Seasons Of Fear
Seasons Of Fear By Paul Cornell and Caroline Syncox
Seasons of Fear suffers by following Chimes Of Midnight, as anything following Chimes Of Midnight or a script of a similar caliber will invariably be at least a mild, if Not immense disappointment. Seasons of Fear though, isn’t really that much of a disappointment, as it is a slightly higher than average script, but you can’t say much more about it than that. The story has the lovely idea of jumping from position to position using the TARDIS, chasing an evil immortal named Grayle. Grayle is lovely.
So is this story mostly.
Bring Me Knitting: Paul Mcgann’s usual fare, but he gets a fun Moriarty homage, and Grayle works against him admirably. He butts heads with him, and if there was ever a Doctor Who movie, this is the plot it should use. Bouncing from each historical point to the next, it’s effortlessly elegant.
Charlie Pollard, Edwardian Adventuress: Charlie is great fun here. She lugs around a massive sword everywhere for the heck of it. She also comments that they should Stone Grayle to death several times, which I would ordinarily say is out of character, but she says it so cheekily. There’s a moment where she has a similar moment of vulgarity as Invaders Of Mars, but in this instance it’s hilarious, and it isn’t a slur, so It gets a pass. And the Anti Time Charlie at the end is one of the best cliffhangers in the show's history. Pity this is followed by The unholy death of Time of The Daleks and Neverland.
The Monsters: The Nimon are stupid.
Overall: Seasons of Fear is another great Charlie era story. I enjoy it immensely. It unlike most stories of this kind isn’t overlong, because it has so much to do. I wouldn’t actually mind a fifth episode to this. But although it’s very very good, It’s not Big Finishes level of very very good that we’re accustomed to, but miles better than most classic Who on the television: 8/10
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