The Talons of Weng-Chiang: Part Five
- Episode aired Mar 26, 1977
- TV-Y
- 25m
Weng-Chiang has stolen the time cabinet from Litefoot's house, so the Doctor and Leela go to try and stop him from using it. They find an opium-drugged Chang. Jago teams up with Litefoot for... Read allWeng-Chiang has stolen the time cabinet from Litefoot's house, so the Doctor and Leela go to try and stop him from using it. They find an opium-drugged Chang. Jago teams up with Litefoot for their own investigation.Weng-Chiang has stolen the time cabinet from Litefoot's house, so the Doctor and Leela go to try and stop him from using it. They find an opium-drugged Chang. Jago teams up with Litefoot for their own investigation.
- Coolie
- (uncredited)
- Young Girl
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- Coolie
- (uncredited)
- Coolie
- (uncredited)
- Coolie
- (uncredited)
- Coolie
- (uncredited)
- Coolie
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- Coolie
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- Robert Holmes
- Sydney Newman(uncredited)
- Donald Wilson(uncredited)
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe double-act of Jago and Litefoot worked so well that the BBC considered giving them a spinoff series. Big Finish Productions later produced an audio series called "Jago & Litefoot: Investigators of Infernal Incidents", which was released between 2010 and 2018. Both actors were reprising their characters.
- GoofsA boom mic is visible when Weng-Chiang strangles Jago.
- Quotes
Leela: Doctor, what is the Peking...
Doctor Who: Homunculus.
Leela: Homunculus.
Doctor Who: It was made in Peking for the Commissioner of the Icelandic Alliance. It was in the ice age about the year 5000.
Professor Litefoot: Preposterous.
Leela: Shh. Go on, Doctor.
Doctor Who: Peking Homunculus was a... was a toy. A plaything for the Commissioner's children. It contained a series of magnetic fields operating on a printed circuit and a small computer. It had one organic component - the cerebral cortex of a pig. Anyway, something went wrong. It almost caused World War Six.
Professor Litefoot: What?
Doctor Who: Yeah. Somehow the pig part took over. So Weng-Chiang has brought the Peking Homunculus back through time. He could have done. Disappeared completely. It was never found.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Lively Arts: Whose Dr. Who (1977)
This is as good as Doctor Who gets. This is a frontrunner for best story ever for me alongside Pyramids of Mars which has some similarities as a pseudo historical with an evil 'ancient God' as well as similar brilliance of writing and characterisation.
The Doctor and Leela arrive in the 'pea-soup' thick fog of Victorian London and the perfectly realised atmosphere of that period with echoes of Jack the Ripper and Sherlock Holmes help to make this one of the great adventures.
Girls have been going missing in the squalid streets around a theatre run by Henry Gordon Jago. Chinese performer Li H'sen Chang and his creepy dummy Mr. Sin are secretly serving Weng-Chiang, considered to be an ancient Chinese God. The Doctor and Leela team up with Jago and Professor Litefoot, a pathologist, and try to solve the mystery and stop Weng-Chiang from getting his hands on an item in Litefoot's possession which has powers unknown to its owner and dangerous to them all.
As well as capturing the Victorian setting perfectly there is a host of colourful and truly inspired characters all acted magnificently well. The wonderfully endearing and engaging Jago & Litefooot played to perfection by Christopher Benjamin and Trevor Baxter make such an impact that they have inspired a series of prose and audio spin off adventures. They provide such charm and humour and make me really care about them. Chang, Weng-Chiang and Mr. Sin are chilling and effective villains who are hugely impressive and scary. Casey and other small cameo parts are extraordinarily good too. Tom Baker is extraordinary as The Doctor. His every line, glance and expression is phenomenally mesmerising and sublime. Leela makes an exciting, interesting and likable companion. She is very bright as well as physically dynamic and brave, Louise Jameson plays the role expertly.
The dialogue throughout is absolutely terrific, entertaining, absorbing, intelligent and convincing as well as being delivered with superb style. The plot is fantastically rich, fascinating and engrossing and the horror aspects are scary and captivating. This is basically grand guignol style horror with thrilling, macabre delights which I thoroughly enjoy. The make up and costumes are tremendous as well as the fabulously realised sets and period setting. Every aspect of the production is of the highest standard with the slight exception of the giant rats which guard the sewer. These rats are not problematic for me at all though because they are cleverly hidden in darkness and still work as a result. If this story was re-released with new computer generated effects re- creating the rats it would be great and would make this a flawless production but the ingenious way it is filmed manages to make the rats work as monsters despite limitations of the technology available.
The horror, excitement and menace of this story are simply superb and the characters and dialogue cannot be bettered. This whole story is sheer magic from start to finish and one of the all-time greats without doubt. For me it is one of my joint favourite stories. AMAZING!
My ratings: All 4 episodes 10/10.
- A_Kind_Of_CineMagic
- Dec 10, 2014