Doctor Who - The Movie


General

Medium: DVD
Production Year: 1996
Certification:
Genre: SF; TV; Doctor Who
Region: Region 2
Nationality: USA; UK
Format: PAL
Amazon Link:

Cast

Actor/Actress Role
McGann, Paul Doctor Who
Ashbrook, Daphne Dr Grace Holloway
Roberts, Eric The Master

Other People

Director: Sax, Geoffrey
Producer: Ware, Peter
Writer: Jacobs, Matthew
Composer:
Studio: BBC

Features

Language Tracks: English
Subtitle Languages:
Audio Tracks: Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo
Running Time: 85
Aspect Ratio: 4:3
Widescreen:
Color Mode: Colour
Director's Cut:

Certifications

  • UK:12

Plot Summary

Made to re-launch television's most famous time traveller, Doctor Who: The Movie is an expensive feature-length episode which attempts to continue the classic series and work as a stand-alone film. Transporting the remains of the Master, Sylvester McCoy's Seventh Doctor is diverted to San Francisco in 1999. Regenerating in the form of Paul McGann, the Doctor gains a new companion in heart surgeon Dr Grace Holloway (Daphne Ashbrook) and must stop the Master from destroying the world. All of which might have been fine, had not the most eccentrically British of programmes been almost entirely assimilated by the requirements of American network broadcasting. Matthew Jacobs' screenplay is literally nonsense, dependent on arbitrary, unexplained events while introducing numerous elements that contradict established Doctor Who mythology. The Tardis is re-imagined as a bizarre pre-Raphaelite/Gothic folly, while the Doctor, now half-human, becomes romantically involved with his lady companion. From the West Coast setting to metallic CGI morphing, from the look of Eric Roberts as the Master to a motorcycle/truck freeway chase, director Geoffrey Sax borrows freely from James Cameron's Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991). Doctor Who fans should feel relieved this travesty was not successful enough to lead to lead to a series, though McGann himself does have the potential to make a fine Doctor. This is the slightly more violent US TV edit, rather than the cut version previously released on video.

Comments

Originally Broadcast: 27th May 1996