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About the Author
Member: Patti Aliventi
Location: Mount Washington Valley, New Hampshire
Reviews written: 2556
Trusted by: 700 members
About Me: Well-behaved women seldom make history ~ Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
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Doctor Who: Revelation of the Daleks - Davros Resurrected (Again)
Written: Dec 13 '06 (Updated Aug 01 '10)
Pros:secondary characters are terrific, Baker and Bryant developing chemistry, good story
Cons:very gory and violent, story focuses on Davros more than the Doctor
The Bottom Line: Especially considering the timeframe that this story was produced, it's a strong showing for this British science fiction series.
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, he is portrayed by Colin Baker. Baker had the misfortune of following some of the best seasons of the series, in addition to issues with scripts often devoid of fresh ideas. Fans of the series have often said this is the period when the BBC seemed to be milking the series for what it could, counting on the fans undying love to pull it through. Paramount could have taken a lesson from them. Just as you couldn't stamp the name Doctor Who on something and expect fans to automatically embrace it, Paramount learned the same thing the hard way with the Star Trek franchise.
But I digress. Baker was given several stories which were good and which blended in with the continuity of the series as a whole. Revelation of the Daleks was perhaps the best story to come out of his years as the Doctor.
The Doctor and his companion, Peri Brown (portrayed by Nicola Bryant) travel to the planet Necros for a non-funeral. The Doctor is there to pay his last respects to a friend. What he doesn't realize is that it's all an elaborate ruse by Davros, the ruler of the Daleks, to lure the Doctor to him. Davros is using organic matter from the bodies being processed at the facility to create a whole new Dalek army with which to conquer the universe.
What Revelation of the Daleks ends up being is a sort of macabre episode of the series with dark comedic moments. The facility looks like something out of The Rocky Horror Picture Show and I can’t say that the people inhabiting it act differently than many of the characters from that flick. Graeme Harper directed, and he was the first director of classic Doctor Who whom Russell Davies asked back to work on the new series. He gives this story in the ongoing saga a contemporary edginess and quirkiness. It doesn’t take itself too seriously but at the same time it doesn’t cross the line and descend into absurdity.
Colin Baker is gives a really great performance here as the Doctor. He seems to have come into his own and found the footing he needed, although getting a decent story might have helped earlier on in his run as well. Though not a flip as earlier incarnations, he’s convincing overall throughout the story with a degree of smoothness and self-assuredness I’ve come to expect in the character.
Nicola Bryant as Peri is adequate. She is more than a screaming sidekick; less a lady in distress than other companions he’s had. It is she who pushes the Doctor out of the way, rather than the other way around, when a huge statue of himself is about to fall on him. She also manages to put off a potential suitor as well as help the Doctor when he is attacked by a mutant. This gal is no shrinking violet and it’s nice to see and reminiscent of the character of Leela.
The lesser characters are great in their own right, adding a sense of the macabre to a place that is essentially a funeral planet. They add the right sense to the place of weirdness without overacting the parts. Davros (portrayed by Terry Molloy) seems to be the main focus of the story, and I swear this thing has more lives than a cat. Molloy does great in the part, giving Davros a cunning I’d never seen before in a character I’d always thought was just a lunatic.
Considering this was generally a Saturday morning show in Britain (seen back then on PBS stations at various times in the U.S.), Revelation of the Daleks is quite gory and violent. Although this is keeping with the macabre theme, it might be rough for some of the younger fans. My pre-teens dealt with it fine but I was glad my 6 year old was busy with something else while we viewed this DVD.
All in all, Revelation of the Daleks is a strong storyline for the show, especially considering this was the waning days of the original run.
SPECIAL FEATURES:
• Revelation Exhumed • Behind the Scenes • Information Text • CGI Effects • Deleted Scenes • Continuity • Photo Gallery
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
© 2006 Patti Aliventi
Recommended: Yes
Viewing Format: DVD
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The sixth embodiment of Doctor Who, Colin Baker, faces his long-running foes the Daleks in this two-part story from 1985. Revelation has the Doctor an...
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