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This review contains spoilers!

I watched the telesnap recon without knowing a bunch of uni students recreated it themselves, which is a shame because I miss moving images

 

Anyway! Absolutely no sign of the TARDIS team, and all the main human cast die horribly after failing to achieve anything. Interesting in terms of Doctor Who history, but it didn't quite do it for me. Maybe I'm just a Dalek hater


This review contains spoilers!

📝5/10

Thworping through time and space, one adventure at a time!

“Mission to Missed Potential: A Skippable Dalek Detour”

Mission to the Unknown stands out as a unique anomaly in Classic Doctor Who history. It’s the only episode without the Doctor, his companions, or the TARDIS, serving instead as a prologue to The Daleks’ Master Plan. It’s also the swan song for Verity Lambert, the show’s original producer, making it a bittersweet entry in the series’ canon. However, despite its unique place in Doctor Who lore, this standalone episode feels like an underwhelming prelude rather than an essential chapter.

All Build-Up, No Payoff

Clocking in at just 25 minutes, this episode spends its runtime laying groundwork for events that won’t unfold until four episodes later. The result is an extended teaser that feels like it could have been seamlessly integrated into The Daleks’ Master Plan. While the Target novelisation of Master Plan wisely folds its events into the main story, the episode itself is little more than exposition and setup with no immediate consequences.

Is it essential viewing? Not at all. Everything important here is reintroduced when The Daleks’ Master Plan begins, making Mission to the Unknown one of the most skippable episodes in Classic Who.

Morbidly Simple Yet Strangely Effective

For all its shortcomings, this episode benefits from Terry Nation’s restrained approach. The story is refreshingly straightforward, avoiding convoluted subplots in favor of bleak, Dalek-driven brutality. The Daleks are reestablished as a force to be reckoned with, their cold, calculating menace given full rein. This grim tone makes the episode one of Nation’s stronger contributions to the series, even if the narrative itself feels hollow.

The first half, centered on three human characters battling both the hostile environment of Kembel and the encroaching Daleks, holds promise. Unfortunately, this tension dissipates as the focus shifts to a drawn-out meeting between the Daleks and a group of bizarre, forgettable alien delegates plotting universal domination. These scenes lack momentum and fail to capitalize on the eerie atmosphere established earlier.

The alien delegates are unintentionally comical, their over-the-top voices undermining any sense of menace. While the UCLAN version tones down the ridiculousness, it’s still hard to take them seriously.

The treacherous planet Kembel is vividly realized through strong sound design and production elements, making it feel alive and dangerous even in reconstructed form. Similarly, the transformation of a man into a Varga plant is suitably horrifying, even without the original visuals. The recreations effectively convey the grim body horror of the scene.

The Reconstructions: A Tale of Three Versions

Since the original episode is missing, fans rely on reconstructions to experience Mission to the Unknown. Each approach offers its own merits:

  1. Loose Cannon Reconstruction
    The telesnap version offers a rough glimpse of the original episode but struggles due to the limited surviving material and poor-quality audio. It’s a serviceable option, though far from immersive.
  2. Ian Levine Animated Version
    This animated reconstruction provides movement and restores some of the original performances using the surviving soundtrack. While not flawless, it’s a competent alternative for those who prefer a more polished presentation.
  3. UCLAN Student Film (2019)
    The standout reconstruction, this recreation by UCLAN students faithfully replicates the look and feel of 1960s television, even utilizing the original shooting scripts and authentic production techniques. With Nick Briggs voicing the Daleks and impressive attention to detail, this version feels eerily authentic, though the model shots of the Dalek ship slightly betray its amateur origins.

Final Thoughts

While Mission to the Unknown is a fascinating experiment in Doctor Who storytelling, it’s ultimately an exercise in frustration. Without the Doctor or his companions to anchor the narrative, the episode lacks the heart and energy that typically define the series. Its disjointed structure and lack of immediate stakes make it feel more like a curiosity than a vital piece of the Whoniverse.

For die-hard fans and completionists, the UCLAN student film offers the most enjoyable way to experience this peculiar slice of Doctor Who history. For everyone else, it’s safe to skip ahead to the main event.

RANDOM OBSERVATIONS:

  • This episode was never broadcast internationally, deemed “too violent” for its heavy dose of Dalek carnage.

This review contains spoilers!

“The greatest war force ever assembled !”

 

Je n’aime pas. 

En soi c’est peut-être pas si mal, mais c’est une histoire de Doctor Who qui n’en est pas vraiment une, et surtout c’est pas du tout mon truc.

L’ambiance de l’épisode reste quand même assez remarquable ceci dit. Terry Nation sait toujours faire vivre des jungles angoissantes, avec plein d’aliens bizarres. Puis l’alliance des grands méchants est aussi un concept qui claque. 

Mais en vrai ici ça m’ennuie. 


Some people really responded to this one but I found it pretty clunky, and hard to connect with, to be honest.  It's a bit of a curiosity more than anything.  I can appreciate how grim the whole episode feels but I also can't say I was very invested in my watch experience compared to the average Doctor Who story.  I think part of it is that the Daleks aren't really enough connective tissue to feel like a Doctor Who story.  It reminds me a bit of the Dalek Empire Big Finish audios which I have also been struggling with.


“I suppose you’ve heard of the Daleks?”

Watched the remake by the University of Central Lancashire on YouTube. A really faithful and fun remake that really does capture the 60s vibes just brilliantly.

The story itself, it’s fine? It’s just build up to something bigger, and doesn’t really have much else to do. Other than that it doesn’t really have much of a story to tell, the Daleks themselves are fine and interesting, and get enough to do, but still feels incomplete without the rest of the story to follow.

Maybe I’ll change my mind when I see The Daleks Masterplan that this is leading too?


This review contains spoilers!

Mission to the Unknown: 8.7 - A story that really made me excited for Daleks Master Plan. The reconstruction done by University of Central Lancashire was really well done and felt very authentic to the times. The plot of the episode was also cool and the Daleks teaming with a bunch of other aliens makes me think the Daleks are going to betray them all. I thought that Cory was also a cool character and his death surprised me as I thought he would be a major player in DMP.


This review contains spoilers!

Watched Levine's animation for this one, what a fascinating episode! No doctor, no companions, just a bunch of temporary cast who all get morbidly killed, either by extermination or transformation into these disgusting creatures. No one will ever find out what happened to them or where they died and they failed to get any warning out to those on earth.

This is one of the most unique Doctor Who stories ever. The new series delivers Doctor-lite episode, but this story shows this show’s infinitely flexible nature, you can have no regular elements from the wider show and it’s still Doctor Who


Those university students really did a great job with that Mission To The Unknown remake. Some of the acting is a bit ropey, but the directing is perfection and the set design/mise-en-scene is so authentic to 60s Doctor Who.


I watched the recreation and it still takes my breath away by how much it feels like the actual story from recons and stuff On a side note the varga plants need to come back in a huge varga Stan


This review contains spoilers!

A bit of an odd one to review, considering it is a prologue to a bigger tale.

 

This story focuses on Mark Cory, a secret agent for the SSS. They’ve landed on a small planet in our solar system, where they discover Varga plants. The thorns of this plant turn anyone who touches them into a mindless killer, before finally turning into a Varga plant themselves.

 

The problem is, these plants are native to only 1 planet: Skaro. Which means the Daleks are back in our solar system. We soon see them discussing plans with other allies to take over and destroy all planets. Including, of course, Earth.

 

After losing his allies, Mark Cory is the only one left to warn the universe of the Daleks’ return. Sadly, before he can send a message into outer space, he is discovered and shot dead. The recording of the final message is left behind on the ground, and we end the episode.

 

There’re some really fun ideas in here, like Dalek allies, the Varga plants and the whole premise of a prologue episode. While not self-contained, it is a fun side story.

 

There’s also some joy to be found in the way this episode can be watched. There’s of course the Loose Cannon adaptation. And it got animated as well, but we get a rare third TV option.

 

In 2019, this story was remade by students of the university of Lancashire. While not exactly 1 to 1 (different actors after all), it hits almost exactly like a 60s story would and was apparently made on a 60s budget as well. This recreation is probably the most modern, definitive way to experience the story. I have to give them props for their work.

 

Since the character are all one-offs, there’s not that much development or interaction to be found here. But that’s not the intention of the story anyway. It’s a setup episode, while still doing some fun stuff on its own.

 

And it is that fun stuff that makes this worth watching. It has some unique circumstances as a recreation. It has some fun with ideas like Varga plants, and it is setup for something big! Definitely worth checking out.