By Owen Quinn author
All photos copyright BBC
I first learned of the Awakening when the BBC released the twentieth anniversary one off magazine in which they premiered the upcoming episodes of the 21st season. The Sea Devils, Silurians, Daleks and the The Master were coming back but hidden among this was a new foe that hooked me right away. The Awakening is a compact story, a little gem that is much better than some of the new era stuff.

We have a story with spooky elements, a deadly alien hidden in a church tapping into the darkest side of humanity, a family member in danger and a potential new companion if history had played out in a different way. The story that is literally begging to be a four parter.
There’s a classic feel to the locality of this story. The quaint English village, Little Hodcombe, the tyrannical lord and alien hidden in a crumbling church that has spawned their legends and myths to the point they are ingrained in the very etchings of the church itself. The episode opens with teacher Jane Hampton (Polly James) criticising the over zealous nature of Sir George Hutchinson’s celebratory war games of the Battle of Little Hodcombe. Sir George has sealed off the village and at first seems to be just caught up in the spirit of it all but we will soon discover that he is being influenced by the Malus itself.
Now, as an audience, we know the Malus is lurking somewhere but first we get to see the influence it has on churning up violence and murder via the war games. The English Civil War came to Little Hodcombe where there was a vicious battle between a regiment of the King’s and a parliamentary force fought destroying not only themselves but the village along with it. Now Sir George wants to create this. But somehow the Malus has brought out his need for power which given his job as a magistrate, is one he would revel in as a position of absolute power. Such is its influence, that Tegan and Turlough discover that it has also invaded the Tardis. Perhaps it is using the telepathic field of the Tardis but the very fact that it could do this at all speaks volumes to what it can do once fully charged.
Something else is happening amid all this. A figure dressed like a pauper steals Tegan’s handbag and she is terrified by the ghost of an old man. The Doctor goes to the church, despite being warned away by Sir George, and finds a refugee from another time. Will Chandler, a teenager from 1643 who was hiding in a priest hole to avoid the battle. Time itself is breaking down between the two time zones explaining why Will and the others are in the present day.

Will reminds me very much of the second Doctor companion, Jamie McCrimmon, a huge fan favourite played by Fraser Hines. Will holds the answers to the Doctor’s questions as he witnessed first hand not only the battle but the arrival of the Malus. It magnified the battle and made it the bloodbath history recorded. I do think that if the imminent departure of all three of the show’s leads was not coming then Will would have become a fan favourite. The interaction between him and the Doctor fells like it’s been happening for years. Played by Keith Jayne, who played the Stig of the Dump from my childhood, Will would have been a great addition to the cast. If it had been only Turlough leaving that year, he would have slotted right in.
Peter Davison is in top form as the Doctor, this being his third and final season. One of the inhabitants of the village is Tegan’s (Janet Fielding) grandfather, Andrew Verney who has disappeared. Being the hot tempered woman she is, Tegan goes off along with Turlough launching a search and retrieve party from Sir George. A nice little touch is Sir George is playing with what looks like a stress ball in scenes. Later in the episode during his frenzied search for Jane and thre others, he drops it in a secret tunnel leading from the church to Sir George’s house. the Doctor relaises that it is a metal mined on the planet Raga exclusively for the people of Harkol which completes the picture for him. The Doctor now knows what the Malus is.

This realisation makes Sir George’s behaviour even more chilling and confirms he is possessed by the Malus. He declares confidently that something wonderful and strange is coming to the village that demands the old customs be restored. This includes the crowning of the Queen of the May. Tegan has been chosen but the crowning of the Queen always meant she is burned at the stake at the end of her reign. Tegan is a complication especially with her grandfather missing so Sir George will burn her alive. And given everything will be recreated, it means that every man, woman and child will be slaughtered. But at this point we still don’t know why.
It is only when the Doctor discovers the metal from Raga that he reveals that the people of Harkol utilise psychic energy in much the same way that humans do electricity. the Harkols sent a probe to Earth on a reconnaissance vehicle. Varney discovered it was real which was why Sir George imprisoned him. It went dormant and it was the Battle of Little Hodcombe that reactivated it and now it is using Sir George to recreate those events to bring it to full power.
And in the cliffhanger, the Doctor, Will and Jane are in the church when the wall cracks revealing the huge face of the Malus with burning green eyes. It roars, drawing the Doctor in. As he covers his ears, he is consumed in smoke.
The Malus is a great prop, moving as if trying to pull itself free from the wall. Its devilish nature is genuinely scary and its spider monkey version that appears in he Tardis in episode two brings to mind old horror movies from the likes of hammer House of Horror. It has inspired legends of the devil because it looks like what we believe the Devil would look like. Or could it be that the dormant Malus used its psychic energy to feed into human minds just as it did Sir George to inspire enough fear to regenerate itself. It could be said that there are shades of the Jon Pertwee story, The Daemons here but for me they are superficial. If anything, the real comparison comes at the climax of the story.
I would be remiss if I didn’t highlight the supporting cast. Denis Lil dominates the screen as Sir George. His fierce enthusiasm for the recreation soon bubbles as you relaise that his love for his hobby goes much deeper than we first thought. Maybe a four parter would have lost his descent into madness but here it is so well and so subtly done. Jack Galloway as his unquestioning henchman, Joseph Willow is rough and gruff and sadly his blind faith in Sir George is not as clear cut as Malus control.
The voice of reason Glyn Houston as Ben Wolsey walks the line of reason well until he realises something is seriously wrong.
It is nice to see a companion have more to their characters by adding family members. We had met her cousin, Colin Frazer, in Arc of Infinity where he became a slave to Omega and poor Aunt Vanessa murdered by the Master in logopolis. It isn’t really until the new era that family became more significant to stories but here in the classic series, it adds volumes to the characters; when they stay alive that is.
Turlough (Mark Strickson) gets his usual stuck in a cell moment because the slight of the story does not allow him to do much else because of everything else that is going on. That’s why I thought Will would be a good replacement because he brought a fire to the show. He was brave but vulnerable and when it came down to it he had no hesitation in killing Sir George, not out of hate or bloodthirst but it was the only way to save everyone and everything. It’s interesting that the Doctor doesn’t condemn or criticise Will for doing this. Unlike Warriors of the Deep, there was no other way.
The novelisation of the story is packed with detail and extra bits demonstrating this would have been an equally successful four part story. You should read it as it is a good read regardless of the umbrella.
Eric Pringle brilliantly weaves together a story that is almost the love child of Doctor Who and Sapphire and Steel in a pseudo historical tale. The Awakening combines alien terror with the supernatural that brings this two parter into an unmissable slot. One of the highlights of the show’s library.






























