Outside the Government 3 (A Fix With Sontarans)
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All right chums, time’s up. Let’s do this. |
This was written both before the Jimmy Saville scandal broke and before anything from Richard Marson’s book about John Nathan-Turner leaked. The former alone would have required a complete rewrite of the post. The latter would have required some discussion somewhere in the blog. In tandem, they render this post almost completely beside the point, and it will receive a full rewrite in the book version eventually. Until then, enjoy the most obsolete post on the blog.
Doctor Who fandom is spectacularly bitchy. Sometimes – even often – this is a virtue. Mind you, it’s an often misunderstood virtue. For one thing, the bitchiness is often mistaken as actual dislike, sometimes to puzzling effect. (The most obvious example here is people who take Moffat’s somewhat infamous interview comments about the classic series as actual dislike for the classic series) It’s not, and the central joke of almost all of fandom’s bitchy, snarky comments about bits of Doctor Who is that despite the obvious faults of the series we love it to pieces. Even with the really terrible episodes that we claim to actively hate there’s the underlying joke that we’ve watched them a dozen times and have a nearly encyclopedic knowledge of how crap they are. The fact that this involves being vicious to Doctor Who is almost incidental – after all, for most of the active history of fandom everybody thought Doctor Who was kind of crap. Doctor Who fandom, unusually for a fandom, has tended to favor ostentatiously loving the show in spite of it being crap over trying to defend Timelash, and really, who’s going to fault them for it.
But, and it’s a big but, there are times when the bitchiness of fandom tips into a bit of a dark side. And to be frank, this is one of them. A Fix With Sontarans is widely mocked and hated. And this is, if not inaccurate, more than a little unfair. Let’s start with the context. A Fix With Sontarans is a mini-episode shot for the show Jim’ll Fix It, in which the late Jimmy Saville extravagantly grants the wishes of people who write in. And in the case of A Fix With Sontarans, a kid named Gareth Jenkins wanted to be on Doctor Who, so Eric Saward lashed together a little TARDIS-set mini episode featuring the Sontarans, which they had around at the time for The Two Doctors. Nicola Bryant wasn’t available for filming it, so they roped in Janet Fielding. The plot is exactly the sort of thing that people do for something like this – the Sontarans and Gareth both get teleported onto the TARDIS, Gareth helps save the day, there’s a cute bit about how he’ll apparently someday be a great military leader against the Sontarans.
It’s crap, of course, but it’s crap in the exact ways you’d expect it to be. Gareth Jenkins can’t act at all and is utterly timid. Colin Baker got the script late enough that he was forced to scribble lines on the console.…