I started listening to this play months back. I finished it last week because I decided I wanted to hear the next two. That's not a good sign, is it? Alas, while I can tell that everyone, especially Colin Baker, is firing on maximum, giving top-tier performances, I'm just not taken in. I've listened to this entire trilogy now and it's difficult to comment on one play without considering the other two, so these reviews may contain some spoilers. I apologise, but I can't best communicate how I feel about all this without taking in the "whole picture", and without giving specific examples where they're needed. That said, I'll go easy here because this is the first one.
And it all feels like a dream. Having listened to the trilogy now, in retrospect, this makes a sort of sense, but whereas a dream-like feel in certain films for example works to marvelous effect, here I'm not so sure. It's not that I expect realism from Doctor Who; it's that things just seem to run like some kind of clockwork machine of destiny through the whole play, as though things were just happening for their own sake and because this is Doctor Who and they're supposed to be like this. That's not entirely right, though; reactions are a bit awry, especially from the Doctor, who seems barely to acknowledge that things are very out of order in this late 18th century Scottish setting. I don't think they need to overplay the outrage and indignation of which Colin Baker is certainly very capable, but I'd expect more from him than this. It almost feels like I'm listening to a Davison story. It seems like he already knows what's going on and is just playing it quiet, but now I know that isn't true, so it's all down to Baker's acting, which puts forward a sort of "I suspect this but I'm not going to tell you about it" feel. Oddly, it's the same sort of sensation I got while listening to him play off Charlie a couple of years back, especially after she became Nila, and there it was a red herring too...the Sixth Doctor was more hopelessly in the dark than anybody in the audience! I'm not sure if Colin is getting a little weary of the incredulous things he's asked to do and believe in these scripts lately, but something is showing in his performances...namely, it's the intelligent and sharp sixth Doctor that I want to see, actually being channeled, probably unconsciously, through his performance, and not the uncharacteristically thick Doctor that the scripts are suddenly asking him to be. I used to assert that the Sixth Doctor adventures were almost always the most gripping in Big Finish's canon, but with the last couple of trilogies in particular the scripts just seem to be a bit floppy and unsatisfying. Colin is still wonderful, though, make no mistake, but I think he ought to be getting better material than this.
Each script is, of course, full of tasty morsels and some Doctor Who grateness. That's the thing, though...this isn't meant to be "Doctor Who: The Greatest Hits", a collection of bits that doesn't add up to anything much, and sadly that's been the impression I often get from these story arcs. I love epic tales, I want long stories, consequences for actions....but I only want all those things if they can be pulled off with style and class.
Jamie is back. He's going to get into the TARDIS at the end of this one and travel with the Sixth Doctor. Cool...everybody knew about this beforehand anyway as it was hyped to hell. Except, Jamie doesn't remember anything. He doesn't even remember Doctor Who and the Highlanders (!). That's supposed to be a tip-off that something is wrong. He's a suspicious old highlander, hardened to fighting, who doesn't even remember the Second Doctor, Ben, Polly or the TARDIS, let alone the Cybermen or the Time Lords. He doesn't have much of a rapport with Colin Baker here because the Sixth Doctor wants things to go back to the way they were in the old days, but to Jamie, there simply aren't any. I suspect this is supposed to be a theme of the series. Still, Six's affection for Jamie seems very genuine and is rather heartwarming.
There are some English soldiers (faceless), a mysterious oil refinery type place (coolest thing about the play, I guess), some Scottish rebels and an amusing bit of alien somethingorother meant to terrirorise the locals and keep them in line. The main villain seems almost like a carbon copy of the thing from the first story in the preceding trilogy of McCoy adventures, A Thousand Tiny Wings. I do listen to a good number of these plays, you know, guys; I notice these things.
And after all that I'm struggling to find things to say about City of Spires. This really ought not to be the case as this should have been something big...Jamie and the Doctor re-united, something running amok with time...but instead it all seems very normal, and, well, almost uneventful. Maybe it's just me; perhaps I wasn't in the right mood for this serial, or maybe the writing just lacks a certain sparkle to make it come to life, but almost nothing stood out to me about this adventure. There have been other Big Finish plays like this, but usually I can find something more to say about them. I'd skip it, except if you want to delve into the trilogy, you sort of need to hear all of them. Now there's another reason to do self-contained stories.