bidmead, based on his story of the same name. It was the 91st story to be
novelized by Target Books.
Christopher H. Bidmead novelized all three of his
television stories for the Target novelization range fairly close to their original
airdate, Frontios being the closest, published not even a year after the
television story was aired. This is
interesting as while this certainly isn’t out of the ordinary it marks one of
the first times the majority of a season’s stories would be put out within the
year making the writers have less time to actually flesh out their
stories. This might be why Frontios
is a story which takes most of its cues from the original television stories
without any real sense of expansion. The
Doctor, Tegan, and Turlough still arrive on Frontios outside of the general
remit of the Time Lords which scares the Doctor and finds the last of the human
race struggling to survive. People are
being eaten by the earth, the current leader of the colony is losing his mind,
and there are things beneath the surface which cause a race memory to emerge in
Turlough. The plot beats are there so it
is really interesting to see how Bidmead’s prose develops a very stark story
with scientific and desperate themes and how he turns up the pulp horror
vibes. Under script editor Eric Saward
there really isn’t a whole lot of pulp in Doctor Who, yeah there is
danger and dark themes (especially in Season 21) but in Frontios on
television the direction by Ron Jones is one of those directorial styles which
are just fine and the script only plays up the desperation. The production design also is really lacking,
especially with the Tractators and the Gravis which are clearly trying, all of
the actors are trying (especially the Gravis), but they just don’t work. The novelization of Frontios allows
the desperation to play out with a lot of the dialogue being stark and simple, giving
it a ragged feel for all of the characters, and by the time the Tractators,
their technology, and the Gravis appear Bidmead makes the shift to horror work
really well. It’s really only a book
that’s let down by not making any plot changes, the stuff with the Time Lords
is even made more explicit as a threat while not amounting to anything. They just get a few mentions because it’s
apparently dangerous for the Doctor to be here.
Same with Turlough and the race memory, we don’t get any further idea of
Turlough’s past, just this tidbit though Tegan is a lot of fun in the book,
especially when she’s on her own.
Overall, Frontios as a novelization works about
as well as its television story outside of being a bit longer and still not
doing anything to explain why the Time Lords might want anything. Turlough doesn’t get depth but the colony
itself has more life and the horror elements are actually played up
throughout. 8/10.
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