6.6 | / 10 |
| Users | 0.0 | |
| Reviewer | 3.0 | |
| Overall | 3.0 |
New Year's Eve 1999. Returning home to Gallifrey with the remains the Master, the TARDIS is forced off course, plunging the Doctor into the middle of a San Fransisco gun battle. Critically wounded, the Doctor has to regenerate to save his own life. But the Master too has a new body with which to wreak havoc, and his ultimate goal is to take the Doctor's own existence
Starring: Paul McGann, Eric Roberts, Daphne Ashbrook, Sylvester McCoy, Yee Jee Tso| Sci-Fi | Uncertain |
| Adventure | Uncertain |
Video codec: HEVC / H.265
Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.33:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English: Dolby Atmos
English: Dolby TrueHD 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English SDH
Blu-ray Disc
Two-disc set (2 BDs)
4K Ultra HD
Slipcover in original pressing
Region B (locked)
| Movie | 2.5 | |
| Video | 0.0 | |
| Audio | 4.5 | |
| Extras | 5.0 | |
| Overall | 3.0 |
By the time Doctor Who: Sylvester McCoy: Complete Season Three hit the airwaves in 1989, the writing was probably already on the (TARDIS?) wall that the venerable series was reaching the end of its unexpectedly spectacular run which began in 1963. As my Doctor Who: Sylvester McCoy: Complete Season One Blu-ray review, Doctor Who: Sylvester McCoy: Complete Season Two Blu-ray review and Doctor Who: Sylvester McCoy: Complete Season Three Blu-ray review probably make pretty clear, by the time McCoy inhabited the role as the so-called Seventh Doctor, the series had become almost a parody of itself, and McCoy's take on the iconic character had evidently actually raised some significant hackles at the BBC, something that didn't especially help in any considerations of continuing the series, at least with McCoy. As fans no doubt know, and as was mentioned in my review of McCoy's final season, somewhat hilariously the series left the air in December 1989 with a serial ironically titled Survival. Suddenly for the first time in over two decades, British airwaves were Who-less, and at least one notable fan definitely felt that absence. That individual was Philip David Segal, born in Britain but raised in the United States starting with his teen years, and a guy who was an inveterate devoted Whovian. A bonus 1080 disc in this package has a rather lengthy documentary prominently featuring Segal where he details the almost insane lengths he had to go to in order to try to reboot Doctor Who, and the fact that this television film didn't come out until more or less a decade after the original series' run came to an end is just one example of the fortitude it took Segal to achieve his quest. Unfortunately, it may have been a fool's errand in any case, as even Segal seems to realize, as an equally insane number of competing corporate interests turned this hoped for "dream project" into something of a nightmare.


Note: This release does not include a 1080 Blu-ray, so these screenshots are taken directly from the 4K UHD disc and downscaled to 1080 and
SDR. Color space in particular is therefore not accurate. Since this release does not include a 1080 disc, the 2K video score above has been
intentionally left blank. A standalone 1080 release is also
available and will be reviewed once a copy arrives. Because there is no 1080 presentation of the film (the 1080 disc contains bonus material), the 2K
score above has been intentionally left blank.
Doctor Who: The Movie is presented in 4K UHD courtesy of BBC with an HEVC / H.265 encoded 2160p transfer in 1.33:1. The back cover of
this release states this "has been newly restored from the original 35mm film elements", and
this page from the
official Doctor Who website provides even more information. This is a great looking 4K presentation, and it is certainly heads and shoulders
of several magnitudes better than the upscaled McCoy episodes previously available on Blu-ray, which should probably be no major surprise. While
there are probably a few niggling qualms that could be cited in terms of the special effects in particular, the bulk of this presentation offers secure
detailing, sometimes kind of astoundingly so, and a gorgeously suffused palette courtesy of HDR (no Dolby Vision that my player detected). Flesh tones
can look just a bit flushed at times, but primaries are really expressive and blacks impressively deep. Grain resolves without any issues.

Doctor Who: The Movie features Dolby Atmos, DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 and DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 options. A lot of the "recycled" older Doctor Who Blu-rays I've reviewed through the years feature rejiggered surround mixes to variable effect, but much as with the video side of things, the surround reimaginings on this 4K disc are arguably more convincing than some of the previously available episodes. The stereo track is absolutely fine and frankly may offer a more forward accounting of things like dialogue or the Doctor's opening narration, but toggling "upward" through the 5.1 and Atmos options even from that opening will reveal significant opening up of the sound design and regular engagement of the side and rear channels in particular. The Atmos track probably delivers some of its most compelling audio in the effects sequences. Dialogue is rendered cleanly and clearly throughout. Optional English subtitles are available.

4K UHD Disc
- Geoffrey Sax (2001)
- Paul McGann & Sylvester McCoy (2009)

Whovians who are also rabid completists will no doubt be attracted to this release one way or the other, much as they may have been with the McCoy seasons of the original series. For that demographic in particular, while the film itself has its fair share of issues, technical merits are first rate and both the 4K disc and the bonus 1080 disc have some really interesting supplementary information. With caveats noted, and for Doctor Who diehards at least, Recommended.