Check out this hilarious cartridge holder , showcasing just what was wrong with the Dr. Who story “ The Horns Of Nimon . ” The new videodisk for “ Nimon ” and four other not - so - Hellenic account offer a blunt dissection of what went improper .
So if you asked Doctor Who winnow to name their favorite stories , I doubt “ Underworld , ” “ The Horns Of Nimon , ” “ The Space Museum , ” “ The Chase ” or “ The Time Monster ” would be on the list . But those five tale are out on DVD as of a duad weeks ago , and they ’re not all bad . There are a few reasons to pick up the DVD besides just being a medico Who completist .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9DvNznjxM1Q

For one thing , those stories do have their charms . “ The Space Museum ” has one of the best first episodes in the original series ’ history , with a canny , suspenseful use of goods and services of time travel . The Doctor and his familiar glimpse their own futures : immobilized and wrick into exhibits in a cruddy museum . Then they ’re flung back in fourth dimension a few hour , and they have to struggle to change their portion . The other three sequence of the fib slide downhill apace but still have some good present moment .
“ The Chase , ” which add up right on after “ The Space Museum ” in 1965 and is bundled with it in a three - videodisk set , is a totally pointless Dalek tale . For everyone who kick about “ triumph Of The Daleks ” and other gratuitous Dalek tarradiddle nowadays , just remember it could be worse . In “ The Chase , ” the Daleks build a time machine and adjudicate to chase the Doctor and his pals around the universe . And … that ’s it . The Daleks pursue the Doctor through a variety of situations , that ramble from silly to flimsy , with the most farcical being a fake haunted household featuring Frankenstein and Dracula robot . It all culminates in the insertion of the Mechanoids , who were supposed to be the Daleks ’ new rivals but were never seen again outside of a tie - in comic . On the other hand , some of the located pieces are cute , and the terminal battle with the Mechanoids has a certain vitality . It ’s a fun but forgettable escapade .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LPPZO4C_BTg

The other three stories were bundled together in a box set of stories deal out with Greek mythology in England . Here in the US , though , I think they ’re only available separately . In either typesetter’s case , watch all three stories back to back leave you with a distinguishable impression that Doctor Who should have just leave Grecian mythology alone . ( If only the 1967 write up “ The Underwater Menace ” still existed in its integrality — then we could have had two awful Atlantis stories , rather of just one . )
So “ The Time Monster , ” from 1972 , is sort of the encapsulation of everything that went wrong with the Jon Pertwee era . The original Master , in one of his last appearances , has appear so often that he ’s in conclusion devolved into a kind of composition board stereotype villain . The Brigadier and the men of U.N.I.T. skate on the edge of being pure comic relief . There ’s rafts of Buddhist philosophical system , flux in with New Age nonsensicality about finding Atlantis . And yet , it ’s got some of my favorite second of any Who storey , particularly when the Doctor and his fellow Jo are locked in a cell , apparently defeated , and the Doctor put some philosophy on her . And its trippy geographic expedition of what would happen if you put two TARDISes inside each other is astonishingly fun , and repose the groundwork for later stories like “ Logopolis . ”
Then there are the two Tom Baker stories , “ Underworld ” and “ The Horns Of Nimon . ” For much of the Tom Baker earned run average , writer like Robert Holmes would take classic fib like The Manchurian Candidate or Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and give them a raw , skill - fictitious spin . But writer Anthony Read ( who script - emended “ Underworld ” and indite “ Nimon ” ) took this approaching much too literally and applied it to Greek myths . So you have Grecian myth represented wholesale , with character like Orpheus take in their names changed to Orfe . And inevitably , the Doctor turns to the tv camera and jiffy about the fact that old myths are repeating themselves . It ’s mostly pretty dreadful .

“ Underworld ” is also noted for being a failed experimentation — the show could n’t afford to build right sets , so they make up one’s mind to utilise greenscreen to insert Tom Baker and the other actors into petite simulation set . It ’s sort of like Avatar , except it does n’t work at all , and see totally preposterous .
So why would you want to purchase these five account on DVD ? For one affair , they ’re somewhat amusing — from the weird godlike brow sported by the Xerons in “ Space Museum ” to the leotard - get into Pisces the Fishes people in “ The Chase ” to pretty much everything in “ Horns Of Nimon , ” these account are made to be snort at . And the Master ’s attempts to seduce Ingrid Pitt in “ The Time Monster ” are Graeco-Roman melodrama cheese . But there are also flashes of briliance in all these history , and “ The Space Museum ” and “ The Time Monster ” lay the all-important fundament for Steven Moffat ’s “ wibbly wobbly timey whimey ” approach to the series .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zV4ahJkUNrw

And the DVD extras mostly further you not to take these picky outings that in earnest . I have to say , these are some of my favored videodisc extras for any of the Doctor Who releases — mostly because they do n’t overdo it . “ The Time Monster ” is able to suit on a unmarried DVD because the extra are hold on pretty light for a change , which is a wise to choice , really . Both “ Horns Of Nimon ” and “ The Chase ” avoid the lengthy , often tiresome and ego - congratulatory making - of documentaries , in favor of having one individual associate with the story explain why it was such a failure . In the case of “ Nimon , ” it ’s writer Anthony Read , as insure above . In the vitrine of “ Chase , ” it ’s director Richard Martin , who looks reasonably horror-stricken by his own handiwork . For “ The Space Museum , ” we get present - day author Rob Shearman , wait back at the narrative and mostly mocking the hell out of it .
Other groovy extras include music demos , showing how Peter Howell re - scored a surgical incision of “ Horns of Nimon ” with electronic euphony as a manifestation for the musical approach that have over in the following year . Also on the “ Nimon ” DVD , there ’s a precious infotainment about all the weird crafts projects the children ’s show Blue Peter has done with Doctor Who over the years . “ The Chase ” has a twain of nice Dalek infotainment , one about their appearances and one about their merchandising . “ Underworld ” includes some very rare footage of those infamous greenscreen sequences being inject .
All in all , if you require to explore just how it is that some installments of classic medico Who break so badly to live up to their voltage — with the makers of those installment lament their failure right alongside you — then these unexampled videodisk present a perfect opportunity .

Doctor Whodvd reviewTelevisionTom BakerWilliam Hartnell
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