"I think I'm goin' back... to the things I learned so well in my youth"
Sarah Jane Adventures: The Temptation Of Sarah Jane Smith Part 1
Well, you would. Wouldn't you? You'd be tempted just like Sarah. To
step back into the past to grab back a piece of your childhood or, as in
Sarah's case, to find out if you had good or bad parents. The theme of
parenthood and childhood has been particularly strong throughout this
year's stories. From Maria and her dad leaving for Washington to Clyde
dealing with his errant father, the bonds between adult and child have
been explored in some depth. Now it's Sarah's turn, in perhaps one of
the strongest, if not the strongest, scripts of the series to date.
Gareth Roberts is obviously deeply attached to Sarah and it shows in
his script in the way he carefully handles the still sensitive trauma
of Sarah's dead parents and slowly unravels the mystery surrounding
their fate. He does it without cheapening the idea and provides
terrific emotional development for the character that the parent series rarely bothered about.
That chap with no eyes, bad teeth and a big hood and a reputation for laughing maniacally.
When a time fissure opens and disgorges a child from 1951 and from the village of Foxgrove, Sarah's tempted to go back and see just what Barbara and Eddie Smith were really like. And I suppose, like any of us presented with such an enticement, she goes through denial, excitement and then the suspicion that it's all a trap. And like all good scripts. the audience is already ahead of her and knows that this is a return match with the Trickster. That chap with no eyes, bad teeth and a big hood and a reputation for laughing maniacally. And much as the lady doth protest, 'I'm strong enough to say no', immediately we see the camera pan across a vivid pink 1950s style outfit, those dissolves of her zhushing her hair and putting on her slap, we know she's been reeled in. She's going back. Yeah, it's just like the classic Carole King song, 'Goin' Back' - full of warmth, anticipation, fear and a sense that she's attempting to reconcile thinking young and growing older and realising perhaps it isn't such a sin to do so. It's a lovely sequence, blessed with a fantastic score from Sam Watts and a Lis Sladen performance that might leave you with a lump in your throat as she sneaks out of the house in childlike eagerness for a date with destiny. What's the point in being grown up, if you can't be childish sometimes?
Tommy Knight's performance, especially his chemistry with Lis, is great too and I love their mutual mockery over the pink outfit she wears to go back in time. Their discussion on the ramifications of meddling with your own past gives a little nod to the Blinovitch Limitation Effect as well as Luke recognising his own normalcy in the excitement of the opportunity. Ever mindful, Sarah also understands that if it is a trap she'll have a chance to find out whilst giving herself an excuse to be self-indulgent. Again, more lovely character moments powering the script along. Fortunately, Roberts knows which side his bread is buttered with the Sarah and Luke relationship and doesn't leave Luke separated from Sarah, depositing him back in 1951 with her when the fissure collapses.
Roberts' script is chock full of these abandonment issues and he recognises that without our even being aware, they can wreak havoc with social and family life.
Whilst Sarah and Luke explore Foxgrove in warm sepia tints and as a
land of milk and honey, Clyde and Rani give us a quick flashback to
last year's Whatever Happened To Sarah Jane Smith
to re-acquaint us with the alien puzzle box and the Graske. These aren't
gratuitous references and genuinely feed in as proper elements of the plot. The
period detail for Foxglove is used well with costumes and vehicles
adding just the right touches to embellish Sarah's lines about the
emergence of Britain from post war austerity. Then there's that great
double take as Sarah hears a voice calling her and Graeme Harper crash
zooms the camera onto her face as she stares directly at her mother
cradling her younger self. It's at this point that we can see how
cunning the Trickster's plan is as the sin of temptation really gets
hold and Sarah thinks of a way to find out why her parents abandoned
her in 1951. Roberts' script is chock full of these abandonment issues
and he recognises that without our even being aware, they can wreak
havoc with
social and family life. These feelings, and especially fears of being
left behind, are incredibly strong motivators both within and outside
of relationships.
There's a typically humourous Luke response to guessing how many gobstoppers are in a jar and the fun continues when Sarah introduces herself as Victoria Beckham and Luke becomes David in a proper laugh out loud moment. The flipside of this is a growing tension as Luke spots the strange schoolboy, Oscar, who came through the fissure earlier and Sarah, worryingly, starts to get obsessed about Barbara and Eddie. Lis and Rosanna Lavelle as Barbara are very natural in their scenes together and Rosanna is especially good when she recounts how Eddie courted Barbara with little notes. Notes that will later be significant; much like the newspaper that Luke shows Sarah. It's then that both she and us, the audience, realise that things are going to go very wrong as she contemplates changing a fixed point in time. Blimey, she even name drops the miners of Peladon as she works herself up into a selfish, emotional outburst. It's quite powerful stuff to see Sarah throwing a wobbly like this and then gambling with the nature of time and trying to play the game of life to win her 'reward'. She's positively unhinged! Didn't seeing Sutekh's alternate 1980 teach her anything?
The best episode this year.
Meanwhle, back in the present Clyde and Rani are confronted by the
creepy Oscar and the trap is finally sprung with Robert Madge as Oscar
doing a nice line in Harry Potter malevolence. He changes into the
pixie like Graske and gives chase, with Graeme Harper then pulling off
a magnificent double whammy of a cliffhanger where Clyde and Rani are
plunged into an alternate, desolate Greenford and Sarah and Luke end up
beneath the ruins of Big Ben. What is it with Big Ben? It's a much abused monument these days. We're left with the Trickster ranting
away in triumph as Sarah gets her reward for buggering up the
timelines. There's really very little to fault this and it's played
well by the ensemble cast, with Lis outstanding here, aided by a script
full of emotional power and big ideas and Harper's penchant for giving
us powerful visuals.The best episode this year.

















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