Saturday 31 October 2015

Paul & Nessa's Happy Hour Show 12 - Hallowe'en Live Special!

Since it's still (just) Hallowe'en as I post this...

With thanks as always to Paul Dunn, Vanessa Karon and all the smashing guys at Cranked Anvil Productions. For more information check them out at http://crankedanvil.co.uk/

If you're that way inclined you can follow the show's presenters on Twitter via @PNHappyHour, resident performer (and Murgala himself) David Foster on @DG_Foster, Cranked Anvil Productions on @CrankedAnvil, radio station Spark Sunderland on @SparkSunderland, producer Jay Sykes on @JaySykesMedia or even me (if you've not had enough of me here) on @Mr_Brell

Anyway, Show 12 this has got a seasonal domestic Murgala sketch and some Blind Date attrocities courtesy of yours truly. Enjoy!


Show 12. Our LIVE Halloween special. EVERYTHING in this show was performed live in the studio – including all the sketches. Listen as the team just about hold it together to bring thrills and chills to the Happy Hour studio. Sketches specially written by Tim Gambrell, Michael Hughes, Neil Tolfree and John Wardle. They were performed by Paul Dunn, Vanessa Karon and special studio guest David Foster. First broadcast 28.10.15.

Friday 23 October 2015

Paul & Nessa's Happy Hour Show 11

With thanks as always to Paul Dunn, Vanessa Karon and all the lovely cuddly people at Cranked Anvil Productions. For more information check them out at http://crankedanvil.co.uk/

If you're that way inclined you can follow the show's presenters on Twitter via @PNHappyHour, Cranked Anvil Productions on @CrankedAnvil, radio station Spark Sunderland on @SparkSunderland, producer Jay Sykes on @JaySykesMedia or even me for that matter on @Mr_Brell

Phew...

Anyway, after a week off for Show 10 this has got a two-parter Murgala sketch in it, which I'm rather fond of (although I am biased). Enjoy!

Show 11.  Sketches by Tim Gambrell, Michael Monkhouse and Dan Sweryt. Performed by James Barton, Paul Dunn, David Foster, Vanessa Karon, Micky McGregor, Wayne Miller, Hazel Pude, Jordan Todd, and Jack Young. Jokes told by Simon Balcon. First broadcast 21.10.15.


Thursday 15 October 2015

Paul & Nessa's Happy Hour Show 9

With thanks to Paul Dunn, Vanessa Karon and Cranked Anvil Productions. Find out more at http://crankedanvil.co.uk/

Show 9.  Sketches by Paul Dunn, Tim Gambrell, David Foster, David Keenan, Jamie McLeish, David Metcalf, Andrew Kirkwood. Performed by James Barton, Carole Cooke, David Foster, Harriet Ghost, Michael Grist, Wayne Miller, Craig Richardson, Steven Sullivan, Jordan Todd and Jack Young. First broadcast 07.10.15


Paul & Nessa's Happy Hour Show 8

With thanks to Paul Dunn, Vanessa Karon and Cranked Anvil Productions. Find out more at http://crankedanvil.co.uk/

Show 8.  Sketches by Paul Dunn, Tim Gambrell, Sam Smith, Chris Tindall, MKM Comedy; performed by James Barton, Carole Cooke, David Foster, Harriet Ghost, Micky McGregor, Wayne Miller, Steven Sullivan, Jordan Todd and Jack Young. First broadcast 30.09.15


Paul & Nessa's Happy Hour Show 7

With thanks to Paul Dunn, Vanessa Karon and Cranked Anvil Productions. Find out more at http://crankedanvil.co.uk/

Show 7. Our first show from our new ‘late night’ slot. Sketches by Paul Dunn, Tim Gambrell, Tim Perry; performed by Sarah Boulter, Paul Dunn, David Foster, Vanessa Karon, Dolores Poretta, Craig Richardson, Steven Sullivan and Jay Sykes. First broadcast 23.09.15


Paul & Nessa's Happy Hour Show 6

With thanks to Paul Dunn, Vanessa Karon and Cranked Anvil Productions. Find out more at http://crankedanvil.co.uk/

Show 6. Our final ‘daytime’ show. Sketches written by Brigit Foster, Tim Gambrell, and David Metcalf Andrew Kirkwood & Jamie McLeish as MKM Comedy. Performed by Sarah Boulter, Paul Dunn, David Foster, Vanessa Karon and Craig Richardson. First broadcast 01.09.15.


Paul & Nessa's Happy Hour Show 5

With thanks to Paul Dunn, Vanessa Karon and Cranked Anvil Productions. Find out more at http://crankedanvil.co.uk/

Show 5. Sketches written by Alex Harwood, David Blair & Richard Duffy as Planet Caramel; Tim Gambrell; and Matt Watson. Performed by Sarah Boulter, Paul Dunn, Jay Sykes, and Planet Caramel. First broadcast 25.08.15.


Paul & Nessa's Happy Hour Show 3

With thanks to Paul Dunn, Vanessa Karon and Cranked Anvil Productions. Find out more at http://crankedanvil.co.uk/

Show 3. Sketches written by Paul Dunn, Tim Gambrell, Matt Watson, Stephen Philip Druce. Performed by Sarah Boulter, Paul Dunn, David Foster, vanessa Karon, Craig Richardson, Jay Sykes. First broadcast 11.08.15.


Paul & Nessa's Happy Hour Show 2

With thanks to Paul Dunn, Vanessa Karon and Cranked Anvil Productions. Find out more at http://crankedanvil.co.uk/

Show 2. Sketches by Paul Dunn, Tim Gambrell, Andrew Stephenson. Performed by Sarah Boulter, Paul Dunn, David Foster, Vanessa Karon, Dolores Poretta, Craig Richardson, Jay Sykes. First broadcast 04.08.15.


Paul & Nessa's Happy Hour Show 1

The lovely people at Cranked Anvil Productions http://crankedanvil.co.uk/ have very kindly given me permission to share here the Mixcloud versions of their Paul & Nessa's Happy Hour shows which contain my material - huzzah!

So without further pomp and ceremony I'll let these shows speak for themselves. Enjoy!

Show 1. The first ever happy hour. Sketches by Paul Dunn, Tim Gambrell, Matt Watson. Performed by Sarah Boulter, Paul Dunn, David Foster, Vanessa Karon, Craig Richardson, Jay Sykes. First broadcast 28.07.15.


 
With thanks again to Paul Dunn, Vanessa Karon and Cranked Anvil Productions.

Friday 9 October 2015

Big Finish - Doctor Who the Lost Stories: The Fourth Doctor Box Set

Rarely have I been fully transported back in time in pure nostalgia by the Big Finish Classic Doctor Who audio releases. That sounds like a criticism, but it’s not. It’s because challenging narratives, creative storytelling and true character development are firm areas in which Big Finish have excelled, and which their TV counterparts back in the day couldn’t always achieve.

Even Gareth Roberts’ Season 17 ‘Missing Adventures’, recently reviewed and enjoyed on these pages, were to a large extent merely summarising the essences of that period in the programme’s history – almost as a commentary on, or celebration of, the stories from that time.

That is really not the case when it comes to The Foe From The Future in Doctor Who The Lost Stories: The Fourth Doctor Box Set. This really did feel at times like 1977 with toddler me being enraptured by monsters and jeopardy and all sort of strange and wonderful things on the television: pure, unadulterated nostalgia.

Perhaps this is to be expected – it is after all based on a disused storyline from Season 14. Disused and not fully developed either. Robert Banks Stewart was unable to fulfil his commitment to the script to close the 1976-77 season so script editor Robert Holmes found himself writing at very short notice the fan favourite The Talons of Weng-Chiang to fill its place. Weng-Chiang borrows a few motifs from Foe From The Future, but it’s certainly not a re-writing of the story and they can exist side by side without any trouble.

John Dorney has adapted the original story breakdown into audio script form. He says himself he had hardly anything to do for episode one as it was virtually all there in Stewart’s notes, but by episode five there was little more than rough notes and episode six hadn’t been plotted at all! There are a few modern concessions which in fairness started with Veet and Marn in The Sun Makers the following season anyway: he transposes the sex of some characters to avoid Leela being the only speaking female character in the story. Charlotte from the village, Dorney’s own original addition to the storyline, works very well as she grows across the story and finds her feet in her pseudo-companion role whilst the Doctor and Leela are separated.

Episodes one and two race through with almost unseemly pace and action. Episode three has a lot of new scene-setting to do and the story calms down considerably for the middle third. Episodes five and six return to the almost break-neck speed and relentless action. I don’t think that makes the story unevenly plotted, I think it’s just the natural flow of the narrative with its ups and downs. Six fast-paced episodes would have left the listener shattered at the end, and there are few TV six-parters that don’t have lulls or instances of padding to give everyone a breather. I really wanted to punch the air with joy as I walked along the road listening to episode six, when Leela rides out the Pantophagen from the time tunnel as I hoped she would after the previous cliff hanger.

I had two niggles: the first was that we got no pay-off or closure to the spooky voice in Jalnik’s head, and secondly that the Doctor doesn’t comment on Leela’s broken leg at the end. Otherwise I think that this was pretty much a perfect story with some really solid performances all round and a great soundscape.


The other story in the box set was The Valley of Death, written by Jonathan Morris from a story breakdown by Philip Hinchcliffe. I can only assume Hinchcliffe enjoyed the experience and was pleased with the results as he came back a couple of years later for the box set Philip Hinchliffe Presents…, to which I have yet to listen.
 

I had a vague idea about The Foe From The Future because it’s been in the fan domain for a while now, but I had no idea what The Valley of Death would involve at all. If this had been a serious proposal at the time it’s clear it would have needed a lot of scaling back, but budget being no consequence on audio the story really goes to town. What I find most curious about the story, though, is that it feels very much like a Graham Williams / Anthony Read era story rather than a Hinchcliffe / Holmes era one. Again this isn’t a criticism in any way, it’s just a curious observation because it’s refreshing to find one producer adopting a style of character realisation and storytelling more in line with his successor after the violence was pared back and wit and comedy pushed forward. It feels at times like a Williams-produced version of The Hand of Fear, a story very much like this one that borrows UNIT to get somewhere, starts off as one narrative in one location and ends up somewhere completely different, telling a very different story. And The Hand of Fear unfortunately struggled with production demands that couldn’t be met satisfactorily in the way you’d expect this story to have done if it had been made at the time.

Morris is aware of this, and possibly the sense of displacement between production ‘eras’ is played up as a result. He sets it in early Season 15 (The Horror of Fang Rock is referenced in passing, but K-9 is not) the first half of which was admittedly a phase of transition from horror to wit. Valley of Death is not a comedy by any means, and it very consciously exhibits certain motifs from across the whole of Tom Baker’s varied time as the Doctor. Not least among these is the Bob Baker / Dave Martin habit of giving a story a catchphrase: ‘Eldrad must live!’ ‘Contact has been made!’ ‘The Quest is the Quest!’ Here it’s ‘By the light of the Luron sun.’

I liked where the story was going at first, but I was less keen on where it ended up. I didn’t dislike the story as a whole, I just felt unmoved by it and at times disappointed that it had wasted some good ideas which could have been developed further. It felt like too much of an homage to old classic B-movies; like it was a story that wanted to do too much. It was more focussed on location and spectacle than about good story progression and fully thought-out concepts. Like the eager explorer that started the whole story off it was always looking to where it wanted to go next, rather than appreciating where it was at that moment, I felt. I was also ever so slightly irritated by Jane Slavin’s character Valerie Carlton, photo journalist, which I appreciate is slightly unfair but with audio it’s all you’ve got to go on and it can really make or break a production.

I’m aware also that my expectations may have been higher because I’d enjoyed The Foe From The Future so much, giving The Valley of Death too much to live up to. I’ll certainly give it another listen after I’ve caught up with a few other releases.

One noteworthy aspect that is consistently good across all ten episodes is the performances by Tom Baker and Louise Jameson. The relationship between The Doctor and Leela is clearly defined and works very well on an aural level, unlike the rather poor treatment they’ve received in print from BBC Books over the years. Tom relishes the words and seems to have ‘bought in’ to what Big Finish are trying to do. Louise Jameson gives an acting masterclass with every scene, her energy and intensity of performance, her understanding of precisely who Leela is and what she’s thinking at every moment and with every line is simply breath-taking. Hers are the most measured, intense and capable performances across the whole range of Big Finish audios in my view.

I look at this release and it strikes me that if you’ve got a box set of two good length stories and one is absolutely brilliant and the other is average, with solid performances across the board (my irritation with Jane Slavin excepted, of course) that’s still a pretty good box set overall. Cheers Big Finish.