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Doctor Who - The Beginning
This DVD box set, of which whispers were heard for nearly two years
before its release, presents on DVD for the first time the first 13
episodes of the original Doctor Who. The
four-part An Unearthly Child introduces two hapless humans to the
world of the mysterious alien Doctor and his granddaughter Susan, and then
plunges the four into a stone-age misadventure where they have to try not
to interfere with the moment that fire was discovered. The four travelers
depart in the TARDIS for a seven-episode meeting with The Daleks,
metal-encased creatures who at first seem to be pitiful and helpless but
then turn out to be murderous beings hell-bent on enforcing a final ethnic
cleansing on their already-ruined world. In The Edge Of
Destruction, an unusual two-part story, the Doctor and friends are
trapped inside the TARDIS, assailed by forces unknown and nearly driven mad
while they try to find out more about what's happening to them. Each story
is on its own disc, and - at least in the UK edition - each
individually-cased disc sports stellar cover artwork of which there ought
to be huge posters available if there's any justice in the world. (As
usual, the North American release will feature entirely different art, but
the same content on the discs themselves; everything mentioned below will
be included on the American/Canadian release.)
It's a remarkably different beginning than the fast-moving premiere of
the new series, but in a way, the B&W murkiness of it all lends An
Unearthly Child a hint of sinister, atmospheric danger that the new
series has seldom achieved. Commentary for An Unearthly Child is
spread across two key episodes (parts one and four), plus the full studio
recording of the rejected pilot. Stars Carole Ann Ford and William
Russell, producer Verity Lambert and director Waris Hussein alternte across
these commentaries, with Gary Russell moderating and occasionally helping
to jog the guests' memories. There's also a text commentary offering
tidbits of production trivia, some of which I've never heard or read
before.
Ford, Russell, Russell (no relation) and Lambert also offer commentary
on The Daleks, though here again only they only talk viewers through
three 25-minute episodes (parts two, four and seven), joined by directors
Christopher Barry and Richard Martin; I can't even imagine trying to keep
everyone talking through all seven episodes. One gets the sense, from
The Daleks commentary, that everyone involved felt the tingle of
something extraordinary in the making, even though there's also some talk
of breaking from one of the studio sessions to watch news of the
assassination of President Kennedy unfold. Surprisingly, Edge Of
Destruction is the first Doctor Who DVD I can think of since the
original UK release of The Five Doctors to feature no
commentary, the likely participants having gotten a chance to say their
piece in the commentary for the other stories.
The documentary and bonus material, for the most part, is on the third
disc, taking up the ample space left by Edge Of Destruction, a mere
two-parter. Doctor Who: Origins is a 55-minute in-depth piece that
wouldn't be the tiniest little bit out of place on a classy major cable
network. With new interview material with producer Verity Lambert,
directors Waris Hussein and Richard Martin, actors Carole Ann Ford and
William Russell, Radiophonic Workshopper Brian Hodgson, and archival
interviews with series creator Sydney Newman, Origins covers much
ground about the dawn of Doctor Who that even I had never heard before, and
manages to be engrossing and exciting all at the same time, even if you
don't know much about the show itself. The interviewees' shared sense of
invention and momentum keeps the documentary from sagging at any point.
The Radiophonic Workshop gets its own documentary as well on this disc,
featuring archived interviews with the Workshop's Dick Mills and Brian
Hodgson, and the late Delia Derbyshire, who created the original version of
Ron Grainer's immortal theme music. The interview material was shot in
1993 for inclusion in Kevin Davies' outstanding Thirty Years In The
TARDIS documentary, but didn't make the cut due to time. Again, an
overwhelming sense of sheer inventiveness flows over everything being
discussed here, and it's a rare treat to hear Delia Derbyshire discussing
the theme music in person. Another short documentary focuses on the
origins and the physical set design of the TARDIS itself.
The Daleks features a brief, episode-specific featurette tracing
the origins of the Daleks, specifically their unique appearance, while
Edge Of Destruction is analyzed to an almost surprising degree in
the featurette Over The Edge, which looks in-depth at the origin of,
and possible interpretations of, the oddball two-part story which had to be
written to feature only the four series regulars on the show's sole
standing set, the TARDIS. There are abundant clips, not only from
Edge itself but from as far forward as Christopher Eccleston's era,
demonstrating how remarkably consistent the series' mythology is, however
haphazardly it may have fallen together. If there was a feature I was
surprised to not see, it was an isolated music track for The
Daleks. The original recordings still exist, and in digitally restored
form no less (as part of the 40th anniversary soundtrack CD Devils'
Planets), though perhaps the sparseness of the music in a seven-part
adventure, and the degree to which the same cues were tracked into the
action repeatedly, wouldn't have made for a listening experience worth the
effort of putting it together for DVD.
Also on the fourth disc is, for all intents and purposes, another whole
story. Completely lost from the BBC TV archives, the fourth Doctor Who
story, Marco Polo, is recreated here with a combination of excerpts
from the surviving audio of the story (which has been released in its
entirety on CD), archival production photos, and narration. The entire
seven-part story is condensed into about half an hour, with most of the
salient plot points preserved. Much of the detail is missed, but it
provides a bonus story that is satisfying in and of itself.
The Unearthly Child DVD also includes some comedy sketches by
Mark (League Of Gentlemen, Doctor Who: The Unquiet Dead) and David
Walliams (Little Britain) and a sketch produced by Reeltime Features starring
a number of well-known names in the fan scene; if these seem like unusual things
to include here, the sketches lovingly poke fun at Doctor Who's decidedly lo-fi
beginnings. Philip Frey has already reviewed one of the three Gatiss/Walliams
sketches here; it's worth noting
that their comedy pieces do not appear as originally aired, as they were edited
slightly at the writers' and performers' request.
It almost goes without saying anymore that the picture and sound quality
are top-notch - these are probably the best-looking 43-year-old British
television shows you're ever going to see preserved in any medium. The
third disc includes some PDF documents, including clippings from the Radio
Times promotion of the then-new series and the Unearthly Child
script in its entirety.
The meticulous restoration work and the labors of love that are the
bonus features make this set more than worth the price of admission. The
sheer amount of research and scholarship that went into the writing of the
documentaries, especially Origins, is staggering when held up against the
show's humble beginnings. I give this set a very strong recommendation.
Reviewed by Earl
Green theLogBook.com webmaster / editor-in-chief


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