After the Doctor and Romana save the Tharil race, Romana agrees to leave the Doctor to become the Tharils' "Queen of Time."After the Doctor and Romana save the Tharil race, Romana agrees to leave the Doctor to become the Tharils' "Queen of Time."After the Doctor and Romana save the Tharil race, Romana agrees to leave the Doctor to become the Tharils' "Queen of Time."
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John Leeson
- Voice of K9
- (voice)
Mark Arden
- Tharil
- (uncredited)
Stephen Frost
- Tharil
- (uncredited)
Laurie Goode
- Tharil
- (uncredited)
Marianne Lawrence
- Serving Girl
- (uncredited)
Jeff Wayne
- Tharil
- (uncredited)
- Director
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- Stephen Gallagher
- Sydney Newman(uncredited)
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Did you know
- TriviaLalla Ward was unhappy with Romana's leaving scene, as she felt it was rushed and dispassionate. John Nathan-Turner was adamant that he did not want elements of soap opera to creep into Doctor Who (1963).
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Dreaming (2009)
Featured review
S18: Warriors' Gate: Odd serial but interesting in content, and the uneven but serious tone works quite well
The final serial in E Space concludes with an engagingly odd story which has an uneven tone, interesting ideas played straight, and comedy supporting bits. It shouldn't really work at all well, but yet I enjoyed it for what it did, even if the way it which it did it wasn't always spot on. The plot sees the TARDIS and crew trapped in white space between universes - a space which contains a race of time sensitive Tharils. This race once were masters with the universe at their command until their robot army rebelled. Now the remaining ones live in a time-locked universe, but are being hunted by a ship using them for time travel.
In the unfolding of the story we see the serial use stark white space really well, have well designed creatures, and have a serious tone which suits the slipping around in time. Perhaps it is not perfect, but I liked the universes and timewinds - not least because it was a nice change from the current seasons where such things would be done with banter and winks. There is comedy here though, but it fits in with the serious tone and is relief more than 'wacky' overplayed humor. I read after watching that the makers stripped a lot of the comedy out, and the lines that got left were played straight - which to me made them funnier thanks to this delivery.
The cast in support are good in the way that they play it straight. Sometimes it gives the show a nicely sinister tone, other times it makes it funnier as I said. Baker is on good form, as is Ward. This turned out to be Ward's final serial as companion, and as with some previous exits, this one felt quite abrupt. She deals with it well, but the nature of the exit could have been more connected to actions in previous episodes. I guess this leaves Waterhouse as the companion though - and his performance here offers no reason to be excited by that news.
All in all, Warrior's Gate is an odd serial in terms of tone, but it has interesting ideas and content, and the serious tone works pretty well - even when it isn't trying to be serious.
In the unfolding of the story we see the serial use stark white space really well, have well designed creatures, and have a serious tone which suits the slipping around in time. Perhaps it is not perfect, but I liked the universes and timewinds - not least because it was a nice change from the current seasons where such things would be done with banter and winks. There is comedy here though, but it fits in with the serious tone and is relief more than 'wacky' overplayed humor. I read after watching that the makers stripped a lot of the comedy out, and the lines that got left were played straight - which to me made them funnier thanks to this delivery.
The cast in support are good in the way that they play it straight. Sometimes it gives the show a nicely sinister tone, other times it makes it funnier as I said. Baker is on good form, as is Ward. This turned out to be Ward's final serial as companion, and as with some previous exits, this one felt quite abrupt. She deals with it well, but the nature of the exit could have been more connected to actions in previous episodes. I guess this leaves Waterhouse as the companion though - and his performance here offers no reason to be excited by that news.
All in all, Warrior's Gate is an odd serial in terms of tone, but it has interesting ideas and content, and the serious tone works pretty well - even when it isn't trying to be serious.
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- bob the moo
- Mar 9, 2019
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