"Doctor Who" Doctor Who and the Silurians: Episode 5 (TV Episode 1970) Poster

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9/10
An evil plan is put into action.
Sleepin_Dragon21 October 2019
The Doctor does his best to reach a peaceful agreement between The humans and Silurians, but there is dissent among the ranks.

I thought the conflict among the Silurians was very good, never mind the race, there is always conflict and plotting, it was a nice touch, meaning the Silurians are a complex race, not one dimensional like The Daleks or Cybermen. They have an order, a culture, a history and a social order.

The plan used by the rogue Silurians is a nasty one, Major Baker's illness is pretty grim. It seems both races mostly want the destruction of the other.

This was excellent, with quite a surprisingly high death count. 9/10
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7/10
"I wouldn't worry about him Brigadier, he's probably chatting quite happily to his monster friends." Decent episode to a good story.
poolandrews24 March 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Doctor Who: Doctor Who and the Silurians: Episode 5 starts as the Doctor (Jon Pertwee) is saved from certain death by the peaceful Silurian leader who orders the other Silurians to let him go, the Doctor asks the Silurian leader to try & negotiate with the human race so they can live in peace together, he agrees but other less willing members of his kind don't & devise a plan to inject Major Baker (Norman Jones) with a deadly virus & let him go so that he will spread, infect & kill millions of us humans with the deadly disease...

This Doctor Who adventure was episode 9 from season 7 that aired here in the UK during early 1970, directed by Timothy Combe this is a good episode in a pretty good story. The script by Malcolm Hulke hasn't quite advanced as much as I'd hope from the opening episode & I can't but help feel some of what's happened is there purely to fill the mammoth seven episodes & there's still two left! However I didn't see the whole deadly virus thing coming & that has made for a nice little plot twist, the arguing between the Silurians seems a bit odd & this aspect of the story doesn't quite work for me but at least it tries to develop the Silurian character's rather than paint them all with the same brush as evil monsters so it's not all bad news I suppose. It's a decent enough episode from a strong story overall but why seven episodes? The cliffhanger at the end this one isn't the best either.

Not much to say about this episode really, nothing new is introduced & the more you see the rubbery Silurians stumble around the more they lose their effectiveness that was built up so well during the first three episodes.

Doctor Who and the Silurians is a good story from a classic Doctor Who era but seven episodes of 25 minutes just seems excessive & unnecessary.
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8/10
...... or should that be Eocenes, or are they ancient aliens?
A_Kind_Of_CineMagic20 September 2014
Review of all 7 episodes:

This very impressive story has a prehistoric but advanced race of reptilian beings becoming involved in a confrontation with humans having been in a state of suspended animation for millions of years. They are named Silurians by a scientist but in a future story The Doctor asserts Eocenes would be a slightly more likely description of the era of history in which they originate. However, while it is stated they were on Earth long before humans it is not stated that they originate from Earth. It would make more sense if they are aliens who evolved on another planet and arrived on Earth many millions of years ago. The Doctor does refer to them repeatedly as "aliens".

These 'Silurians' have returned in recent Doctor Who, one even becoming a close ally of the 11th and 12th Doctors, but look very different in this original appearance. They are well realised (although the dinosaur they keep like a guard dog is an unnecessary and less successful addition) and the whole story is thoroughly absorbing.

This adventure is cleverly written by Malcolm Hulke with fine scripts and an intelligent plot, the only big problem in the writing is one bad scientific blunder where the Doctor theorises that an object the Silurians saw on collision course with Earth millions of years ago was captured by the Earth's gravity and became the Moon. Modern science estimates the Moon has been in Earth's orbit for 4 to 4.5 billion years! Even the very ancient Silurian period, when moss like plants and small arthropods are the only known life to have existed on land, began 443 million years ago. That was 3.5 to 4 billion years after the Moon came into orbit. Early humans only came into existence 1 or 2 million years ago and the Silurians say this object was coming towards Earth AFTER they had been co-existing with humans so the Doctor would be making an uncharacteristically horrendous bit of historical and scientific judgement in stating it was the Moon.

That one blunder in episode 5 drops that otherwise excellent episode down in my estimation but otherwise the writing is top notch with very intelligent ideas and smart dialogue. The whole story is very well acted. Jon Pertwee, Nicholas Courtney, Caroline John, Peter Miles, Fulton Mackay and Geoffrey Palmer are all superb. The story is also very nicely filmed and has some cracking scenes throughout. There is a great moral theme underlying the story of whether to deal with a threat by peaceful negotiation or by military means. A theme just as relevant today as it ever was. The Brigadier and the Doctor are put on opposite sides of this debate which adds greatly to the moral dilemma the audience has to consider.

Apart from that one glaring line of dialogue regarding the Moon there are only really two other small minus points. Firstly the incidental music by Carey Blyton, which has silly and annoying kazoo sounds recurring. Secondly, a few of the effects which were not convincingly realised such as the dinosaur and the Silurians scorching their way through walls in episode 7. But bearing in mind the limitations of age and budget this is very forgivable. I would ideally have cut the superfluous dinosaur and the line about the Moon entirely and changed the way they entered the research centre. This is a terrific story and well within my top 100 but it could possibly have been a top 30 story, for me, with a few issues ironed out, particularly the scientific error about the Moon which drops episode 5 in my ratings.

Pertwee begins to establish himself nicely after his strong debut and Courtney and John as the Brigadier and Liz Shaw build upon their already engaging characters whilst already developing a little depth with the Brigadier showing a slightly darker side. The alien plague subplot neatly added into the mix later in the story reignites interest and drama and provides some of the best scenes such as Masters (Palmer) inadvertently spreading the plague in London and Dr. Lawrence (Miles) going berserk in episode 6.

A must see story for fans.

My Episode Ratings: Episode 1 - 10, Episode 2 - 9.5, Episode 3 - 9.5, Episode 4 - 10, Episode 5 - 8, Episode 6 - 10, Episode 7 - 9.5
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