Category: Complete Review
Doctor Who episode 199: Fury from the Deep – Episode 2 (23/3/1968)
This episode is starkly split between the futuristic control rooms of the Euro Gas facility and the amazing psychedelic domesticity of the residential block. Robson stamps around control bullying Harris and bashing heads with Van Lutyens, and everyone very earnestly talks about impellers and pipelines and gas flows like this is a knock-off of The Power Game. Meanwhile, in their apartment, the Harrises talk to each other like they’re in Brief Encounter (it’s all ‘darling’).
Doctor Who episode 198: Fury from the Deep – Episode 1 (16/3/1968)
A good chunk of this episode feels oddly familiar, like a jumble of influences plundered from other stories. The TARDIS’ arrival on a beach, where the Doctor and his friends much about before getting shot at isn’t a million miles away from The Enemy of the World, and along with the general high security paranoia and the theft of a file by an unseen saboteur suggests this might be another espionage thriller. But then there’s the relationship between Chief Robson, the governor of this base under siege, who’s a familiar General Cutler type: a gruff despot, like Clent or the Gatwick Commandant. And the idea of a monstrous something lurking hidden in the pipes, living on poison gas, is right out of The Macra Terror – with that story’s Controller, Graham Leaman appearing as Price.
Doctor Who episode 197: The Web of Fear – Episode 6 (9/3/1968)
In the very final analysis, this is a bit of a cop-out ending. The Doctor’s spent the last week and a half coming up with a clever plan to foil the Intelligence, but ultimately he doesn’t get to carry it our because Jamie jumps the gun, uses the hacked Yeti to attack its peers, and wreck the Intelligence’s machine. There’s a lot of chaos, a big explosion, and then it all wraps up in about three minutes as the Doctor bemoans Jamie’s actions and warns that the Intelligence is still out there: ‘It might come back.’
Doctor Who episode 196: The Web of Fear – Episode 5 (2/3/1968)
Intriguingly, this episode explicitly takes place in real time: near the start the possessed Travers, moving awkwardly as a puppet controlled by the Intelligence, warns the Doctor that he has 20 minutes to make up his mind whether he will give his mind to the Intelligence for the sake of all the human lives, and be forced to live as a child with Jamie and Victoria as “parents”. And then, at the halfway point Anne remarks that they have 12 minutes remaining to come up with a way to re-wire a Yeti control sphere to regain the initiative.
Doctor Who episode 195: The Web of Fear – Episode 4 (24/2/1968)
The episode begins with Professor Travers being dragged away from the Goodge Street base by Yeti, and concludes with his return, escorted by them. In between are some of the most visceral action sequences and gruelling horror the show has attempted to date, including the massacre of nearly all the supporting cast in a Yeti attack that shows off Camfield’s dynamic film direction and ability to make about four Yeti costumes look like a horde. Shock moments include the sight of Lane’s corpse shrouded in cobwebs, and Captain Knight’s body left, eyes wide open, where a Yeti leaves it.
Doctor Who episode 194: The Web of Fear – Episode 3 (17/2/1968)
Of the 97 missing episodes of Doctor Who, this is perhaps the most keenly felt because for a brief moment it wasn’t missing. It was found, but then lost again. At the time this made me unaccountably furious, to the extent that I’ve never actually seen The Web of Fear until now, stubbornly holding out until this one was handed over. But short of the winds blowing in another direction, it remains firmly in the clutches of some private collector, and me having a sulk about it won’t change that fact.
Doctor Who episode 193: The Web of Fear – Episode 2 (10/2/1968)
It’s Troughton’s first week off in a while, and Haisman and Lincoln use his absence to their advantage – his mysterious disappearance makes him a suspicious person of interest to Captain Knight and his men, none of whom knows exactly who or what is behind the Yeti attacks. This is made clear in an effective scene between soldiers Blake and Weams, who dismiss the idea that they’re ‘abominable snowmen’ for the more prosaic explanations of a foreign power’s robot army, or creatures from outer space
Doctor Who episode 192: The Web of Fear – Episode 1 (3/2/1968)
There’s something refreshing retro about this episode. Not only does it follow directly on from The Enemy of the World, like the old Hartnell stories, but the Doctor is back to his old ways of indignantly defending his control of the Ship, which then goes wrong and starts flashing a warning light, before something disturbing appears on the scanner. And when the TARDIS does land, in a deserted London, the crew promptly find a dead body and an ominous poster just like in The Dalek Invasion of Earth.
Doctor Who episode 191: The Enemy of the World – Episode 6 (27/1/1968)
The conclusion to the story is largely perfunctory, which only adds to the sense that beyond giving Troughton the opportunity to play the Great Dictator, Whitaker didn’t really have much idea what to do with this. The introduction of the secret bunker filled with middle class people never gels with the rest of the less absurd plot elements; Giles Kent’s unmasking is a bit clumsy, and rather than providing any sort of satisfactory denouement, Whitaker just blows everything up.
Doctor Who episode 190: The Enemy of the World – Episode 5 (20/1/1968)
The story is pretty clearly pitting those who countenance killing as a means to an end – Salamander, Benik, and Kent – against those who value life more highly: the Doctor, Bruce and Swann. An unlikely alliance between the Doctor and Bruce to expose Salamander starts to come together at the moment when Salamander’s own carefully-laid plans begin to fall apart because of his own over-confidence.