"Doctor Who" The Leisure Hive: Part One (TV Episode 1980) Poster

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7/10
A New Regime Takes Over , A Fact Made Obvious On Screen
Theo Robertson21 January 2014
Producer Graham Williams had left the show a few months earlier and now the show was produced by John Nathan Turner . Impossible to think in 1980 that a few years down the line JNT would be the anti-Christ and would be remembered as the man who was responsible for seeing the show cancelled . I say " impossible " because as soon as JNT sat in the producer seat fandom glad that Williams had left bombarded the new producer with praise , the irony being that the self same individuals praising JNT were more often than not the same people calling for the beheading of him a few years later

In this debut from the new production team they hit the ground running . We're treated to a new title sequence and a new arrangement of the title theme . Both of which are very impressive after six years of the time tunnel type sequence . There's also a slightly different feel to the show . Gone is the tongue in cheek humour that often ridiculed the show and we have a more serious tone to everything which is down to new script editor Christopher H Bidmead and who uses hard sci-fi concepts throughout the season . This leads to a more serious and dramatic show and despite the premise revolving around a man with meglomanic ambitions trying to get his hands on a machine that will make his ambitions a reality the story David Fisher is relatively engaging with constant plot turns and perhaps the best aspect to the story is how well the cliffhangers are developed .

The Leisure Hive is directed by the delightfully named Lovett Bickford who makes his first and only contribution on the show . Despite being mainly studio bound Bickford manages to put most of the budget up on screen . One of the problems watching this 30 years after seeing it is commentating without the benefit of hindsight . The colour clash is glossy and garish and this is something that became problematic in later years with style over substance being a common criticism but after coming immediately after the Williams tenure it seemed like a breath of fresh air . Bickford and the rest of the production team also deserve some credit for reining in the more excessive aspects of Baker's performance and in this his final season in the title role Baker gives a much more serious performance than he was in the previous couple of years
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8/10
Welcome to Doctor Who, 1980's style.
Sleepin_Dragon22 February 2020
A new brush has very much swept clean here, Graham Williams has gone, and JNT has now taken over. The Leisure Hive really does feel like The Doctor having his first steps in 1980, although Nikon had briefly transmitted in the January.

I am the first to admit that The Leisure Hive is a somewhat mixed bag, but this first episode is excellent. JNT deliberately wanted everything to feel fresh and new, and it certainly does, new opening sequences, new outfits, new music, and a definite change in story and tempo. The opening scenes on Brighton beach look great, I don't remember a time previously where we had such a lazy sequence.

It's bright, colourful, tacky, and way over the top, it's such a contrast to The Horns of Nimon, it just shows how much of an impact a new Producer has.

One thing worth pointing out, this was almost four million down on viewing figures from Nimon.

Enjoyable, 8/10
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7/10
When Two Tribes Go to War...
Xstal16 July 2022
Welcome to The Leisure Hive, a place to rest, a place to thrive, where people come for peace and quiet, though very soon there'll be a riot, as bodies start to come apart, reviews will soon be off the chart, high price to pay for your own pleasure, at least you do it at your leisure.
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Not a fan
AttitudeInc3 December 2021
First, the new intro is awful. They shouldn't have messed with the theme so much. The stars are hideous and whole thing just looks cheap. Not today cheap, just plain cheap for any time. Second, the music for the episode is just bad. All I can think of when watching this is the old Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy BBC show. That music was fairly bad but forgivable given the subject matter and even added a bit of weird fun to the episoe's. Here it just makes the episodes feel stupid.

Ugh.
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7/10
Leisurely adventure
A_Kind_Of_CineMagic3 April 2020
Review of all 4 episodes:

It is quite strange that this opens with an overly long panning shot across Brighton beach that is totally pointless. Especially strange as this is the opening scene of new Showrunner John Nathan Turner's era and one would think he would want a more interesting, striking, exciting or funny opening. The opening we get is pretty dull and odd. After that we get a flawed adventure which never reaches top standard and has various aspects which are weak but overall I feel it is overly criticised. I think it is okay. It is quite entertaining, especially in the middle parts.

The tone is far less zany and comedic than the Graham Williams produced era which had just ended and has a more serious feel along with efforts to be intellectual and use high scientific ideas. It is not all convincing and some of it seems a bit flaky but the ambition is admirable.

Tom is better in this more reined in style in my opinion but the script often fails to let him shine. It is interesting and dramatic when he gets aged by a machine and that is the highlight for me.

The plot is decent and the Argolins who run a leisure complex with hidden things going on are good in concept. They look a bit over the top but it works okay while the ideas of their race dying out etc work well. The Foamasi are cleverly used as unseen mysterious characters who seem menacing and intriguing until they appear fully at which point the costumes let it down.

There is plenty of good acting from numerous cast members and the dialogue is mostly fine. Romana and K-9 provide support and moments of camaraderie.

Overall I find enough of interest to make this a reasonable effort.

My ratings: Part 1 - 7/10, Parts 2 & 3 - 8/10, Part 4 - 7/10. Overall - 7.5/10.
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9/10
Glossy
traken-4719123 February 2023
Final season for Tom Baker but the start of a new team behind the show with a modern techy new look and approach.

We have a brand new title sequence and theme tune. Brand new costume for the cosplay kinkers.

And the story starts with a glorious panoramic shot of Brighton beach that lasts a long time for a Dr who story (ever pressed for time) this feels like we are being indulged. It's luxurious, the anticipation as slowly the TARDIS drifts into shot. Magic

As for the rest of the show, it's really good. There is a definate glossy glitzy new hi-tech feel about this story. The sets, the special effects. It's all about tachyons and stuffs

Thoroughly decent story and acting

And end of episode One is up there with the very best cliffhangers of all time.
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5/10
A special effects outing in which the effects are anything but special
Leofwine_draca19 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
THE LEISURE HIVE is a little-known four-part serial from Tom Baker's latter days as the Doctor. You don't hear much mention made of it, and the reason for that is that it simply isn't very good; it's essentially a special effects story in which the special effects have badly dated through-and-through, without a single convincing moment from beginning to end. The Doctor and Romana head to a random planet where they encounter a dying race and scientific experiments, alongside the usual conspiracy sub-plot and shoehorned-in monsters. Baker gets a chance to dress up in old-age make-up while Lalla Ward is bright and spunky, which I liked a lot. The cast includes a youthful David Haig (best known for his TV comedy roles) and an ageing Adrienne Corri as the graceful Mena.
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3/10
Wow. All sorts of terrible here.
teaguemcmartin27 January 2016
To be fair, I began the original Doctor Who after watching the first 9 seasons of NuWho. It wouldn't be fair to compare the cgi, even if some is comparable to the melting trash bin. The effects in general are bad enough to plunge the average episode into mediocrity. There's a big difference between laughing at Tom Baker's wit and laughing at an arm covered in green bubble wrap. However, when the writing plays a larger role than effects, I can become decently immersed in an episode. For example, I thought the Ribos Operation was excellent. The writing was clever, the characters were interesting AND well acted and it minimized the special effects. The Land of Fiction was interesting enough to hold my interest even without the excellent Tom Baker. Actually, with 2015 graphics and Baker, Tennant or Smith it probably would be an amazing episode. Then there's this episode. With a cheesy new title sequence and an even worse theme song, it wasn't off to a great start. But like I said, those are things I can look past. The story slogged from scene to scene. Something something tachyon, something something enemy. War, reduplicator tachyon tachyon. Yet despite having my favorite original Doctor and the preferred Romana, the characters were even flatter than the storyline. Baker's lines were rarely as clever as he deserved and Romana's lines were more fitting for her predecessor, not the spunky Romana II. Then there were the Formasi. Truly a sight to behold. I know to expect little from Original Who's effects department but this conjured up memories of Drashigs, Gel Guards, Bubble Wrap and octopi. To be fair, up until the last few years effects had a tendency to detract more than add to a story. Not everyone can be the guy that did the Predator makeup, I get that. But judging from the books in my library (some of which I've even read), I'm pretty sure that writers were just as capable then as they are now. They even lazily threw in something at the very end of the last episode about how they should really be doing their job looking for the black guardian. At least I think that's who they said, I'm not sure. They mentioned him once after two hours of running between tachyon stabilizers and reduplicators. In the end, The Doctor and Romana were worthy of much better dialogue and we, the avid viewers, deserved a better show.
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