“The Sontaran Stratagem” and “The Poison Sky” stars David
Tennant as the Doctor, Catherine Tate as Donna Noble, and Freema Agyeman as
Martha Jones with Rupert Holliday-Evans as Colonel Mace, Christian Cooke as
Ross Jenkins, Jacqueline King as Sylvia Noble, Bernard Cribbins as Wilfred
Mott, Ryan Sampson as Luke Rattigan, Christopher Ryan as General Staal, and Dan
Starkey as Commander Skorr. They were written
by: Helen Raynor and directed by: Douglas Mackinnon with Nikki Smith as Script
Editor, Susie Liggat as Producer, and Russell T. Davies and Julie Gardner as
Executive Producers. They were
originally broadcast on Saturdays 26 April to 3 May 2008 on BBC One.
The Sontarans as Doctor Who aliens are a joke
in several ways. Throughout their
appearances in the classic series they became more ineffective as villains with
costumes that almost immediately stray away from their roots as nasty, brutish,
and short, with The Invasion of Time, A Fix with Sontarans, and The
Two Doctors portraying them as especially a joke. This is something the revival would eventually
run with under Steven Moffat, writing them as outwardly incompetent for comedic
effect in episodes such as “The Time of the Doctor” and “A Good Man Goes to War”. Only their initial appearances in The Time
Warrior and The Sontaran Experiment had attempted to keep them a
joke, but a joke of a very different sort.
Robert Holmes created the Sontarans as a comment on war and imperialism,
both its futility and the extreme harm of the single-mindedness that leads to
the fall of empires. They are a species
locked in an eternal stalemate with the Rutans and this is something Russell T.
Davies wished to keep when reviving them for the fourth series of his Doctor
Who revival, allocating their appearance to be the series’ first two-part
story once again in the hands of ex-script editor and writer Helen Raynor, with
the additional request for a return from Martha Jones, UNIT, and a story
involving some sort of pollution solution being false. The two-part production was assigned to new
director Douglas Mackinnon who would go on to be a prolific director of both Doctor
Who and British television in general as the fifth production block of nine
for this series. While episode
production is often allocated approximately a month per episode, this two-parter
was filmed efficiently between location and studio footage over the course of
five weeks, with insert footage added less than a month before broadcast of Billie
Piper as Rose Tyler (essentially a repeat of a clip shot for a later episode).
“The Sontaran Stratagem” as an episode, despite the
large issues with Raynor’s previous efforts in “Daleks in Manhattan” and “Evolution
of the Daleks”, is quite enjoyable. The
plan of the Sontarans here have allied themselves with young genius Luke
Rattigan, played by Ryan Sampson, to develop a GPS and green energy system,
ATMOS, for a brighter tomorrow. Rattigan
as a character is a foil to the Sontarans, too intelligent for his own good,
essentially Elon Musk but less fascist to create a product that somebody else
actually developed with impossible plans revealed in the second episode “The
Poison Sky”. Sampson plays Rattigan as a
queer-coded sniveling pansy archetype with delusions of war (and some
potentially harmful ASD coding as well), but as a villain Raynor’s script in
this first episode excels at making him a foil for the Sontaran characters. Christopher Ryan and Dan Starkey play our
main Sontarans as General Staal and Commander Skorr, respectively, Raynor
continuing the Sontaran naming trend of s-names. “The Sontaran Stratagem” actually excels at
putting the Sontarans front and center for much of the episode, appearing in
full with a reveal of under their helmets at about halfway through the episode,
quite soon after the Doctor can investigate Rattigan’s academy for geniuses. Much is made about the Sontarans as warriors
who must always face their enemy and Raynor has added a militaristic chant to
their culture for victory, something that goes a long way to extend Robert
Holmes’ original militaristic metaphor from The Time Warrior. What doesn’t quite work in this first episode
about this plan is that much of the episode plays investigating ATMOS and the
academy before the halfway point as something that the audience should be along
with the Doctor as sinister but not alien, while the pre-credits sequence shows
the death of a journalist when the ATMOS in her vehicle is taken over all
before cutting to the TARDIS for a second pre-credits sequence. Only the second sequence was needed, as it
establishes the Doctor and Donna happily traveling and being called to Earth by
Martha Jones which is perfectly intriguing to the audience which genuinely
would want to see Freema Agyeman back as Martha.
The interplay between the Doctor, Donna, and Martha is
wonderful, gone is the catty relationship of romantic rivals in “School Reunion”
as Raynor plays Donna and Martha becoming fast friends. Assisted by the amazing chemistry between Tennant,
Tate, and Agyeman, the audience also gets this sense that this TARDIS team genuinely
would be a winner. Included in the
episode is UNIT as an organization, represented by Colonel Mace, played by
Rupert Holliday-Evans, who is a nice addition, but the interplay between the
Doctor and UNIT doesn’t actually work as well as Raynor seems to think it
is. The Doctor takes a completely pacifist
route to operations, only begrudgingly working with UNIT in this episode
despite the ATMOS factory under investigation being a situation tailor made for
UNIT. This is also commentary on the
Doctor making Martha a soldier due to the trauma of “The Sound of Drums” and “Last
of the Time Lords”, which doesn’t work because Martha is an army doctor, not a
soldier. The episode tries to frame her
as the latter without actually doing such, something made worse in the second
episode where her character is largely sidelined as she is cloned by the
Sontarans as part of their plan. The
cloning aspect is actually a stroke of genius overall, even if using Martha as
the cloned victim stops her from really being in the second episode: the
Sontarans are a species of clones and this is the first time the production could
actually portray this with special effects (though I personally prefer the
black armor on the Sontarans, the blue just doesn’t look right and I can’t
really place why). What does work,
however, is the reflection on family, Donna being convinced to go home for a
visit allowing some wonderful performances from Jacqueline King and Bernard Cribbins
as Sylvia and Wilfred, leading to the cliffhanger and their interactions with
the Doctor working wonderfully. It’s a
way the cliffhanger can have stakes as Wilfred is the one in danger as well as
the rest of the world, adding a personal connection to our characters and the
audience. “The Sontaran Stratagem” is
also just quite a good piece of setup for a story. 7/10.
“The Poison Sky” is where things fall apart and don’t
quite work as well as the episode would have them hope. It’s an episode where the plot feels scraped too
thin for a second forty-five minute episode, as the cliffhanger is the Sontaran
plan going into motion but the plan sets up.
Helen Raynor’s script splits the TARDIS team in three ways: Martha in
the clone bath, Donna on the TARDIS, and the Doctor with UNIT, and the largest
issue here is that these plots don’t ever quite gel in terms of focus. The story is a race against the clock as the
ATMOS are activated as terraforming devices so the Sontarans can use the Earth
for a new cloning planet, as well as some interesting baggage of the Sontarans,
alien soldiers, being annoyed at not being allowed to fight in the Last Great
Time War, though like the best aspects of the Time War it is left unexplained
and off-screen overall. While the
Sontarans do invade the factory for a sequence where UNIT foolishly sends in
soldiers to their deaths (including Private Ross Jenkins who had been bonding
with the Doctor throughout the serial), they actually just stay in their ships
throughout the episode. This is subtly used
to add to the general commentary of the Sontarans as war leading to mindless
death and the one-track mind of war being the only goal.
The Sontarans aren’t actually all that effective at
war because they all attempt to be generals, sitting back while watching the
world burn, but being destroyed by a simple press of a button. Now, Raynor fails slightly on the simple
solution to the episode, attempting to build it up as a solution where the Doctor
cannot win and Rattigan has to make a last minute “heroic” sacrifice tot blow
the Sontarans sky high, throwing their catchphrase against them. One of the large issues with this is that Rattigan
doesn’t get enough time to be developed as a complex human villain, he's still
a sniveling nerd. There is exactly one
scene of him revealing his plan to take his brilliant students away to another
planet (which he then finds from the Sontarans was a lie) which they turn on
him. The issue is that we don’t actually
see the student characters outside of this single scene or Rattigan outside of
the Sontarans to build up who he is as a human.
Sampson’s performance is also just too over the top that it doesn’t
quite work in this second half in particular, the breakdown being almost
laughable. The Sontarans are somehow
more reserved than Rattigan which doesn’t feel as if it’s meant to be seen as
this over the top. It’s also just an
episode that takes far too long to get to the obvious conclusion of Donna sneaking
onto the Sontaran ship (a very tense and well directed sequence, the best of
the episode due to Catherine Tate), the Martha clone realizing who she is a
clone of and discovering morality (an interesting performance from an underused
Freema Agyeman), and the Doctor teleporting to the ship to reverse the
poisonous gas emanating from the ATMOS vehicles so the day is saved. There’s also a slight misuse of mentioning
Brigadier Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart but not bringing in Nicholas Courtney
for a brief cameo, which is partially what’s holding back the UNIT/military
commentary as the Doctor is distasteful.
The Brigadier (or another pre-established UNIT character) needed to be
here to make the more militarized UNIT feel more authentic. “The Poison Sky” just feels like an episode
that could have surpassed “The Sontaran Stratagem” if there weren’t integral pieces
missing. 4/10.
Overall, “The Sontaran Stratagem” and “The Poison Sky”
are certainly an improvement from Helen Raynor, though they are also the last
two episodes she would write for the series, most likely forever due to her
transphobic beliefs. The first half is
quite strong with character development and an interesting extrapolation of
Robert Holmes’ original vision for the Sontarans, but the second half doesn’t
take enough time to develop any of its threads making it feel
underdeveloped. The use of UNIT could be
interesting, and the return of Martha Jones is the highlight as the three
person TARDIS team works incredibly well for this two part story, but some of
the elements are missing or buried too deep to be interesting. David Tennant as the Doctor is also portrayed
as close to his most pacifist self, something that will come to a head in the
next episode to the weakest results for this fourth series, but the seeds are
here and they make the Doctor’s character feel out of character without another
human presence that knew UNIT before the modern day as Raynor’s scripts imply a
change has taken place. Douglas
Mackinnon’s direction is also excellent, even on a limited schedule. 5.5/10.
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