Doctor Who:
The Key To Time
U.K. (Made for TV) / 1978-79
Directors:
Michael Hayes, Pennant Roberts, et al
Starring
Tom Baker
Mary Tamm
John Leeson
Color / 633 Minutes / Not Rated
Format: DVD (R1 - NTSC / 6-disc set)
Warner Home Video
Tom Baker as the Doctor.
Hold your mouse pointer over an image for a pop-up caption
The Doctor with his faithful K9.
Romana, the babe-alicious new assistant.
K9 comes through.
Mr. Fibuli reports.
"Too late, Doctor!"
On trial in Hyperspace.
Behold the power of Kroll!
Swampies are like an after-dinner mint.
Enter the Black Guardian.
"Absolute power over every particle of the universe..."

Doctor Who: The Key To Time  
Movie Rating  
7
  DVD Rating   10   DVD score is for entire set  
The longest running science fiction series in TV history, the BBC's Doctor Who lasted an incredible 26 seasons (1963-1989). In episodic fashion it chronicled the adventures of a centuries-old Time Lord from the planet Gallifrey, known only as the Doctor — a genial, fantastically brilliant alien with a special fondness for Earth and all things English. A champion of Good, the Doctor confronted evil across the length and breadth of the space-time continuum, facing all sorts of wicked baddies in defense of the innocent and oppressed. In his various guises (7 actors eventually played the role), the Doctor saved Earth and humanity — not to mention a host of other planets and races — more times than Flash Gordon, Buck Rogers and the crew of the Enterprise combined. In his ingenious interdimensional vehicle, the TARDIS (permanently 'disguised' as an English police call box), the Doctor could travel instantaneously to any place or time in the Universe. This concept opened up a virtually limitless stage on which to enact some rather hoary melodramas — episodes ended on old-fashioned cliffhangers, after all — though cleverly written and cheekily performed. Even the Ed Wood-style special effects, pitiful as they were, couldn't damper the fun.
    Changing the actors was smartly explained by having the Doctor "regenerate" into a new character when mortally wounded. By far the most popular actor to play the Doctor was Tom Baker (The Golden Voyage Of Sinbad), who headlined the series from 1974 to 1981. Gangly and gregarious, his Doctor was the ultimate genius smartass with a heart of gold — Mr. Spock possessed by the spirit of Groucho Marx. (With that hair, perhaps Harpo...) It was the broadcast of these episodes in America, mostly on PBS stations, that first introduced Doctor Who to his friends across the Pond. The 1978-79 season (its 16th) broke from tradition and consisted of a single overarching plot connecting each of the multi-part stories. Called The Key To Time, it's a 10½ hour adventure sending the Doctor on an intergalactic quest of cosmic proportions. Warner Home Video brings this entire season of the series to Region 1 DVD in a special 6-disc box set. (Each DVD is also sold separately.)
    DISC 1 The Ribos Operation The first installment sees the Doctor tasked with recovering the widely scattered segments of the Key, an artifact of immense power, by the mysterious White Guardian. To aid in his search the Doctor is paired with a fellow Time Lord, Romana (Mary Tamm), certainly one of the comeliest of his many female companions during the show's long run. This new assistant is dubious of the Doctor's abilities, certainly rubbed the wrong way by his flippant, devil-may-care attitude. They track the first segment of the Key to the medieval ice world of Ribos, where they become embroiled in the scheme of two con men to dupe a dispossessed space warlord into buying the planet — a planet not theirs to sell. A middling episode of the series, the narrative is limited to just a few castle sets and suffers mightily from the atrocious overacting of Paul Seed as the Graff Vynda-K, the power-mad warlord who doesn't take kindly to being played the fool. DISC 2 The Pirate Planet The second adventure was scripted by Douglas Adams, author of the popular Hitchhiker's Guide To the Galaxy. It's quite funny, brimming with whimsical dialog and fantastical sci-fi concepts. Any attempt to explain the deliciously fanciful manner in which the bad guys plunder defenseless planets of their natural resources (and exactly why it's being done) is simply impossible for me in such limited space. Suffice it that Who fans will have a great time with this one. Again, unfortunately, a way over-the-top performance by the villain (this time Bruce Purchase, playing "The Captain") proves detrimental. It's also rather distracting that Baker sports what looks like huge cold sores on his mouth — that makeup can't hide and which are rather lamely 'explained' — throughout all four chapters. DISC 3 The Stones of Blood My favorite story of the six. A sinister druidic cult in modern-day Britain worships a goddess who's really an alien criminal, but it's the Doctor who ends up on trial when he tries to stop her. Tight plotting and cool sci-fi concepts triumph over the thrift shop special effects. There's even a surprising slasher movie-type moment when two innocent campers are killed by the Ogri — living rock creatures that absorb blood for nourishment. (This deft blend of science fiction and horror was the Doctor's 100th adventure.) DISC 4 The Androids of Tara The least of the Key to Time stories. (Fortunately for you there isn't room here for any Scarlett O'Hara jokes.) It's a really silly takeoff on ye olde Prisoner of Zenda routine, complete with miraculous doppelgänger and climactic swordfight. (Romana looks exactly like a royal princess of Tara; the Doctor goes blade to blade with the evil Count Grendel.) The costumes are even sillier than the plot. DISC 5 The Power of Kroll Series fans tend to pooh-pooh this one as too cheesy but I like it. An evil corporate type plots to ethnically cleanse a swamp-covered moon of its primitive green-skinned inhabitants. But the "Swampies" (as they're derisively called by the whites) are being shipped modern weapons for nefarious reasons. The lake god of the natives, Kroll, is actually a humongous squid-like creature a mile long. It starts eating cast members so the Doctor must intervene. Though K9, the Doctor's faithful robotic dog, is sorely missed here (he's not built for marshy terrain), the story is fast-paced, loopy fun. Besides, I enjoy ridiculous giant monsters. The green-painted extras running in place, continuously chanting "KROLL!", are especially goofy. DISC 6 The Armageddon Factor In the concluding Key To Time story, the Doctor, Romana and K9 are caught in the crossfire of an interplanetary nuclear war, a conflict arranged by the evil Shadow (William Squire) to further his own sinister agenda. The longest of the six, this one tends to drag in spots; frankly, the Shadow is a laughably clichιd villain more suitable for The Bugaloos. But the Doctor's jury-rigged "Time Loop" is interesting and lovable ol' K9 gets to play a prominent role. The Black Guardian, a formidable nemesis whom the Doctor would again face in future stories, is first introduced here.
    Originally a kiddie show, Doctor Who expanded its boundaries to become an 'all ages' entertainment, a fanciful throwback to the serials of the 1930s and '40s. It's certainly something the whole family can enjoy together — though I'd think much of the dialog and many of the convoluted plot devices to be way over most kids' heads. Also, though they're never bloody, for a 'kid-friendly' program a lot of characters meet violent deaths. (Something you certainly wouldn't see today.) As fun as the show can be, however, it isn't likely to impress first-time viewers nowadays. The sets, costumes and special effects are generally quite poor by today's standards; heck, they were pretty laughable 25 years ago! Doctor Who is a show that requires the viewer to engage his/her own imagination in order to fully appreciate it.

Warner, in collaboration with the BBC, has done a terrific job with its line of R1 Doctor Who DVDs. In the case of these 25-year old Key To Time adventures the programs look and sound like they were shot yesterday. Though loaded with the kind of extras that'll doubtless thrill dedicated Whovians (see below), to me the best thing about the discs is the option to view each story in its separate cliffhanging chapters rather than as a single, unbroken tale. The show is best absorbed in small doses, I think; watching only one or two chapters a day/week should keep you coming back for more.
    Tom Baker participates in audio commentaries to three of the six DVDs — The Ribos Operation (joined by Mary Tamm), The Androids of Tara (with Tamm and director Michael Hayes), and The Power of Kroll (with John Leeson, the voice of K9). Tamm is joined by director Darrol Blake on The Stones of Blood and by director Michael Hayes and actor John Woodvine on The Armageddon Factor, while The Pirate Planet offers commentary by director Pennant Roberts and actor Bruce Purchase. Aside from each disc's audio commentary, an optional text-only 'commentary' track provides a wealth of production notes on each serial in the form of periodic subtitles. Each disc also features individual episode and scene access as well as a photo gallery and cast bios. The only other notable extra is some extraneous outdoor footage from The Pirate Planet. Each serial is presented fullframe (4:3), in digital mono. 1/09/03
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