CLOSE-UP
Alan Bennion as Slaar, leader of the Ice Warriors, in Lime Grove Studio D for the recording of The Seeds of Death (1969, director Michael Ferguson).
Michael Ferguson was one of the most visually inventive directors on Doctor Who during the 1960s and early 70s, masterminding extensive action sequences in The War Machines (1966) and The Ambassadors of Death (1970), and ambitious effects in The Claws of Axos (1971). But Ferguson was also an ingenious studio director, as shown by his work on The Seeds of Death (1969). Episode Four of this story is a good example.
The main trick Ferguson uses to create excitement is rapid cutting. There are 15 shots in the first minute alone. Three other scenes contain rapid cutting between shots: the moment halfway through when an Ice Warrior storms T-Mat reception, and the two scenes that form the episode’s dual cliffhanger. In the store room, the cuts create a mood of panic as we hastily switch from close-ups of Jamie and Miss Kelly hiding from the Ice Warrior, while in the Moonbase control room they help ramp up the tension, as we cut between Zoe at the temperature wheel and close-ups of Phipps watching anxiously from the ventilation duct.