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Doctor Who - The Keeper Of Traken

The most low-key story in a trilogy of adventures that had major
ramifications for the series, The Keeper Of Traken saw the
reintroduction of the Master - making only his second appearance since the
death of Roger Delgado, the first actor to play the role - as a
surprise twist at the end of part four. Traken is also notable
for being the singular outing for Tom Baker's Doctor and Matthew
Waterhouse's Adric as the TARDIS crew. (Though Logopolis also
starts out with this pairing, by the end of that story's second episode
more companions have been introduced to the mix.)
In a commentary recorded a few years ago, writer Johnny Byrne, actors
Matthew Waterhouse and Sarah "Nyssa" Sutton, and the late Anthony Ainley,
who played two pivotal roles in Traken, talk about the making of
the story. Byrne talks candidly about the few Doctor Who serials he wrote,
including at least one story that was never made that would have revisited
Traken, and talks even more candidly about why he didn't write more. When
the subject of Byrne's most famous gig, that of story editor for Space:
1999, is brought up, he's even more frank about the failings that both
shows shared.
Undoubtedly the most fascinating aspect of Traken's commentary,
however, is the participation of Anthony Ainley himself. It's gotten to be
a bit of a cliché to say that the actor behind any given villain is nothing
like his character, but that doesn't make it any less true. Ainley comes
across as an old-school British showbiz gentleman, effusive in his praise
and gentle in his criticism. It's fairly well known that Ainley wasn't
always in sync with John Nathan-Turner's ambitions as the show's producers,
and sometimes rubbed his co-stars the wrong way, but even when sensitive
topics are brought up, he's clearly trying to focus on the positive, even
when he's pointing out something like the biggest Gallifreyan booger you'll
ever see, hanging in plain sight from the nose of one Mr. Tom Baker. Had
he lived, he could have been a treasure trove of further information on the
Doctor Who stories in which he guest-starred for future DVD commentaries.
On the flipside, as much as I liked Adric and how Matthew Waterhouse
portrayed him, there were just a few times during the commentary that I was
wishing he'd hush up and let the others get a word in edgewise. I suppose
I should be more charitable - there are only a handful of stories yet to be
released to DVD which could require his services in the commentary capacity
- and I suppose I was getting a bit annoyed because this was the only time
we'd get to hear an Ainley commentary on DVD, and the man was being cut off
in mid-sentence.
Feature-wise, Traken is backed up by two relatively brief
featurettes. Being Nice To Each Other chronicles the concept and making of
the story, with several participants interviewed, though the focus winds up
being on Sarah Sutton - this being her debut in the series - and Johnny
Byrne. (Anthony Ainley had passed away by the time the featurette
interviews were shot.) Another featurette discusses the behind-the-scenes
story of the Master's return, and focuses heavily on Geoffrey Beevers, who
played the part through much of Traken until Ainley's character,
Tremas, was "possessed" by the Master. Amusingly or unnervingly, depending
on how you feel about it, Beevers seems all too adept at slipping back into
character. (He's also played the Master in a few Big Finish Doctor Who
audio stories, so he's had practice in recent years.)
Served up with a side dish of the usual extras that make every classic
Doctor Who DVD a lavish package - isolated musical score, production note
subtitles, the Doctor Who Annual from that year in PDF format, and so on -
Traken may seem low-key in hindsight, but gives fans a lot of
insight into the story and the people who brought it to life. And that, at
least to me, is what the DVD experience is all about.
The Keeper Of Traken is available as part of the Doctor Who:
New Beginnings box set, or as an individual release (in North America
only).
Reviewed by Earl
Green theLogBook.com webmaster / editor-in-chief


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