As the previous individual dvd releases for this season were fairly comprehensively packed with additional features- most included here- there’s not quite as much brand new material in this Collection as there have been in others. Of course, the sheer quality of the actual stories is enough in itself yet somehow the team has found some interesting new documentaries to present as well as cleaning up the episodes with AI. The method used has sparked some controversy with some people saying it has caused a loss of detail and some odd looking moments. I believe that, just like when there are new special effects options available, the original episode as it was should still be an option. Apparently, this was thought to be something people would not be interested in yet the large number of social media posts on the subject suggests otherwise. To be honest I didn’t notice that much on my nearly three year old tv, but some of the stills posted online suggest peoples faces are the most affected with them ending up looking too smooth and unnatural.
Classic Doctor Who (1963-89) including reviews, memories, merch, fandom, spin offs and more. X (aka Twitter- @JohnConnors100, Instagram- JohnConnors100
November 02, 2025
September 12, 2025
Season 13: The Seeds of Doom
It’s
been said that atypical Doctor Who
often works best – and unconventional stories such as `Caves of Androzani` or
`Blink` often appear to poll highly - but `Seeds of Doom` might seem to be an example
where the reverse is true. It shows what the series can do well and what its
strengths are. It’s a variation of a story that’s been told often in the show
yet something special comes together to make it a prize specimen. No doubt a
modern take on this story would highlight the ecological issues and perhaps
even delve into Harrison Chase’s undoubtedly colourful past but such depth is
not needed for what remains at its heart an adventure yarn with a threat our
confined heroes have a limited time to sort out.
August 31, 2025
Christopher Bidmead
Christopher Bidmead, who has died, was the first of producer John Nathan Turner’s trio of script editors each of whom ushered in quite different approaches to Doctor Who. Bidmead was the chosen enabler of JNT’s intent on making the series more serious and drawn from real science as opposed to the boggle eyed, humorous iteration that Graham Williams and Douglas Adams had delivered the previous season. From a forty five year distance, Bidmead’s ideas and commissions were not that far removed and no less ambitious that those of Douglas Adams; it is just the way they were played was tonally different.
August 10, 2025
Season 13: The Brain of Morbius
`Brain
of Morbius` should not work. Studio bound yet including such locations as a
cliff edge and the exterior of a stormy planet and populated by characters
whose larger-than-life personas fill up the screen it would surely be a mess?
Yet it’s like a glorious, bonkers stage play that should really have
transferred to the West End and run for years. It has that melodramatic edge to
it which is what happens when you get a cast that is willing to hurl themselves
into something as mad as this. In any other season this would be the pinnacle,
here it has to make do with sharing the acclaim with others. Whatever the
disagreements about the script that led to the credited `Bland` pseudonym this
is a story that proves that classic Doctor Who is always more about the
story than it is about the effects.
July 21, 2025
Season 13: The Android Invasion
It’s
a shame that this story is destined to sit forever at the foot of any poll you
might run for this season yet there is a lot about `The Android Invasion` I
really like. Not only does it include some iconic imagery- the finger pointing
space helmeted androids and the fake Sarah’s face falling off- but it also has
the Doctor in a pub! Its opening half is atmospheric and full of mystery
like an extreme episode of The Avengers.
It may be the weakest story of the season (and I’ll readily agree to
that) but that’s some standard because this is my favourite season of Doctor
Who ever.
July 06, 2025
Season Two@60 The Time Meddler
Considering some of the talent involved on both sides of the camera (Dennis Spooner, Douglas Camfield, Peter Butterworth, Alethea Charlton) it’s somewhat disappointing that this story fails to catch light. The idea of someone from the Doctor’s own planet interfering in history, actions in opposition to the principles that the Doctor holds dear, is certainly an interesting one and would be even more so to viewers in 1965.
June 04, 2025
Blackpool Remembered book review
This is a fantastic book for those of us with fond
memories of getting as close to travelling in the Tardis as we could at Blackpool’s Golden Mile each
summer. I’ve already done several posts on here a while back with my memories
of the Blackpool exhibition and its good to see more people sharing memories
and photos of the place. This book was originally online but for the generation
that remembers Blackpool, a physical memento is something extra special.
May 23, 2025
Season Two@60 The Chase
A
fill in story apparently only roughly drafted by Terry Nation and then
developed by Dennis Spooner, `The Chase` struggles to match the drama of it’s
title. It never seems much like a chase as the Daleks pursue the Tardis to
several locations, gaining ground as the Doctor has to stop for a period in
each place. What could be thrilling is hidebound by the budgetary restrictions
and a script that seems far too ambitious to be properly realised. Nonetheless
it has interesting elements, lively performances and some good effects.
April 27, 2025
Season Two@60 The Space Museum
I’m at a loss as to why `The Space Museum` always fares so badly in various polls over the years where it has even ended up at the very foot of the table. Just off the top of my head I can think of at least thirty stories its better than. The first episode alone is surely one of the finest Sixties episodes of all. All of the aspects singled out by some reviewers are actually no worse (and sometimes better) than in many other stories. Most are the production shortcomings which fans of classic Doctor Who are surely used to by now.
March 27, 2025
Season Two@60 The Crusade
The
early years of Doctor Who did seem to like wholly historical stories
which in theory were easier to produce than sci-fi ones. While there would be
no issue with the Tardis landing amongst ordinary or fictional people, constant
encounters with well-known historical figures creates limitations on the
storylines. The BBC’s educational remit could be tested by depictions of the
likes of Marco Polo or Nero interacting with the Doctor while not all stories
are as strict about the effect the travellers have on history as `The Aztecs`
is. Its probably why the wholly historical adventures were replaced by pseudo
historical ones mixing supposedly real history with some alien antagonist.
Though generally intelligently written and made `The Crusade` harbours these
issues. All the way through you do get a sense that the production would be
more interesting without the Doctor and his companions in it at all. It sits at
the point where adherence to facts crashes into the need for some drama.
March 16, 2025
Doctor In Distress
Thus a plan was hatched to make a high profile song to highlight an issue which, as far the wider public was concerned, had already been sorted. The people to whom this task fell were Ian Levine and Fiachra Tench. Levine had a track record as a DJ and producer of HI NRG records that were popular in clubs and were also starting to infiltrate the charts. As the name suggests HI NRG music is supposed to be powerful, up tempo and pulsing with intense vocals. Ian Levine’s own superb production of the song `High Energy` by Evelyn Thomas the previous year is a textbox example of the musical genre. `Doctor In Distress` is not.
March 14, 2025
Season 7 Collection: Extras
The Collection season seven doesn’t have as many new extras as others only because the DVDs of individual stories were replete with additional features. Even the usual shelf space saving isn’t possible as the width of the box is more or less the same as that of the four individual dvds together but there should always be ample room for one of the cornerstone seasons of Doctor Who. It’s no exaggeration to say that season seven saved the series at a moment when its future was in doubt. Yet it’s also a unique quartet of stories as season 8 onwards boiled the show down to primary colours so remains an outlier in the series’ style.
I reviewed these four stories in detail on this blog five years ago, to read those reviews go to January- May 2020 posts in the Archive.
February 28, 2025
The Time when Doctor Who was nearly cancelled
Forty years ago, Doctor Who faced an existential threat that could take if off air forever. Or at least eighteen months. Yet thanks to a loose coalition secretly driven by the production office, the series lived on for another three years. This is the story of those tumultuous few weeks in 1985 when the Tardis doors could have been shut for good and what happened afterwards...
On Wednesday 27 February 1985 London's daily newspaper 'The Evening Standard' received a phone call from a never identified source at Thames Television repeating a rumour they'd heard to the effect that Doctor Who was being taken off the air "for at least 18 months". This was not a new rumour. Producer John Nathan Turner had already heard it himself the previous week from both lan Levine (his unofficial script consultant) and Robert Holmes (who'd been commissioned to pen a third Auton story) but he had, publicly at least, dismissed the idea. It's almost certain that the stories originated from one of many fans who were employed at the BBC and it was wishful thinking on the producer's part to ignore the signs of a television programme in crisis; signs that had been apparent for two months.
Episode 1 of 'Attack of the Cybermen' had garnered impressive ratings of nine million but they had dropped to seven million for the second part. By 'Mark of the Rani' part 1 they'd dropped alarmingly to around six and a quarter million; a fall of almost a third. This had been noticed by the press who were on alert for a cancellation/crisis angle, a situation heightened by rising complaints about the level of graphic violence in the season which had been voiced publicly in the 'Radio Times' and on Points of View. The casual viewer seemed to be turning off as the season progressed, frustrated by increasingly un linear storylines that baffled many, as did an increasing reliance on old motifs and continuity by the barrel load. In place of spectacle and dark corners came nasty violence epitomised by an unsympathetic Doctor whom kids simply did not like. At the same time the BBC was looking to re-route budgets to enable the launch of breakfast television and the expansion of daytime programming. Some senior figures saw this as a chance / excuse to axe their least favourite sci-fi adventure. So when the ratings for season 22 took such a dramatic tumble Doctor Who was already vulnerable.
February 17, 2025
Season Two@60 - The Web Planet
Long
before I saw this story I read the Target novel upon which it is based, `Doctor
Who and the Zarbi`. That book’s strange Chris Achellios cover and descriptive Bill
Strutton prose conjured up a totally alien world for young me. For ages I
imagined that the televised episodes were as elegant and bizarre and
imaginative as that book. So inevitably when I eventually saw it on a grainy
video it was hugely disappointing. I wanted those descriptions; I wanted it to
look like that book cover and it just didn’t. So, I sort of left it to one
side.
February 11, 2025
Season Two@60 - The Romans
Opinions
I’ve heard about this story range from it being the best Sixties story to being
throwaway nonsense. Its neither of these things yet certainly drifts closer to
the former. I think I’d only seen it once before, probably on some grainy
videotape in the days when Sixties stories were passed around fandom like rare
commodities. All I could remember was a hectic farce which it is but maybe I
appreciate that more now plus finding out it was intended to embody those
attributes makes it easier to enjoy. Like a lot of seldom seen Doctor
Who stories it pays to re-watch and discover just what makes it tick.
January 19, 2025
Season Two@60 - The Rescue
Though ostensibly made to introduce a new companion, `The Rescue` is an interesting story whose brevity means that the usual meandering that fills many a Sixties episode is absent. Instead, David Whitaker’s script is tight (even if it contains some unlikely contrivances) and on a handful of sets plays quite theatrically in a good way with some excellent direction courtesy of Christopher Barry. Visually and narratively it is reminiscent of one of those pulp sci-fi stories from the 1930s especially with its twist of the alien monster not being an alien at all. It does have a few flaws but I would rate it as one of the top first Doctor tales.
January 06, 2025
Season Two@60 - Planet of Giants
Season opener is a glimpse of ambitious things to come.
Where it not for Susan leaving at the end of `Dalek Invasion of Earth`, that epic would surely have opened season two rather than this slight tale. `Planet of Giants` has a reputation for being quite dull though the decision to reduce it from an intended four episodes to three does move it along a bit. It is an unusual story though in that the TARDIS crew’s presence is never detected by the guest characters and though the Doctor and co do affect the outcome, they rely on guesswork to figure out the gist of what is going on.















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