Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0
The Doctor
Jo Grant
Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart
Captain Mike Yates
Sergeant Benton
The Master
Captain Chin Lee
Prison Governor
Dr. Roland Summers
Professor Kettering
Corporal Bell
George Patrick Barnham
Arthur Linwood
Chief Prison Officer Powers
Senior Prison Officer Green
Prison Officer
Prison Officer
Prison Officer
Prison Officer
Mailer
Vosper
Fu Peng
Senator Alcott
Charlie
Major Cosworth
Fuller
Main Gates Prisoner
Prisoner (uncredited)
Written by Geronimo1967 on 2024-09-02
Still without his dematerialisation circuit, the trapped "Doctor" (Jon Pertwee) and his assistant "Jo" (Katy Manning) are summoned to a prison for violent felons to investigate a mystery surrounding the rather menacing "Keller" machine. It's a sort of high-tech gadget that substitutes the need to execute these miscreants with a process that soaks up all their evil and leaves them like the placid "Barnham" (Neil McCarthy). Well, needless to say, the thing has gone a bit wonky and there's a bit of a riot broken out at the establishment. Meantime, the "Brigadier" (Nicholas Courtney) has his work cut out for him organising the security at the first world peace conference. The Chinese delegate is killed and the "Doctor" is diverted from his original task - only to discover that these events might have something in common and that the "Master" (Roger Delgado) might be behind a cunning plot to use all the evil stopped up in the "Keller" to avenge himself on both the "Doctor" and on us pesky humans. I was never really as much of a fan of the Earth-bound adventures and despite a full suite of UNIT characters this one isn't really much better than an average spy thriller with some sparingly used special effects. Pertwee enters into the spirit of this enthusiastically, Delgado delivers his usual brand of hammy megalomania well enough too and it's a decent enough ensemble effort, but it's too thinly strung out and the writing - though quite entertaining a times - struggles to sustain this light-weight outing across six episodes. It's all watchable enough, but please can we get back into the TARDIS for some off-world tin foil, papier-mâché and green lycra stories soon, please?