DVD Review The Ice Warriors

Released by BBC Home Entertainment on September 17, 2013. SRP $34.98 (DVD)
Subtitles: English SDH 4:3 Mono black & white (Main Feature)
For those who do not want to believe a large cache of missing Doctor Who episodes have been returned, we get another release that takes missing episodes and gives it new lease on life by being animated. This time we look at the very first story to feature that race from Mars known as the Ice Warriors. It supports a tremendous guest cast, generally looks really good and is considered an all-time classic from the famous Season 5 �Monster Season� of Doctor Who. This seems to have everything but yet I find that I have always been underwhelmed by the story.

It was a given that I would get a copy of these episodes at some point and I did but it took a lot longer than I would have thought. In 1990 I got my first copy of the story. It was a camera copy. For those who live in the world of digital downloads, the idea of a camera copy must sound horrific. Because the broadcast standards were different between the UK and US (PAL vs. NTSC), an NTSC camera would have been pointed at a PAL TV screen to make copies. It was so much easier and cheaper than paying money to get the stuff professionally converted. Though the problem was that picture quality was crap. The frame rates wouldn�t line up between the PAL monitor and NTSC camera causing the picture to flicker. If that wasn�t bad enough, the copy that was leaked from the BBC had burnt-in window timecodes and other data stating the name of the story and other pertinent information. To avoid that showing up on the camera copy, the person who did it zoomed the camera in on the monitor to make sure none of that was on the screen. As you can imagine, it cut off a ton of people�s heads on the screen. When I got this copy, I was unimpressed with the story. Camera copies never really bothered me before but this was horrible. It was hard to watch and I disliked the story.

The story literally takes place after The Doctor, Jamie and Victoria leave Tibet in their last story The Abominable Snowmen. This story is set in the future and there are ice glaciers about to roll through the UK. It�s the start of second ice age and the World power uses ionization to keep the glaciers back. That right there seems to be the main plot but it really isn�t. This threat still lurks after the Doctor leaves. He doesn�t change a setting on the sonic screwdriver and fixes the Earth before he leaves, he accepts this as how the Earth is during this period. There is one glacier that is threatening the lives of many people. There is a scientist who should be at the base trying to solve the issue of the glaciers but he is gone. This is the scientist Penley. Penley is the genius who has been working at the base but has had enough with the leader of the base Clent and has now left to become a scavenger along with the anti-technology scavenger Storr. Clent himself is an overbearing pompous man who has to do everything by the book or what the base computer tells him to do. He is not able to relate to people the way a leader should and is considered almost a machine himself since no one seems to be able to relate with him.
We enter the story with hysteria going on in the base. There is a malfunction and everything is going critical with the ioniser possibly leading to a gigantic meltdown. Without Penley, who just recently left the base, Clent is left with working with people at the base who is not nearly qualified. Clent promotes Miss Garret, Penley�s assistant, to take his place on the spot. It is a pretty awful time for a promotion considering they are facing death. 

















Extras:
Audio Commentary: I thought the approach to the audio commentary was really interesting with this release. Episodes 1,4,5,6 was a �live� commentary with Frazer Hines, Deborah Watling, Sonny Caldinez, Designer Jeremy Davies, and grams operator Pat Heighman. Episode 2 had a different approach with archive interviews making up the commentary. This included Bernard Bresslaw, Peter Barkworth, Wendy Gifford, make-up supervisor Sylvia James, writer Brian Hayles, director Derek Martinus, and costume designer Michael Baugh. Episode 3 commentary was a nice commentary with Michael Troughton, son of Patrick Troughton. Throughout all of it was the voice of Toby Hadoke to keep it all together. Episode 2 was a nice experiment that I felt worked out well. It is a great way to use archive clips some of us never heard before. For the stuff many of us have heard, like the Brian Hayles stuff, it is contextual and makes perfect sense for being included. Episodes 1,4,5,6 is perhaps not-surprising a lot of fun. Frazer and Toby have a great repertoire and Debbie takes a lot of bantering from Frazer. Although Pat sounded a little nervous at times trying to get a word in about what he does, his and Jamie�s contribution are invaluable. I love hearing about how Doctor Who was produced in the 1960s. Sonny is enjoyable too as he was in so many other things than just The Ice Warriors. Frazer, Debbie and him worked together not too long before on The Evil of the Daleks. 



