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Doctor Who - Time-Flight (Episode 123)
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Editorial Reviews:
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All is not well aboard the TARDIS - in an attempt to cheer up Nyssa and Tegan after the recent death of fellow companion Adric, the Doctor plans a trip back to the year 1851 and a visit to the Great Exhibition in London. However, the journey is unexpectedly interrupted and the TARDIS mysteriously appears in Terminal 1 of Heathrow Airport in modern-day London. At the same time, a routine incoming Concorde flight disappears without a trace... Are the two events connected? A second Concorde, carrying the Doctor, his companions and the TARDIS, is dispatched to follow the same flight path as the missing aircraft in an attempt to discover the fate of the passengers. But when this Concorde arrives back at Heathrow, they discover that things are not quite what they appear to be... What sinister force is behind the kidnapping of the Concorde passengers and crew? Is an ancient malevolent power at work, or something with which the Doctor is much more familiar? DVD Features: Audio Commentary DVD ROM Features Deleted Scenes Featurette Interviews Outtakes Photo gallery Production Notes
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Time-Flight is the four-episode serial that concluded Peter Davison's first season as the fifth Doctor. Arriving at Heathrow Airport with companions Nyssa (Sarah Sutton) and Tegan (Janet Fielding), still grieving after the death of Adric in "Earthshock" (1982), the Doctor is soon involved in solving the mystery of a Concorde that has literally vanished into thin air. Tracing the lost plane's flight path in a second Concorde, the travelers find themselves flying through a hole in time into the prehistoric past. Here the Master (Anthony Ainley), under the rather camp persona of Kalid (which strangely he maintains even when alone), is planning to harness the power of the currently disembodied alien Xeraphin, who are stranded on Earth. Echoing both the classic 1960 Twilight Zone episode "The Odyssey of Flight 33" and prefiguring Stephen King's chilling The Langoliers (1990), at heart Time-Flight is a reworking of the superior Tom Baker Doctor Who story "City of Death" (1979). Ending on a minor cliffhanger, what makes the story really distinctive is that it was the first drama of any sort to be given permission to film in and around a genuine Concorde. --Gary S. Dalkin
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Doctor Who - Time-Flight (Episode 123)
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User Comments About Doctor Who - Time-Flight (Episode 123)
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However, I really still like Peter Davison's first season but this one is the worst of them. The problem is that after watching it again, I haven't pulled it out since. It isn't really a bad story but it feels like a missed oppertunity which unfortunately would mark a bit of the JNT era. This is one of those episodes that you sit around, watch and can't really why you don't care more for it. My thought was that it probably wasn't as bad as I had remembered and sat down prepared to give it a chance. I should start be saying that for me the show began to go off kilter a bit during the JNT era. I hadn't seen it in years and then I preordered it before it was released about a year ago.
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"The coherence is breaking up!"
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The set of Kalid's inner sanctum is kind of nice looking. This disc features a mini-documentary focusing on the companion Tegan. Philosophers and theologians for centuries have discussed the nature of good and evil; the best on offer here is one guy surrounded by odd special effects shouting (and I paraphrase), "Be good." at another guy who responds (paraphrasing again), "No, be evil." (This script is apparently hostile to philosophers in general. They don't realize that the screenwriter is just making up all this physics as he goes along.
I like his giant crystal ball. Peter Davison on numerous occasions points out (correctly) that quite a lot of the problems with how the production visually looks are due to the fact that TIME-FLIGHT was at the end of a season and therefore had almost no money left out of Doctor Who's already minuscule budget. The script is unsteady, the sets are cheap, and the direction is static and dull. I don't want to give away too much (can I really spoil a story from twenty-six years ago)., but does any part of his plan make sense. If you plan on watching this, then I suggest taking a page out of the DVD's commentary track participants and plan plenty of breaks and the medicinal use of chocolates or other mood-enhancing substances. Like Peter Davison on the DVD's commentary track, I find myself trying desperately to think of something positive to say.
The serial ends up being a bunch of different bits and pieces thrown together with little in the way of structure or logic to form them into a cohesive whole. TIME-FLIGHT is one of those stories where virtually every aspect of production ends up looking shabby. TIME-FLIGHT is the story of two British Concordes which accidentally travel 140 million years into the past. There's no sense of danger, suspense or drama; the characters simply happily tell the audience when things are going well and then gloomily inform us when things are going badly. Does anyone recall that plot-point more than an hour after viewing. Even when actual events occur, they aren't particularly memorable. Watching this on DVD years later it turns out that the serial is everything I was expecting and more.
The audience is never given a reason for that; the story simply asserts it. Amusingly, the first word he states out loud is part of his chant and is a hearty: "Shiraz." Which I assume that producers were drinking quite a lot of when they came up with these ideas. By eleven minutes into the first episode, we're already knee-deep in technobabble; we'll be in over our heads before the final credits roll. Characters simply stand around reading plot points to each other. In Doctor Who serials, when sorrows came, they came not as single flaws but in battalions. The epic verbal battle between the good Xeraphin and the bad is also poorly illustrated.
Actors Peter Davison, Sarah Sutton and Janet Fielding join script-editor Eric Saward who spends most of his time alternating between profuse apologies and finger-pointing at the rest of the production team. The script does far too much telling with almost no showing. Why, for example, does control of the Xeraphin give the story's bad guy unlimited power. It's mostly built around a single camera interview with Janet Fielding who turns out to give one of the strongest and most interesting takes I've seen an actor give concerning their time on Doctor Who. The DVD commentary track is also worth a listen.
If one doesn't know the conventions of the genre, one would assume that one lacks the knowledge of science and therefore cannot follow the story for that reason. Sarah Sutton and Janet Fielding have a lot of fun pointing many of the shortcomings. TIME-FLIGHT's first problem is its script. Fans remember the two stories where Tegan's mind was possessed by the Mara; does anyone similarly look upon TIME-FLIGHT as the gripping story where Nyssa is possessed by the Xeraphin. And the DVD extras are not only the best thing about the purchase, but they're actually good on their own merits. And what is the point of Kalid the sorcerer. There's a bizarre potshot at Bishop Berkeley in episode one which never gets followed up on). In this time zone is a mysterious sorcerer, an old enemy, blobby creatures called Plasmatons and an ancient, powerful extraterrestrial race called the Xeraphin with the whole plot revolving around the age-old struggle between good and evil.
This is what people who say they don't like science-fiction probably cannot stand. In just a few sentences she neatly sums up virtually all of the problems that the show displayed during this era. There's not a lot of insight to be gained, but the cast at least make the serial fun to watch by pointing how much they enjoyed working with the other people in the story. If this sounds interesting to you, then you'll no doubt be disappointed by the end result. I hadn't watched TIME-FLIGHT since my teenage years and I didn't really remember much about it apart from the very low opinion it has amongst Doctor Who fans. Why does he chant and cackle and stay in that outfit even when there is no one else around.
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An excellent episode. I can't wait for the rest of the series to be released.
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Oh, come on, it's better than you think!
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you don't see that in every sci-fi show), then frankly, you're a mindless zombie. After the commentary, I was almost convinced that I had watched the worst Doctor Who story ever. And the script has some good quips in it, with the Doctor climbing out of the TARDIS and into a side compartment of the plane, and saying in wonder, "This is smaller on the inside than it is on the outside." Nice twist on the common quote. Oh, and at the end, where the three pilots try to convince security that they went back 140 million years, and one of them quips "Think of the overtime." is hilarious. As for the same old argument, the special effects are worse here, Grimwade (the writer) shoulod've known better, boo-hoo, get over it. Then I remembered Last of the Time Lords, Boom Town, Parting of the Ways, Silver Nemesis, Arc of Infinity, and I came back to my senses.
I have a newfound liking for the story, it's a good light-hearted simple adventure. Captain Stapley makes an excellent short-term friend for the Doctor, taking in all his unreal surroundings with a mixture of wonder and daring (Who else tries to sabotage the TARDIS to stop the Master). I love the irony that the Doctor keeps trying to get Tegan to Heathrow Airport, but fails, and when he doesn't try, he reaches it bang on target, right place, right time. "Well, there wasn't really a story. A 1980's pilot's yearly salary multiplied by 140 million.
All in all, give it a go. And after some forgettable extra characters in Earthshock, we have what Janet calls on the commentary, "Crispin's Boys." (.). It was. Time-Flight is great. Be careful, though, because most of the extras, like Timelash, are on the negative side. If you can't stretch your imagination, and let yourself get into the story (sending a Concorde back to prehistoric times. But man, they were good." Six years later, he's a new Doctor Who fan thanks to this very DVD. I remember when Star Wars Episode 2 came out in the cinemas, and me and a friend who had just seen it were talking about it, his comment was.
The sole positive viewpoint on the DVD with the Grimwade interview says it perfectly, "You've got to keep pushing the ideas" Good on ya Grimwade. Like Timelash, Time-Flight certainly isn't a classic, I can't give it five stars, because there are a few things still niggling, the way they leave Tegan still feels jarring, as does the Master dressing up as an Arabic zombie. Once they get over the sadness of Adric being killed, this TARDIS crew of the Doctor, Tegan and Nyssa suddenly work a lot better, without Adric's petulant streak that was apparent with his time with the Fifth Doctor. Oh, and Professor Hayter makes a good foil, at the start seeming like a closed-minded sceptic, but at the end, sacrifices himself to the Xeraphin. anyone know how much that will be. But despite that. Thanks to reviewer John Liosatos, I was convinced to have a second look at Time Flight when it came out on DVD and I'm glad I did. just special effects.
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I have always enjoyed the interaction between Peter Davison's Doctor and Anthony Ainley's Master, and this is one of my favorite episodes featuring the two. I was delighted to see it come out on DVD, and I enjoyed the extras.
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