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
RRP: £19.99
Our Price: £6.18 (subject to change)
Editorial
Amazon.co.uk Review
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.
A Talon-tastic, Clawed Classic.
Review date: 2008-09-29 Rating: 10 out of 10
If there is one genre the Beeb does well it's the costume drama and perhaps this is why this eccentric gem is the peak of classic Who. It is set in the foggy streets of Victorian London where the deerstalker-wearing Fourth Doctor and Leela are searching for the abductor of young women; okay, so far so cliched. What is lurking in the sewers? But what connects the dark plot to Li H'Sen Chang, a Fu Manchu-like leader of a Tong group and a sinister illusionist? How can Chang get Mr Sin, his ventriloquist's dummy, to appear so alive? Is the Doctor the only time traveller walking the 19th century's most important city?
This is a simply superb story written by Robert Holmes the series' greatest writer and script-edtor plus its the last story directed by the great David Maloney who promptly left to be involved in "Blake's 7" and the last adventure to be produced by Peter Hinchcliffe who masterminded many Who classics,a golden era misnamed "gothic" by Whovians, so this is both a great story and a momentous milestone in the series' history.
Maloney cleverly shot a lot of the adventure on location and therefore we get a tangible sense of atmospheric tension so the wild set of plot influences (Conan Doyle's Holmes, Rohmer's Fu Manchu and Laroux's Phantom) are grounded into as much reality as any story which features a pig-brained midget oinking like a pig at its climax can possibly hope or strive for.
Baker would never be so consistent brilliant again and arguably the show would be caught in a tailspin for many years in the Williams and Nathan Turner eras. But Louise Jamieson is also superb as Leela at her bravest and most heroic. Add in great roles for John Bennett as the honourable but villianous Chang, Christopher Benjamin as the lovable theatrical fraud Jago and Trevor Baxter as the delightful old buffer Professor Lightfoot. But Michael Spice and Deep Roy both deserve special praise for portraying menace purely through gestures and voices under bulky masks as Greel and Sin.
The extras are good- a chatty commentary, an overly earnest documentary and a nostagic Blue Peter selection of "makes" - a Doctor Who puppet theatre and a truly naff lesson in sound effect by series stalwart Dick Mills.But the oddest extra is the poor quality backstage footage - why?
Overall, perhaps the best Who adventure ever and a great piece of work in its own right. Essential viewing,my dear Watson.