“42” stars David Tennant as the Doctor and Freema
Agyeman as Martha Jones with Adjoa Andoh as Francine Jones, Michelle Collins as
Kath McDonnell, William Ash as Riley Vashtee, and Vinette Robinson as Abi
Lerner. It was written by: Chris
Chibnall and directed by: Graeme Harper with Simon Winstone as Script Editor, Phil
Collinson as Producer, and Russell T. Davies and Julie Gardner as Executive
Producers. It was originally broadcast on
Saturday 19 May 2007 on BBC One.
Chris Chibnall’s first association with Doctor Who
came as head writer of the spin-off Torchwood, Russell T. Davies being
impressed with his work on the first series of that show. As such, Davies asked Chibnall to submit a
script for the third series of Doctor Who, pitching a far future
adventure sequel to “The Impossible Planet” and “The Satan Pit”. Chibnall was still head writer of Torchwood
and as a result Davies slotted it into the seventh production block, the penultimate
block with the eleventh episode under the direction of Graeme Harper, despite
airing as the seventh episode of the series.
Davies also requested Chibnall pair down his narrative when it became clear
that the budget of the series needed at least one more episode limited to a few
sets and minimal special effects, suggesting Chibnall change the premise of a
crew stationed around and in a sun to a spaceship that is being pulled towards
the sun, also proposing the episode take place in real time across forty-two
minutes, hence the title “42”. With
these changes the explicit elements of “42” as a sequel to “The Impossible
Planet” and “The Satan Pit” would be dropped, however the production design of
the SS Pentallion, named after a drive from Revenge of the Cybermen,
would skew close to that earlier story in terms of style. Scheduling production for “42” was also hectic
as the other episode placed in the seventh block, “Utopia”, suffered revisions
due to a guest star’s availability. Much
of production was filmed in studio with only one major location, St. Regis
Paper Company, being used. A central
corridor of the spaceship was redressed several times through production to
make efficient use of the sets.
Graeme Harper as director is no stranger to directing tense
disaster stories, The Caves of Androzani was his first Doctor Who
assignment in 1984 and “42” is an episode whose major strengths should be the
tension of the spaceship getting ever closer to the sun and its inevitable destruction. There’s even a sequence where companion
Martha Jones is separated from the Doctor and hurtling towards the sun which should
be peak tension, however, “42” ultimately falls flat due to a couple of key
factors. First, there is this
inconsistency in the tone of the script that undercuts much of the urgency. Chris Chibnall devised the idea that the
switch to get power back to the ship is behind a series of locked doors whose
passwords are all trivia questions that must be answered, and if we’re being
honest a potentially deadly trivia game should be an excellent idea. It’s one that “Bad Wolf” used in an explicitly
game show style format, but using it to progress through a series of doors
could be great used in a different story, a story where that is the central
thrust and not just one idea fighting for attention. “42” also has the drama aspect of the crew of
this spaceship being revealed to have illegally drawn energy from the sun for
fuel and the sun infecting the crew as it is alive, turning them into killers
that burn their compatriots. While the
sun being alive is an interesting concept, the budget of the episode really
doesn’t do it justice and the monster element feels added at the last minute in
classic Doctor Who fashion, something that is surprising since Chibnall
included the idea in his original pitch for the episode.
The episode also just suffers greatly with the characterization
of the supporting cast, while being portrayed by a great cast, there really isn’t
much to distinguish much of the crew.
This is just a paint by numbers crew, several of which are meant to be killed
to prove the danger which is a shame. Stories
where a human is turned into a creature often play around with the body horror
aspect, and due to the more limited budget this is paired down to effects on
the eyes and sweat which is at least effective.
The Doctor is infected at the climax of the episode and David Tennant
does give a chilling performance even if the villainy is just lashing out in
brutal anger and not a more complex evil, but that’s okay, the sun is just
trying to survive after all. “42” is notable
for furthering “The Lazarus Experiment” setting up Martha Jones as a full time
companion and a small sequence featuring Adjoa Andoh as Francine Jones does
some excellent setup about the politician Mr. Saxon and her maternal instincts,
but it also interrupts the episode in general.
Overall, “42” is the definition of an episode that’s
perfectly fine on its own. It does a couple
of things to further the arc of the third series and there’s a very interesting
idea at the core of the episode, but Chris Chibnall’s script is split as to
what the tone is supposed to be. It does
not work at being a thriller despite a director who can certainly direct a
thriller, and there is an underlying comedy that just feels a bit out of place,
while the supporting characters are especially let down by the material. It’s a middle of the road episode in the exact
middle of the series. 5/10.
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