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Doctor Who: The Creature from the Pit
Overlook Pick

Doctor Who: The Creature from the Pit

60
User Score3 ratings
TMDB 6.016+19791h 40mEnglish
ActionAdventureDramaScience FictionTV Movie

Synopsis

The Doctor and Romana follow a distress signal which leads to the jungle planet Chloris, whose ruthless ruler Lady Adrasta harbors a deadly creature in a pit.

Director
Christopher BarryFrom TMDB credits
Studio
BBC1 production companies
Release
November 17, 1979Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 15
Tom Baker
Tom Baker
The Doctor
Lalla Ward
Lalla Ward
Romana
Eileen Way
Eileen Way
Karela
Myra Frances
Myra Frances
Lady Adrasta
Geoffrey Bayldon
Geoffrey Bayldon
Organon
David Brierly
David Brierly
K-9 (voice)
David Telfer
Huntsman
Morris Barry
Tollund

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Jul 2, 2024

This was always one of my favourite "Dr. Who" stories. The TARDIS arrives on the jungle planet of "Chloris" only for the travellers to find themselves apprehended by "Karela" (Eileen Way) who is the chief enforcer of the "Lady Adrasta" (an enjoyably hammy Myra Frances). What nobody quite understands is why there are the remains of what appears to be an huge egg on the surface, and one that the "Doctor" (Tom Baker) thinks might be alive. Luckily, "Romana" (Lalla Ward) manages to escape in the confusion and she soon encounters a tribe of warriors bent on the collection of the planet's rarest commodity. Metal! Needless to say, this puts quite a price on the head of "K9" too - laser gun, or not. As the story develops we learn a little more of the maniacal tendencies of "Adrasta" and of the occupant of a deep pit, and network of tunnels, into which she ceremoniously turfs her enemies - never to be seen again! It's all stage bound so the settings don't impress much, but I just found this to have a more characterful story with loads going on, plenty of opportunity for Baker to keep his tongue in his cheek and for "K9" to get in and out mothballs. There's a lather-clad bloke with a whip, some all-conquering tumbleweed and a monster that I can only imagine must have induced conniptions for self appointed British good taste guru Mary Whitehouse at the time. I enjoyed this.

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