Day: September 10, 2006

  • A Good Sandwich

    I took the family to Boston Market yesterday for lunch.

    As far as I’m concerned, BM chicken is not bad, but nothing particularly fantastic, and their stuffing has too many crisp chunks of celery and carrot in it for my taste. Still, it’s a credible alternative, and we go there once a month or so.

    Lately though, BM has had roasted sirloin and it is pretty good, but way too expensive. I usually have it anyway.

    Yesterday I noticed that they had added a Sirloin Dip sandwich, using the same roast sirloin they serve as a dinner. I figured that adding bread to the mix would make it more filling, and therefore cheaper. I’m not normally a fan of french dip sandwiches, though.

    The sandwich arrived, toasted with melted cheese on a sub roll. I noticed immediately that the sirloin had dried out in the toasting process. I tore off a piece and tried it: dry and flavorless. Things were not looking good.

    Once I tried an actual bite of the sandwich things were quite different. It was, without doubt, the best french dip sandwich I’ve ever had. I would highly recommend it.

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  • Doctor Who – The Curse of Fenric – Review

    The Curse of Fenric
    by Ian Briggs
    1989, Story #158
    Starring
    Sylvester McCoy as The Doctor
    Sophie Aldred as Ace

    According to the Doctor in this story, the universe was once nothing except light good and evil. Then came the beginning, the Big Bang and the two forces were shattered and spread out into the Universe as echos of good and evil. The Doctor has come to 1940’s England to battle, once again, with that evil.

    Plot
    WWII, somewhere on the coast of England, Russian soldiers arrive for a secret mission, so too do the Doctor and Ace.

    The Doctor quickly infiltrates a top secret naval facility where a scientist is working on the Ultima machine – a German code-breaking “computing machine.” Something is amiss, people near the water are being killed. The local legends say it is the norse Curse of Fenric.

    The ancient runes in the local church seem to hold the answers and while everyone else struggles to make sense of what’s going on, the Doctor knows more than he is telling.

    In deciphering the runes, the British release Fenric from his 17 century imprisonment. They also unleash his “wolves”, humans mutated into Hemovores. In a word: vampires.

    Apparently, the Doctor is the one who imprisoned Fenric 17 centuries ago, using only a banana… no wait, sorry, that was a different Doctor. Fenric was imprisoned with a chess game. Now the game is on again and Ace manages to give the answer to Fenric, allowing him to defeat the Doctor… or does he?

    Analysis
    This is the second to last episode of the original Doctor Who series. I don’t think there’s anyone who wouldn’t agree that it was time for retirement for the venerable Doctor. In particular, McCoy’s final year saw a push to make him “more mysterious” again. When he started out back in 1963, we knew nothing of him, but by the time McCoy’s years had come along, more information than you could have wanted to know about the Doctor and the Time Lords was available. By this point, I think the Time Lords were guest hosting game shows and we’d been told so much about the Doctor’s background you could figure out what color poo was in his diapers back on Gallifrey.

    These efforts to make him “mysterious” again failed miserably. The Doctor would arrive somewhere and seem to know what was going on. He’d walk around amidst the chaos as if he was setting up the pieces of a game, and then, he’d pull the rabbit out of his hat at the end. (A rabbit that was obviously hidden there since the before he arrived) Crisis solved. This didn’t make the Doctor so much mysterious as it did annoying. Where’s the sense of suspense if it’s obvious the Doctor is just following a well-planned and orchestrated plot? I can tell you where the “suspense” comes from. It comes from Ace screwing things up because the Doctor hasn’t told her what’s going on. That’s just bad writing, if you have to bring along your own plot complications.

    Nonetheless, this is probably McCoy’s finest episode, he has some of his finest moments as the Doctor along the way.

    A few things do bear worth mentioning:

    • Fenric. A variation on a Norse god name. In this case, meaning wolf. He’s bad, therefore, he’s the a Bad Wolf. Coincidence? The continuing Bad Wolf theme from Eccleston’s season was never properly resolved, just swept away like an inconvenient plot point in Parting of the Ways.
    • The Doctor explicitly says good and evil existed before the universe began. Why then was the the 10th Doctor having so much difficulty that the “evil” in the Satan Pit came from before the universe began?
    • The Doctor explains you gotta have faith, absolute faith, in something and you can put up a psychic barrier to drive back the hemovores. The Doctor has no difficulty putting up a faith barrier – an extremely strong one – but, what does he have faith in?
    • Ace is given a lot of importance in this episode. We’re finally given an explanation for the ridiculous “time storm” that swept her from Perrivale to Iceworld and subsequently into the Doctor’s care. She’s been a pawn in Fenric’s game all along. On top of that, the Doctor appears to have known this all along.
    • Far from powerless during his imprisonment, Fenric apparently can conjuring time storms and influence people’s minds. He used a time storm to place Ace in the Doctor’s path and she used one to bring a hemovore from Earth’s distant future into the past for no apparent reason exceptt to make more hemovores. Why couldn’t he escape sooner, then?
    • What’s with this Earth’s future where everyone is turned into a hemovore? Hasn’t Ian Briggs seen any of the other episodes of Doctor Who? The Earth and humans always prevail. It didn’t end that way for mankind.

    Bonus material on this DVD includes the re-edited “movie” version of the story, which has been enhanced in a variety of ways, and several documentary pieces, some old, some new. The one with writer Ian Briggs really reveals someone who is just a little too obsessed with sex in his writing. There’s no actual sexual activity in this episode, it’s just that the writer says it’s all about sex from the water and swimming (everybody wants to come into the water) to wheelchairs (homosexuality). Methinks somebody wants his works to be considered more “serious” than they really are.

    Conclusion
    If you’re going to watch just one of the currently available McCoy stories, make it this one. (Not that many are available.)

    The Future
    Good news: I ordered Web Planet, Inferno and Ghost Light (2 out of 3 ain’t bad) and they should arrive on Wednesday.

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