Minuet in Hell

Minuet in Hell
Big Finish Productions audio play
Album cover
Minuet in Hell
Series Doctor Who
Release number 19
Featuring Eighth Doctor
Charley Pollard
Writer Alan W. Lear
Gary Russell
Director Nicholas Briggs
Producer(s) Gary Russell
Jason Haigh-Ellery
Executive producer(s) Jacqueline Rayner
Set between The Stones of Venice and
Invaders from Mars
Length 1 hour 51 mins
Release date 17 April 2001

Minuet in Hell is a Big Finish Productions audio drama based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. Unlike the other Eighth Doctor audio plays from this "season", Minuet in Hell was not broadcast on BBC 7 in 2005, primarily due to story references that were dropped for the broadcasts, and the more mature subject matter of this story.

Contents

Plot

The Brigadier finds the Eighth Doctor a patient of a medical institute. Meanwhile Charley has lost her memory and is working in the Hell Fire Club under the direction of Francis Dashwood the Third, where a demonic creature called Marchosias has been summoned by the local dignitaries of Malebolgia. Are these demons real, or can the disturbed Doctor reclaim his wits and learn the truth?

Cast

Continuity

  • In the second part of Minuet in Hell, a litany of the Doctor's previous companions includes the name "Sam". At the time of the play's release, this was intended as a reference to Sam Jones, the Eighth Doctor's companion from the novels; this placed the books and the audios in the same continuity. Producer Gary Russell subsequently decided that the two continuities should be separate (partly because of different directions taken between the two ranges). The play Terror Firma introduced the characters of Samson and Gemma Griffin, previously unknown companions of the Eighth Doctor, providing the possibility that "Sam" was a reference to Samson instead.
  • Gideon Crane believing himself to be the Doctor due to an accident is very similar to what happened to Jackson Lake in the 2008 TV Christmas story The Next Doctor.

Notes

  1. This audio drama is based on an earlier Audio Visuals story of the same name, which was set in the context of the historical Hellfire Club. The Big Finish version moves the action to a fictional U.S. state called "Malebolgia", which, despite its name, appears to be somewhere in the Bible Belt.
  2. The Audio Visuals version starred Nicholas Briggs as the "Nth Doctor". In the Big Finish version, Briggs plays a character who believes himself to be the Doctor.
  3. The name "Malebolgia" is derived from Malebolge, the name used in Dante's Inferno for the Eighth Circle of Hell.
  4. The Brigadier is said to be a guest in Malebolgia due to his experience with Scottish devolution.
  5. Teenaged demon hunter Becky Lee Kowalczyck is an obvious homage to Buffy Summers, heroine of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
  6. The fictional state of Malebolgia is described as having been created by recently seceding from another state. Two American states have been created in this way: West Virginia seceded from Virginia during the American Civil War, and Maine split off from Massachusetts in 1820 as part of the Missouri Compromise. Given the "Bible Belt" setting, the secession of Malebolgia from another state may be a reference to the commonly-held notion that the state of Texas retains the right to subdivide itself into (up to five) other states. However, there is no such secession movement in any American state, and the legal case for Texas being able to subdivide at will is weak (see article). Of course, Malebolgia could merely be West Virginia.
  7. The character B.E. Dashwood seems to be under the impression that Philadelphia is a state when it is actually a city in the state of Pennsylvania. He lists it, along with Massachusetts and Maine, as great states whose reputation and honor should be matched in time by Malebolgia, eliciting applause from his audience. This is also odd, however, because Massachusetts and Maine (as well as Pennsylvania) are northern, "Yankee" states with very different cultural and political histories and a long-standing rivalry with the southern, Bible-belt states (including the Civil War itself). These may be scripting errors, although given the historical anomalies that propagate through subsequent stories (especially Invaders from Mars and The Time of the Daleks) they could be explained away as anti-time contamination.
  8. B.E. Dashwood claims to be descended from Francis Dashwood, 15th Baron le Despencer, founder of the original Hellfire Club and Chancellor of the Exchequer.

External links

Reviews


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