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Doctor Who - The Leisure Hive
There are few Doctor Who serials more integral to
the study of the show's evolution than The Leisure Hive. This four-part
story, which kicked off season 18,
Tom Baker's last year in the role and John Nathan-Turner's first outing as the
series' producer, was easily the most dramatic shift in the style of the show
since the first full-color episode aired ten years before. The extras on the
DVD of The Leisure Hive seem especially aware of this fact, making this
disc an outstanding combination of a memorable story and memorable
featurettes.
The number of firsts achieved in The Leisure Hive's 100-minute running
time, aside from what has already been noted above, is almost incomprehensible:
it also saw the first appearance of a new arrangement of the theme music (the
first in the show's history to make it to air since the original 1963 version),
and the first appearance of digital effects in Doctor Who. And while those 1980
digital effects may be something that the average local TV station can outdo in
2005, one can hardly miss the abundance of digital effects in Christopher
Eccleston's latest adventures as the Doctor - it's a significant milestone.
The Leisure Hive also takes significant strides away from the humorous
excesses of the latter half of the 17th season and toward a much more
drama-based and speculative-science-based direction, again at Nathan-Turner's
insistence.
That Nathan-Turner himself died a few years ago, before any of these
featurettes were even conceived, isn't a hindrance, thanks to the glut of
fan-made video productions that were made between 1990 and 2004. An existing
interview covering a lot of the same ground as these featurettes lets John
Nathan-Turner speak for himself about the changes he instituted when he took
over the series; other interview subjects include director Lovett Bickford,
script editor Christopher H. Bidmead, costume designer June Hudson, and even one
fleeting appearance by Tom Baker himself. On the one hand, this primary
feature, "A New Beginning," is refreshing in that it offers a fond but balanced
look back at the dawn of John Nathan-Turner's reign; there's still quite a split
in fandom between those who think his ten years in the producer's office marked
Doctor Who's renaissance and those who think that decade was one long, tragic
road toward the show's 1989 cancellation. On the other hand, "A New Beginning"
also puts perhaps an unfair amount of blame on the comical excesses of late
1970s Doctor Who on script editor Douglas Adams. I've read several interviews
where, even years later, Adams chafed at this suggestion, blaming both the
enigmatic Tom Baker and a succession of directors overpowered by the ego of the
show's star for the show's increasingly tongue-in-cheek tone. Then again, as
Adams is one of my favorite writers, I suppose I'm biased and may well be
reacting too strongly - truth is, I tend to be an apologist for both Adams and
Nathan-Turner, so I'm a bit torn. Despite my misgivings about the dead not
being present to defend themselves, I thought "A New Beginning" was very
enjoyable and informative.
Bidmead and writer David Fisher go back and forth on the origins of the story
in a featurette called "From Avalon To Argolis," while June Hudson gets her own
short featurette about her grand costume designs. BBC Radiophonic Workshop
composer-in-residence Peter Howell and graphic designer Sid Sutton, tasked with,
respectively, updating the audio and visual elements of the series' main titles
for the 1980s, are the focus of "Synthesizing Starfields." This last featurette
interests me enormously with regards to both men's work, but between its
zig-zagging between archival interview footage and newer material, and the
already disparate nature of its interview subjects (a musician and a graphic
artist?), "Synthesizing Starfields" is also a little bit maddeningly
schizophrenic, though it accurately reflects how Howell and Sutton worked on
their respective elements separately and yet in tandem. An archival Blue Peter
visit to the Longleat Doctor Who exhibition, featuring an appearance by
then-incoming producer John Nathan-Turner, rounds out the bonus features.
On board for the commentary are Lovett Bickford, Chris Bidmead and Lalla
"Romana" Ward, embarking on a fond and yet sometimes sharp deconstruction of
the four episodes of The Leisure Hive. Bickford and Bidmead take credit,
and take their lumps, for what did and didn't work for this first outing of the
new-look Doctor Who, while Lalla Ward provides a unique perspective of contrast,
having worked on both the jokier late 70s episodes and the first season of the
reinvigorated 80s stories. An isolated music track is also available, though
I'd be remiss in my duties if I didn't point out that The Leisure Hive's
grandiose synthetic music has been available on CD for quite some time. A Dolby
5.1 Surround mix of all four episodes is also presented as an audio option, and
it makes quite a departure from the original mono mix.
Everything's been cleaned up marvelously, and after a steady diet of vintage
60s and 70s episodes on DVD, and a few late 80s stories as well, it's
interesting to see not only The Leisure Hive itself in digital form, but
a suite of bonus features that effectively conveys how jaw-droppingly new
it all must have seemed in late 1980 when the Doctor returned with a completely
new sound and look. Part one of The Leisure Hive is as vastly different
in tone, style and content from part four of The Horns Of Nimon as the
1996 TV movie or Rose are from part three of Survival. The bonus
material does an outstanding job of conveying that "shock of the new," and
The Leisure Hive itself has aged rather well. Highly recommended.
Reviewed by Earl
Green theLogBook.com webmaster / editor-in-chief


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