"Doctor Who" World's End (TV Episode 1964) Poster

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(1964)

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9/10
Part 1 is iconic in the show's history.
Sleepin_Dragon7 June 2017
The TARDIS crew of The Doctor, Ian, Barbara and Susan land on Earth, but the joys of Ian and Barbara's home coming are cut short. The Earth is decayed and a far cry from the world they once knew.

Fresh after the success of the previous detail The Daleks, it was only natural that the monsters from Skaro would make a quick return. This first part is a hugely atmospheric episode, it certainly does a great job in setting the tone, the imagery is so powerful, the power station, that fantastic sign 'it is forbidden to dump bodies in the river,' a superb job was done in creating a futuristic, disease ridden Earth.

Susan's poor ankles, injured more times then you can imagine, I wish they'd thought of some other way to separate the group, it always served as an all too convenient device.

Throughout this story the viewer is treated to some powerful imagery, and that final scene of the Dalek appearing out of the water is fantastic, it must have come as a surprise as there'd been no mention of them.

A great start to a classic serial 9/10
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9/10
Despite Some Dated Aspects The Show Doesn't Get Any Better Than This
Theo Robertson9 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Spoilers To all six episodes

The Tardis lands on a planet and Ian and Barbara are over joyed when they realise they're in London . However their joy is short lived by the eerie atmosphere surrounding the city . It' the city they know but something is seriously wrong . After injuring herself Susan requires treatment on a sprained ankle and The Doctor and Ian go on an exploration only to find a calendar dated 2164 and posters on walls saying " Dumping bodies in the river is forbidden " Seeing a spaceship circle over head they try to return to the Tardis and are accosted by men wearing strange helmets . They try to escape to the river only to find something that shocks them

This is the story where DOCTOR WHO really became DOCTOR WHO and established the Daleks as being icons of British television . The impact of this opening episode still carries a knock out blow . It says something that QUATERMASS writer Nigel Kneale watched this and while being impressed with it forbid his children to watch the show because he thought it was " offensive " that the BBC should be allowed to scare children like this . You can perhaps see his point as the Robomen , the robotic human slaves converted by the Daleks do have a body horror rarely seen in the show . Unlike in the film adaptation once you're converted by the Daleks you stay converted until death

This a marked difference between the film and the original BBC source material . If the original Dalek story owed a lot to HG Wells Terry Nation has gone the full hog and ripped of War Of The Worlds while mixing in his own chilling take on post apocalypse horror . Nothing is played for laughs and despite any technical limitations he goes out of his way to write everything as being as serious as possible . You can believe these human survivors have survived a plague that has wiped out continents and are facing extinction . In fact if you've no knowledge of the story you'll be shocked as to how mean spirited everything is as one character is forced to kill his brother and of the brusque cold heartedness of the main female character Jenny . If Nigel Kneale finds this offensive to the little ones you just know this will appeal to the sadistic nature of children of all ages - even middle aged ones like myself

Some things don't entirely work . One is the slightly uneven nature of the directing by Richard Martin . There's a couple of scenes where if you look at the background of the location filming you'll notice traffic in the background and Danny Boyle managed to greatly improve on this with 28 DAYS LATER . There's also the constant reusing of extras where you eventually notice that the Robomen are always played by the same actors and the very cute peroxide blonde woman keeps reappearing . Some of the action scenes are slightly bizarre and looks like the framing of these scenes aren't going to planned . Perhaps the biggest flaw is down to Nation where it's revealed what the Daleks plan is which leads to ask is there not any planets between Skaro and Earth ?

This is a milestone not only for the reintroduction of the Daleks but the departure of a companion for the very first time in the show where Susan is written out where she's effectively abandoned by her " grandfather " and finds consolation in the loving arms of David . There's not a lot of build up to this and isn't entirely successful but doesn't concern itself for 20 minutes of tears , wailing , teeth gnashing , violins blasting away off screen only for the companion turn up in the next season finale . When someone left in those days they stayed left and one hopes RTD and Steven Moffat might have learned from this . As it stands this story remains one of the greatest stories in the show's long rich , iconic history
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8/10
What a curate's egg of a story
izokial8 April 2010
There are things here that modern Who could REALLY learn from. For example:

-The Daleks are Nazis. There's no way of getting away from that comparison; they patrol London's streets with their arms raised high in salute, merciless metal, totalitarian killing machines. And they're scary.

-The Daleks don't fire lasers. Instead the picture goes funny, there's a crackling noise and someone falls dead to the floor. It doesn't work so well with large groups of people, resembling a bad local play, but the grimacing transition from life to death is considerably more chilling than what came later. In short, the emotionless causation of pain makes for uncomfortable viewing.

And then there's the bad:

-Terry Nation's writing tends to regularly lose focus. For every great scene there are 5 where nothing much happens.

-It's far too slow and a fair bit too long. '70s Doctor Who is slow by modern standards, but this is just... glacial.

Honestly, this contains so much fantastic imagery it really should be a classic and I REALLY wish they could return to that 1984-esque idea the next time they decide to wheel the Daleks out again.

THIS is the story that illustrates best how awesome the Daleks could be.
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10/10
The Dalek Invasion of Earth Part 1: Imperfect but still a brilliant classic
A_Kind_Of_CineMagic6 July 2014
Review of all 6 episodes:

This story running from World's End for 6 episodes marks the return of the Daleks and was an extremely important story in establishing Doctor Who's popularity. This time the Daleks are more frightening because not only have they got additional powers of movement in different terrains and new levels of evil ambition but they are also the invaders of Earth. To show them on Earth and in fantastic, iconic scenes around famous London landmarks with London and apparently the world turned largely to ruins, provides real fear and drama.

The human race has been reduced to hiding or serving the Daleks. This is all powerful stuff even now, let alone in the early sixties so near in memory to similar threats of the Nazis.

The story also marks the first departure of one of the Doctor's companions, his grand-daughter Susan. Her character has a decent last story and while she had lost her appeal somewhat, her leaving scenes provide moving and lovely magic from William Hartnell with a superbly written and acted speech of incredible dignity and pathos.

There are various imperfections such as strange elements to the scientific explanations and plans of the Daleks and far less effective Dalek voices than the first or later stories. However there is is so much else to recommend this story that these issues pale to insignificance. Plot issues and less well executed elements mainly occur in the 4th and 5th episodes but they are still mostly strong episodes and the rest of the serial is very high quality. It is exciting, menacing, absorbing, with striking ideas and imagery.

The story is written by Terry Nation but David Whitaker as script editor deserves some credit for this and all previous stories. This marks the last story before the departure of Whitaker from that role, he would only return as a guest writer.

A must see story in the history of Doctor Who.

My Ratings: Episodes 1-3 - 10/10, Episode 4 - 9/10, Episode 5 - 8.5/10, Episode 6 - 9.5/10.

Overall average rating: 9.5/10.
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The Dalek Invasion of Earth
ametaphysicalshark14 July 2008
It is nauseating to me to think of how Susan's departure would have been handled in Russell T. Davies' era of Doctor Who. It is nauseating not because "Doctor Who" would have arrived at the the inevitable cliché sweeping, melancholy strings would play at a shockingly high volume in the background as the Doctor and Susan cried for twenty minutes in a stunningly obvious attempt at manipulating the audience crap that Hollywood churns out, but because it is proof that modern drama REQUIRES such nonsense to be popular. Look at Susan's departure here, Hartnell, in what is possibly the best acting I have ever seen him do, gives a quiet, melancholy speech to Susan from inside the TARDIS, having already made the painful disconnect. What a stunning, brilliant scene. Unquestionably one of the finest and most memorable examples of drama in the programme's history.

"Journey's End", the final episode of the 30th full season of Doctor Who, has aired only little more than a week prior to me writing this review of the episode and it definitely has a lot in common with this story, right down to Daleks piloting Earth in some manner. "The Dalek Invasion of Earth" however, while featuring some shoddy effects and sets certainly incomparable to "Journey's End", is much, much better than that story. There is actual humanity here. The performances, with one or two bad scenes forgiven, are wonderful, human, vulnerable performances, not weepy 'run while Murray Gold chases you' rubbish. This is, again, not a criticism of modern Who necessarily, but of what has happened to television drama recently.

"The Dalek Invasion of Earth" would have been a perfect four-parter. Of course, any era of Who prior to Hinchcliffe/Holmes and Baker is going to try to squeeze 'epic' out of EVERYTHING, so we end up with a six-parter instead with one episode (episode four) being completely disposable, mediocre, and useless, and even the very good episodes suffer a bit, keeping them from the sort of greatness the final episode of the serial achieves. As every other fan who has discussed this story will tell you, it is surprisingly dark, absolutely brutal in places. The hopelessness, fear, and dread is captured excellently and feels genuinely frightening at times, and had the Daleks not been so... rubbish when it came to the voices and even to an extent the design, the story would have been absolutely unbelievably SCARY. As it stands it is still a very good story but one has to admit the voices take you out of the story ("Day of the Daleks" has worse Dalek voices, but they aren't really the focus of that story to the extent they are here). "The Chase", a much sillier story, could have done with silly Dalek voices, but bizarrely that story has much improved Daleks.

There is some shoddy direction but the sheer excellence of the acting and music, together with the inconsistent but overall effective script, make "The Dalek Invasion of Earth" an excellent story, and naturally an important one in "Doctor Who" history, but not quite the epic it could have been. I'm not sure it needed to be an epic, it almost feels like a Hinchcliffe horror story at times.

Episode 1: 8/10, Episode 2: 8/10, Episode 3: 8/10, Episode 4: 6/10, Episode 5: 8/10, Episode 6: 9/10.

Average: 7.83/10
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10/10
World's End
guswhovian4 July 2020
The travelers arrive in a deserted 21st century London, where the Doctor and Ian soon become separated from Barbara and Susan.

"World's End" is a great start to one of the most memorable 60s Doctor Who stories of the 1960s. This is probably Terry Nation's writing triumph, as there are some very memorable scenes, such as the opening with the Roboman committing suicide.

This is also the first time you get to see William Hartnell and co. on location. The Reign of Terror featured brief location filming, but "World's End" features various bits of location filming which add to the story tremendously.

There's several delightful moments throughout the episode, especially courtesy of Hartnell and William Russell, who are both on top form (but when are they not?). My favorite is when Ian warns the Doctor to watch himself, and the Doctor snaps back "I'm not a halfwit!".

However, it's directed by Richard Martin, whose direction had earlier marred The Daleks. He's defientely improved, but there's still some bad directorial choices. Especially bad is the opening scene with the Doctor dusting the TARDIS console; it's framed very badly, with Hartnell disappearing off screen for several seconds at a time,
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10/10
One day, I shall come back. Yes, I shall come back. Until then, there must be no regrets, no tears, no anxieties. Just go forward in your beliefs, and prove to me I am not mis
wetmars30 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
The TARDIS returns to London; however, it's the 22nd century. With bodies in the river, and quiet in the Docklands, the city is a very different place. The Daleks have invaded and it's up to the Doctor to thwart them once again.

Review of six parts -

This story is just... a fantastic classic! Extremely entertaining, hyper-realistic acting, our first companion departure, what made me sad about Carole Ann Ford's relationship with the BBC is that she said "Doctor Who? It destroyed my acting career.", she was disappointed about what her character was, uninterested, she was unhappy about her character in those early days of production, and became tired of the role of Susan and decided to leave the programme because the producers would not let her expand and develop the character, just damn.

The Daleks? I love them, my most favorite Doctor Who "monster", the Supreme Commander just steals the show, everything in this episode worked out, the iconic shots where the Daleks are patroling around London, this is truly a brillant classic... The ending? God, that was so sad because of the depressing music. =^[ Well, we will see Carole Ann Ford in The Five Doctors and briefly in Dimensions in Time, maybe. I've been thinking about to review all of the episodes until Logopolis, and just make the 2019-2020 classic DW reviews longer, and review the stories I missed due to dailymotion not having them, even reviewing Dr. Who and the Daleks, Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D., Shada, A Fix with Sontarans, the 1996 TV movie, The Crusade, The Curse of Fatal Death, Scream of the Shalka, and Daemos Rising.

What surprised me about this episode is that during filming, William Hartnell fell after the ramp of the Dalek flying saucer, down which he was being by Baker, suddenly collapsed. Hartnell fell on a metal camera stand, landing awkwardly on his spine. Although he was temporarily paralysed, he recovered suffciently to continue the recording, but it was decided he should have the following week off to recover from the bruised back he had sustained, what a good old man he was.

Let's see how the Daleks could've survived the eruption of which killed the remaining Daleks and destroyed their base.

10/10, a brilliant classic!
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9/10
A Dalek Britain
timdalton00712 May 2020
Warning: Spoilers
(Note: A review of all six episodes.)

In my recent review of The Reign of Terror, I noted how Classic Doctor Who rarely engaged in the big end of seasons tales that Modern Who does. If you want proof of that, look no further than the second story of its second season. The Dalek Invasion of Earth is a story that has all the hallmarks not only of those modern finales but of the best tales of the Hartnell era.

That's something down mainly to the sheer scope of the piece. For perhaps the first time in the show's run, there's a genuine sense of an epic feel to proceedings. The Doctor and companions take viewers on a journey across a Dalek occupied Britain of the 22nd century (even if it looks suspiciously like the 1960s at times). We not only get to learn of the Dalek onslaught via not only dialogue but get to see it first hand in a series of extensive film sequences shot on location. The best of these are in episodes three and four, with Barbara, along with members of the resistance, trying to escape London as Daleks patrol around various landmarks. Those sequences, and the first episode cliffhanger, have become iconic and deservedly so in the eyes of this 21st-century viewer.

While the series had pushed to do big scale stories before (particularly with the likes of Marco Polo or The Keys of Marinus), this is the one where it feels like they finally figured out how to do it right. There's the aforementioned location filming, but also how director Richard Martin and designer Spencer Chapman push and often strive against the limits of the multi-camera studio. Even the use of stock footage in places serves the story well when it shifts to the Bedfordshire mine. True, those effect sequences of the Dalek saucer aren't up to much, so much so that it's all too easy to understand why the DVD release has the option to look at some nicely done replacement shots, but that's a small flaw in an otherwise well-made serial.

That it works as well as it does is how grounded it is. Yes, this is a science fiction story with Daleks, Robomen, and a weird alien known as a Slyther roaming around as a kind of guard dog. For all of that, the trappings and tropes at play owe less to 1950s sci-fi than to the Second World War. For make no mistake, this is Terry Nation channeling those fears from twenty-five years before of a Nazi invasion of Britain.

And it's not even done subtley. The way the Daleks insist "WE ARE THE MASTERS OF EARTH," their propaganda broadcasts, the slave labor at the mines, to the use of "the final solution" to describe their ultimate objective in the concluding installment all bare this out. Elsewhere, there are plenty more tropes of Second World War fiction on display from the resistance members the TARDIS crew encounter, their leader Dortmun's Churchillian speeches, to the black marketer Ashton. Even the women in the woods who betray Barbara and Jenny to the Daleks for better treatment, justifying their actions by telling themselves they would have been caught anyway, echoes stories from across Nazi-occupied Europe during the war.

Terry Nation wasn't the first writer to explore the idea of Hitler's Britain, of course. Noel Coward's Peace in Our Time was among the earliest works, written and performed in the aftermath of the war. Also being made around the same time was the pioneering independent film It Happened Here was being made around the same time, and likewise features sequences of young men in Nazi uniforms marching around many of the same landmarks we see in episode three. Other works would follow, among the most notable being Len Deighton's thriller SS-GB but The Dalek Invasion of Earth is notable not only for being among the earliest works but also for how it put a particular genre based spin on events.

Lastly, there's a significant first here, one that brings us back around to Modern Who: a companion exit. The last ten minutes or so of the final episode deal with Susan's departure, the Doctor leaving her behind to help rebuild this post-invasion world. It's a beautifully handled sequence, well played by both Hartnell and Carole Ann Ford, the grandfather saying goodbye to his granddaughter. Its effectiveness is helped by the way that the relationship between Susan and a young man named David Campbell is built into the story throughout, setting the stage wonderfully for what would follow. There would be companion exits throughout Classic Who but rarely handled as well as this one was, as evidenced by the likes of Dodo's exit in The War Machines and Leela's departure after Invasion of Time. Indeed, this sequence would set the stage for the departures we've seen throughout Modern Who from Rose in Doomsday to the many (and finally overwrought) departures of Clara in the Moffat era. All of them, the best and the worst across nearly sixty years, have their basis in what viewers first saw on Boxing Day 1964.

If you only ever watch one Hartnell story, you could do a lot worse than watch The Dalek Invasion of Earth. It is, hands down, one of the best stories of this era. It's also a notable gamechanger for the series, bringing back a monster for the first time, telling its first alien invasion story, and featuring the first companion exit. It deserves it's status based on any one of those reasons but, to the credit of all involved, it's also a cracking story to boot.

And that makes it a rare beast, indeed.
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6/10
"The Dalek Invasion of Earth"
robot-cat16 July 2007
Radiation nil, oxygen normal, pressure normal...an earth reading! The Tardis has landed in London. A menacing deserted London, with no sign of life and no sense of normality, but the decaying city is not as empty as it seems. The year is 2164 and the travelers soon find themselves facing antagonists whom they thought they had destroyed...the Daleks. They have conquered the Earth.

Ten Years after a cosmic storm, continents of people were wiped out by a plague. Then the Daleks came in saucers, shipping humans to vast mining areas, turning them into robomen and against their fellow humans. Earth contains something no other planet contains - a magnetic core - but why are the Daleks digging for it and how can the Doctor prevent them from tampering with the force of creation?

Classic 6 part series with the Doctor, Susan, Ian, and Barbara and their second clash with the Daleks.
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8/10
A classic First Doctor adventure*
jamesrupert201420 February 2024
After materialising in a devastated London in the year 2164, The Doctor, Barbara, Ian and Susan (William Hartnell, Jacqueline Hill, William Russell, Carole Ann Ford) come face to eye-stalk with an old foe, the tinny-tyrants from Skaro, who, along with their dehumanised minions the 'robo-men', have enslaved a humanity weakened by plagues and meteorite bombardments. This 6-part post-apocalyptic tale was Terry Nation's follow-up to 'The Daleks', the iconic First Doctor story that did much to establish the future of the long running time-travel saga. Shot on location with a larger cast (including many extras and numerous Daleks), scenes of an empty London, and some attempts at more ambitious props and special effects (such as the Dalek saucers), the serial is much more expansive looking than earlier adventures (possibly because the BBC was willing to invest more in a 'sequel' to a hit). For the most part, the story moves along briskly and the cliff-hanger episode-endings are nicely done (although the addition of the 'slyther', a gratuitous monster that adds nothing to the plot but padding, could have been dispensed with). The story has its darker moments (notably suicides, the nature and fate of the robo-men, the treachery of people desperate for food). The serial also sees the first departure of a companion, a nicely-done scene that manages to be moving without being maudlin. All-in-all, an entertaining early entry in the long-running chronicles of the benevolent Timelord, his companions, and his various nemeses that is considered to be among the best from the era of the 'First Doctor'. The addition of the bipedal 'robo-men' addresses the conundrum as to how the Daleks can conquer a planet whose populace uses 'stairs' (fans would have to wait decades before discovering the real answer). Remade as the lack-luster theatrical release 'Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A. D.' a year later with Peter Cushing as the Doctor. * Score and comments pertain to the entire serial.
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7/10
Exterminate! Exterminate!
JamesHitchcock18 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This was the first of many Doctor Who serials to deal with an alien invasion of the Earth- this was a particularly popular theme during the Jon Pertwee era of the early seventies- but "The Dalek Invasion of Earth" differs from most of these in one important respect. In most "alien invasion" stories (such as, for example, "Terror of the Autons") the invasion fails because the Doctor is able to prevent it. Here, however, the invasion (which is never actually shown, although we hear about it at second hand) has already succeeded before the story begins. The First Doctor and his companions Susan, Ian and Barbara are hoping to return to the London of 1964, but instead arrive two hundred years too late. They find that the Earth of 2164 has been conquered by the Daleks and London is in ruins, most of its population dead.

It is often said that Terry Nation invented the Daleks as a Nazi analogue, and this serial clearly derives from all those war films which depict heroic European resistance movements fighting against the Nazi occupiers. A resistance movement has grown up among the surviving human occupiers of Britain to fight the Daleks and their human slaves, the Robomen, and the Doctor and his companions join forces with them to overthrow the Dalek regime and frustrate their fiendish plan. (As with a number of science-fiction films and programmes, the "science" involved is pure fiction; the Daleks' master-plan is to remove the Earth's core via a mine in Bedfordshire and replace it with a giant motor, thus turning the planet into a gigantic spaceship which the Daleks will use to return to their home planet. It's easy when you know how).

The serial also involved another first- the first change in the crew of the Tardis in the programme's history. (Over the years there were, of course, to be many more such changes). Carole Ann Ford was growing dissatisfied with the development of her character, believing that the scriptwriters were making Susan too weak and passive, so asked to be written out. The solution was found of having Susan fall in love with David, a young resistance fighter, and she decides to remain behind to help rebuild the devastated Earth. We never learn what became of Susan and David; it might have made an interesting programme to see how he reacted when he discovered that his new love was in fact an alien being with superhuman powers. (A sort of British sci-fi version of "Bewitched"). In the early days of the programme, however, details of exactly how Time Lords (and Time Ladies) differed from humans had not been fully worked out.

"The Dalek Invasion of Earth" served as the basis for the "non-canonical" film "The Daleks' Invasion Earth: 2150 A. D.", starring Peter Cushing. Actually, although I liked Cushing's interpretation of the role, I preferred the television version; the film version has a number of weaknesses, notably a misconceived attempt to inject comic relief into a story that would be better without it. Six episodes is often at least one too many for a "Doctor Who" serial, but on this occasion the longer format pays off. The four main characters are separated early on, and each has his or her own adventures with the resistance, thus allowing greater scope for character development and cliffhanger endings. The departure of Susan in the final scene also makes for an emotional high point. This is a highly enjoyable serial, and also a historically important one, as it established the Daleks as recurring enemies for the Doctor, thus ensuring that every schoolboy of my generation would parade around the school playground chanting "Exterminate! Exterminate!" 7/10.
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