Doctor Who (1963)
Doctor Who is the longest-running science fiction TV series in history, airing initially from 1963 to 1989. Doctor Who is about ideas. It pioneered sophisticated mixed-level storytelling. Its format was the key to its longevity: the Doctor, a mysterious traveller in space and time, travels in his ship, the TARDIS. The TARDIS can take him and his companions anywhere in time and space. Inevitably he finds evil at work wherever he goes...
The Doctor is put on trial by the Time Lords again. The first of two events from his recent past is presented as evidence of his interference in the affairs of other worlds. In particular, his actions on planet Ravalox.
The Doctor finds that the subterranean UK Habitat is run by a cloistered robot named Drathro, whom the inhabitants call "The Immortal." Their black light energy converters are destabilizing, unaware that it's the result of two space pirates mucking about on the surface with designs on looting their dwelling.
The Doctor escapes to rejoin Peri on the surface but shortly becomes the prisoner of a surface-dwelling tribe called The Free. Ravalox isn't Ravalox after all, but before the Doctor can learn much more an irresistible agent from UK Habitat comes to fetch him back.
All those on Ravolox are in exponentially greater peril than anyone can comprehend. If anything in the entire universe is to survive, it may come down to the Doctor arguing against machine logic over the value of life.
The court looks into the Doctor's investigation of Thoros Beta, home planet of the Mentors whom the Doctor suspects of selling advanced weaponry to primitive cultures.
Having been put through a makeshift truth extractor, the Doctor appears damaged, apt to mimic the personalities of those with whom he has eye contact. He eventually abandons Peri and a gung-ho warrior king in favor of joining in with Sil and Dr. Crozier in the latest of their perverse projects.
While the Doctor helps Dr. Crozier transfer Lord Kiv's brain into a new host skull, Peri accompanies King Yrcanos as he searches for the Alpha Resistance fighters whom he feels, most certainly, will follow him into glorious battle against the Mentors and the Doctor.
The first transfer is flawed, so Dr. Crozier needs to transfer Lord Kiv into another host body. Unfortunately, Peri meets all the requirements for the subsequent candidate. Since the Doctor's been helpful and has somewhat of a personal interest in Peri, he's permitted to locate an equally suitable substitute candidate, if he can. The prosecution rests.
As the trial continues, the Doctor presents an event from his future as evidence of his reform.
A lethal booby-trap in the Hydroponic Center awakens the genetically engineered fruit pods in storage, and passengers and crewmen alike start disappearing without trace. There's a murderer on board and the Doctor means to find out who he or she is.
A course change that takes the Hyperion III closer to a black hole could prove unwise when there are so many aboard ship with hidden agendas. Disappearances continue, a murderer remains at large, and one person finally crumbles under the strain of harboring a guilty secret.
With factions vying for control of the ship, the Vervoids are found to be responsible for the many disappearances. Only the Doctor sees the fundamental but missed point as to why they can't be reasoned with or why they can't be allowed to arrive on Earth.
The charge against the Doctor changes from mere meddling to inexcusable genocide. His future looks both grim and very short.
So much ado by the Valeyard and the Master over the Doctor's death makes the Doctor wary of being made decoy for some other, truer target. Continuing in the Matrix itself, he may find both them and the answers he seeks.
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Michael Jayston | The Valeyard |
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Colin Baker | The Doctor |
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Lynda Bellingham | The Inquisitor |
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Nicola Bryant | Peri |
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Robert Goodman | Loader |
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Tony Selby | Glitz |
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Bonnie Langford | Melanie |
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Brian Blessed | King Yrcanos |
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Tom Chadbon | Merdeen |
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Honor Blackman | Professor Lasky |
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Patrick Ryecart | Crozier |
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Joan Sims | Katryca |
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Roger Brierley | Drathro |
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Alibe Parsons | Matrona Kani |
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Christopher Ryan | Kiv |
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Timothy Walker | Grell |
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Denys Hawthorne | Rudge |
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Trevor Laird | Frax |
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Michael Craig | Commodore |
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Richard Bonehill | Hyperion III Officer |
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Leon Davis | Ortezo |
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Arthur Hewlett | Kimber |
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Malcolm Tierney | Doland |
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Yolande Palfrey | Janet |
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Adam Blackwood | Balazar |
| Director | Chris Clough |
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| Ron Jones |
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| Nicholas Mallett |
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| Writer | Sydney Newman, Donald Wilson, C.E. Webber, Pip Baker, Jane Baker, Robert Holmes, Philip Martin, Eric Saward | |
| Producer | John Nathan-Turner | |
| Packaging | HD Case |
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| Nr Discs | 6 |
| Screen Ratios | Fullscreen (4:3) |
| Audio Tracks | DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio Mono |
| Subtitles | English (SDH) |
| Edition Release Date | Dec 10, 2019 |
| Regions | Region A |