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IMDbPro

Le seigneur du temps

Original title: Doctor Who
  • TV Movie
  • 1996
  • TV-14
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Eric Roberts, Paul McGann, Daphne Ashbrook, and Yee Jee Tso in Le seigneur du temps (1996)
Space Sci-FiTime TravelAdventureDramaSci-Fi

The newly-regenerated Doctor takes on the Master on the turn of the millennium, 31 December 1999.The newly-regenerated Doctor takes on the Master on the turn of the millennium, 31 December 1999.The newly-regenerated Doctor takes on the Master on the turn of the millennium, 31 December 1999.

  • Director
    • Geoffrey Sax
  • Writers
    • Matthew Jacobs
    • Sydney Newman
    • Donald Wilson
  • Stars
    • Paul McGann
    • Eric Roberts
    • Daphne Ashbrook
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Geoffrey Sax
    • Writers
      • Matthew Jacobs
      • Sydney Newman
      • Donald Wilson
    • Stars
      • Paul McGann
      • Eric Roberts
      • Daphne Ashbrook
    • 138User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos44

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Paul McGann
    Paul McGann
    • The Doctor
    Eric Roberts
    Eric Roberts
    • The Master…
    Daphne Ashbrook
    Daphne Ashbrook
    • Dr. Grace Holloway
    Sylvester McCoy
    Sylvester McCoy
    • The Doctor
    Yee Jee Tso
    Yee Jee Tso
    • Chang Lee
    John Novak
    John Novak
    • Salinger
    Michael David Simms
    Michael David Simms
    • Swift
    Catherine Lough Haggquist
    Catherine Lough Haggquist
    • Wheeler
    • (as Catherine Lough)
    Dolores Drake
    Dolores Drake
    • Curtis
    Will Sasso
    Will Sasso
    • Pete
    • (as William Sasso)
    Jeremy Radick
    Jeremy Radick
    • Gareth
    Eliza Roberts
    Eliza Roberts
    • Miranda
    Bill Croft
    Bill Croft
    • Motorcycle Policeman
    David Hurtubise
    • Professor Wagg
    • (as Dave Hurtubise)
    Joel Wirkkunen
    • Ted
    Dee Jay Jackson
    • Security Guard
    Gordon Tipple
    Gordon Tipple
    • The Old Master
    Mi-Jung Lee
    • News Anchor
    • Director
      • Geoffrey Sax
    • Writers
      • Matthew Jacobs
      • Sydney Newman
      • Donald Wilson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews138

    6.311.1K
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    Featured reviews

    georox29

    What if the movie had worked?

    Just suppose the film had been a reasonable success and maybe gained 10 million viewers in the United States, not that I agreed at all with a US co-production. £3.3 m is not a lot of money, even in 1996 for the BBC themselves to fork out.

    According to Bidding Adeau, there would have been at least 6 other films. Perhaps the next set in the future on a space station penned by Terry Nation? Maybe another with The Cybermen and one with the Daleks?

    I think if the TV series in 2005 works. There should be in parallel like DS9 ran along with Voyager, there should be an attempt to fill the gaps without running into Attack of the Cybermen syndrome. Maybe a few McGann films to see what happens between him and Christopher Eccleston's first appearance.

    The half-human thing and kiss can be all but forgotten. A new TARDIS set.

    If anything I would like to see more of McGann's Doctor. In that rape programme Lying he looked fantastic, still young enough.
    Rabbit-7

    HERE's why the Brits hate us!

    Whenever anyone talked about the possibility of America doing "Dr. Who" (especially after BBC cancelled the show), people would joke, "Oh, right! They'd add car chases and gun fights and the Doctor would fool around with his companions!" Then they'd have a hearty laugh at these stereotypes of Hollywood, confident that they were being sarcastic and, if it ever DID happen, certainly people involved with the show would try to preserve the sensibilities of the series. That'll show 'em for over-estimating the intelligence of our media! I think America should revive the Lend-Lease Act, providing funding for any future movies but letting the Brits actually make them. In turn, the BBC should file for a gun law exemption so they can shoot any Fox producer trying to visit the set.
    7JeffG.

    A wonderful (if brief) return!

    The only bad thing I can think about the Doctor Who TV movie is that it didn't become a new series. Paul McGann did an excellent job as the Doctor. Hopefully, he'll get another chance to play the role again someday. Loved the new TARDIS console room as well. The movie did a fine job in appealing to both long-time Doctor Who fans and people unfamiliar with the show.
    keenan-1

    Oh, dear.

    The summary says it all: Oh, dear.

    I don't particularly like it when Hollywood attempts to "glamourize" an existing phenomenon in order to rope in lots and lots of new viewers (to make money, of course, what other reason can there be?) but I've grown to accept the fact that it's an established part of the entertainment business. I approached this movie with what I hoped was an open mind, and I was even slightly intrigued by the first five minutes or so of the movie...

    This changed, of course, when suddenly stuff started blowing up, pointless FX started popping up all over the place, and the scriptwriters apparently forgot that they were writing for DOCTOR WHO and seemed to think that they were employed by Chris Carter and the X-FILES, as they started a direct rip-off of the black oil creature, which is suddenly all that's left of the Master. (That this flies in the face of all previous background established by a show that had run for over twenty-five years is only to be expected; after all, it was only a cheesy little British sci-fi show and everyone KNOWS that Hollywood knows best, after all!) I was left with my mouth hanging open, aghast at the mess to which I was being subjected.

    Paul McGann tried. God, how he tried. I can almost see him as the Doctor if I squint. This has nothing to do with the man's acting ability, which is superb, nor does it have to do with his comparatively young age--he was about the same age as Peter Davison was when he took over the role, after all. I just could not believe in a Doctor who was playing second fiddle to a completely new and fictitious TARDIS--say, last time I looked, wasn't the Eye of Harmony something to do with Rassilon back on Gallifrey?

    Let us mercifully pass over the spectacle of the Doctor's first on-screen kiss--except to say that if he was never tempted by some of the companions in his past (particularly Romana, who at least was of the same species!) then why the heck would he be tempted by some jittery Earth woman who didn't particularly like him?

    Please, o scriptwriter, if you're going to use characters and equipment that have been established over a quarter of a century, does it not make sense to have some passing familiarity with what you are writing? Or am I being ridiculous?

    Never mind. At least I still have access to all of the videos of the classic episodes. Be sure that this travesty is one that I have zero interest in acquiring. If you're a fan of the television series, avoid this movie or spend the duration of it weeping for the mess they've made of DOCTOR WHO. If you've never seen the series and are a big fan of on-screen stuff that is really special effects in search of a movie, well, this will be right up your alley. Just don't subject a true fan to this nightmare, please.
    8Prismark10

    The Enemy Within

    It is now twenty years since the US/UK co-production of Doctor Who: The Movie was broadcast. Shown seven years after the cancellation of the television series and nine years before the relaunched series with Christopher Eccleston.

    It was the only new Who in the 1990s. It also brings a lot of ingredients that was used in the relaunched series as Russell T Davies studied what it did right and what it got wrong.

    Sylvester McCoy returns as the seventh Doctor, he gets shot and after receiving botched hospital treatment, regenerates into Paul McGann's eighth doctor.

    The Tardis lands in San Francisco in 1999. The Master escapes in a snakelike form from the Tardis and plans to take control of the Eye of Harmony once he has occupied the body of a paramedic (Eric Roberts).

    The Doctor must find a beryllium atomic clock and stop the Master with the help of Dr Grace Holloway.

    British director Geoffrey Sax made use of the higher budget with good use of special effects even though he was hampered with a reduced number of shooting days.

    The Tardis is much bigger but I guess the HG Wells like interior setting does not make it look like a Gallifreyan time machine.

    The visuals were grand and obviously some of the morphing techniques were inspired by films such as Terminator 2.

    The casting of Paul McGann was the master stroke, with the 60 minutes screen time he had, you really felt that he was the Doctor. A Byronesque romantic (he even got to have a kiss) and man of action.

    It was a shame we have seen so little of McGann's time lord apart from the mini adventure, The Night of the Doctor; although there are plenty of Eighth Doctor audio adventures.

    I also liked the malevolent interpretation of the Master by Eric Roberts who really pushes up the dial with his campiness when he puts on the time lord regalia. He shifted the emphasis of the Master from the moustache twirling villain of Anthony Ainley and it has been carried on by the subsequent Master's since then, male or female.

    The story was not that great, you felt it needed a bit more reworking and it had rather a lot of continuity which was fine for fans of the original show, but what about new viewers?

    A point not lost in the 2005 re-continuation which started afresh and only added continuity in small measures over subsequent seasons.

    Some of the elements of the television film might have introduced a few groans. The cloaking device to describe the Tardis chameleon circuit and the Doctor being half human. However it was a lot less Americanised than people feared and had it contained lots of links to the television series.

    There were a segment of fans who were disappointed after this was shown in 1996. Yet the movie received very good viewing figures in the UK and two decades on it was worth revisiting McGann's outing.

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    Related interests

    Leonard Nimoy and William Shatner in Star Trek (1966)
    Space Sci-Fi
    Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd in Retour vers le futur (1985)
    Time Travel
    Still frame
    Adventure
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in L'Empire contre-attaque (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The UK television broadcast ended with a dedication to Jon Pertwee, the third actor to play The Doctor in Docteur Who (1963) (and one of the most popular), who had died a week earlier.
    • Goofs
      Despite losing all of the possessions that were on his person after being checked into the hospital, The Doctor still produces his trademark bag of jelly babies twice. Where did they come from?
    • Quotes

      The Doctor: Wait, I remember. I'm with my father, we're lying back in the grass, it's a warm Gallifreyan night...

      Grace: Gallifreyan?

      The Doctor: Gallifrey. Yes, this must be where I live. Now where is that?

      Grace: I've never heard of it. What do you remember?

      The Doctor: A meteor storm. The sky above us was dancing with lights. Purple, green, brilliant yellow. Yes!

      Grace: What?

      The Doctor: These shoes. They fit perfectly!

    • Crazy credits
      The UK television broadcast ended with a dedication to Jon Pertwee, the third actor to play the Doctor in Docteur Who (1963) (and one of the most popular), who had died a week earlier.
    • Alternate versions
      The version broadcast and released on video by the BBC in 1996 had the following cuts (totalling 1 min 6 secs):
      • The caption "Based on the original series broadcast by the BBC" is removed, although no footage is edited.
      • Chang Lee's gang firing at the departing car.
      • Chang Lee's two friends being shot.
      • The third and fourth gunmen aiming at Chang Lee.
      • The gunmen firing at the TARDIS.
      • The operating scene is heavily edited with many cuts of Grace and her attempts to retrieve the probe from the Doctor's body. The sound of the Doctor's final scream was also removed.
      • A closeup of Chang Lee's neck being twisted and the sound of Bruce's wife's neck snapping. These cuts were waived for the 2001 DVD release.
    • Connections
      Edited into Comic Relief: Doctor Who - The Curse of Fatal Death (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      In A Dream (I Called Out Your Name)
      Written by Barbara L. Jordan and William Peterkin

      Performed by Pat Hodges

      Courtesy of Heavy Hitters Music

      Played on a grammophone when the Doctor is sitting in the lounge of his Tardis, just before the Master escaped

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    FAQ2

    • Is this Dr Who movie definitively linked to both the 1963 and 2005 Dr Who series?
    • Is Paul McGann and his role as the 8th Doctor considered Canon?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 18, 1997 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official site (United Kingdom)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Doctor Who
    • Filming locations
      • 1988 Odgen Avenue, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada(Grace's house)
    • Production companies
      • Universal Television
      • BBC Worldwide
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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