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Doctor Who: Dimensions in Time

  • TV Mini Series
  • 1993
  • 13m
IMDb RATING
4.8/10
598
YOUR RATING
Doctor Who: Dimensions in Time (1993)
ComedySci-FiShort

The Rani hatches a scheme to trap the incarnations of the Doctor and their various companions in a 20-year time loop in Albert Square.The Rani hatches a scheme to trap the incarnations of the Doctor and their various companions in a 20-year time loop in Albert Square.The Rani hatches a scheme to trap the incarnations of the Doctor and their various companions in a 20-year time loop in Albert Square.

  • Stars
    • Sophie Aldred
    • Tom Baker
    • Colin Baker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.8/10
    598
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Sophie Aldred
      • Tom Baker
      • Colin Baker
    • 16User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes2

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    TopTop-rated1 season1993

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    Top cast42

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    Sophie Aldred
    Sophie Aldred
    • Ace
    • 1993
    Tom Baker
    Tom Baker
    • The Doctor
    • 1993
    Colin Baker
    Colin Baker
    • The Doctor
    • 1993
    Nicola Bryant
    Nicola Bryant
    • Peri Brown
    • 1993
    Nicholas Courtney
    Nicholas Courtney
    • Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart
    • 1993
    Peter Davison
    Peter Davison
    • The Doctor
    • 1993
    Michael Fillis
    • Sea Devil
    • 1993
    Carole Ann Ford
    Carole Ann Ford
    • Susan Foreman
    • 1993
    Richard Franklin
    Richard Franklin
    • Captain Yates
    • 1993
    Derek Handley
    • Ogron
    • 1993
    Louise Jameson
    Louise Jameson
    • Leela
    • 1993
    Caroline John
    Caroline John
    • Liz Shaw
    • 1993
    Shobu Kapoor
    Shobu Kapoor
    • Gita Kapoor
    • 1993
    Ross Kemp
    Ross Kemp
    • Grant Mitchell
    • 1993
    Letitia Dean
    Letitia Dean
    • Sharon Watts
    • 1993
    Bonnie Langford
    Bonnie Langford
    • Melanie Bush
    • 1993
    John Leeson
    John Leeson
    • K9
    • 1993
    Sylvester McCoy
    Sylvester McCoy
    • The Doctor
    • 1993
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    4.8598
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    Featured reviews

    5A_Kind_Of_CineMagic

    One-dimensional

    This was a special little 2-part story marking the show's 30th anniversary. It was made up of the first mini episode that was shown as part of charity telethon Children in Need with the second mini episode shown during the next evening's Saturday night TV show Noel's House Party.

    It has some nostalgic appeal because it has 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th Doctors reappearing along with the 7th Doctor plus many many cameos for companions from the history of the show. Also, after 4 years with no Doctor Who on TV I remember being thrilled to have something for the anniversary.

    Unfortunately all the returning stars have very little chance to shine. Mostly they blurt out a line or two of mostly expositionary dialogue and that is it. Even the Doctors are not given any really engaging scenes. So it is grest to see everyone but it is all spread very thin without much to really enjoy.

    The plot is a jumbled mess and is forced to be a crossover with hit show Eastenders, a London based sosp. This has no relevance at all and is all a bit daft.

    It was shown in rudimentary 3D but mostly just looks a bit rubbish.

    Aspects of particular interest include Kate O'Mara having her final appearance as The Rani, the Brigadier and Susan having scenes with the 6th Doctor, Liz Shaw getting a cameo, well known film actor Samuel West getting an early small role, K-9 and Bessie featuring and all the other cameos.

    It is a bit of nonsensical fun.
    7mjshannon

    Whirlwind two part skit!

    This story starts like a regular episode with the Rani in her TARDIS following the Doctor's TARDIS and generally up to no good ( she is trying to collect all the Doctor's selves to complete her menagerie), with a young travelling companion. The Rani has trapped the disembodied heads of the first two Doctors in a Time Tunnel (this must have looked very wild in the original 3-D transmission!). We then join the Seventh Doctor and Ace exiting the TARDIS in front of the Cutty Sark. Things then move very fast and get very confusing. The Rani apparently wants to capture one specimen of every living thing which will then allow her to have the power to control evolution (I gleaned much of this information from The Seventh Doctor Handbook as it's not really clear in the two part skit). Why many of the companions are needed instead of just one human, for instance, is not explained. However, this is still a ton of fun. This came out the year (1993) that the Doctor Who movie "The Dark Dimension" was to have been released and as a bonus this would have been the cherry on the cake. In reality, though, "The Dark Dimension" was cancelled and this was the consolation prize thrown at fans--quite a letdown in that context! It should be remembered, however, that this production was made for Children In Need and all actors donated their time and services free of charge. One wishes there was more screen time for each Doctor and interaction between them but time is literally of the essence here and even with the brevity of time on screen each shines as if they have never left the role (except Hartnell and Troughton of course who are just floating heads!). Many companions appear as well and one can only think of what could have been with more time. I mean the Sixth Doctor with the Brig as well as Susan and the Third Doctor and Victoia are just three examples. All of the meetings of Doctors and companions are fun but oh so brief. Towards the end tons of old monsters appear (a Tractator, Tetrap, Sea Devil, Zog from the stage play "Ultimate Adventure" among many others). The final resolution to this mystery is very confusing but it's still fun to see the Seventh Doctor, Leela and K9 together! One will miss the 3-D effects that this was originally filmed in and may become a bit dizzy with the rotating camera work but this is harmless Who fun. If you can find someone with a copy of this give it a view, if not for any other reason, to see the final official screen adventure of Jon Pertwee as the Doctor!
    6MightyCaptain

    Final Call for Old Doctor Who

    For those who believe Sylvester McCoy didn't play the Seventh Doctor on screen in the years between his final TV outing, Survival and the 1996 TV Movie- Allow me to introduce Dimensions In Time, a charity special aired in 2 parts in November 1993. McCoy and Ace actress Sophie Aldred reprised their roles for this mini-reunion that reunited all the living actors to play Doctor Who alongside many of their old companions from the original series. Kate O'Mara (a recurring villain from the Sixth and Seventh Doctors eras) returned as the Rani in a new scheme to control the nature of evolution. While clearly not to be considered on the same scale as a normal production of Dr Who or even previous specials like The Five Doctors, this skit is still fun to watch as it is the last time we see Jon Pertwee as the flamboyant Third Doctor (he passed away three years later) and very likely the final time we will ever see McCoy, Tom Baker, Peter Davison and the much lamented Colin Baker play their interpretation of the character on screen. The new series, which began transmission last month, is not likely to utilise their talents as head writer Russell T Davies has stated he wishes to not focus on the past so much in his reinvention of the series. So taken for what it is- this is a good if all to brief celebration of the first 26 years of the legend that is Doctor Who.
    8michael-stead

    More important than it seems

    At the time this was just viewed as a gentle skit, with the chance to see a few old Doctors, who agreed to appear because of the charity aspect, when there was no chance of formally arranging for them to appear in the show – even if it had been running then.

    Within the bounds of their existing dispositions (Tom and Jon both being irretrievably dotty, and Peter having lost the peachy bloom of his youth) everyone played the show for real and even though they were only brief, there were some lovely performances from Louise Jameson and Lalla Ward, as well as the other supporting cast.

    Outside of the context of the skit, this item has a wider cultural impact, as it brought together Doctor who at its most camp, with East Enders at it's most depressing and had the two realities created for the BBC interact in an absolutely serious manner. In many ways this was a Doctor Who episode rather than an East Enders one, although it fits equally well, or badly, into the continuity of each. East Enders is as much a work of fiction as Doctor Who, but represents television's vision of the ordinary, everyday, kitchen sink lives of its viewers – the same viewers who would sit down to watch Doctor Who, so in some sense this is an example of how the BBC picture the Doctor walking out into the audience.

    There had been an idea in the 1960s to have both the Beatles and the cast of Z-Cars turn up in Doctor Who and neither proposal quite worked. Here the mingling of East enders and Doctor Who was pulled off, and even though it was like fingers down a blackboard for fans at the time, it could prove to be a much more important cultural marker for media historians of the future.

    As an adventure it just about held together and pressed forward to a conclusion, however for those fans who prefer to see plot holes, this is Doctor Who as Swiss Cheese.
    5Chris-195

    No, it's not good...

    ... but it was made for charity, so I have a hard time being too critical of it. It's fun for fans, but I wouldn't recommend it to anyone else. Even fans, though, may be alarmed at seeing all these characters crammed into one ten minute film. Some have aged to the point that it's just odd seeing them play the same characters. Tom Baker especially looks so different that it's a little off-putting. And Louise Jameson just looks silly in that Leela costume -- kind of like an aging hippie whose trying to sell you incense at a renaissance fair. Still, it's nostalgic fun. The only offensively awful thing about it is the terrible floating heads they use to represent Hartnell and Troughton caught in the time stream. Surely they could have used their actual images.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      During filming, Sylvester McCoy stood in the middle of Albert Square and yelled, "I don't understand why those BBC Enterprises people can't get us all together for love nor money, but when JNT makes a few calls, we're all here with our boots blacked - doing it for nothing! There must be something wrong!"
    • Goofs
      Towards the end when the 7th doctor is about to override The Rani's computer, when he psychically joins his other incarnations, 3, 5 and 4 are shown but for some reason 6 is mysteriously missing, despite the fact that he should be there story wise.
    • Quotes

      Romana: Have you seen the Doctor?

      Phil Mitchell: Yeah, Doctor Legg is the only doctor around here love.

      Romana: Doctor who?

    • Alternate versions
      Two versions of part 2 were shot. Ron Tarr (Big Ron) and Nicola Stapleton (Mandy) both shot scenes helping other EastEnders characters escape from The Rani (the versions are otherwise identical). Viewers voted which version they wanted to see. Mandy won and her episode was shown. The Big Ron version was never broadcast but was shown the same weekend at a Doctor Who convention in Chicago.
    • Connections
      Edited from Children in Need (1993)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 26, 1993 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • BBC Online - The Console Room
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich, London, England, UK
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      13 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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