Doctor Who - The Mind Robber Reviews

Doctor Who - The Mind Robber

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Doctor Who: The Mind Robber - Landing in Storybook Forest

Written: Jun 07 '09 (Updated Aug 01 '10)
Pros:story, excellent casting, minimal effects that work
Cons:Doctor seems a bit "off", ending
The Bottom Line: The Doctor & Co. land in a forest with no apparent way of escape in a surprisingly well made story-arc from the early years of the show.


Plot Details: This opinion reveals major details about the movie's plot.

Doctor Who is a British science fiction television series which has been around off and on since 1963. The main character is just known as "The Doctor" and is a Time Lord from the planet Gallifrey. This means he travels through time to various places. One of his favorite places to visit is Earth. Typically, he has a companion traveling with him, usually female, sometimes male, sometimes one of each. He travels in a time machine known as a "Tardis" which is disguised as a British Police booth.

A Time Lord can regenerate if fatally wounded, which has accounted for all the different actors who have played The Doctor throughout the years. In this episode, the Doctor is portrayed by Patrick Troughton.  He's traveling with two companions, Jamie and Zoe (portrayed by Frazer Hines and Wendy Padbury).

As the TARDIS is about to be buried in molten lava, the Doctor uses the controls to move the booth and its inhabitants out of reality.  He's never used this particular function before and doesn't know what to expect.  The Doctor states there is nothing outside of the TARDIS, but Jamie and Zoe want to go exploring.  Both believe they are seeing their homes outside of the TARDIS - Scotland for Jamie and London for Zoe.  They wander out into what would seem to be nothingness and become lost.  Both experience a feeling of being watched.  They manage to retreat back to the TARDIS and believe they are safe, only to have the TARDIS explode when they try to return to their reality.

Here they find a land ruled by an English writer who calls himself The Master (not to be confused with the evil Time Lord by the same name) and pursued by the life-size clockwork solders.  They encounter such storybook characters as Rapunzel, Blackbeard, and Gulliver.  All of this is a test as The Master is getting old, and needs someone to replace him…

It’s easy to distinguish that The Mind Robber was originally a four-part episode that was suddenly expanded to five.  Although the first episode in the story-arc is quite interesting, it also has something of a stand-alone feel to it.  The four episodes that comprise the main story-arc are quite strong and create a world that is both familiar and strange to the audience.  The weakest part is the ending which reeks of all I disliked about Star Trek: Voyager; too many situations where things happen and then the ending wipes it all away with no consequence.  Taking the TARDIS out of the equation, however, is brilliant as it forces the three characters to not have that resource to fall back on.

The acting is fine, although this Doctor seems very different that others.  For some reason he's quite fussy as well as being indecisive and even fearful at times.  It’s not something I’m used to seeing, not even in the episodes I’ve seen Patrick Troughton in.  Zoe doesn’t seem to have a lot to do except scream an awful lot.  The most brilliant bit of acting comes from not Frazer Hines as Jamie, but his one episode replacement, Hamish Wilson.  It seems Hines came down with a bout of chicken pox, and this face-changing bit was written into the script to explain the different actor.  Wilson positively nails the role.  Emrys Jones portrays The Master and really takes on the role much like the Wizard of Oz; there’s more to the man behind the curtain than we first believe.

The use of familiar characters in the storybook forest of sorts works well to have the audience somewhat familiar with what’s going on and not have to go on with long explanations of who they are.  Much of what these characters say and do is familiar if you know their tales.  There aren’t a terrible amount of special effects, but considering the time period what’s in The Mind Robber works remarkably well.  The endless white void works as does the depictions of a unicorn in the forest.

The DVD is very good.  Keep in mind, this was from the black and white era of the show.  The restoration from the 16mm copies are very good with a few instances where the quality deteriorates.  There’s a slew of extras that I’ve come to enjoy with the Doctor Who discs, including commentary and a couple of featurettes.

What could have been amazingly cheesy instead works quite well.  For a story-arc that first aired more than forty years ago, I found I liked The Mind Robber quite a bit.  It was way better than just the usual alien-of-the-week.  The acting is good, if Troughton or Director David Maloney were a little off with the Doctor.  Opportunities to do something different weren’t squandered.  The story itself is very well-written.  Overall, if I were looking for a good story-arc from the early years, this would be near the top of the list for me.


SPECIAL FEATURES:

• Commentary with Wendy Padbury, Frazer Hines, and Director David Maloney
• Bail Brush Segment
• Information Text
• The Fact of Fiction
• Highlander
• Photo Gallery
• Who's Who


DOCTOR WHO on DVD:

The First Doctor (William Hartnell) 

The Beginning Collection ~ The Keys of Marinus ~ The Aztecs ~ The Dalek Invasion of Earth ~ The Rescue/The Romans ~ The Web Planet ~ The Time Meddler ~ Lost In Time ~ The War Machines

The Second Doctor (Patrick Troughton) 

Lost In Time ~ The Tomb of the Cybermen ~ The Mind Robber ~ The Invasion ~ The Seeds of Death ~ The War Games

The Third Doctor (Jon Pertwee) 

Spearhead from Space  ~ Doctor Who and the Silurians Inferno ~ The Claws of Axos ~ The Sea Devils ~ The Three Doctors Carnival of Monsters ~ The Green Death ~ The Time Warrior 

The Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker) 

Robot ~ The Ark in Space ~ The Sontaran Experiment ~ Genesis of the Daleks ~ Planet of Evil ~ Pyramids of Mars ~ The Brain of Morbius ~ The Hand of Fear ~ The Deadly Assassin ~ The Robots of Death ~ The Talons of Weng Chiang ~ The Horror of Fang Rock ~ The Invisible Enemy ~ The Invasion of Time ~ The Ribos Operation ~ The Pirate Planet ~ The Stones of Blood ~ The Androids of Tara ~ The Power of Kroll ~ The Armageddon Factor ~ Destiny of the Daleks ~ City of Death ~ The Leisure Hive ~ The E Space Trilogy ~ The Keeper of Traken ~ Logopolis 

The Fifth Doctor (Peter Davison) 

Castrovalva ~ Four to Doomsday ~ The Visitation ~ Black Orchid ~ Earthshock ~ Time-Flight ~ Arc of Infinity ~ Black Guardian Trilogy ~ The Five Doctors ~ Warriors of the Deep ~ Resurrection of the Daleks ~ The Caves of the Androzani 

The Sixth Doctor (Colin Baker) 

The Twin Dilemma ~ Attack of the Cybermen ~ Vengeance on Varos ~ The Mark of the Rani ~ The Two Doctors ~ Timelash ~ Revelation of the Daleks ~ The Trial of a Time Lord

The Seventh Doctor (Sylvester McCoy) 

Delta and the Bannermen ~ Remembrance of the Daleks ~ Battlefield ~ Ghost Light ~ The Curse of Fenric ~ Survival 

The Eighth Doctor (Paul McGann) 

Doctor Who - The Movie

The Ninth Doctor (Christopher Eccleston) 

Doctor Who 2005 - The Complete First Series 

The Tenth Doctor (David Tennant) 

Doctor Who 2006 - The Complete Second Series ~ Doctor Who 2007 - The Complete Third Series ~ The Infinite Quest ~ Doctor Who 2008 - The Complete Fourth Series ~ The Next Doctor  ~ Planet of the Dead ~ The Waters of Mars ~ The Next Doctor ~ The End of Time

The Eleventh Doctor (Matt Smith)

Doctor Who 2010 - The Complete Fifth Series


DOCTOR WHO MOVIES


The Doctor Who Collection: Doctor Who and the Daleks ~ Daleks Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.


OTHER RELATED SERIES:

Torchwood Series One ~ Torchwood Series Two ~ Torchwood Children of Earth

The Sarah Jane Chronicles




© 2009 Patti Aliventi

Recommended: Yes


Viewing Format: DVD

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