Review of The Ark (#23)
DVD Release Date: 08 Mar 11
Original Air Date: 05 – 26 Mar 1966
Doctor/Companion: One, Steven Taylor, Dorothea “Dodo” Chaplet
Stars: William Hartnell, Peter Purves, Jackie Lane
Preceding Story: The Massacre of St. Bartholomew’s Eve (One, Steven)
Succeeding Story: The Celestial Toymaker (One, Steven, Dodo)
Although we don’t really figure it out until halfway through, The Ark is sort of two stories wrapped into one. Beginning with a rather typical “outsiders bring harmless-to-them germs into a closed population, threatening to wipe out said population” plot, the story soon takes a turn toward more socio-political themes. Groups are set against each other and make plans of varying degrees of stupidity and brutality. Obviously, this being Doctor Who, there’s also a time-travel twist to the tale (which I won’t completely spoil here), but that is primarily clever storytelling rather than a necessary element for plot advancement.
Perhaps the most memorable aspect of the story, at least on the surface, is the abysmal quality of the monster-of-the-week, which is poor even by Doctor Who‘s standards (and that’s saying quite a lot!). The actors playing the Monoids could not have been comfortable with body-length rubber sheaths that included huge (clearly visible) zippers up the back, mangy wigs draping down over half their faces, and ping pong balls painted as eyeballs in their mouths. Every time one of these pathetic critters waddles on set, you can’t help but snicker and think about the mechanics of wearing the costume (particularly the moutheyeball – nor does it help to learn that it actually was ping pong balls they used). Yet somehow, the Monoids manage to fulfill their literary roles in (both parts of) the story relatively well. Clearly that’s a testament to the quality of the tale the writers had to tell.