Doctor Who:
The Claws of Axos
By Bob Baker and Dave Martin
Reviewed By Paul Bowler
"Axos calling Earth. Request immediate assistance. Axos calling Earth".
As well as having to endure a security inspection at UNIT HQ by the pompous civil servant, Mr Chinn (Peter Bathurst), the Brigadier (Nicholas Courtney) is also visited by the American agent Bill Filer (Paul Grist) to discuss the threat posed by the Master (Roger Delgado) - but the meeting is soon thrown into chaos when an alien spacecraft is suddenly detected by the radar monitoring station. The spaceship lands next to the Nuton Power Complex, burying itself in the earth, where strange tendrils snake out and capture a tramp - Pigbin Josh (Derek Ware) - who stumbles onto the scene and gets dragged inside the living vessel for analyses.Stunt team HAVOC have a field day with The Claws of Axos. The scripts offer the opportunity for plenty of gun battles with the marauding Axons, with their explosive tendrils killing UNIT troops, as well an impressive showdown in the Nuton Power Complex. There is one fantastic scene where Captain Mike Yates (Richard Franklin) and Sgt Benton’s (John Levine) jeep is attacked by Axons, who jump on the vehicle as Yates and Benton bail out - an explosive stunt by HAVOC ends with the jeep careering into a field as it bursts into flames.
The Doctor (Jon Pertwee) and Joe Grant (Katy Manning) travel to
the crash site with the UNIT team to investigate the spacecraft, they are joined
by Hardiman (Donald Hewlett) and Winser (David Savile) from the power plant, and
together they enter the alien ship where they meet the golden skinned crew - the
Axons. The Axons leader (Bernard Holley) says that their ship, Axos, has been
badly damaged by a solar flare and needs repairs. The Axons offer the world a
substance called Axonite which humanity could used to make animals grow rapidly,
demonstrating the effects on a small toad, before stating that Axonite could
eradicate the worlds food shortages.
Ignoring the Doctor’s misgivings, Chinn soon begins to arrange
for the world wide distribution of Axonite, unaware that the Master is a
prisoner of Axos, and that Bill Filer has also been captured and duplicate by
the Axons to help them capture the Doctor. The Axons true form, a horrific mass
of shambling orange tentacles, is revealed when they attack the reactor at the
power complex. Having been captured by Axos and forced into revealing the
secrets of time travel to prevent Jo being aged to death, the Doctor joins
forces with the Master and uses the TARDIS to snare Axos inside a time loop. The
Master manages to escape and the Doctor returns to Earth, the TARDIS
materialising in the ruins of the Nuton Power Complex, and sheepishly has to
explain his actions to his friends - the Time Lords having programmed the TARDIS
to always return to Earth to ensure the Doctor remains exiled.
The Claws of Axos (1971) is the first televised set of script
by writers Bob Baker and Dave Martin, although you’d never realizes it, with
director Michael Ferguson and the production team doing an excellent job of
realizing every aspect of this hugely ambitious story. Jon Pertwee is brilliant
as the Doctor, his contempt for the pen pushing Mr Chinn quickly puts the civil
servant in his place, and the Doctor isn’t easily fooled by the Axons offer
either. He works closely with UNIT throughout much of this story, relying on the
Brigadier to keep the situation under control while he attempts to study the
sample of Axonite. Never one to follow orders, Jo Grant is the first to see the
Axons true form, and after being captured with the Doctor she is tortured by
Axos to make the Time Lord divulge his secrets. Katy Manning is brilliant as Jo,
particularly when trying to escape the psychedelic interior of Axos with the
Doctor as the organic ship convulses violently around them; and her unwavering
faith in him - even when he apparently sides with the Master - is justified when
the Doctor returns and reveals that it was all just a ploy to defeat Axos.
The Axons themselves are a remarkable concept. We learn that
these golden beings and their vessel are actually one and the same, originating
from a planet on the far side of the galaxy, who travel the universe plundering
the life force of other worlds to survive. Their ship is like a great parasite,
feeding off other planets, with each part of Axos, including the golden
humanoids and their ghastly depersonalised forms, and even the ocular nerve
centre of the vessel are all conjoined by a bizarre kind of symbiosis with the
chameleon element Axonite - a process by which these aliens can absorb and
manipulate any form of energy they encounter. The Axons true appearance
resembles a gnarled mass of orange roots, a stark contrast to their beautiful
golden forms; these misshaped monstrosities are often filmed in slow motion -
giving them a really threatening presence as they lumber around.
This story features some fantastic model shots as well as some
great location work that really helps establish the exterior scenes outside Axos
after the spaceship lands. When the location shooting experienced changeable
weather conditions, a line about freak weather and snow surrounding the area
where Axos landed had to be written into the story. These scenes also feature
the hilarious antics of Pigbin Josh, a poor rambling old tramp who becomes Axos’
first victim, suffering a horrible death after being foolish enough to try and
investigate the spacecraft. The voice of Axos is also provided by Bernard
Holley, who plays the Axon leader, and he effortlessly conveys the ruthless
nature of Axos as the omnipresent entity issues commands from its all seeing
command centre.
Season Eight sees the UNIT family fully established, with Barry
Letts and script editor Terrance Dicks also introducing the renegade Time Lord
the Master played by Roger Delgado. The Master would feature as the main villain
in every story of Season Eight, often working behind the scenes, and
manipulating others to do his bidding. However, in trying to forge an alliance
with Axos the Master has unwittingly become a prisoner himself. Seizing his
opportunity to escape, the Master uses his hypnotic abilities and clever
disguises to break into the Nuton Power Complex so he can steal the Doctor’s
TARDIS and leave Earth.
When the Doctor and Joe escape Axos they return to the Nuton
Power Complex, where the Doctor decides to work with the Master to defeat Axos.
This leads to some wonderful scenes as he Doctor and the Master struggle to get
the TARDIS console in working order, this is the first time we have seen the
TARDIS interior since The War Games (1969), and its great fun to see the
sparkling banter between Pertwee and Delgado as they prepare to dematerialise.
Naturally the Doctor saves the day by trapping Axos in a time loop, but he’s
unable to prevent the Master from escaping again.
The Claws of Axos is an immensely exciting story, filled with
terrific performances and good special effects; it includes all of the classic
elements that made the third Doctor’s era so successful. With its memorable
aliens, contemporary Earth setting, and some great action sequences, The Claws
of Axos is one of the seventh season’s best stories.
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