STORY PLACEMENT

 THIS STORY TAKES

 PLACE BETWEEN THE TV

 STORY "THE CELESTIAL
 TOYMAKER" AND THE BIG

 FINISH AUDIO "MOTHER

 RUSSIA."

 

 PRODUCTION CODE

 Z

 

 WRITTEN BY

 DONALD COTTON

 

 DIRECTED BY

 REX TUCKER

 

 RATINGS

 6.3 MILLION

 

 WORKING TITLE
 THE GUNSLINGERS

 

 RECOMMENDED 

 PURCHASE

 'EARTH STORY' DVD

 BOX SET (BBCDVD3380)

 RELEASED IN JUNE 2011.

 

CLICK TO ENLARGE IN COLOUR

  

CLICK TO ENLARGE IN COLOUR

   

 BLURB

 TOMBSTONE, ARIZONA,

 1881. THE AIR IS FILLED

 WITH THE SOUNDS OF

 SHOOTING, CUSSING,

 AND TUNES KNOCKED

 OUT ON THE BATTERED

 PIANO AT THE LAST

 CHANCE SALOON.

 

 THE DOCTOR AND HIS

 COMPANIONS AREN'T

 THE ONLY NEWCOMERS

 IN TOWN. THE CLANTON

 BROTHERS HAVE RIDDEN

 IN TO SETTLE A GRUDGE

 WITH DOC HOLLIDAY,

 A GAMBLER, DRINKER

 AND DENTIST. IN THE

 WILD WEST, TEMPERS

 ARE SHORT, GUNS ARE

 SWIFT, AND A MOMENT'S

 HESITATION CAN MEAN

 DEATH...

 

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The Gunfighters

30TH APRIL 1966 - 21ST MAY 1966

(4 EPISODES)

 

1. A HOLIDAY FOR THE DOCTOR      2. DON'T SHOOT THE PIANIST

 

3. JOHNNY RINGO      4. THE OK CORRAL

 

 

                                                       

   

 

The Gunfighters has long-since held a position of notoriety amongst Doctor Who

serials. Whilst its viewing figures weren’t all that poor, its audience appreciation score was. In fact, so pitiable was its approval rating – 30% – that to this day there isn’t another Doctor Who story that has gone down as badly with the viewing public. However, The Gunfighters numerous repeats and commercial releases in recent years have prompted its widespread re-evaluation, at least by biased fans of the series. Running through Corridors authors Rob Shearman and Toby Hadoke have praised its dry comedy, while About Time authors Tat Wood and Lawrence Miles have hailed it as “the first Western made for British television.”

 

 

And to be fair to The Gunfighters, it is a very funny piece. Perhaps not in the way that writer Donald Cotton intended it to be, I’ll grant you, but watching it again certainly made me smile. I understand that William Hartnell had been lobbying the production team for some time to do a Western, and so he really throws himself into the pastiche here, flexing slapstick muscles that he can’t have used since his Carry On days. Meanwhile, poor Peter Purves is forced to endure indignity upon indignity - as if having to put on a Yankee drawl that makes Morton Dill sound eloquent wasn’t bad enough, he was made to sing one of the most dire saloon songs imaginable. It’s so very painful that it’s hilarious. Even Jackie Lane’s Dodo Chaplet is not as exasperating as usual here - in fact this is probably her least offensive outing. For once her inherent stupidity and feeble-mindedness are in accord with the events unfolding around her.

 

Whats more, as British telly’s

first stab at a Western, The

Gunfighters looks remarkably

good on screen, particularly

with monochrome smoothing

its rough edges. It would be

easy to scoff at the production

values when comparing it to

a modern effort, but when we

measure it against Marco

Polo’s Cathay or even The

Romans Rome it ticks all the

same boxes, and in addition throws in a buxom belle. The shoot-out in The OK Corral (which would be the last televised episode to carry an individual title until Rose, over 39 years later) looks particularly wonderful, provided that you can forgive the dramatic liberties Cotton took concerning it.

 

Above: Mary Tamm’s seen it in the Times - Tomorrow’s Times

 

Where the serial falls down though is in its plot. The total sum of the narrative can be inferred from the pun in the first episode’s title, A Holiday for the Doctor, and as I’ve intimated above, the historical backdrop that it is set against is far less truthful than even the most laissez-faire Hartnell-era historicals. At best it’s not edifying; at worse it’s misleading. The final nail in the serial’s coffin is the soundtrack, which makes watching the four episodes a teeth-gritting test of endurance. How many times can you stand to hear the same excruciatingly awful refrain? Tristram Cary’s Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon bookends almost every scene, and so if you’re intrepid enough to watch the whole serial in a single sitting, by the end of it I swear that you’ll feel your grip on sanity beginning to slide. At least when it first aired, The Gunfighters’ assault on the eardrums was spread out over the course of a month. All the same, I remain convinced that, but for this awful tune, The Gunfighters would have gone over far better with its audience.

 

The DVD’s bonus material does an admirable job of championing

the serial’s commendable traits. The commentary is moderated by

the abovementioned Mr Hadoke, who besides being a fountain of

trivia and minutiae throughout, also acts as an eloquent and near-

convincing defender of this ill-reputed tale. He also serves a more

mundane function as catalyst for the buried memories of most of

the contributors, who include production assistant Tristan de Vere

Cole and several supporting actors - as well as one man who will

never, ever forget the horrors that this production subjected him to.

The disc also includes the first Doctor’s instalment of Tomorrow’s

Times, which is slightly glossier than the other Doctors’ editions

that we’ve had to date. Besides being delivered by a smouldering,

businesslike Mary Tamm, this fascinating programme takes in the

papers’ reactions to everything from the Kennedy assassination to

the Peter Cushing spin-off movies.

 

Above: Donald Tosh discusses how Doctor Who nearly reached The End of the Line in 1966

 

The most extraordinary feature of all though is the forty-five minute End of the Line. Written by Jonathan Morris, this outstanding documentary covers the final third of Bill Hartnell’s reign, boasting candid contributions from many of the era’s companions; then-script editor Donald Tosh; new series writer Garth Roberts; and super-fan Ian Levine. There was so much for this programme to cover – O’Brien and Lane’s impromptu departures; Anneke Wills and Michael Craze’s troubled relationship with Hartnell; incoming producer Innes Lloyd’s “dumbing down” of the show; Hartnell’s illness, the vascular dementia that presented secondary to it, and his  subsequent decline – yet the programme juggles them all masterfully, resulting in one of the most informative and engrossing features that the range has produced to date.

 

It’s hard to believe that the same season which spawned an intergalactic blockbuster such as The Daleks’ Master Plan, a brutal historical the calibre of The Massacre, and even mind-bending serials like The Celestial Toymaker could churn out a cut-price Western lampoon, but churn it out it did. Is its shameful reputation warranted? I don’t think so. The Gunfighters might not be Doctor Who’s finest hour, but there are worse serials out there. Whether you’ll find one with a thinner plot and as annoying a jingle, however, is another matter.

 

Copyright © E.G. Wolverson 2008, 2011

 

E.G. Wolverson has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988 to be identified as the author of this work.

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