Sound scares! The new DOCTOR WHO (Richard E. Grant) and friends face the Scream of the Shalka. Images: BBC. |
DOCTOR WHO - SCREAM OF THE SHALKA
Starring Richard E. Grant as the Doctor
Written by Paul Cornell
Directed by Wilson Milam
Release date: 16th September 2013, from BBC WORLDWIDE
Reviewed by Scott Weller
Bringing a very definite looking Vampire/Goth aura to his travels through the fifth dimension of space and time, the alternate ninth DOCTOR WHO, as personified by Richard E. Grant in his first and only appearance as the Time Lord hero -fights a scaly new menace to mankind and the universe within the series first animated film, 2003's 40th anniversary celebration landmark Scream of the Shalka, now making its colourful debut on DVD from the BBC.
Arrival in a frightened town: Richard E. Grant's incarnation of the Doctor. |
▶ DAVID PREVIEW OF DOCTOR WHO -SCREM OF THE SHALKA DVD OUT 16TH SEPEMPER 2013 - YouTube
Fan author turned respected TV writer Paul Cornell comfortably shapes the destiny of this four-colour version of the Doctor-a more grim looking, isolated and grim attitudes figure who, now firmly working for his Gallifrey superiors, arrives in England to discover just how grim being "Up North" can be when he discovers a Lancashire town gripped in fear by the presence of horrific underground creatures, the Shalka, whose terrifying screams resonate with power and destruction. Having landed on the planet via a crashed meteorite, the creatures soon have a huge plan for our shiny blue/green planet and its resources, hoping to turn humanity into its slaves. Not if the Doctor has anything to do with it though, of which hes ably assisted by youthful and adventurous new companion, Alison (Sophie Okonedo) , her boyfriend, Joe (Craig Kelly), and brave soldiers helping in the best UNIT tradition (led by Jim Norton as Major Kennet) . There's even a robot form of the Doctor's old enemy, the Master (nicely voiced by Derek Jacobi, long before he briefly inherited the part in the David Tennant era), stuck in the TARDIS to occasional help our hero and provide such much needed sardonic, if a little camp, wit. As the presence and plans of the Shalka are properly unveiled in the six-part story, alongside hitherto unknown powers, their malignant leader, Prime (Diana Quick, clearly relishing playing a WHO monster) proves a formidable enemy for our hero of the ages to lock horns with, and another fine female villain to add to the series historical roster. And talking of David Tennant, look out for his fun voice cameo!
The Shalka screaming starts! |
Richard E. Grant can't help but channel parts of his earlier and beloved WITHNAIL & I performance into his portrayal of the Doctor, and feels slightly uncomfortable in early episodes, but by by the story's big face-off conclusion you can tell he's had a lot of fun ultimately playing the role and made it uniquely his own, bringing some genuine flourishes of drama and occasionally out there improvised comedy, too. its a shame that his planned for second story was terminated- despite being a big success on the BBCi webcast site, the animated series got very little publicity attention and resources from the BBC, who were, at that time focusing, quite rightly, on the impending arrival of the series live action return with Christopher Eccleston in the role, under the command auspices of new series guru Russell T. Davies. SCREAM's animation looks pretty basic then and now, what with its Flash animation- and was always supposed to be designed to be, for a time when the Internet and its technology was still very much in its infancy, but animators COSGROVE HALL- legends in the field for children's animated television programmes, do manage to sneak in some intriguing visuals and QUATERMASS-like atmosphere that also captures that essential British-ness of DOCTOR WHO.
The evil Shalka leader, Prime (voiced by Diana Quick). |
TARDIS buddies: the Doctor and the Master (voiced by Derek Jacobi). |
The Doctor and Alison (Sophie Okonedo): protectors of the Earth! |
KOOL TV RATING: A nostalgic trip down animation lane, for an overall underrated and mostly satisfying animated project, worthy of a retrospective DVD release of its own- a project celebrating the old series strengths but also providing an early kind of blueprint for format changes, plot and character elements that would play such a vital part of the series modern success just a few short years later. 3 out of 5
Get hold of DOCTOR WHO: SCREAM OF THE SHALKA here:
Doctor Who - Scream of the Shalka [DVD]: Amazon.co.uk: Richard E. Grant, Sophie Okonedo, Derek Jacobi, Craig Kelly, Diana Quick: Film & TV
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