"Doctor Who" The Dancing Floor (TV Episode 1966) Poster

(TV Series)

(1966)

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5/10
It's a crazy episode.
Sleepin_Dragon4 March 2021
The Toymaker sets another challenge for Steven and Dodo, one false move, and they'll dance forevermore.

This is absolutely surreal, Steven and Dodo face a challenge, if they get it wrong, they face an eternal dancefloor, they get a glimpse into that possible outcome.

It is the weakest episode of the story so far, it is incredibly silly, if you're in the mood for a laugh, it may just pass the time, but after listening to The Dalek Masterplan, this really is the other end of the scale.

Michael Gough has been heavily underused so far, a strong actor, an interesting character, but we don't see much of him, and we don't learn too much about him either.

Dodo is convinced that their opponents are somehow human, she's really struggling to grasp what's actually happening.

One to go. 5/10.
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4/10
The Celestial Toymaker: Part 3 - Good start but very disappointing and bizarre otherwise.
A_Kind_Of_CineMagic19 August 2014
Review of all 4 parts:

The Celestial Toymaker is a 4 part story beginning with The Celestial Toyroom.

This story is the first instance of the series going off into pure fantasy with a whimsical, strange setting in which the TARDIS crew are tormented by a mysterious power with mind games and very odd goings on. Sound familiar? Well if you have seen The Mind Robber from the second Doctor's era or the episode Amy's Choice from the modern 11th Doctor's (Matt Smith) era then you will see that this is very much the story they are based upon.

This being a different kind of story to anything that went before is a big plus in the first part as it is unusual and therefore surprising and interesting. The character of the toymaker is also an interesting and well acted character with the smooth Michael Gough in his usual good form. However the strangeness and bizarre 'toyroom figures' they meet start to grate more and more in parts 2 and 3 with poor scenes and unimpressive acting from some silly guest characters. Part 3 is particularly weak and embarrassing, probably the worst Hartnell era episode. The mind games are not thrilling and the final part with things coming to a conclusion still fails to pick up the level above that of the unimpressive second part let alone to match the first part or to rescue the story. Writer Brian Hayles has not provided great material apart from the initial ideas. Gerry Davis and Innes Lloyd who were the new script editor/producer combination also seem to have neglected the first couple of stories they inherited from their predecessors letting this fall very flat.

Overall this is disappointing stuff after the good first part and could maybe have been a success given proper care or would have been better as a 2-parter with a lot of the nonsense cut out.

My Ratings: Episode 1 - 8/10, Episode 2 - 5.5/10, Episode 3 - 3.5/10, Episode 4 - 5.5/10

Overall: 5.63/10
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