I wish "Terminus" was a good as "Enlightenment" and "Mawdryn Undead", It's fairly generic and even when I first saw the story, I was "didn't they do the beginning of the universe last season?" (They had indeed, in "Castrovalva", followed by "Four to Doomsday" where Monarch wanted to go back in time, and in both stories the use of the big bang was more dramatically rewarding). For whatever ideas "Terminus" had, it's still largely boring though if it's of any consolation, rewatch that middling middle story while pretending we missed the scene where Tegan and Turlough ate beans before Turlough did his sabotage and now it's catching up with them in the ducts.
I forgot where the robot prop came from, but JNT took the robot prop in hopes of using more real science/engineering in the show, along with the fantastical element of shapeshifting. When the prop was realized to be too hard to program, among other unfortunate hurdles, the prop was sidelined and nobody thought of having it shapeshift into a person until its finale story. Even then, none of the potential real-life opportunities were used. And as guesswork is cool, having Kamelion spit out 4KB worth of hexadecimal code would become boring fairly quickly, never mind swapping defective motors but where on Xeriphas would they be gotten from?! Oh well...
Such a rushed job that even the paint was literallty fresh on the day of filming!
"The Five Doctors" isn't always coherent in its plot, but worthy. Many plot holes/issues can be explained with headcanon anyhow.
It has atmopshere, Will as a person who would have made a fun companion, some BBC Micro ASCII text used as vfx, and for a plot that otherwise should feel bigger if it's this evil entity, the Malus, trying to break free to destroy the universe or something. The fact it has any atmosphere is surprising in of itself.
Good luck!
An underrated adventure, one that has a long list of checkbox items to deal with, and yet they're all handled remarkably well for the most part.
Arguably the messiest story of the season, the atmopshere and threat of the Daleks makes up for it all and then some.
A simple plot, a partial rehash of "The Power of Kroll" what with gunrunners and double double-crossing, just no stupidly big monster. Just a stupid tiny one. But it's a good rehash, done better. Even then, the Doctor is surprisingly generic in this swansong. Most of its strengths are due to the acting, direction, pacing, and music.
Season 22 is an improvement, often good to great, but Colin's premiere is not a classic. As sci-fi it's mostly veneer and forgetting small things like the distance between planets, speed of light, and other basic things), and some controversial elements are (a) so poorly done that the actors are compensating on screen, and (b) requires remembering events from "Caves" as there's direct continuity, even with concepts under-10s aren't going to understand. The scripting was so uneven that Eric Saward scrambled in taking over writing of the final two parts. The main author either gave up on the script, or his electric typewriter really did blow up. The author had a fair amount of drama under his belt, but as sci-fi this one's a genuine misfire.
Started with Tom Baker, got to see most of the others, then got to see the first two incarnations during the 1985 "hiatus". Little did we know back then why the show was put on hold, and the incarnations to come.