Beyond History’s End | 50th Anniversary Doctor Who Review 1 of 12 | The First Wave by Simon Guerrier


Now ‘linear’ isn’t a word that you’ll see often thrown about when discussing the plot of a Doctor Who story, but if you study the series’ earliest episodes, they customarily followed a linear narrative; hell, they were even shot that way in the beginning. In direct defiance of this, Simon Guerrier’s script opens with a cliffhanging pre-title sequence that Steven Moffat would be proud of, sucking the listener into what feels very much like a typical second episode – at least, for a while. Like a Whovian Tarantino shooting in a darkened room, Guerrier dramatically segues between two-hand audio drama and descriptive rewinds. Those who favour listening to their Big Finish productions whilst serenely lying down can forget about it; The First Wave’s ceaseless suspense will have you fidgeting at the very least.


As with its two predecessors, I found the most enthralling segments of this story to be those that simply see Peter Purves play Steven and Tom Allen play Oliver. To say that this is Oliver’s final turn, Guerrier’s script is exceedingly kind to his space pilot cohort, building upon the six-dimensional groundwork laid in The Cold Equations by having him step up the plate in the Doctor’s absence, drawing upon his wartime experiences to help guide his judgement and steel his stomach. The former Blue Peter man and I’m Alan Partridge joke-butt gives a duly stirring performance as his character deals with his mentor’s apparent demise as well as his and his remaining friend’s apparently-inexorable fate (and indeed the pending subjugation of all time and space by the Vardans), and once more he makes for a credible first Doctor to boot. In my reviews of previous Purves-led Companion Chronicles for The History of theDoctor , I wore out my lexicon trying to describe just how evocative his portrayal of Hartnell’s Doctor is, so this time around I’ll just quote the man himself: “I do a mean Doctor,” says he. And so he does.

Like a lot of listeners, I doubted that Guerrier would ever surpass his Sara Kingdom stories, but with the trilogy that The First Wavecrowns, I think that he just might have. Bringing a character back from the dead as a house suddenly doesn’t seem quite so inventive when it’s measured against teaming up the ascetic first Doctor with a bowler hat-doffing gay banker who’s more afraid of a criminal record than he is alien monsters and outer space. The First Wave is available to download from Big Finish for just £7.99. The CD version (which also comes with a free download) is just a pound extra.

The colony has been plagued by problems. Maybe it’s just gremlins, just bad luck. But the equipment failures and thefts of resources have been increasing, and there have been stories among the children of mysterious creatures glimpsed aboard the Wheel.
Many of the younger workers refuse to go down the warren-like mines anymore. And then sixteen-year-old Phee Laws, surfing Saturn’s rings, saves an enigmatic blue box from destruction.
Aboard the Wheel, the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe find a critical situation - and they are suspected by some as the source of the sabotage. They soon find themselves caught in a mystery that goes right back to the creation of the solar system. A mystery that could kill them all.

Published on April 09, 2013 03:31
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