Doctor Who: Day of the Daleks

7.9
19721h 36m

Guerillas time-jump back from the 22nd century to assassinate Sir Reginald Styles - a diplomat working for World Peace, The Doctor discovers they are from a future where the Daleks have invaded the Earth (Following wars precipitated by Styles's destruction at the peace conference). With the Daleks desperate to maintain their version of history, The Doctor and Jo find themselves in a totalitarian future, where they must discover who really happened and prevent it.

Production

Logo for BBC

Cast

Photo of Jon Pertwee

Jon Pertwee

The Doctor

Photo of Nicholas Courtney

Nicholas Courtney

Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart

Photo of Katy Manning

Katy Manning

Jo Grant

Photo of Richard Franklin

Richard Franklin

Captain Yates

Photo of John Levene

John Levene

Sergeant Benton

Photo of Peter Messaline

Peter Messaline

Daleks Voices (voice)

Photo of Aubrey Woods

Aubrey Woods

Controller

Photo of William Hartnell

William Hartnell

The Doctor (1) (picture) (uncredited)

Photo of Patrick Troughton

Patrick Troughton

The Doctor (2) (picture) (uncredited)

Photo of Nicholas Briggs

Nicholas Briggs

Dalek Voices (Special Edition)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

"Sir Reginald Styles" is about to convene a conference that could finally deliver world peace when he is the victim of an assassination attempt. This attracts the attention of UNIT and so the "Brigadier" (Nicholas Courtney) drafts in the help of the "Doctor" (Jon Pertwee) and "Jo" (Katy Manning) to investigate a strange glowing device. It turns out that this is some sort of a portal to the future from which someone is sending heavily armed guerrillas. Why, though? Well pretty quickly we discover that it's the eponymous antagonist of the "Doctor" who are determined that their empire shall not be compromised by the meddling of their pesky foe. As the cat and mouse game ebbs and flows, the "Doctor" has to deal with not just his old enemy, but their henchmen the "Ogron" (an early "Klingon"?) and the manipulative "Controller" (Aubrey Woods). This is more my kind of adventure with plenty of action, a good solid story and someone has had great fun developing some visual effects for the lasers and the disintegration gun. There's loads of early evening menace and though I could have done with a few more "Dalek" encounters, it's still an entertaining four-part series that condenses the story tightly with a focus on a dastardly plot that mixes timelines, locations, and might just stop WWIII.

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