The Tardis lands on Deva Loka. While Nyssa recovers inside the Tardis, the Doctor and Adric meet a survey team and their hostages, the seemingly primitive and mute Kinda. Meanwhile Tegan is ... Read allThe Tardis lands on Deva Loka. While Nyssa recovers inside the Tardis, the Doctor and Adric meet a survey team and their hostages, the seemingly primitive and mute Kinda. Meanwhile Tegan is tormented by an evil entity in her dreams.The Tardis lands on Deva Loka. While Nyssa recovers inside the Tardis, the Doctor and Adric meet a survey team and their hostages, the seemingly primitive and mute Kinda. Meanwhile Tegan is tormented by an evil entity in her dreams.
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Jeff Stewart
- Dukkha
- (as Jeffrey Stewart)
Stephen Calcutt
- Tribe member
- (uncredited)
Graham Cole
- Kinda
- (uncredited)
Jonathan Evans
- Kinda Tribesman
- (uncredited)
Barney Lawrence
- 2nd Kinda Hostage
- (uncredited)
Jonny Lee Miller
- Kinda Child
- (uncredited)
Mike Mungarvan
- 1st Kinda Hostage
- (uncredited)
Glen Murphy
- Kinda Tribesman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- Christopher Bailey
- Sydney Newman(uncredited)
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaRichard Todd is first Best Actor Oscar nominee to appear in the series.
- GoofsWhen looking at the wind chimes, the doctor tells Tegan to hit two of them and then declares "a perfect fifth". The interval actually heard is a perfect fourth.
- Quotes
The Doctor: An apple a day keeps the... Ah, never mind.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Frighten Factor (2009)
Featured review
Tegan in the Garden Of Eden
KINDA opens on a paradise-like world named Deva Loka where an Earth expedition has suffered several missing members, the officer in charge is a bully, and his security man is on the verge of a nervous breakdown. Meanwhile, as Nyssa sleeps off what is (apparently) a side-effect of being in Monarch's mind-scan chamber, Tegan falls asleep under some bizarre hanging wind chimes, and finds herself in a bizarre dream-world with characters who look like they stepped out of ALICE IN WONDERLAND. And it just keeps getting stranger as it goes!
As I get older and my sensibilities get sharper, I've noted more and more how bad films get worse, but good ones keep getting better. KINDA really surprises me, as watching it again today I found myself enjoying it more than I ever had. I now consider it the first really GOOD Peter Davison story (in fact, the first really GOOD story on this show since THE KEEPER OF TRAKEN).
Saunders (Richard Todd) starts out a meanie, but even then he has one line that's stuck with me, when he says, "It'll be GOOD for 'im-- make a MAN out of 'im!" Of course, he lightens up considerably as the story goes on. Hindle (Simon Rouse), who starts out lodging official protests against everything, goes completely insane once he's left in charge of the dome. I'm not sure whether he's genuinely frightening or just annoying as hell, but a good right hook to the jaw could have solved a lot of problems if someone, almost anyone, had delivered it somewhere early in the story.
Tegan is a lot less annoying this time out, and her frantic behavior in the dream-place for once seems quite natural. When she emerges possessed by The Mara, we see an entirely different performance, and it's quite surprising, as it shows Janet Fielding had a LOT of potential that was never utilized in her entire run on the show. Adric is far less annoying than in the 3 previous stories... at least, until he decides to play up to Hindle (you just feel like the Doctor must be thinking, "Oh, NOT AGAIN!"). He then gets worse near the end when he bluntly tells Tegan it's all her fault, then childishly tries defending his own failings. Mature, he AIN'T.
At last, Peter Davison's Doctor gets a chance to shine, as he really feels at home in this story. I did keep wishing he'd have found a way to clobber Hindle (I'm sure Jon Pertwee or Tom Baker would have managed it), as his continual inaction allowed the level of danger to keep increasing.
I was genuinely fascinated this time around by a lot of story elements that in earlier viewings I just found baffling. It seems to me KINDA may well have been a sci-fi allegorical retelling of the Biblical story of "The Garden Of Eden", what with such things as people living in a garden-like paradise, evil taking the form of a snake trying to tempt or possess people, and local fruit-- an apple-- being considered "forbidden" by the manual. I love the line when The Doctor says, "An apple a day keeps the... never mind."
The whole concept of the wheel of time and history repeating itself was rather mind-blowing. As usual, Mary Morris (as Panna) was mesmerizing (I get a kick out of her every time I watch THE PRISONER episode "Dance Of The Dead"), though it seems The Doctor put his foot right in it when he said he "must be" an idiot, and she started calling him that repeatedly. At least Karuna (Sarah Prince) only did it once, and showed him more respect once she (probably) figured out he was trying to help, and, smarter than he looked.
Of all the characters who turned up on the show during this period, it's Todd (Nerys Hughes) who felt to me like someone who SHOULD have become a Companion. She was smart, pretty, level-headed, and although she argued a bit with The Doctor (they were, frankly, both baffled by what was going on around them), they seemed to get along quite well. When they shake hands farewell at the end, it seemed a shame to think we'd never see her again. Especially when The Doctor was stuck with Adric and Tegan (well, for awhile, anyway).
As I get older and my sensibilities get sharper, I've noted more and more how bad films get worse, but good ones keep getting better. KINDA really surprises me, as watching it again today I found myself enjoying it more than I ever had. I now consider it the first really GOOD Peter Davison story (in fact, the first really GOOD story on this show since THE KEEPER OF TRAKEN).
Saunders (Richard Todd) starts out a meanie, but even then he has one line that's stuck with me, when he says, "It'll be GOOD for 'im-- make a MAN out of 'im!" Of course, he lightens up considerably as the story goes on. Hindle (Simon Rouse), who starts out lodging official protests against everything, goes completely insane once he's left in charge of the dome. I'm not sure whether he's genuinely frightening or just annoying as hell, but a good right hook to the jaw could have solved a lot of problems if someone, almost anyone, had delivered it somewhere early in the story.
Tegan is a lot less annoying this time out, and her frantic behavior in the dream-place for once seems quite natural. When she emerges possessed by The Mara, we see an entirely different performance, and it's quite surprising, as it shows Janet Fielding had a LOT of potential that was never utilized in her entire run on the show. Adric is far less annoying than in the 3 previous stories... at least, until he decides to play up to Hindle (you just feel like the Doctor must be thinking, "Oh, NOT AGAIN!"). He then gets worse near the end when he bluntly tells Tegan it's all her fault, then childishly tries defending his own failings. Mature, he AIN'T.
At last, Peter Davison's Doctor gets a chance to shine, as he really feels at home in this story. I did keep wishing he'd have found a way to clobber Hindle (I'm sure Jon Pertwee or Tom Baker would have managed it), as his continual inaction allowed the level of danger to keep increasing.
I was genuinely fascinated this time around by a lot of story elements that in earlier viewings I just found baffling. It seems to me KINDA may well have been a sci-fi allegorical retelling of the Biblical story of "The Garden Of Eden", what with such things as people living in a garden-like paradise, evil taking the form of a snake trying to tempt or possess people, and local fruit-- an apple-- being considered "forbidden" by the manual. I love the line when The Doctor says, "An apple a day keeps the... never mind."
The whole concept of the wheel of time and history repeating itself was rather mind-blowing. As usual, Mary Morris (as Panna) was mesmerizing (I get a kick out of her every time I watch THE PRISONER episode "Dance Of The Dead"), though it seems The Doctor put his foot right in it when he said he "must be" an idiot, and she started calling him that repeatedly. At least Karuna (Sarah Prince) only did it once, and showed him more respect once she (probably) figured out he was trying to help, and, smarter than he looked.
Of all the characters who turned up on the show during this period, it's Todd (Nerys Hughes) who felt to me like someone who SHOULD have become a Companion. She was smart, pretty, level-headed, and although she argued a bit with The Doctor (they were, frankly, both baffled by what was going on around them), they seemed to get along quite well. When they shake hands farewell at the end, it seemed a shame to think we'd never see her again. Especially when The Doctor was stuck with Adric and Tegan (well, for awhile, anyway).
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- profh-1
- Nov 8, 2009
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