There’s a sleight of hand you need to pull off to make a Doctor Who story work. It’s the same trick you need for James Bond (certainly the film incarnation) and Indiana Jones, in fact it’s a crucial element of all invincible hero stories. Even though the readers’ (or viewers’) minds tells them that all will be okay at the end – that this is The Doctor or James Bond or Indiana Jones, and there’s no way this adventure is going to conclude with them pushing up daisies and being quietly mourned – the viewer (or reader) must still be convinced that what is unfolding in front of them is real peril. We have to believe, for the length of the tale, that somehow – incredibly and impossibly – everything could go wrong and the narrative will lead to our hero dying. Yes, it’s absurd; yes, it’s willing suspension of disbelief – but it’s something we need. And as much as I liked this tale, as much as I found a great deal to enjoy within its digital pages, I never had that sense of peril. The Doctor was always in control, never that far away from being on top of things and so the story lacked that adrenalin fizz which would have made it great.
Paul McGann’s Doctor was sure to be the hardest to capture, given that his sole TV appearance was in one not very good episode. Yes, he’s done sterling work in audio plays since, but for most people he’s the half human Doctor in that TV movie which went nowhere. (Why, if you’re introducing a new Doctor, would you have a substantial part of the running time focused on Sylvester McCoy? And I ask that as someone who really likes Sylvester McCoy. And since when are Daleks the height of justice in the universe? Apologies, I seem to have lost my chain of thought, please give me a moment… Thank you.) Alex Scarrow does a fine job in conjuring the dapper English alien abroad. Adjectives which sprang to mind as I read were: polite and unflappable; genial and friendly; both reassuring and other-worldly. This is a Doctor I don’t know as well as the others, but I liked him.
It’s a modern tale and one which owes a lot to Hollywood (even the title recalls ‘Alien’ and ‘Species’.) An alien spore arrives in Arizona and starts to terra-form all around it, destroying any organic matter it encounters. This is a gooey and nasty villain that really made this reader squirm, I’d go as far as to say I’d like to see it in the new TV show. If only the Doctor didn’t get the measure of it so swiftly and glide serenely through the tale.
A good story then, one of the best of this series, but s story which could have been excellent – a really great little chiller.