Doctor Who - Pyramids of Mars
Facts
| Cast | Tom Baker and Elisabeth Sladen |
| DVD Release | September 7, 2004 |
| Running Time | 97 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 794051202321 |
| Buy this item | $11.49 at Amazon.com As of Dec 3 1:14 EST (details) 1 DVD, Warner Brothers, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 41 new from $11.49, 12 used from $10.81, 1 collectible from $19.99 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Abase yourself you groveling ant! |
| Outstanding "Whodom"! |
Basically, the story is that Sutekh (Satan to us) has been entombed by the Egyptian God Horace for thousands of years but the intervention of an English archaeologist led to The Evil One's chance to escape captivity. So, Sutekh takes over the archaeologist's body and travels back to his huge estate to set up camp where he needs to transport his "being" to Mars to destroy the Eye of Horace which holds him in captivity.
Just as Sutekh gets rolling on this endeavor, Doctor Who and his sidekick, Sarah, swoop in with the TARDIS and the two proceed to complicate matters for old Sutekh, who is neither amused nor the first bit pleased with the Time Lord's interference with his plans. And don't let the hefty "mummies" fool you when you first see them -- they're actually evil, but groovy, robots, the sinister minions of Sutekh the Terrible.
This entry is well-done with plenty of great cinematography and is supported by a solid and coherent story. Elisabeth Sladen stars as Sarah and the great Tom Baker as Doctor Who. This BBC production is 97 minutes in length, with an aspect ratio of 4:3, and is listed as "Story No. 82," airing originally from 10/25/75 through 11/15/75. It was written by Stephen Harris and directed by Paddy Russell.
I've watched a ton of Doctor Who and this is certainly one of the better ones that I've ever seen. A good selection for either Doctor Who fans or casual sci-fi enthusiasts. January 26, 2008
| Great DVD - No Sound! |
| Pyramids of Greatness |
Pyramids is also the story in which the Doctor finally sets aside the UNIT era, telling Sarah that he doesn't consider Earth his home and that he has to find something better to do than to go chasing around after the Brigadier. This qualifies as a vast departure from the Third Doctor, who called Earth his home away from home, and, apart from his first season, willingly acted as UNIT's scientific advisor. For better or for worse, depending on perspective, the Doctor becomes a free agent again at this point.
More subtly, the writers touch upon a controversial topic, capital punishment. When Sarah asks the Doctor if Sutekh was so evil why didn't Horus and the rest of the Osirans simply kill him, the Doctor responds that it was against their code of honor. Killing him would mean they are no better than he was. Again this is a matter perspective, but in this case one perspective is incurably flawed. You can wrongly believe that since the Osirans were an honorable race, killing Sutekh indeed would make them no better that he was, flawed logic considering that Sutekh left a trail of death and destruction across the Universe, and executing him would ensure the survival of millions of souls across the Universe. They would simply be getting rid of a vicious killer. Or you can correctly believe that the Doctor condemned the Osirans for simply imprisoning Sutekh because this left open the possibility of escape to terrorize the Universe once more. In the end, the Doctor corrected the Osiran's mistake, "executing" Sutekh by sending him through the time tunnel far in the future so he aged to death.
All that said, you just gotta love a story in which the villain in episode one is an Egyptian named Ibrahim Namin, portrayed so eloquently by an Englishman named Peter Mayock. I can't see anyone getting away with that in today's politically correct society. Good thing we have stories like Pyramids of Mars to serve as reminders of a once not-so-sensitive world. December 5, 2007
| Doctor Who Pyramids of Mars |
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