In
Antarctica Camp 3, several scientists -- Moberly (Michael McStay), Winlett
(John Gleeson), and Stevenson (Hubert Rees) -- excavate from the ice a mysterious
vegetable pod.
Found
at a layer that indicates it is more than 20,000 years old, this vegetable pod
becomes of interest to the World Ecology Bureau in London.
The
Bureau contacts UNIT, and sends the Doctor (Tom Baker), and Sarah Jane
(Elisabeth Sladen) to Antarctica to investigate it.
The
Doctor determines the pod originated not on Earth, but a distant planet, and orders
the scientists to keep it well-guarded until his arrival. His orders are
disobeyed, however, and one of the scientists is attacked by the pod and
assimilated it by it. The pod is actually a malevolent alien life-form called a
Krynoid.
A
“galactic weed,” the Krynoid travels the universe dispersing seeds to habitable
planets, and then destroying all animal life there. Now it is a race against time:
can the Doctor stop the Krynoid from spreading before it takes over all plant
life on Earth?
A
millionaire and plant-lover named Harrison Chase (Tony Beckley), is secretly
working against the Time Lord to help an adult Krynoid germinate and rule our
world.
The
thirteenth season of classic Doctor Who (1963-1989) culminated
with “The Seeds of Doom,” a serial from Robert Banks Stewart that is clearly
inspired both by John Campbell’s “Who Goes There?” and the 1951 film, The
Thing. The (excellent) narrative
re-purposes settings and characters from the history of The Thing productions and
literary works.
As
is the case in both “Who Goes There” and The Thing, an alien life-form that
is buried in the ice (whether at Antarctica, or the North Pole, like the
Hawks/Nyby film), is unearthed here, revealing an alien menace.
Similarly,
the Krynoid is plant or vegetable-based life in “The Seeds of Doom,” and as you
may recall, the Thing (James Arness) in the fifties film is characterized as an
“intellectual carrot” made of
vegetable matter.
Mind
boggling…
It’s
intriguing how “The Seeds of Doom” adopts different aspects of The
Thing’s narrative across the decades. From the novella, we get here the
idea of an evil contaminating our life form and altering the shape of a human
being, which is then able to infect others similarly. And, the larger threat is of a new and
inimical life-form taking over the Earth, eliminating the human race in the
process. In the case of this Doctor
Who tale, the Krynoid escapes Antarctica, and gets to Great Britain,
where things get out of hand quickly.
From
the 1950's film, primarily, “The Seeds of Doom” takes the aforementioned nature
of the monster (vegetable rather than animal), and the idea of a possibly-mad
ally helping it along. In the movie, Dr.
Carrington (Robert Cornthwaite) -- whether from lack of sleep, bad judgement,
or poor character -- attempts to propagate a “Thing” garden at the base, and
preserve the “wise” being (despite its readily obvious violent qualities).
Here, Harrison Chase, an eccentric millionaire, chooses intelligent plant life
over his own species, and plays, essentially, the same role in the drama. He is
the turncoat to his own species, deluded about what role he would play in the “New
Order.”
“The
Seeds of Doom” has always been one of my favorite Doctor Who serials of the
Tom Baker era. The first sections, set in Antarctica are claustrophobic and terrifying,
and the nature of the Krynoid threat is well-established. For a low-budget show, some of the effects
still manage to be creepy and disgusting.
Meanwhile,
the last chapters of the serial -- with an adult Krynoid towering over Chase’s
mansion, and harnessing the power the Earth’s vegetation -- plays like some
gonzo (and thoroughly enjoyable) kaiju movie.
One
other element worthy of discussion here involves the presence of the Doctor, the
protagonist. In other versions of The Thing, characters such as
McReady/MacReady, Kate Lloyd, or Pat Hendry have to play “catch-up” to
understand the situation and the nature of the threat the Earth faces.
In
“The Seeds of Doom,” the Doctor -- with all of his knowledge of time, space,
and alien life-forms -- has an advantage they didn’t. He knows all about the
nemesis he must contend with, and is ready for battle, almost from the
beginning.
A true classic.
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