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Doctor Who - The Power Of Kroll [VHS] [1978]
 
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Doctor Who - The Power Of Kroll [VHS] [1978]

VHS ~ Tom Baker
3.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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1 new from £12.99 10 used from £4.88 1 collectible from £7.50

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Product details

  • Actors: Tom Baker, Mary Tamm, Neil McCarthy, Phillip Madoc
  • Directors: Norman Stewart
  • Format: HiFi Sound, PAL
  • Classification: PG
  • Studio: 2 Entertain Video
  • VHS Release Date: 5 Jun 1995
  • Run Time: 91 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00005792V
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 3,653 in Video (See Bestsellers in Video)

    Popular in these categories:

    #51 in  DVD > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Cult Series > Doctor Who
    #93 in  Video > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Doctor Who

Product Description

Synopsis
The Doctor, Romana and K9 search for the Key to Time. Romana is captured by the Swampies and they intend to sacrifice her to the mighty Kroll. Originally transmitted in 1978-79.

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Doctor Who - The Power Of Kroll [VHS] [1978]
72% buy the item featured on this page:
Doctor Who - The Power Of Kroll [VHS] [1978] 3.7 out of 5 stars (3)
Doctor Who - The Armageddon Factor [VHS] [1978]
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Doctor Who - The Armageddon Factor [VHS] [1978] 5.0 out of 5 stars (3)

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
5 star:    (0)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars There's something in the water..., 28 April 2009
By Binro The Heretic "mattieboyz" (Hillsborough, Sheffield) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)      
Often derided by fans and critics alike, The Power of Kroll forms part of the 'Key to Time' season from 1978. The reason it is not a fan favourite is mainly I suspect due to the poor effects: The titular creature is poorly realised through dodgy blue-screen and the Swampies - abused natives of the planet - are clearly wearing woolen wigs and have green powder paint on their bodies. Of course, we all know that classic Doctor Who is often great despite its weaknesses, however despite an intriguing sub-plot involving gun-runners and enthusiastic performances from the leads, this remains a poorly produced and mediocre serial. One bonus is John 'voice of K9' Leeson in his only front of camera role, but even he can't compensate for a shoddy ending and 'that' rubber tentacle.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Doctor versus a giant swamp octopus, 6 Dec 2003
By Mr. S. J. Cassidy (london,uk) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
To me the Doctor was always about the outrageous. It was always about letting your imagination soar. It pushed the boundaries and creating alien worlds, terrifying monsters and entertaining plotlines but without the kind of budget that George Lucas has to play with. The writers of 'The Power of Kroll' let their imagination go wild on this one. Obviously the Tarzan and King Kong films they saw as a kid influenced them. This one features treacherous marshes, spear-brandishing natives, a sacrifice of the female lead and the biggest monster in the Dr Who cannon - a giant squid/octopus called Kroll stretching five miles across..

Of course with such monster to play with there must be quite a build up - the build up takes three episodes with us only seeing it at the end of episode three. It is this build up which is the most entertaining. It first shows on scanners at the oil refinery with lots of "I can't believe this thing it is five miles across!" and the like. If you have a sense of wonder then you will enjoy 'Kroll'

I'm digressing. The plot:-

In their search for the 'Key To Time' Tom Bakers doctor (arguably the best) and the lovely Romana (Mary Tamm) land on one of the moons of Magnus Delta. Somehow on this moon is a piece of the key which they may find. The moon is a kind of reservation for an indigenous people known as 'the swampies' who live a fearsome primitive existance worshipping an ancient god called Kroll. Recently methane gas miners have colonised the moon and have built a refinery and are extracting the mineral to send to their home planet. They see the swampies as savages and the swampies see them as interlopers so there is ground for lots of conflict. Their refinery also seems to be built on a vast lake. At the bottom of the lake lies Kroll, the gigantic deity, and the miners seem to have woken him from his century old slumber.

As you can see this means lots of fun. The technicians on the refinery are brilliantly acted and are portrayed as selfish colonists treading on each other and the swampies to get what they want. And there is a theme running through this adventure which is the treatment of indigenous people. Paralells can be drawn between the Americans/Indians & British/Africans. As the Doctor says "progress...well that's a very flexible word.."

THe special effects are OK with the arrival of Kroll being espeically grandiose, but the model of the refinery is very obvious. And whoever came up with the idea to make the swampies green was having a laugh. The green paint was so tough they couldn't get it off after filming finished.Mary Tammn is excellent as Romana (one of my favourite companions) and there is a superb small part of Glyn Thomas who plays the cynical arms dealer Rohm Dutt.

I enjoyed this one. And if you can get over lots of swampies jumping up and down, waving their spears and shouting "Kroll! Kroll! Kroll!" - you will too...

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Doctor versus a giant swamp octopus, 7 Dec 2003
By Mr. S. J. Cassidy (london,uk) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
To me the Doctor was always about the outrageous. It was always about letting your imagination soar. It pushed the boundaries and creating alien worlds, terrifying monsters and entertaining plotlines but without the kind of budget that George Lucas has to play with. The writers of 'The Power of Kroll' let their imagination go wild on this one. Obviously the Tarzan and King Kong films they saw as a kid influenced them. This one features treacherous marshes, spear-brandishing natives, a sacrifice of the female lead and the biggest monster in the Dr Who cannon - a giant squid/octopus called Kroll stretching one mile across..

Of course with such monster to play with there must be quite a build up - the build up takes three episodes with us only seeing it at the end of episode three. It is this build up which is the most entertaining. It first shows on scanners at the oil refinery with lots of "I can't believe this thing it is five miles across!" and the like. If you have a sense of wonder and still a part of a child in you then you will enjoy 'Kroll'

I'm digressing. The plot:-

In their search for the 'Key To Time' Tom Bakers doctor (arguably the best) and the lovely Romana (Mary Tamm) land on one of the moons of Magnus Delta. Somehow on this moon is a piece of the key which they may find. The moon is a kind of reservation for an indigenous people known as 'the swampies' who live a fearsome primitive existance worshipping an ancient god called Kroll. Recently methane gas miners have colonised the moon and have built a refinery and are extracting the mineral to send to their home planet. They see the swampies as savages and the swampies see them as interlopers so there is ground for lots of conflict. Their refinery also seems to be built on a vast lake. At the bottom of the lake lies Kroll, the gigantic deity, and the miners seem to have woken him from his century old slumber.

As you can see this means lots of fun. The technicians on the refinery are brilliantly acted and are portrayed as selfish colonists treading on each other and the swampies to get what they want. And there is a theme running through this adventure which is the treatment of indigenous people. Paralells can be drawn between the Americans/Indians & British/Africans. As the Doctor says "progress...well that's a very flexible word.."

THe special effects are OK with the arrival of Kroll being espeically grandiose, but the model of the refinery is very obvious. And whoever came up with the idea to make the swampies green was having a laugh. The green paint was so tough they couldn't get it off after filming finished.Mary Tammn is excellent as Romana (one of my favourite companions) and there is a superb small part of Glyn Owen who plays the cynical arms dealer Rohm Dutt.

I enjoyed this one. And if you can get over lots of swampies jumping up and down, waving their spears and shouting "Kroll! Kroll! Kroll!" - you will too...

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


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