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Doctor Who: The War Machines (Story 27)
 
Manufacturer: BBC Video / Warner Bros.
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Product Description

London, 1966. The TARDIS materialises in the shadow of the newly-completed Post Office Tower, and the Doctor senses a strange energy in the air. He instinctively knows that evil is at work nearby. Posing as a scientist, the Doctor and his 'secretary' Dodo gain access to a suite at the top of the tower and meet the driven Professor Brett. His life's work, the thinking computer WOTAN, is about to be linked up in a problem-solving network with many other machines around the world. But the Doctor is concerned. How can WOTAN possibly know the meaning of the word 'TARDIS' and about the Doctor's travels through time and space? What is the strange control that WOTAN can exert over humans via a mere telephone call? Andwhat is the computer's link with the deadly robots being assembled in Covent Garden warehouse?

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The War Machines
 
Review Date: January 30, 2010
Reviewer: Leonard Timothy Melton,
A very good Doctor Who DVD it is in black and white and in very good quality and the storie line is very exellent.
The Elusive Ben and Polly Episodes
 
Review Date: January 18, 2009
Reviewer: W. B. Cropper, Harrisburg, PA
Oddly enough the only full story arc to feature companions Ben and Polly (and the abrupt departure of the un-accepted Dodo Chaplet) happens to be their very first adventure with the Doctor. Ben and Polly were brought to the show to bring a more young and hip perspective to the 1966 series (as Dodo ended up being... well the name says it all). Ben and Polly were probably the best pair of companions and the first companions to witness a 'regeneration' when William Hartnell left the series and Patrick Troughton took over as the Doctor (during the lost episode from "the 10th planet"), but the most under rated companions as only 1 of their 9 story arcs (they appeared in 40 episodes) survives in it's entirety as BBC wiped the archives in the 70's and has been unable to recover over 110 episodes from the Hartnell / Troughton era - and only about 7 of the 40, 25 minute episodes, featuring Ben and Polly have been found to this day, barring a few odd clips here and there from editing rooms.

The War Machines takes place in 'modern day' London - 1966. and Will Operating Thought ANalog, or WOTAN is a computer that not only has the capibility to think for itself, it also is becoming smarter than the human race - and seeing no need to keep the inferior humans around. It's a pretty good plot and an absolute collectors items just for the simple fact it may be the only full story arc we'll ever see with the elusive companions (and two of the best of their time), Ben and Polly.
LOVE IT
 
Review Date: February 12, 2009
Reviewer: Gus J, Saco, ME
ONE OF THE GREATEST DOCTOR WHO EPISODES EVER FROM THE SIXTIES. I LIKE WILLIAM HARTNELL AFTER TOM BAKER AND JON PERTWEE. I LIKE AN UNEARTHLY CHILD (DEBUT EPISODE THAT AIRED IN THE U.K. THE DAY AFTER JFK WAS ASSASSINATED). IT WAS THE FOUNDATION FOR THE SERIES 26 YEAR RUN WAR MACHINES IS THE HEART OF THE FIRST DOCTOR. THIS EPISODE AIRED FROM EARLY TO MID SUMMER IN 1966 (IN THE U.K.).
A change of course
 
Review Date: December 7, 2008
Reviewer: John Liosatos, Crook County, IL United States
Doctor Who altered its course with The War Machines. Rather than travelling to a distant planet to meet strange-looking aliens, or to Earth's past to encounter a significant historical figure, War Machines is set in comtemporary London, the swinging mid-60s, and it shows! For the very first time in the series' young history, the Doctor and his companion(s) face a modern-day threat, the first time, that is, when they are large enough to interact with the rest of the characters, unlike Planet of The Giants.

As Professor Brett states, WOTAN is ten years ahead of its time. Well, maybe not ten. Perhaps only five years, which would put it smack down in the beginning of the Pertwee Years, right next to a simlar story, Mind of Evil, about a machine taking over people's minds. If anything, The War Machines foreshadows the Third Doctor's era. Hartnell dabbles with electronic gadgets, works with the military (not UNIT yet, but very UNIT-like), and endures incompetent politicians to prevent a menace from taking over the world. Sound familiar? The Pertwee Years four years early. In fact, if you re-hash this script and use it toward another popular 60s TV program, The Avengers, it would feel right at home. I anticipated John Steed and Emma Peel to show up on my TV screen at any minute.

Incidentally, the notion expressed that Doctor Who finally has taken its intended form with The War Machines is about as bogus the Doctor's background being changed during the McCoy years to be something more than a timelord. The intended course in any series is how it originates, not how it becomes. The originators of any series always deserve the "intended course" label. This is not to say that the new direction of the show is bad, but let's not claim that this is where Sidney Newman & Verity Lambert envisioned Doctor Who going.

Basically, The War Machines steers Doctor Who in a new direction, a very subtle foreboding of the early 70s, worth every one of the four stars I gave it. However this story could have been a five-star beauty. How you ask? Where have you gone Ian & Barbara. The Doctor may as well have been companion-less. Dodo barely features at all, disappearing somewhere in episode two, never to be seen again. We are given the revelation at the end that she has decided to stay in London, and bids the Doctor goodbye by relaying a message through the new companions, Ben & Polly. As the Doctor says, that's gratitude for you, not even showing the decency to see the Doctor off personally after being given the experience of her life. Dodo should have gotten a more substantial exit. As for the aforementioned new companions, Ben & Polly fit in with the swinging 60s era, and Polly is pleasing to the eye, however they are no Ian & Barbara. In retrospect, War Machines could have been the perfect swan song for Ian & Barbara. I can just see them telling the Doctor that "we have decided to remain here" at the end of this story, fate having steered the Tardis back in their own time finally. An opportunity sadly lost...
Nicely Restored early Doctor Who Story
 
Review Date: January 14, 2009
Reviewer: Nancy A. Fox, West Covina, CA USA
This is an enjoyable story from the William Hartnell era of Doctor Who. The Doctor and his companion, Dodo, land in 1960s London shortly after the completion of the Post Office Tower. A brand new thinking computer system, called WOTAN, is housed in the tower. The computer can think for itself, and it decides that humanity is not properly intelligent to be in control of the Earth. WOTAN takes over men's minds by means of hypnotism, and has them create powerful war machines in select locations throughout London, and the war machines will be used to attack London and bring London, then England, then the entire world under WOTAN's control.

The story seems rather dated to modern sensibilities. The war machines themselves are especially laughable in today's world of microchips, and mini computers. These huge machines are portable computers, complete with 1960s era computer tape reels, and rather pointless weapons. However, to 1960s youth (and we must remember that Doctor Who was a children's show) these machines must have appeared quite frightening. If you're familiar with later era Doctor Who shows, the war machines look a lot like the cleaners from Paradise Towers in the Sylvester McCoy era.

This story was missing entirely from the BBC archives by the mid 1970s, but through the diligence of fans it has been restored. There is a short documentary narrated by Anneke Wills that explains how the story was pieced back together. The other extras that are on the DVD include: excerpts from the BBC children's program, Blue Peter, that shows the Post Office Tower (or GPO Tower as it was known) being built, plus an appearance by a war machine touting the upcoming new Doctor Who Adventure, a brief then and now feature showing locations used for the story as they exist today, and a short documentary about the GPO Tower narrated by the former Post Master General. There is also commentary by actress Anneke Wills, who played Polly and director Michael Ferguson, plus information text. It's not overly heavy on extras, but the ones that are there are quite interesting. The quality of the picture is excellent thanks to the restoration team's efforts.

While William Hartnell is not my favorite Doctor, but I did enjoy the story. The computer taking control of its creators would be used again throughout the original run of Doctor Who, such as the Pertwee story The Green Death. The War Machines proceeds at a nice pace, and gives a fascinating view of English society in the mid-1960s. This is also a significant story regarding the Doctor's companions. First it is the last story to feature his companion Dodo, although they really did a lousy job writing her out of the series. Second this story features the first appearance of new companions Ben and Polly. Third, I believe this is the only complete story existing featuring Ben and Polly.

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