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Title:
Doctor Who: The Brain Of Morbius: The Tom Baker Years 1974 – 1981
Region:
One
Genre:
British Sci-Fi TV Series
Stars:
Tom Baker, Elizabeth Sladen, Philip Madoc, Cynthia
Grenville, Colin Fey, and Gillian Brown
Writer:
Robin Bland
Director:
Christopher Barry
Feature
length: 99 minutes
Extras:
Audio Commentary with Actors Tom Baker, Elisabeth Sladen, and Philip Madoc,
Producer Hinchcliffe, and Director Christopher Barry, Getting A Head
Making Of Documentary, Designs On Karn Featurette, Set Tour, Photo
Gallery, Sketch Gallery, Production Note Option, DVD-ROM: Radio Times
Billings PDF File
Languages:
English Monaural Sound
Subtitles:
English Subtitles for the Deaf and Hearing Impaired
Packaging:
Keep Case
Chapter
Stops: 6 Per Episode/ 4 Episodes
Sound:
Monaural Sound
Year
of Television Broadcast 1976/DVD Release: 2008
Home
Video Distributor: BBC Video
MPAA
Rating: Not Rated
Reviewer:
Mark A. Rivera
With
the TARDIS being controlled by the Time Lords, thrusting The Doctor (Tom Baker)
and Sarah Jane (Elizabeth Sladen) into dangerous situations, the duo find
themselves on the planet Karn, where the Elixir of Life exists and is protected
by a sisterhood of immortals determined to protect what left they have at any
cost. Long ago, the renegade Time Lord, Morbius, once a member of The High
Council, attempted a revolution with thousands of followers, who he promised to
share the Elixir of Life with. The Time Lords defeated Morbius and he was
executed. Yet the brilliant scientist Mehendri Solon (Philip Madoc) managed to
rescue Morbius’ brain and then took it to Karn where no one would be likely to
discover it and where he has used bits and pieces of crashed alien travelers,
who the sisterhood caused to crash out of fear the ships passing within range,
were after their precious elixir. When Solon realizes that a Time Lord has
arrived on Karn, he conspires to literally take Doctor’s head to house the
brain of Morbius and thus finish the body he has created, which was designed
based on efficiency and not aesthetics. Thus the body of Morbius is an
abomination. The sisterhood has also been alerted to The Doctor’s arrival, and
attempt to kill him because they think he has come to take the last of their
elixir. When the Doctor manages to escape death twice, Solon places Morbius’
brain into a dangerous plastic brain case, which is susceptible to static
electricity in the cranial cavity and thus can upset the equilibrium and
dislocate neural centers.
Doctor
Who: The Brain Of Morbius
is a great episode for Halloween even though the episode first aired in January
of 1976. It is basically a Frankenstein type story that calls to mind the
glory days of Hammer Studios too. The episode is also noteworthy for it’s
production design, particularly with Solon’s castle interiors. Presented in a
(1.33:1) broadcast aspect ratio, Doctor Who: The Brain Of Morbius looks
about average for a show shot entirely on 1970s video. There is a bit of video
noise from age, but otherwise, the episode looks okay. A clear English Monaural
Soundtrack is provided along with English Subtitles for the Deaf and Hearing
Impaired encoded as options. An audio commentary for all four episodes is
included and it features Actors Tom
Baker, Elisabeth Sladen, and, Philip Madoc, Producer Hinchcliffe, and Director
Christopher Barry. Tom Baker may not be The Fourth Doctor anymore, but he still
has the great sense of humor that embodied much of his performance as the Doctor
during his heyday and at times he has everyone participating in the audio
commentary. Elizabeth Sladen makes comments to reflect upon how much classic Doctor
Who has informed David Tenant’s performance as the Tenth Doctor in the new
series and also remarks on the impact that Star Wars has had on sci-fi
feature films and television. An informative production note text commentary can
be turned on while watching the program too. Interestingly the original story
would have had a robot as the sole survivor of a spaceship crash containing
Morbius. Simply following it’s programming to save and protect Morbius at all
cost, the robot was to be the one responsible for constructing the Morbius
Monster.
With
two episodes having already been produced that pitted the Doctor against a
robot, it was decided that the story elements needed revising. Forbidden
Planet is the inspiration behind the evil renegade Time Lord’s name for
the episode. This information is covered with great detail in the making of
documentary Getting A Head (32:45), which features interviews with
Director Christopher Barry, Producer Philip Hinchcliffe, Writer Terence Dicks,
Designer Barry Newbery, Composer Dudley Simpson, and Actors Philip
Madoc, Cynthia Grenville, Colin Fey, and
Gillian Brown. Paul McGann, who portrayed The Eighth Doctor in the 1996
BBC/American Television movie, narrates the documentary. The documentary is
supported by a production design featurette (6:11) and virtual set tour using
computer graphics (2:12). The documentary, production design featurette, and
virtual tour are all presented in a widescreen 16 by 9 television aspect ratio.
Motion photo and sketch galleries and a PDF file containing the Radio Times
billings that is accessible for DVD-ROM users wraps up the bonus features on
this DVD release. The interactive menus are well rendered and easy to navigate.
Doctor
Who: The Brain Of Morbius:
The Tom Baker Years 1974 –
1981 will
debut on Region One NTSC DVD Video on Tuesday, October 7, 2008 courtesy of BBC
Video.
©
Copyright 2008 By Mark A. Rivera
All Rights Reserved.

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