Doctor Who: The Beginning Collection
The First Three Stories of the Classic Series Available as a 3-DVD Set
"An Unearthly Child," the four-part debut story, opens in London, 1963 where the Doctor is living with his teenage granddaughter Susan (played by Carol Ann Ford). Two of Susan's teachers at Coal Hill School - Ian Chesterton (William Russell) and Barbara Wright (Jacqueline Hill) - follow her home one evening after school. They stumble into the Doctor space-time machine, the TARDIS (Time And Relative Dimensions In Space). And angry Doctor shanghais the teachers, and the adventure begins! They arrive in the year 100,000 B.C., where they discover a tribe of cavemen on the verge of dying out unless they can rediscover how to make fire. Episode One of "An Unearthly Child" aired on November 23, 1963, the day after President John F. Kennedy was assassinated.
"The Daleks" is the seven-part adventure which made Doctor Who into a television phenomenon. This story, written by Terry Nation, introduces the Daleks, who have become the Doctor's most popular enemies, and are even used today in the new series. Nation's morality play places the Daleks in the roles of Hitler's Nazis, bent on the complete extermination of a humanoid race called the Thals (who represent the Jews). The Doctor, along with Ian, Barbara and Susan, must persuade the pacifistic Thals to stand up and fight the Daleks or face extinction.
"The Edge of Destruction" is a short two-parter set entirely inside the TARDIS and focusing entirely on the four principal characters. TEoD is a story which makes effective use of the TARDIS and helps develop the characters very well.
Verity Lambert, the original producer of Doctor Who, joins surviving cast members Carole Ann Ford and William Russell on the commentary tracks, as well as the respective directors of each story. Some other great bonus features include the featurettes "Creation of the Daleks," "Doctor Who: Origins," "Over the Edge" and "Inside the Spaceship," as well as a condensed, reconstructed version of the lost "Marco Polo" story and Episode Two of "The Edge Of Destruction" in Arabic.
For newer viewers who only know Doctor Who through the new series, The Beginning Collection makes a great intro to the classic series. And for those of us who were addicted to the classic series years ago, watching these episodes is like sitting and enjoying a visit with an old friend. I wholeheartedly recommend Doctor Who - The Beginning Collection for ALL Doctor Who fans, young and old.
Published by R.E. Norton
I'm a 43 year old Midwest male - happily married with a 15 year old stepson and a three year-old little boy. My wife and I are very active in our church. My hobbies include reading, creative writing, music... View profile
Ultimate Doctor Who - a Look at an Underrated Era of Doctor Who BooksHere is a look at why Justin Richards' tenure as editor of the Eight Doctor Books turned a flagging series into memorable run of stories that amazingly foreshadowed elements of...
Doctor Who: Earthshock (1982)The four-part Earthshock originally aired in March 1982 near the end of Doctor Who's nineteenth season. This story was the high point of Peter Davison's first season as the Fif...
Doctor Who: The Trial of a Time Lord DVD SetThe Doctor goes on trial for his life in this four DVD set showcasing the season-long, 14 episode adventure "The Trial of a Time Lord."
Doctor Who: New Beginnings DVD SetThis newly released three-disc DVD set chronicles the transition from the end of Tom Baker's seven-year tenure as the Doctor to Peter Davison's debut as the Time Lord. This set...- The Edge of Destruction Tagret NovelisationThe Edge of Destruction continues to please me.
- Doctor Who: The Dalek Invasion of Earth (1964)
- Doctor Who: Prisoner of the Daleks by Trevor Baxendale (BBC Books)
- Doctor Who: Resurrection of the Daleks
- Doctor Who for Beginners: The Classic Series (1963-1989)
- Alice Munro's Runaway Short Story Collection is a Runaway Hit
- Doctor Who: Revelation of the Daleks
- Doctor Who: the Web Planet
- The first DW episode - aired one day after President Kennedy was assassinated.
- "The Daleks" was the story that launched Doctor Who as a cultural phenomenon in the UK.
- The Daleks remain the Doctor's most popular enemies.


1 Comments
Post a CommentGreat job. I enjoyed watching The Daleks on DVD, which I recently obtained. The new show is fantastic, but seeing the original episodes is wonderful! Great article.