Toms Tardis Award Winner - Best Main Range Cover Design
1001 Nights is the last story from the main range release of 2012. The four single episodes is something that Big Finish have done for the last couple of year with Company of Friends (2009), The Demons of Red Lodge and Other Stories (2010) and Recorded Time and Other Stories (2011). From the cover (designed by Alex Mallinson), the story has an Arabian nights feel to it and it aso have a different feel to previous stories whereas the stories had all been self-contained with not real link, this has a story and short stories in the middle. Also unlike previous stories there is no specific story title with an author attributed to it. No such thing happens here. The story sees the Doctor and Nyssa trying to find a beacon to stop a threat from arriving. Instead of letting the Doctor and Nyssa find it, the Sultan wants Nyssa to tell him stories. The title comes up quite quickly as we are told that someone had to tell 1001 stories to keep someone alive, so Nyssa has to do the same to get the Doctor out.
The first story sees the Doctor
and Nyssa arrive where someone is being kept prisoner. He appears to be the
only prisoner and there is only one guard. There is a force field protecting
the prisoner and at first he seems to be someone quite dangerous but that is
short lived when the prisoner says that the jailer is the dangerous one. The
prisoner is a Myaxa and is being tortured to confess for something he doesn’t know
what he’s done. In a clever twist, the prisoner and the jailer are the same
person. The story has a fairly snappy end to it with both the prisoner and
jailer being zapped but it doesn’t end glumly. There was a nice ending where
the Myaxa (now as one) is left in the force field until its turned off. I quite
enjoyed this story, it was short but had a steady and rapid build up to a nice
and satisfying conclusion. 1001 Nights is the last story from the main range release of 2012. The four single episodes is something that Big Finish have done for the last couple of year with Company of Friends (2009), The Demons of Red Lodge and Other Stories (2010) and Recorded Time and Other Stories (2011). From the cover (designed by Alex Mallinson), the story has an Arabian nights feel to it and it aso have a different feel to previous stories whereas the stories had all been self-contained with not real link, this has a story and short stories in the middle. Also unlike previous stories there is no specific story title with an author attributed to it. No such thing happens here. The story sees the Doctor and Nyssa trying to find a beacon to stop a threat from arriving. Instead of letting the Doctor and Nyssa find it, the Sultan wants Nyssa to tell him stories. The title comes up quite quickly as we are told that someone had to tell 1001 stories to keep someone alive, so Nyssa has to do the same to get the Doctor out.
The second story is set in
Norwood in the 19th Century where Nyssa is being possessed. It’s
basically The Excorist but in the Doctor Who world without any of the gore and
horror. It turns out that the thing that is possessing Nyssa is a Crypto
Conscious Virus called The interplanterian (not sure of spelling). We didn’t get
the power of Christ compels you but we did get the power of Gallifrey compels
you’. The word that the Doctor used to get the virus out of Nyssa was Tremas
which was a nice link for Nyssa. I thought that when Nyssa and the Doctor left
then that would be it but there was a nice twist where it continued as the interplaneterian has moved to someone
else and he is defeated by some special tea. The story itself was rather good
and I enjoyed.
The third story sees the Doctor
and Nyssa arrive at a coastal town where they go to a pub where they seemed to
be obsessed with telling stories. It seems that the locals of the pub are quiet
what they seem. We learn there is a planet of tales and a planet of jokes. The
mere idea is wonderful. The locals are all after the Doctor’s tales and we
think that he had been drugged and they seem to be wanting to download his
tales. The story ends with the locals memories got wiped. I liked this one because
it was not what I was expecting. I thought that out of the three so far this
was the one that I enjoyed the most. There was a nice wide range of characters
that were nice to listen to.
The main story has seen the
Doctor trapped with the old man and as the story progressed we learn that the
Doctor is being used so that they can take the Doctor’s TARDIS. The Sultan
(Siddig) turns out to be a Shanakey. He traps the real Sultan in his ship and
makes him think he is in a cell. The fourth episode is where the main story
takes centre stage where we learn whats really going on and the reason why
Nyssa has been telling the stories. I liked the scene where the Sultan smells
the air for the first time and he delivers a lovely speech, then there is the
moment where he discovers that he has been held captive for a century. I thought
it was a shame when he departed from the story and thought it would have been
nice if at the end we find out that he was back in his rightful place.
I like it when the story seems to
go up a gear in the final part where the Sultan pretends to be the Doctor, makes
Nyssa forgets the Doctor and go travelling in the Doctor. I like how Nyssa manages
to twig what is going on and then takes the TARDIS back. When Nyssa finds the
Doctor we discover that the Doctor has been left for just over 3 years of 1001
nights. The ending of the story is rather good because the Doctor takes the
Shanakey somewhere that will look after him and probably use him as a lab rat.
I always like the Fifth Doctor
and Nyssa stories as Nyssa is one of my favourite companions and I always think
that this partnership works well. Peter Davison doesn’t really get much to do
until the final episode but when he does eventually get something to do he does
it well. Sarah Sutton puts in a fantastic performance from start to finish. It’s
always good when Sarah Sutton is the only companion because it means that she
gets to show why the character is so good. The big name of the supporting cast
was Alexander Siddig who won the Toms Tardis Award for Best Supporting Guest in
2010 for his role as The Captain in The Wreck of the Titan. Here he plays
Sultan who is a very unlikeable character and Siddig plays the role wonderfully.
I personally think that this was a better character than the captain but it
shows what a good actor the Siddig is. The rest of the characters were all very
good and there wasn’t a dud performance in any of them.
I thought that this was a lovely
story. After the very tense and dramatic stories that we have had in the latter
part of 2012 it was nice that we had a story that was very light in terms of
dramatic weight but still felt like it was a proper Doctor Who story and it was
the perfect way for the main range to end 2012 with. Out of all the stories
with single episodes, this has to be the best because it seemed to work better,
the main story along with the short stories all worked well together to make
the whole release enjoyable.
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