"Doctor Who" The Web of Fear: Episode 6 (TV Episode 1968) Poster

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S5: The Web of Fear: Effective and atmospheric serial
bob the moo28 December 2013
Earlier in 2013 I decided that I would start watching Doctor Who from the start as much as I could; having really seen none of it prior to the Baker/McCoy era, this meant that for the vast majority that I would be watching for the first time. When I was trying to work out how to best get hold of the various episodes, I remember looking at those available from the Troughton era and seeing how many of them were missing and how few serials were actually available in a complete (or even near- complete) form and part of me thought I would just skip this and jump right into the next Doctor. I am glad I didn't do that because so far Troughton's episodes have been pretty good even if they tend to follow a similar structure – plus just before I started his era, a handful of additional episodes were found in Nigeria, some of which took this serial up to 5 out of 6.

Following the rather odd enemy of the world, this serial returns us to a structure of "enemy outside the gates" which humans on one side and monsters on the other, but it does so in a very effective way. The first thing to note is that it really feels very different from the first shots outside the Tardis. The serial opens with the aftermath of the previous episode, but then suddenly we find ourselves in a spooky house with a style and atmosphere very different from the previous serial and a sense of dread that made me think of a British ghost story from the period. This continues throughout the serial whether it be focused on the Yeti or the bigger picture of the Great Intelligence. I did not have the one remaining episode of the serial where the Yeti first appeared so this was my first sight of them and I must say I enjoyed them a great deal – large imposing beasts with real looming menace. The Great Intelligence is a good backdrop but I got less of a feel for that as it is delivered via others who act "controlled".

What really worked for me was the drama. Other "under siege" plots in this season have done a decent job but this one is really very well driven forward and delivered. The plot builds, people get killed, the humans snipe at each other under tension and fear and the Doctor mostly has his hands full. Not all of it is perfect but it has a consistent threat to it that I enjoyed. Troughton always seems to be aiming for this and I liked that he scaled his delivery back a little here from how intense and dramatic he can be and by doing so he allowed the slower, creepier atmosphere to work alongside what he does. Support is generally very good from all involved and everyone gets into the required space very well.

I'm very glad this serial was one of those recently found as so far I think it is the strongest of the Troughton serials that I've seen – and I have generally enjoyed most of them as I like him as a Doctor. Unfortunately the final serials of the season is a reminder of what happened to so much of his work, as almost none of the final two remain. Here's hoping that the sixth season was not as badly affected as the fifth.
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10/10
The story rounds off in impeccable style.
Sleepin_Dragon5 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
The Yeti are now in control, it seems the Doctor has only the Yeti under his control and Jamie to rely on. Chorley has turned up, suspicions still rife as to which one of them is the Great intelligence. The Great Intelligence hook the Doctor up to a device in order to drain his mind.

Plaudits to Douglas Camfield for his incredible direction, and for the writing combination of Mervyn Haisman and Henry Lincoln, you could be forgiven for thinking that to make a great show like this would be easy, but it's not often every element is on point to this extent. The acting throughout was impeccable, the music great, and some cracking special effects.

The concluding episode is fantastic, the final showdown was well worth the wait. We learn a lot about Troughton's Doctor, he's funny, but composed and intelligent. We learn the power of The Great Intelligence, and get a great performance from Jack Woolgar, who switches the tone of his character to great effect. It makes a chance to see an adversary escape and still at large.

Outstanding 10/10
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10/10
The Joy of Fear. One of the very best, a terrific classic
A_Kind_Of_CineMagic2 September 2014
Review of all 6 parts:

This has been acclaimed as an all time classic for many years and deservedly so. It is terrific in every department.

The story involves the Great Intelligence, the villain introduced earlier in season 5 and which would return some 45 years later, shortly before and during the shows 50th anniversary season. The threat posed by this villain and the actions of his minions the Yeti, provide cracking entertainment and thrills.

The Great Intelligence causes the TARDIS to go to Earth where the evil power is carrying out an attack on London including robot Yeti marauding through the London underground.

There is plenty of action, there is mystery as to who is under the influence of the Intelligence and consistently great dialogue supporting a tremendously high standard of story (written brilliantly by Mervyn Haisman & Henry Lincoln) throughout the 6 episodes. The number of great characters is incredible with Nicholas Courtney as Colonel Lethbridge-Stewart (later to be Brigadier, regular 'companion' to The Doctor) making his notable debut, the return of Professor Travers (Jack Watling) and the addition of Anne Travers (Tina Packer), the journalist Chorley (Jon Rollason) and some excellent soldiers especially Sgt. Arnold (Jack Woolgar). Great villains, brilliant acting from the whole cast (including regulars Pat Troughton, Frazer Hines and Deborah Watling), great direction from Douglas Camfield, quality production values and set design with a fine script and effects make this pretty flawless.

This is a true all time classic with an atmosphere and a magic which make it one of the best Who stories ever and therefore as good as TV gets! All 6 episodes 10/10.
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