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Doctor Who - The Talons Of Weng Chiang [1977] [DVD] [1963]

4.6 out of 5 stars 51 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Actors: Tom Baker, Louise Jameson
  • Format: PAL
  • Language: English
  • Subtitles: English
  • Subtitles For The Hearing Impaired: English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Classification: PG
  • Studio: 2 Entertain Video
  • DVD Release Date: 28 April 2003
  • Run Time: 98 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (51 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00008N704
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 43,580 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

The inimitable Doctor Who and his assistant Leela are confronted by sinister and seemingly inexplicable occurrences in this gripping thriller set in the shadowy depths of nineteenth century London.

With the help of Professor Litefoot, the Doctor investigates the gruesome murder of a cabbie and the mysterious disappearances of young girls. Whilst being chased by giant rats and forced to pit his wits against an evil doll and a merciless illusionist, he comes face to face with his most deadly enemy to date: Magnus Greel - a fifty-first century war criminal posing as Weng Chiang, an ancient Chinese god. Can the Doctor thwart his dastardly plans before Leela becomes his next victim…. This is the first time an unedited version of Dr Who: Talons of Weng Chiang has ever been released.

From Amazon.co.uk

The Talons of Weng-Chiang is one of the very best Doctor Who stories, a six-part adventure set in a Gothic Victorian London inspired by The Phantom of the Opera and Sax Rohmer's tales of Fu Manchu, with nods towards Jack the Ripper, Dracula and Sherlock Holmes. The final story from the show's Golden Age (Philip Hinchcliff's three-year tenure as Producer), boasts superior production values and a bizarre storyline involving a time-travelling war criminal, giant rats in the London sewers and a malevolent ventriloquist's doll with the brain of a pig.

Pitted against this flamboyant madness, largely centred on an East End music hall run by the self-important Henry Gordon Jago (a memorable performance by Christopher Benjamin) are Tom Baker's fourth Doctor, in pre-self-parody top form, and Louise Jameson's Leela at her primal best. There's strong support from Trevor Baxter as the Watson-like Professor Lightfoot, and John Bennett as the villainous Li H'sen Chang. Really helping matters is the first-rate direction from David "Genesis of the Daleks" Maloney, evoking a creepy atmosphere in a fantasy London of shadows and fog. Weng-Chiang was the pinnacle of Gothic Who and still remains highly enjoyable entertainment.

On the DVD: Doctor Who: The Talons of Weng-Chiang offers all six original episodes with good, if variable, 4:3 picture and crisp and clear mono sound. There is also highly informative on-screen trivia text and a lively group commentary with David Maloney, Louise Jameson, John Bennett and Christopher Benjamin. The highlight of Disc 2 is an hour-long documentary, Whose Doctor Who, shown on BBC2 the day after the final episode of "Weng-Chiang" aired. Also included is 23 minutes of extremely poor quality b/w timecoded video production footage and--much more fun--26 minutes worth of clips from Blue Peter with Lesley Judd, John Noakes and Peter Purvis showing how to build a Doctor Who music-hall theatre. There's also an interesting 11-minute 1977 interview with Philip Hinchcliffe, continuity announcements and trailers, a photo gallery, a short new animation, Tardis Cam No. 6, and optional subtitles. --Gary S Dalkin

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: DVD Verified Purchase
I am unlucky to have been to young to watch any of Tom Bakers fantastic tenure as the Doctor when it was first broadcast, my dad had watched Doctor Who from when it first started back in 63 and had quite an extensive video collection which is from where I had my first exposure to many of the great adventures of all the doctors.

This was my favourite although the giant rat scared me silly as a young naive boy!!

A classic moment which seems to get funnier everytime I see it is when a Chinese assasin throws an axe at the doctors head (narrowly missing) and the Doctor striding up to him and asking him if he was trying to attract his attention!!

It is one of the longer stories but its just brilliant and well worth watching.
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Format: DVD
If you had to force a Dr Who Fan to choose the best five adventures ever then The Talons of Weng-Chiang would be in the top five.
For many Talons of Weng Chiang is the best ever I would agree it was excellent and stays in the mind long after others have faded..

Why is this so good?
It really is a combinations of factors that all come together to make the whole.

Firstly Tom Baker- for many he is the best Doctor but in Talons of Weng Chiang he really excels. His humour, comic timing and mannerisms are spot on. Jokes come thick and fast my favourite has to be when he dodges an axe thrown by an assassin, turns and asks "Are you trying to attract my attention?"
Baker plays the parody up to the hilt well right up to his Sherlock Holmes like Deerstalker hat and cane.
His companion Leela- the delightful Louise Jameson sheds her skins- literally and wears a strange Victorian Garb knickerbockers that enable her to kick, gouge and poleaxes her assailants with ease. Her questions about London really bring the strangeness of London to the fore.
The script writer is excellent and has written the finest script of a whole series.

The setting Victorian London all `Pea Soup Smog's' and river mists. The Bobbies on the Beat whistle calls and the Victorian Music Hall.
Disappearing ladies ala Jack the Ripper. Add to this the terror of the Chinese Tongs thugs all tattooed with the Black Scorpion led by a Chinese John Bennett as the villainous Li H'sen Chang (last seen by the Doctor in China over 400 years ago).
And wait for it...
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'And the recent one about the giant rat', opined the critic in the Daily Express, 'gave me a serious attack of the jim-jams', whatever that means; the rat looks convincing in one shot, and one shot only. It only goes to show the kind of people that the Express were employing as TV critics - if they were frightened by that rat, they were probably scared of the teddy bears on Play School as well.

The rat is the only thing wrong with this, however; the rest is really very good indeed, as I know lots of people have already said. Christoper Benjamin, Trevor Baxter, John Bennet (even though he's not really Chinese... I eagerly await the coming of a law to enforce racially-correct casting), Michael Spice, Deep Roy, Chris Gannon... marvelous, but we know that. The script, location filming and direction are superb too. (The gag about 'Eureka is Greek for 'This bath is too hot'' seems to have been cribbed from a 1976 episode of The Good Life).

What else do I like about it? Patsy Smart as the drooling ghoul (in case you wondered where Miss Roberts from the first two series of Upstairs Downstairs went after she went barmy!); David McKail and Conrad Asquith as the policemen; Judith Lloyd as Theresa - for the first, and possibly only time, there is a prostitute on Dr Who - Oooh, I'm telling Mary Whitehouse!

And I love the location filming, both at the Theatre Royal Northampton (you can tell it's a real theatre, which makes a massive difference) and in Wapping and Southwark, because it all looks superbly authentic, and because I know where most of the locations are.
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By E. A Solinas HALL OF FAMETOP 500 REVIEWER on 26 Aug. 2011
Format: DVD
Out of the entire Dr. Who series, "The Talons of Weng-Chiang" remains one of my favorites -- it was one of the first serials I ever saw.

And it doesn't hurt that it's a ripping good yarn as well, with the Doctor and Leela going back into the Victorian era in time for Chinee cults, Jack The Ripper-style killings, and a deadly secret hidden underneath a theater. This is one of those Dr. Who stories that simply gets everything RIGHT, whether it's well-developed guest characters, humor, or even a semi-sympathetic villain.

The Doctor has decided to show Leela her heritage by taking her to Victorian London, where they attend a stage show starring the Chinese magician Li H'sen Chang. But their evening is ruined when they see a cabbie murdered by a gang of Chinese men, and find that the dead guy was searching for his wife -- who went mysteriously missing during Chang's show. And she wasn't the first disappearance.

With the help of Professor Litefoot (who is very smitten with Leela despite her odd behavior) and the bumbling theater owner, the Doctor sets out to discover who Chang is working for, and what this mysterious masked figure wants. However, nobody except the Doctor can recognize who this person really is -- and the horrors they can unleash all through history.

Giant rats, Chinese gods, a killer ventriloquist dummy and a serial killer in Victorian London -- "The Talons of Weng-Chiang" is just a deliciously pulpy story, but somehow it avoids falling into outright silliness. It's one of those episodes that is immensely fun to watch, but it is also a very well-written mystery (since we don't know who Weng-Chiang is) and sci-fi story.

But another great part of this story is the guest cast.
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