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Doctor Who - Inferno
 Doctor Who fandom routinely
applies the word "classic" to its descriptions of several adventures
from the original series, and as Doctor Who fandom is wont to do, that
description is routinely shifted around to describe different stories,
as the prevailing tastes and critical mood of the fans in general.
Inferno is just that, a fairly recent addition to the ranks
of the Who "classics," and all I can say is...what took so long?
The seven-part story is presented in its entirety on the first
disc of this collection, with a running commentary by the then-current
team responsible for this show, producer Barry Letts and script editor
Terrance Dicks. Nicholas "The Brigadier" Courtney is on hand to recall
the story from his perspective, and there are occasional contributions
from John Levene, whose appearances as Sgt. Benton were on the verge of
making him a regular cast member. Levene now lives in America, so his
commentaries are recorded separately and edited in. This isn't as
jarring as you might think - there's really only one or two instances
where any attempt is made to splice him into the others' discussion.
The bonus features on the second disc are, as usual, impeccable.
Can You Hear The Earth Scream? is the factual documentary about
the making of Inferno, with on-screen contributions from not
only the commentary participants, but Caroline "Liz Shaw" John, and
stuntman Derek Ware, whose hand-picked army of stuntmen, known as HAVOC,
were ubiquitous in the Pertwee era. Even as a devotee of the incredibly
detailed Howe, Stammers & Walker Handbook series, I learned things about
Inferno that I had never known before from this featurette.
The UNIT Family, Part One focuses on both the fictional and creative
decisions that led to the formation of UNIT, the United Nations
Intelligence Task Force, during the twilight of the Patrick Troughton
era, which became "home base" for an exiled-to-Earth third Doctor in the
early 1970s. UNIT's early adventures are covered in depth, including
John Levene's unlikely route to the role of Sergeant Benton, and the fact
that Nicholas Courtney was almost dismissed as looking "too young" to
hold the rank of Brigadier!
In both documentaries, there's a great deal of reverence for director
Douglas Camfield, who helmed many of the military-oriented stories from
UNIT's inception onward, and wound up hospitalized with a serious heart
condition during the making of Inferno. Camfield himself is
certainly worthy of a future documentary, methinks.
I should probably be tired of saying this, but TV DVDs simply don't
get better than the classic Doctor Who releases. Even the new
series DVDs aren't quite on the same level. And this being one of
my favorite stories (and a specimen of that rare beast, a seven-parter
that doesn't contain much in the way of padding out the story),
Inferno on DVD certainly gets high marks from me.
Reviewed by Earl
Green theLogBook.com webmaster / editor-in-chief


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