Skip to content

DVD Review: Doctor Who – Colony In Space

Written By:

Paul Mount

alt src=http://www.starburstmagazine.com/images/sept2011/doctor_who_colony_of_space_review.jpg

Review: Doctor Who – Colony in Space (PG) / Directed by: Michael E Briant / Script by: Malcolm Hulke / Starring: Jon Pertwee, Katy Manning, Roger Delgado, Morris Perry, Bernard Kay, John Ringham, Helen Worth, Nicholas Pennell

When Russell T Davies resurrected ‘Doctor Who’ in 2005 he made it quite clear that when the Doctor voyaged into Space and visited alien planets, there was going to be a human presence out there. His vision of the show’s future-vision saw the human race as front and centre amongst the stars, forging out into the Universe to inhabit new worlds and investigate the mysteries of space. It’d be a dirty job but Mankind had to do it. Cold, greasy, grubby and mechanical, the human race would be depicted as struggling to gain a foothold in an environment which wasn’t their own. It’s hard to imagine that the 1971 serial ‘Colony in Space’ wasn’t lurking somewhere in the back of his mind as in many ways it’s a rough template for 21st century stories like ‘The Impossible Planet’ and ‘42’ which depicted its human protagonists battling against the odds to survive in hostile, difficult environments and in the face of extreme adversity.

In 1971, tiring of the ‘Doctor-in-exile’ format imposed upon them in order to keep ‘Doctor Who’ alive, then-producer Barry Letts and his script editor Terrance Dicks, itching to get the Doctor back out into Space, created a simple but efficient (and oft-repeated) plot device  whereby the Time Lords use the Doctor as their ‘secret agent’, dispatching him off into Space in a remotely-controlled TARDIS to tidy up some dirty work they’d rather not be seen interfering with. ‘Colony in Space’ was the first fruits of this idea and, whilst not exactly a classic story of its era, it’s certainly one which has been much-maligned and often just summarily dismissed over the years and it’s long-overdue the sort of reappraisal this smart DVD release ought to bring it.

The Time Lords send the Doctor and Jo to the planet Uxarious, where ragged beardy human colonists from the 25th century are battling to avoid starvation (and none of them look even remotely starving, most of them being well-fed middle-to-upper class early 1970s BBC thesps) on the grey and unwelcoming surface of a planet which stubbornly refuses to support their crops. There’s murder afoot too, as sightings of giant lizards on the surface lead to the death of colonists living in outlying habitation domes. But the planet has attracted attention from elsewhere; rich in a valuable mineral, the Intergalactic Mining Corporation (IMC) with their red-and-black uniformed officers and guards, are also on the scene, declaring exclusive mineral rights and trying to force the colonists off the planet by fair means or foul. The planet is also home to green-skinned, spear-wielding primitives and some rather more unusual inhabitants below the surface, guardians of a secret Doomsday weapon which the Doctor’s old enemy the Master (Roger Delgado), posing as an Earth Adjudicator sent to sort out the dispute between the colonists and the miners, has got his beady eye on for his own nefarious purposes.

‘Colony in Space’, like so much ‘Doctor Who’ is ambitious way beyond its budget and its capabilities. This is space opera on a shoestring and yet it’s huge fun, combining the novelty of seeing Pertwee’s urbane Doctor in the TARDIS and travelling to another world with the barren, genuinely alien-looking environment (in reality a china clay pit in Cornwall), a few weirdy-looking aliens and, fairly typically from 1970s writer Malcolm Hulke, a script which rails against the relentless power of big business corporations and the desperate hopelessness of a few grubby, shabby humans with stuck-on beards grizzling about failing crops. From a 2011 perspective, Hulke’s hippie idealism seems quaint and a bit naive but some of his core concerns are as pertinent now as ever they were.

In common with many six-part stories of the era, ‘Colony in Space’ can’t help but feel a bit padded on occasion as there’s so very rarely enough story to accommodate 6 twenty-five minute instalments and the appearance of the Master in episode four gives the serial a bit of a lift when it’s starting to sag a little. But this remains a well-written, earnestly-performed piece (yes, that is Gail out of ‘Coronation Street’) with good location footage, some effective action sequences (Pertwee always enjoyed a good bit of rough’n’tumble and there’s a startlingly realistic fight scene in the last episode between a colonist and an IMC guard, splashing around in the mud knocking seven bells out of one another) and a real frontier spirit as the well-meaning colonists refuse to give up to the bully boys who want to take their new home away from them.

It’s good to see ‘Colony in Space’ out on DVD at last because this is a story that’s been overlooked for far too long. The picture restoration is decent enough (but not as pinpoint sharp as many other ’classic’ releases as the prints were recovered from episodes sold abroad and cleaned up for commercial release) and more than enough to remind this veteran fan of the innocent 1971 thrill of seeing the TARDIS taking the Doctor out amongst the stars again for the first time in two years. Rattlingly-good fun.

Special features:  ‘IMC Needs You’ is a fairly typical ‘making of’ feature, there’s 20 minutes of unused ‘film trims’ from the location footage (love that catchy backgound music!), photo gallery, commentary, information titles and more.

alt src=http://www.starburstmagazine.com/images/sept2011/stars/8stars.jpg

Doctor Who: Colony in Space’ is out on DVD in the UK now.

Paul Mount

You May Also Like...

still from titane film by julia ducournau, who has set her third film, titled alpha

TITANE And RAW Filmmaker Sets Her Third Film

French filmmaker Julia Ducournau should be a name well-known to any self-respecting horror fan, the mind behind the cannibal film Raw and the wild, genre-defying Titane. And in some good
Read More
godzilla x kong filmmaker adam wingard has upcoming film onslaught scooped up by A24. Still from The New Empire

A24 Scores Adam Wingard’s Action-Horror ONSLAUGHT

A24 has come out on top of an auction to pick up Onslaught, an action thriller directed by Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire filmmaker Adam Wingard, which he’s co-writing
Read More
louis leterrier to direct and produce sci-fi horror feature 11817

FAST X Filmmaker To Direct Sci-Fi Horror Film 11817

Fast X and Transporter filmmaker Louis Leterrier has been tapped to direct and produce the sci-fi horror film 11817, based on a script by Matthew Robinson (The Invention of Lying,
Read More

Emily Booth Teams Up with NYX at HorrorConUK

Genre legend and all-round icon Emily Booth will be joining forces with free-to-air TV channel NYX UK at this year’s HorrorConUK, which takes place at Magna, Sheffield on May 11th
Read More
kristen stewart to star in vampire thriller flesh of the gods. still from twilight franchise

Kristen Stewart, Oscar Isaac To Star In Vamp Thriller FLESH OF THE GODS

Kristen Stewart and Oscar Isaac will star in vampire thriller Flesh of the Gods, the next project from Mandy filmmaker (and STARBURST favourite) Panos Cosmatos. Adam McKay is aboard to produce the feature with
Read More

Get Ready for Take-Off With the SUPER WINGS: MAXIMUM SPEED Trailer

Animated TV spin-off Super Wings: Maximum Speed is heading to cinemas! Check out the trailer below… Synopsis: Young airplane Jet is proud to be the fastest in the world, but
Read More