Doctor Who and the Sea-Devils
was
written by Malcolm Hulke, based on his story The Sea Devils. It was the 9th story to be
novelized by Target Books.
Sometimes there’s a
novelization that you just struggle to find an angle to talk about. There are plenty of novelizations that just
take the television story and transplant it to prose with nothing special and
those are difficult but usually there’s some minor changes you can latch onto. Doctor Who and the Sea Devils is kind
of a special case in that while there are changes (there are two particular
continuity errors where Jo is mentioned to have been there for Doctor Who
and the Silurians and the events of Frontier in Space are
mentioned), most of the changes are artificial.
At this point I’ve covered five of the seven novelizations from Malcolm
Hulke and all of them have been some of the best novelizations, so it’s sad to
see Doctor Who and the Sea Devils kind of struggle to reach those heights. The Sea Devils is a story I enjoy
quite a bit on television, but a lot of that comes down to the performances of
Jon Pertwee, Katy Manning, and Roger Delgado.
The plot itself is essentially a repeat of Doctor Who and the Silurians,
something that Hulke really doesn’t do much of to expand upon for Doctor Who
and the Sea-Devils. Now the plot
itself does move at a very nice pace in novelization form, simply because Hulke
is one of the few novelists to understand that he can play around with format
instead of just translating the television episodes to some form of prose flexibly.
Now that isn’t to say Doctor
Who and the Sea-Devils is by any means bad.
It’s not, it’s actually quite a fun time since the plot to Doctor Who
and the Silurians and The Sea Devils is a great plot that explores
the Doctor, but what really saves this novelization from being fine to being a
good time is some little added character moments. Early on in the novelization, there is this expanded
explanation that the Doctor fought in the court system to give the Master life
imprisonment instead of the death penalty, as well as this added idea to ensure
he is given reading material while in prison.
There is also an added implication that had the Master stayed imprisoned
the Doctor would continually visit as time went by which is honestly wonderful.
There are also small sequences from
Trenchard’s perspective up to his death which also make for an exhilarating climax
of the novel, even if it still follows the TV series beat for beat. Minor cuts also include some of the improvised
jokes between Jon Pertwee and Katy Manning which have sadly dated the serial so
it’s honestly nice to realize they are gone and Hulke didn’t intend them in the
script.
Overall, Doctor Who and the Sea-Devils suffers from just translating a television story that is regarded as a classic due to its performances while it’s plot is something that had only happened a few stories previously (and broadcast only two years before), though added character moments save the book and perhaps is why it had several reprints. 7/10.
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