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Marco makes films. You wouldn’t like them. The lighting’s shoddy, the sets are cheap and the sound’s appalling. But there’s an audience for them. Because they’re films in which bad things happen to women. Marco’s latest venture is based on real events. Events which took place in Fetch Priory many years ago. It’s an anthology piece, and Marco needs one final victim. But the last victim is not who anyone is expecting. Death has returned to Fetch Priory. And Death is no-one’s victim.
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This is the first of a set of four stories in which various members of Torchwood face off against monsters from the regular Doctor Who series. Here, as is obvious from the title and cover, it's Gwen versus the Fendahl. There isn't much background on that given, so this probably won't make much sense to anyone who hasn't seen Image of the Fendahl. If you have... well, it had some good ideas, but it didn't work all that well for me.
The story concerns the making of a snuff movie at Fetch Priory based around the events of the original TV story some decades before. This means that all of the characters involved, apart from Gwen herself, are deeply unlikeable. That's fair enough, given that misogyny is a central theme of the story, but with Gwen acting strangely and only really coming to the fore in the closing segments, it makes it hard to really care what happens to anyone.
The result is a fairly traditional horror story where the makers of the horror movie are the victims of a real monster. The fact that the Fendahl doesn't directly speak doesn't help much on audio, and at times it's difficult to follow exactly what it's supposed to be doing. Certainly, they were going for a dark and unpleasant vibe here and I'd say that that worked, along with the message about the attitudes of the filmmakers towards women (mostly, although not entirely, shown through their actions rather than explicit dialogue) which partly subverts the genre. A lot may depend on whether you like the sort of supernatural horror film it's emulating - which, in fairness, is something that fits well with the Fendahl as a monster - but I didn't feel this was one of the stronger entries in the series.
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67 primary books71 released booksBig Finish Torchwood is a 71-book series with 67 primary works first released in 2015 with contributions by Guy Adams, David Llewellyn, and 26 others.