Skip to content
10% OFF SITEWIDE THIS EASTER WEEKEND! Use Code: RWEASTER10 at checkout, min. spend £20
10% OFF SITEWIDE THIS EASTER WEEKEND! Use Code: RWEASTER10 at checkout, min. spend £20

Doctor Who - The Web Planet

Movie
Barcode 5014503135522
DVD

Original price £7.37 - Original price £7.37
Original price £7.37
£7.37
£7.37 - £7.37
Current price £7.37

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
in stock

Release Date: 01/10/2005

Genre: TV Series
Region Code: DVD 2
Label: 2 Entertain Video
Actors: William Hartnell, William Russell, Jacqueline Hill, Maureen O'Brien
Director: Richard Martin
Number of Discs: 1
Audio Languages: English
Subtitle Languages: English

PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
STARRING WILLIAM HARTNELL AS THE DOCTOR A STRANGE POWER DRAIN FORCES THE TARDIS TO MATERIALISE ON THE PLANET VORTIS.

AMAZON REVIEW
One of the most widely-watched of all the '60s-era Doctor Who serials, The Web Planet (1965) puts the first Doctor (William Hartnell) and his companions in the middle of a war between two alien races--the moth-like Menoptra and a hostile race of ant creatures known as Zarbi--for possession of the planet Vortis. With the help of a grub-esque people called the Optera, the Doctor discovers the Zarbi's hidden weapon--the seductively voiced spider creature the Animus, which plans to ensnare the Time Lord and thwart his assistance to the Menoptra. An estimated 13.5 million viewers tuned in to watch all six episodes of The Web Planet, which manages to overcome its unfortunately awkward creature costumes (which are grim even by Doctor Who standards) to deliver a dramatic and suspenseful story with a subtle touch of social commentary; Hartnell is at his flinty best as the Doctor, and gets solid support from William Russell, Jacqueline Hill, and Maureen O'Brien as his fellow time travelers. The DVD includes the usual abundance of new and archival extras: in addition to commentary by Russell, Martin Jarvis (who played Menoptra prince Hilio), producer Verity Lambert, and director Richard Martin, there is a 40-minute making-of featurette (with Hill, Lambert, and others among the many interviewees), and Russell provides the narration for "The Lair of the Zarbi Supremo," a short story based on the serial that was taken from the first Doctor Who Annual (that periodical is also included on the disc in PC-ROM format). A crudely illustrated but historically interesting film strip version of the serial, as well as the usual text-only production notes track and photo gallery, round out the supplemental features. --Paul Gaita