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Roger Delgado in Docteur Who (1963)

User reviews

Terror of the Autons: Episode One

Docteur Who

13 reviews
8/10

"I am The Master"

  • profh-1
  • Feb 8, 2012
  • Permalink
9/10

Every good guy needs a villain.

The Doctor receives a warning from a Timelord, The Master is at large on Earth, and has stolen a vital part of The Nestene consciousness.

It's a brilliant first part to this four part story, not only has one legend joined, in the form of Roger Delgado, but a second also has, Jo Grant, wonderfully portrayed by Katy Manning. The Master would become a huge part of the show, we've had him and her in various incarnations, but there's nothing quite like the original.

It feels very different to the previous series, there's more of a horror vibe, some very nasty acts, with plenty more to follow. It is very grainy in quality, it doesn't look so sharp as say Inferno.

Pertwee is now very much installed as an ambassador and saviour of Earth, he would battle The Master many times with the help of UNIT, just a shame he couldn't travel to other world's.

An excellent start. 9/10
  • Sleepin_Dragon
  • Feb 22, 2020
  • Permalink
9/10

Excellent and very important in the show's canon.

Review for all four episodes.

This would shape many future episodes, The Doctor and Jo, aided by UNIT on Earth battling The Master, a very strong era of the show. I liked Liz Shaw, as a companion for The Doctor she was up to him, The Doctor was definitely not an avuncular figure to Liz, he was to Jo, throughout this episode she's constantly asking who, what and why. Manning is a total joy though, innocent and fun, my favourite companion.

Delgado is terrific as The Master, together with the accompanying music, the fate that befell the poor technicians was very nasty, miniaturised and placed inside a sandwich box, who said there was no horror element in this era.

The Autons and Nestene had been wonderful in the last series, great they returned so quickly, it's only a shame it took until Rose for us to see them again. They are menacing, particularly as Police.

It's such an important four part story.
  • littleredroses
  • Feb 22, 2020
  • Permalink
10/10

Master of Thrills

Review of all 4 episodes:

The most notable aspect of this story is the arrival of The Master as an arch nemesis for The Doctor. This fellow renegade Time Lord is like Moriarty is to Sherlock Holmes, an equally brilliant, intelligent regular adversary who is a bit like 'the other side of the same coin' with The Doctor. The idea of this character and the performance by Roger Delgado is absolutely fantastic. The Master and his plan to bring back to Nestenes, with their ability to turn plastic items into deadly living plastic Autons to attack humanity, provides terrific entertainment.

There is a level of terror and horror in this adventure, similar to its predecessor featuring the Nestenes, Spearhead From Space. Attacks by an inflatable chair, a telephone wire, plastic daffodils and especially a creepy child's doll are sinister and thrilling, creating some very memorable 'hide behind the sofa' moments that have lived in the minds of viewers ever since. Also the Auton dummies disguised as people have some great moments. In particular there is a great, spectacular stunt when an Auton is knocked down and falls dramatically, careering down a huge slope, apparently to its death, only to just get straight back up.

Jon Pertwee remains on top form along with an excellent guest cast and all the regulars do well although it is sad that the character of The Doctor's 'assistant' Liz Shaw is replaced. Her replacement character Jo Grant goes on to be a very endearing character but Liz Shaw was the better companion for The Doctor in my opinion with a strong intellect as well as bravery. The addition of Captain Mike Yates is great but perhaps they transferred the strength and intelligence of Liz Shaw onto Yates and passed the glamour and warmth of Liz onto Jo Grant. That is an unfortunate decision for gender equality. I liked having all those aspects combined within the one female companion. In saying that I do really like Katy Manning as Jo.

The story is not necessarily perfect, if you nitpick you can find a few minor faults in a scene here and there but even then it still stands up against any TV show of any era. The great new villain added to top class thrills, excellent acting, cracking dialogue and good amounts of action make this a classic. Written by Doctor Who legend Robert Holmes and well directed by admirable showrunner/producer Barry Letts, this is a must watch for all fans.

My Ratings: All 4 episodes - 10/10
  • A_Kind_Of_CineMagic
  • Sep 24, 2014
  • Permalink

Very good story which introduces The Master (#55, Terror of the Autons)

I love Robert Holmes, I love the Autons, I love The Master, I like Jo Grant, and I quite like this story, though it really could have been a lot better. "Terror of the Autons" is a very good story but not a flawless one, this is a story which suffers from a rushed ending, silly plot devices, and even some inexcusable Scooby Doo-like moments in which masks are pulled off to reveal the *yawn* unexpected.

The best part of this story, which is surprisingly light on any of the Auton-induced terror which its title promises (nothing here even comes close to the Autons attacking London in "Spearhead from Space", other than maybe that doll *shudder*), is undoubtedly the first appearance of The Master. Now, The Master may have been remembered by much of the mainstream as a pantomime villain (and apparently Russel T. Davies, who wrote John Simm as an annoyingly flamboyant and silly villain), but that is due to future interpretations of the character. Roger Delgado is nothing short of BRILLIANT as The Master. Cold, menacing, charming, deceptive, and intelligent, this is a proper VILLAIN. Delgado's death was a major loss for Doctor Who.

The Autons and Nestenes are fairly disappointing in this story as they are not really the villains. It would be their last appearance in Doctor Who right until the first story of the revived series "Rose". "Terror of the Autons" is well-written overall although not among Holmes' absolute best. The direction by the uncredited Barry Letts is okay. Katy Manning gets a good start in this story playing Jo Grant, an underrated companion in my opinion.

Episode Ratings:

Episode 1: 8/10 Episode 2: 9/10 Episode 3: 8/10 Episode 4: 7/10

Overall: Average rating amounts to 8/10 and I will stick with that rating for this story across its four episodes
  • ametaphysicalshark
  • Jan 19, 2008
  • Permalink
8/10

Enter the Master and Jo Grant

The title says it all. Two of Who's most iconic figures introduced in one very enjoyable package.
  • maxglen
  • Nov 7, 2019
  • Permalink
6/10

"You insolent primitive." Classic Doctor Who.

  • poolandrews
  • Jul 25, 2007
  • Permalink
6/10

The Pertwee Era Starts Here

  • Theo Robertson
  • Feb 6, 2010
  • Permalink
7/10

The Master!

  • wetmars
  • Feb 24, 2021
  • Permalink
6/10

Doctor Who: Terror of the Autons

This might have had a touch more menace to it, had the eponymous creatures bent on Earth's conquest not looked like the famous yellow-coats at a seaside holiday camp. Anyway, they are the chosen implements of the malevolent "Master" (Roger Delgado). He has returned to assist the powerful "Nestene" with their dastardly plans but hasn't counted on the intervention of the "Doctor" (Jon Pertwee) and his UNIT ally the "Brigadier" (Nicholas Courtney) who are intrigued when a secret power unit is stolen; then a radio telescope is put out of action and bodies start popping up all over Britain seemingly the victims of suffocation. Now it's up to our intrepid Time Lord to piece together the pieces of this puzzle before humanity is cling-filmed to death. It's good to have "Capt. Yates" (Richard Franklin) back to complete the military team and this story gives "Jo" (Katy Manning) a little more of a role as she proves invaluable helping the "Doctor" work to thwart their antagonists. Thing is, though, despite the best efforts of Delgado - and his penetrating stare - as the megalomaniacal mastermind of evil, this is just another rather cheap and cheerful drama that comes across as vaguely comical at times, and has way too much script. There's just not enough happening, and though the premiss that the world might regret being quite so dependent on plastic one day has some resonance, there's just no peril here and the flat denouement rather sums it all up. I'm sure budgets were an issue, even in 1971, but I think the "Doctor" needs to get back into space and give us some baddies we can get to grips with rather than yet another series of episodes that focus too much on saving our own planet - again, and again whilst facing the endless red-tape of the British government.
  • CinemaSerf
  • Aug 28, 2024
  • Permalink
6/10

Terrible visual quality

Review of the Complete Story:

TERROR OF THE AUTONS is a prime piece of Dr Who, made during the tenure of the late, great, Jon Pertwee. As a bonus it co-stars Nicholas Courtney as the beloved Brigadier, features the excellent Roger Delgado in his first appearance as the Master, and also stars companion Jo Grant (aka Katy Manning) in her first screen appearance. If all of that greatness wasn't enough, it's also a sequel to my personal favourite of all Dr Who stories, SPEARHEAD FROM SPACE.

A shame, then, that the BBC really dropped the ball on this one. They erased the colour tapes of the production back in the 1970s, leaving them with only a 16mm black and white print. Decades later they got hold of a colour NTSC version and combined the two sources, leading to this colour version we get today. I first saw this on VHS back in the day and thought it was simply a horrid transfer, but it turns out TERROR OF THE AUTONS just looks rubbish.

It looks like one of those old 1930s colourised films they did, but one in which the process went wrong somewhere. Every scene looks fake and like it was done on a green screen. The special effects bits are particularly bad. Even so, this is an enjoyable adventure, although it's both choppier in terms of story and sillier in terms of menace than its predecessor. Here, the Master is using the Nestene Consciousness to attack mankind with all manner of plastic madness. There are killer daffodils, miniature people, creepy Frank Sidebottom lookalikes, plus the oddest (and daftest) doll you'll ever see. It's all great fun, of course, and just a shame the BBC ruined the quality and took the shine off it.
  • Leofwine_draca
  • Apr 17, 2015
  • Permalink
7/10

NOT THE WORST, BUT NOT THE BEST

For me this four part Doctor Who serial, is not one of the worst Doctor Who's made but its certainly is not one of the best.

Everything that I myself saw in this four part serial, which was made in the autumn of 1970 looks artificial. There is no style in it whatsoever.

The way it was directed by Barry Letts, with the help of his production team, makes this serial look like it was made by a bunch of amateurs.

The story written by Robert Holmes is good, and it is a good sequel to Spearhead From Space. Unfortunately it falls apart visually by both the actors and the production team.

On the acting side there is only one good performance, and that comes from Roger Delgado making his debut as The Master. His introduction in episode one is excellent.

The rest of the cast are so overconfident with their performances, it makes there characters look artificial.

Having parts of the story centre around a circus, a radio telescope at a research centre, a space museum, a plastics factory, UNIT HQ and the debut of Jo Grant, it sadly falls apart at every level of the story.

Unfortunately there is no realism in it.
  • DOUG-BROWN-2013
  • May 1, 2025
  • Permalink

Enter the Master

Nobody can accuse the television series "Doctor Who" of being environmentally unfriendly; they were always happy to recycle used material. "Terror of the Autons", the first serial of the eighth season, is essentially a remake of "Spearhead from Space, the first serial of the seventh season. Once again the Nestene Consciousness, an "incorporeal intelligence", is trying to conquer the Earth, starting with Britain, by using "autons", remotely controlled plastic robots. The autons were brought back because they had proved popular when "Spearhead from Space" was broadcast the previous year, but someone at the BBC clearly realised that incorporeal intelligences do not make very satisfactory villains and that the Doctor needed a more corporeal enemy to fight.

Enter the Master. This serial was the first to feature the evil renegade Time Lord, a sinister figure dressed in black, who was to be a regular villain in the next three seasons (and doubtless would have been a regular fixture for much longer but for the tragic death of actor Roger Delgado in a road accident). His role in this particular adventure is not always easy to understand, because it is never really explained why he is assisting the Nestene Consciousness or how its planned conquest of the Earth is likely to benefit him. Nevertheless, the Master was a welcome addition to the series. Moriarty to the Doctor's Holmes, his appeal to the viewer was that he was one of the Doctor's own people, with a similar intellect and a similar level of technology at his disposal. He presented a greater threat than any human adversary ever could.

I was less happy with another new characters introduced in this serial, the Doctor's new companion, Jo Grant. His previous companion Liz Shaw had been a brilliant scientist and as close to the Doctor's intellectual equal as it was possible for a human to be. She had not, however, proved popular with the viewers and had been written out, and someone decided that her replacement should be as unlike her as possible. Katy Manning's Jo is capable of loyalty and courage, but comes across as a stereotypical dumb blonde bimbo. (She failed science at A-level and only got a job with UNIT because her uncle pulled strings on her behalf). I must admit that in 1971, when I was only a child, I probably did not fully appreciate the differences between Liz and Jo and did not understand their implications, but now that I am rewatching the programme as an adult the substitution of an intelligent woman by an unintelligent one seems like an unnecessary backward step.

"Terror of the Autons" is not really my favourite "Doctor Who" adventure. It is too similar to "Spearhead from Space", and as in that serial many of the details (killer daffodils!) struck me as more surreal than scary. The scene where one character is killed off by a weird little plastic doll struck me as particularly bizarre. It is, however, worth watching as the first appearance of Delgado's masterly Master.
  • JamesHitchcock
  • Mar 10, 2022
  • Permalink

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