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TARDIS Guide

Overview

Released

Sunday, March 14, 2004

Written by

David J. Howe

Publisher

Reeltime Pictures

Directed by

Keith Barnfather

Runtime

53 minutes

Time Travel

Present

Location (Potential Spoilers!)

Earth, England

Synopsis

Trapped in an isolated cottage, Captain Cavendish thinks he is seeing ghosts. The only person who might understand and help is Kate Lethbridge-Stewart ... but when she arrives, she realises that Cavendish is key in a plot to summon the Daemons back to the Earth. With time running out, Kate discovers that sometimes even the familiar can turn out to be your worst nightmare.

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2 reviews

I feel that Dæmos Rising is better than a lot of Wilderness Years productions in some aspects for simply having a mostly clear plot, aided by sufficient exposition at good times in the story. However, I did not find the plot itself too interesting, and I never really felt too invested in the characters. There are some cool concepts, but I did feel that Dæmos Rising was trying a bit to hard to be "edgy" and occult, and not necessarily succeeding.

There are some questionable special effects in this, and not all of the acting is great.

The DVD has a behind the scenes documentary. This has some fun moments.


Bongo50

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This review contains spoilers!

We near the end of Doctor Who’s wilderness / theme park era with a chamber piece bringing back Kate Stewart (in both a straightforward and an awkward seductress mode) and the big bad from Pertwee's The Dæmons.

It starts small with Kate offering help to a lonely ex-UNIT officer Cavendish who seems to have had a complete mental breakdown in a secluded English cottage due to a magical, satanic book. There are several one on one scenes with a lovely, spooky atmosphere - much like the quieter, mythical moments from shows such as Jonathan Creek or Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

This slowly builds to an impressive CGI devil set piece (very reminiscent of what would come later in The Satan Pit). Once they have a massive devil in the story though they run out of things to do. As with a lot of mid-par Doctor Who it ends with our hero defeating the enemy with the power of love. The CGI dæmon decides that it wont be bossed around by the saucy, evil version of Kate Stewart, so the good version in spared.

Its been fun seeing what Doctor Who might looked a bit like had it been around in the early 2000s, but I'm definitely glad the official show came back in its place!


15thDoctor

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