As part of the 60th anniversary celebrations of Doctor Who, the first Dalek story has been dazzlingly colourised and weaved into a 75-minute blockbuster.As part of the 60th anniversary celebrations of Doctor Who, the first Dalek story has been dazzlingly colourised and weaved into a 75-minute blockbuster.As part of the 60th anniversary celebrations of Doctor Who, the first Dalek story has been dazzlingly colourised and weaved into a 75-minute blockbuster.
William Hartnell
- The Doctor
- (archive footage)
William Russell
- Ian Chesterton
- (archive footage)
Jacqueline Hill
- Barbara Wright
- (archive footage)
Carole Ann Ford
- Susan Foreman
- (archive footage)
Alan Wheatley
- Temmosus
- (archive footage)
Philip Bond
- Ganatus
- (archive footage)
Virginia Wetherell
- Dyoni
- (archive footage)
Marcus Hammond
- Antodus
- (archive footage)
Jonathan Crane
- Kristas
- (archive footage)
Gerald Curtis
- Elyon
- (archive footage)
David Graham
- Dalek Voices
- (archive sound)
Peter Hawkins
- Dalek Voices
- (archive sound)
Robert Jewell
- Dalek
- (archive footage)
Kevin Manser
- Dalek
- (archive footage)
Peter Murphy
- Dalek
- (archive footage)
Michael Summerton
- Dalek
- (archive footage)
Gerald Taylor
- Dalek
- (archive footage)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
It should be noted that one of the BBC's stipulations regarding this colourized release of The Daleks, was that it needed to be kept to a 75 minute run time. There was no going against this order. The production crew obviously did their best to pare down the original 175 minutes, but the result is a disjointed mess.
The colourising is for the most part beautifully accomplished. One hopes this process will be put to other classic black & white episodes of the series. However, if any further conversions are produced, editing should be better controlled if not entirely abandoned. As presented, The Daleks-Colourized is 75 minutes of choppy story telling. Many scenes are rushed and others seemingly disorganized. In some instances, characters that were in a scene one moment, are gone the next, though they are not seen leaving nor given time to leave. In another instance, the Doctor and others are trapped on the upper floors of a tower, soon after they are on the edge of entering a jungle with no intervening explanation of their escape.
Other than editing, newly produced music pours over scenes like invading slime, covering dialogue and clashing with action. Choice of music during a scene set in the Dalek Control Room is ponderously bizarre. New special effects, however, are for the most, excellent. Hopefully additional colourized episodes of B&W Doctor Who will be produced without unjust editing. Soundtracks, if not religated to the original, should have a better fit and volume.
A worthy experiment, especially for the brillance of colour. A rating of 5/10 from me.
The colourising is for the most part beautifully accomplished. One hopes this process will be put to other classic black & white episodes of the series. However, if any further conversions are produced, editing should be better controlled if not entirely abandoned. As presented, The Daleks-Colourized is 75 minutes of choppy story telling. Many scenes are rushed and others seemingly disorganized. In some instances, characters that were in a scene one moment, are gone the next, though they are not seen leaving nor given time to leave. In another instance, the Doctor and others are trapped on the upper floors of a tower, soon after they are on the edge of entering a jungle with no intervening explanation of their escape.
Other than editing, newly produced music pours over scenes like invading slime, covering dialogue and clashing with action. Choice of music during a scene set in the Dalek Control Room is ponderously bizarre. New special effects, however, are for the most, excellent. Hopefully additional colourized episodes of B&W Doctor Who will be produced without unjust editing. Soundtracks, if not religated to the original, should have a better fit and volume.
A worthy experiment, especially for the brillance of colour. A rating of 5/10 from me.
I really enjoyed this episode! The colorization is absolutely fantastic-it's done with great attention to detail, making the visuals feel natural and immersive. Seeing these classic moments in color brings a whole new level of appreciation for the story and performances. The quality is top-notch, and it really enhances the viewing experience. I hope more episodes get the same treatment in the future. It would be amazing to see even more classic Doctor Who stories brought to life in color!
I really enjoyed this episode! The colorization is absolutely fantastic-it's done with great attention to detail, making the visuals feel natural and immersive. Seeing these classic moments in color brings a whole new level of appreciation for the story and performances. The quality is top-notch, and it really enhances the viewing experience. I hope more episodes get the same treatment in the future. It would be amazing to see even more classic Doctor Who stories brought to life in color! The added depth and vibrancy make everything feel fresh while still respecting the original vision. A fantastic job!
I really enjoyed this episode! The colorization is absolutely fantastic-it's done with great attention to detail, making the visuals feel natural and immersive. Seeing these classic moments in color brings a whole new level of appreciation for the story and performances. The quality is top-notch, and it really enhances the viewing experience. I hope more episodes get the same treatment in the future. It would be amazing to see even more classic Doctor Who stories brought to life in color! The added depth and vibrancy make everything feel fresh while still respecting the original vision. A fantastic job!
So is it Worth the Watch? Yes. Although I think this should've been longer, making it less rushed, the colourisation and audio restoration is incredible, as is the updated score (although heavy handed at times) and special effects. It's not as successful as the original in regards to maintaining the eerie and uneasy atmosphere, but if you don't want to spend 3 hours watching the original, then put this on instead. Just like the original, it's good, but just not quite as good, although I would still personally watch this over the Original as it's much shorter. So it's definitely not bad.
The Daleks in Colour: 7/10.
The Daleks in Colour: 7/10.
Certainly a fascinating experiment - The Daleks serial re-colourised for the anniversary events in late 2023 and it although it looks compelling the drastic editing of the original story is ludicrous. Especially as the Tales of the TARDIS (which appeared at the same time) features the full serials with only the titles and end credits edited out, this felt like a leap too far. Excising whole chunks of the story and mashing up scenes to make it seem more pacey and more modern just makes it look silly. It feels like an experiment gone too far - a set of choices that didn't need to be made. Give me black and white and creaky 60s pacing any day.
On viewing this so called film, it was at the beginning just rushed and ruined, it is far more superior in the TV series, The music soundtrack was a mess with too much dominating every scene you watch, on this it seems that let's put some music here and hope for the best, but most of all the editing from 175 minutes down to 75 minutes was not enough time, it even worked at the normal 95 minutes, but it in common sense would still have. Been rubbish, the people who produced this need to be sacked
Modern blockbuster of which they tried to make made it even more of a shambles.
The colourisation of the TV show was not bad, In all the BBC have failed at this project, please stick to the original TV Doctor Who: The dead Planet.
The colourisation of the TV show was not bad, In all the BBC have failed at this project, please stick to the original TV Doctor Who: The dead Planet.
Did you know
- ConnectionsEdited from Docteur Who: The Dead Planet (1963)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 15 minutes
- Color
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