Saturday, 20 October 2012

Dr Who: The Ambassadors of Death: DVD Review

Dr Who: The Ambassadors of Death: DVD Review


Rating: M
Released by BBC and Roadshow Home Entertainment


1970s Doctor Who gets an outing with this latest from Jon Pertwee's era, in a tale much wanted on DVD and which has been fraught with restoration problems.

Dr Who: The Ambassadors of Death is a key title for the range; it's a 7 part relatively tautly told tale of the return of a Mars Probe, missing for 7 months. When the rescue mission recovers something, it's definitely not human and soon the Doctor and Liz Shaw are doing what they can to save the world.

Dr Who: The Ambassadors of Death is a well put together story which eventually starts to creak over its 7 parts; it's got suspense in spades and good solid central performances from the likes of Pertwee and Caroline John (sadly recently deceased); plus the story has parallels with Quatermass and other sci-fi themes from the 70s.

But this release has to be lauded for the work done to restore the damaged tapes; whilst it still looks a bit poor in places, the team has done a great job putting it all together and ensuring that it works - with one ep surviving in colour and the rest in damaged black and white, this is a masterful piece of love.

The extras are a reasonable bunch over the two disc release of Dr Who: The Ambassadors of Death DVD but they're nothing sensational to write home about.

All in all, Dr Who: The Ambassadors of Death is worth a peek; it shows Pertwee at his best and in a serial which has, for the majority, stood the test of time.

Extras: Commentary, docos, the ever brilliant production notes and a wrap up of Pertwee's time in the role as defined by the press.

Rating:


No comments:

Post a Comment

Very latest post

What's on Prime Video in March

What's on Prime Video in March Here's everything that's streaming on Prime Video in March. Young Sherlock (March 4) Starring Her...