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The Doctor Who DVD Files –“The Ultimate Build-up Doctor Who Encyclopaedia” in fortnightly issues.
Magazine content[[edit] | [edit source]]
Collectable loose leaf pages divided into nine categories that could be filed accordingly.
- Sam Garner
- The Weeping Angels trapped this 1930's private eye.
- Broton
- This Zygon warlord hid at the bottom of Loch Ness.
- Salamander
- Meet the Doctor's devilish double
- Nicholas Courtney
- Read our profile of the actor who played the Brigadier.
- Into the Unknown
- Read our interview with script editor Anthony Read
- War Machines
- These machines invaded 1960s London.
- Wonderland!
- The Doctor takes a trip into the present ...
The quest for the Key to Time ends on the planet Atrios.
- Seventh Transept
- Dare you venture into the crypt of the Headless Monks?
DVD release (with cover blurb)[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Each issue came with a DVD release.
- Reversible DVD sleeves enabled the collector to display one of two designs featuring either the Doctor and his enemies or his companions.
- "We have the power to do anything we like. Absolute power over every particle in the universe ... "
- The Doctor's quest for the Key to Time reaches its dramatic conclusion when the TARDIS arrives on Atrios, which is at war with its twin planet, Zeos? The Time Lord and his companions, Romana and K9, must find the sixth segment and restore the balance of power in the universe before both planets destroy each other. But Zeos is deserted, so who is behind the war?
Notable information[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Contents error printed for The Armageddon Factor ... "The Fourth Doctor takes a flight on a supersonic jet" <sic> last months DVD was Time-Flight and featured the Fifth Doctor
- When Romana joined the Fourth Doctor in search of the Key to Time she was 140 years old.
- The planet Zeos had galactic co-ordinates 008 01 0040.
- Nicholas Courtney's middle name was Stone and he was born in Cairo, Egypt on 16th December 1929, and appeared in over a hundred Doctor Who episodes.
- The Post Office Tower (later renamed to British Telecom Tower), was opened in October 1965 and featured in The War Machines the following year.
Credits[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Project Manager: not credited this issue
- Group Editor: not credited this issue
- Editor: Kieran Grant
- Art Editor: Pete Byrne
- Designer: not credited this issue
- Sub-Editor: Catherine Anderson
- Contributing Writers: Peter Griffiths
- Illustrators: none credited this issue