Sunday, 22 March 2026

Corridors of Power


"Why would you want to generate plasma inside a spaceship?"

Writer: Matthew Griffiths
Format: Short Story
Released: December 2003
Printed in: Short Trips: Steel Skies 01

Featuring: First Doctor, Vicki, Steven

Synopsis

There are many places that most of us can never see: places that are sheltered, locked away, cordoned off from the outside world. But to the Doctor, and those who travel with him in his TARDIS, there is no such thing as a locked door. Anywhere in space and time is open to them to visit – even if sometimes it might be better to leave such places well alone.

Steel Skies is a collection of stories based in enclosed and artificial environments: places constructed to keep the dangers of the universe outside, perhaps, or to keep their inhabitants locked in. It is divided into four sections, each exploring a different kind of confinement:

Section One, Flight, comprises four tales of travellers who left their homes for far-away destinations – to explore, to start a new life, or to fight for the survival of their species.

Section Two, Frontiers, explores the corridors, living quarters and ventilation shafts of four futuristic environments – designed to shelter men, women and children from harsh natural forces, or from the threat of nuclear war.

Section Three, Incarceration, tells four stories of punishment and imprisonment, from San Francisco's infamous Alcatraz, to the cage of a flightless angel in the dilapidated ruins of Heaven. 

Section Four, Isolation, deals with the loneliness and despair of being cut off from the world outside, by physical or mental incapacity, by the ravages of war, or caught between destinations aboard the TARDIS itself. 

A recurring theme in all four sections is the effect of the Doctor's arrival in these enclosed environments – sometimes positive, sometimes less so.

Verdict

Corridors of Power was a decent story to kick off my reading of the Steel Skies edition of Short Trips! I’m very excited to be starting a new edition of this Big Finish prose series because I don’t think it’s any secret that I didn’t get on too well with the Zodiac edition so I’m fascinated by the concept at the heart of this one. It’s not an obvious one that’s for sure but this captured the essence really well. It felt very contained and I understand that captured the intended feel of the book very well. I like the way the story tapped into the stereotypical nature of Doctor Who when it came to running through corridors. That’s good fun but I did like the mysterious feel this story had right from the off. I loved that Steven was being pretty boisterous when the TARDIS landed on what the Doctor was claiming wasn’t an ordinary floor. That set the intrigue right from the off. The image of the Doctor and Vicki looking down on Steven from the ledge was great too and I can imagine the First Doctor here not being too happy about having to clamber down! The insistence from Steven on being on a spaceship was good and I like how he has some experience and credentials there being a pilot. If somebody was going to know then it was certainly this companion! The emergence of the handymen was interesting and it was clear that things weren’t quite in sync. That could have perhaps been presented as being a little more uncomfortable as I didn’t quite grasp why they weren’t fully interacting with the Doctor and his companions. It makes sense that they couldn’t understand them and despite the established TARDIS translation circuits being in play, I think you can get away with that a little in the First Doctor era. The Doctor taking on the challenge of the situation on the ship was good and Steven also showcased some strong Doctorly qualities. He was wanting to get to the bottom of the situation and I think part of that was because he and the Doctor disagreed slightly on where they had arrived and what that meant. The Doctor investigating the scorch marks was good and I liked the eureka moment when he realised they were a failed translation. It’s intriguing that Steven dubbed the hunched peoples on the ship as handymen before we even knew the expected horror at the end. I liked that the Doctor knew that what was being created in the form of the plasma cannon was brutal and would wipe out the arriving space fleet. That was pretty daunting but it was slightly underwhelming to find that the arriving party were actually the clients of the handymen and not the intended target. Once that was revealed, it was obvious to me that the clients were going to be humanity. The Doctor worked it out beforehand which was good and initially Steven was angered at the prospect of leaving the handymen to their fate. But then four humans emerged for their weapon. That was good despite the predictability as the companions had to realise that their own species were coming to collect a weapon of utter destruction. The human race never changes and that was difficult for Steven to accept. A little more of Vicki in the story would have been nice but it was fun for her to have gone down the chute initially! I was praying for the Doctor to follow but that wasn’t going to happen in this incarnation. Overall, a really decent story that captured the feel well and just had a little bit of predictability. A good read. 

Rating: 7/10

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