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Doctor Who: The Brain of Morbius Streaming.
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Season Thirteen.
Much to the Doctors chagrin the Time Lords have taken control of the TARDIS, sending the Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith into very hazardous ground upon the stormlashed spaceship graveyard planet of Karn.
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Sheltering from the rain in a castle atop a mountain, the Doctor encounters the surgeon Mehendri Solon, and his simple minded slave/assistant Condo conducting unpleasant experiments on living flesh, but for what reason?
And now as a storm approaches, large noxious from the depths of Time Lord history plots its return to the land of the living.
But can even the Doctor’s mind, be a match for The Brain of Morbius.
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Four episodes of sumptuous gothic filled suspense, suspense that will suspend your everyday worries and cares, well at least for ninety minutes anyway. Mr Baker and Ms Sladen are on lovely compose, as is Philip Madoc, marvellously getting his teeth into a role he can go gloriously over the top with. Welsh born Madoc was a; “Who” semi regular, featuring in stories like The War Games as The War Lord, The Krotons as Eelek, and The Power of Kroll as Fenner. As well as the second Peter Cushing Dalek film. And with the passing of time, even writer Terrance Dicks no longer feels so bland towards this anecdote anymore. For people like myself who finds the extras a nice touch, I did feel the extras were a bit on the ancient side compared to some other releases.
Warning to the parents of tiny ones, the scene where Solon shoots Condo reveals a bit of blood, so a bit of parental discretion may be called for there.
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DVD Extras
Commentary by Tom Baker, Elisabeth Sladen, Philip Madoc, Philip Hinchcliffe and Christopher Barry .
Getting a Head:~ A recent documentary about the making of the programme featuring Christopher Barry, Philip Hinchcliffe,writer Terrance Dicks, designer Barry Newbery, composer Dudley Simpson, and actors Philip Madoc, Cynthia Grenville, Colin Fay and Gillian Brown, with narration by Paul McGann
Designs on Karn: How the planet Karn was created, with designer Barry Newbery
Set Tour Prefer a hump around the studio sets with this 3D CGI reconstruction
Radio Times Billings: Listings from Radio Times on Pdf DVD Rom
Photo Gallery
Sketch Gallery
Coming Soon Trailer
Production Information Subtitles
Digitally remastered characterize and sound quality.
Originally broadcast:~ 3rd January 1976 – 24th January 1976.
(Status 2 version now on sale at amazon.uk)
I out-and-out cherish this chronicle. I’ve taken the typical “Doctor Who” fan’s path to this point of plan, however. I was riveted at age 11, embarrassed at age 16, and now celebrate it in all its campy glory. When the disembodied brain of Morbius fell onto the floor with an audible “splat!” tedious in Fraction Three, I actually cheered.
What’s most impressive about the DVD release is the Restoration Team’s attitude to the myth. Now that the classic series DVDs have been coming out for almost ten years, and the greatest of the immense stories have long since been released, and the available remaining stories approach from deep in the third tier (and now, with the imminent release of Doctor Who: Four to Doomsday (Episode 118), the fourth tier), it is hard to predict what editorial slant the DVD extra features will engage. I’ve been surprised, for example, by the coldness toward Doctor Who – Unlit Orchid (Episode 121), and I nodded along to the wistful revelation that Doctor Who: The Invisible Enemy/K9 and Company: A Girl’s Best Friend unprejudiced hasn’t old-fashioned that well at all.
Fortunately, the DVD producers appear to like Morbius, and for roughly the same reasons that I do. They’re perhaps a diminutive too enamored of Philip Madoc’s Shatner-esque turn as this story’s Dr. Frankenstein stand-in, Solon. But everyone loves the dimly courageous Condo, the one-armed manservant standing in for Igor. Even Terrance Dicks, who took his name off the final version of the narrative, seems to have warmed up to it considerably — and we know from many other past DVD releases that Uncle Terry isn’t horrified about picking a fight with a 35 year-old bit of TV history.
All in all, “Brain of Morbius” blends two elements of “Doctor Who” greatness. First, a terrific script by Robert Holmes, elephantine of memorable insults (“That palsied harridan!”) and throw-away world building (the lone reference to “the calm gas dirigibles of the Hoothi”, which 15 years later was resurrected for Like and War (The Unusual Doctor Who Adventures) . And second, there’s that mettlesome 1970’s mentality that “We’re going to acquire away with putting a rubber brain in a fishbowl and mounting that on an ill-fitting costume with chicken feathers and an great lobster claw”.
The only curiosity is that, while the text commentary accurately describes Terrance Dicks’ novel-writing career as including the Past Doctor Adventure Warmonger (Doctor Who), the writer curiously fails to mention that it was in fact a prequel to this epic. Unbiased as well, however. Unlike this DVD, you might want to give that book a miss.
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