Part three gives us some exposition (such as how Lupton decided to join a Buddhist group because he wanted power; um, what?), but it's really about two things: how Tommy, the mentally impaired helper at the retreat, steals the blue crystal from Lupton, and how the action (well, much of it) moves to Metebelis III. The scenes on Earth are still reasonably entertaining; it's nice to get some explanation for Lupton's actions, even if they're a little odd, and Cho-je gets to be happily serene ("It is good that we have come to the West. You whip your poor horse too much. He gallops so that he is exhausted and yet, you know, he never leaves his stable"). And John Kane does a good job as Tommy, making him sweet and likable.
But when events move to Metebelis III, things start to take a downward turn. There's some extensive abuse of CSO, but the real issue concerns the actors portraying the "Two-Legs". Some of them, like Gareth Hunt, are reasonably good, but then there's Jenny Laird as Neska, who seems to think she's only doing a rehearsal. "No I shan't you shan't take him Sabor my husband my love why did you do it why why?" is only the most memorable of her lines for its sheer lack of emotion or inflection. It's such a bizarrely wooden performance that you can't help but watch. I've never seen Jenny Laird in anything else, but she can't be like that all the time, can she?
The Doctor defends himself from a blast from an Eight-Legs' guard. (Planet of the Spiders Part Four) ©BBC |
The other major event to happen in episode four concerns Tommy, who looks into the blue crystal and has his mind "realigned" (for lack of a better term), allowing him to read and understand things that were beyond him before. Once again John Kane does a good job with this, as he absorbs the children's book he's been reading with growing excitement, as he realizes how much it makes sense to him. Oh, and Mike Yates gets knocked out and then tied up by Lupton's associates. And that's about it for events on Earth, as the cliffhanger once again is set on Metebelis III, as the Doctor unsuccessfully enters the spiders' citadel to rescue Sarah and is instead captured. Although, curiously, the actual cliffhanger seems to concern Sarah giving up hope once she sees that the Doctor is a prisoner of the spiders, rather than (say) the Doctor getting captured...