THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS SO PLEASE STOP READING IF YOU DON'T WANT TO BE SPOILED!
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READY?
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OK THEN ... YOU WERE WARNED ...
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Doctor Who has enjoyed several 'sequel' stories over the years, most often of course featuring (and because of) the popularity of the monster that featured in the first one. Thus we have 'sequels' featuring Daleks and Cybermen and Sontarans to name but three. There are others of course: The Meddling Monk returned for a second outing in the season following 'The Time Meddler', the Yeti were back for another outing in the season following 'The Abominable Snowmen'. Sil was back the season following 'Vengeance on Varos' ... you're sensing a theme here ...
In 'New-Who' there have been some returns with quite a distance between the new and the original appearance. The Autons and the Nestene Intelligence returned in 'Rose', 34 years after 'Terror of the Autons'. The Macra were back in 'Gridlock', a mere 40 years between that and their first appearance in 'The Macra Terror'. With 'The Well' we are treated to the return of an enemy from 2008, just 17 years ago. To put this in context, it's a little like the Sensorites turning up in 'State of Decay'!
Let's get to the story though, and it's a cracker. The Doctor and Belinda are still trying to get back to Earth using this 'vindicator' device, and so the TARDIS lands on a space ship, but not before the pair get changed out of their gear from the previous story and into some rather natty spacesuits which just happen to completely be the same as those worn by a bunch of marine-like soldiers who are about to descend to the surface of the planet below. That TARDIS wardrobe is darn clever like that!
No sooner have they left the safety of the TARDIS than the Doctor and Belinda are completing their suiting up and jumping out of the ship to arrive safely on the planet surface. The Doctor does his vindicator thing, and then they're off exploring with the soldiers.
We're totally in Aliens territory here. There's a mining operation which they have lost contact with, a missing crew, and a blasted planet. So they explore and find a lone individual, Aliss, who is deaf, but who seems to be the only surviving person there. All the rest of the crew apparently went mad and killed each other. Except Aliss.
All the mirrors are broken as well, and, it seems, no-one has heard of the Earth. They are far in the future, and whatever happened to the Earth on 24 May 2025, it wiped the planet from existence.
So they try and work out what happened. Belinda starts seeing glimpses of something behind Aliss, and the Doctor discovers that this was a diamond mine before the star was destroyed. He further discovers that Planet 6767 used to be called Midnight ... and he has been here before (in the story called 'Midnight').
So they now have a dilemma. They want to save Aliss, but the mystery creature has latched onto her and is always behind her. Anyone who ventures behind her is violently killed. And also, the creature wants to get off the planet ... so they can't take Aliss with them.A solution presents itself when the Doctor, using the fact that for some reason the mine runs on mercury, blows some holes in the pipes behind Aliss to create a huge mercury mirror. This allows them all to run ... but the creature is also fast and latches onto one of them again - this time it's Belinda! The Doctor tries to get it to switch to him, but no dice. Thus the marine commander Shaya, shoots a hole through Belinda, just missing her heart (we have been told several times that she is a crack shot), and the creature switches to Shaya, who then runs to the mining shaft and falls down it, apparently taking the creature with her.
But then, as the remaining marines return to their ship, one of them seems to have something behind her ... the creature has escaped the planet!
As a story 'The Well' is excellently put together and is quite claustrophobic and scary. As I say, it's very much influenced by the film Aliens and I also caught a sense of 'The Waters of Mars' episode of Doctor Who which has a similar bleakness to it, and a noble suicide at the end.
Where it fell down for me was in the realisation of the threat. In 'Midnight' the plot revolved around this unseen, unknown entity which could take over a person, making them speak the same thing as someone else the creature wanted to possess - the Doctor fell into that trap! Whereas here it's completely different. The creature lurks always right behind someone on their back, and anyone who goes behind them is killed. Maybe the thing got fed up with there not being anyone to take over by the speaking thing and changed the way it attacked?But also, given that we are many hundreds and thousands of years after the events of 'Midnight', how long does this thing live? And why didn't it attack the mining works when they were first set up? Why wait until now? Maybe they found it deep in the planet's surface and brought it to the surface while looking for diamonds?
The mercury thing was a nice idea, but very convenient when they needed a mirror to try and break the thing's influence on Aliss. I'm also not sure why Aliss being deaf was significant. There was something to do with people it attached itself to being able to hear the thing whispering, but what was it saying? And why was that important? Not sure.
For an entity which wants to get off the planet, killing everyone violently would not seem to be the best approach to be honest. Why not lay low and wait for a ship to arrive and then get on it? Much easier.
And the Mrs Flood moment? This comes at the end when the Senior Officer of the marines bizarrely turns out to be Mrs Flood (remember this is in the far, far future) who is interested that the Doctor was using a vindicator. Why, we have no idea! So is Mrs Flood a series of splinters like the last of the Jagaroth (from 'City of Death') ended up as - that story also had a time fracture which is what happened to Belinda in 'The Robot Revolution'? Is she a time traveller who is stalking the Doctor? At this point ... I've no idea.Overall, another superb episode of the show, with a great setting and some stellar performances from all concerned.
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