At four episodes a thin story is over-stretched, the finale seems tacked on, and the shoddy creature effects are more remarkably phallic than anything in the same year's theatrical release, Alien. On the plus side, Lalla Ward in her third story grows nicely into her role as Romana, David Brierley takes over from John Leeson as the voice of robot dog K-9, and the set design and costumes are well up to the show's late-'70s high standards. Not a patch on the immediately preceding "City of Death," but an entertaining Whovian pantomime nonetheless. --Gary S. Dalkin
The Doctor and Romana respond to a distress call on Chloris, where they are caught up in Lady Adrasta's dictatorial ways. On Chloris, metal is needed to contain the increasingly fecund jungle. Adrasta has the monopoly on metal--she owns the only mine, and that is the source of her power. She also employs the service of the Huntsman and his band of Wolf Weeds, which resemble green tumbleweeds. However, there are some rebels under Torvin, former miners, who are staging ambushes to steal anything metal.
The Doctor meets Organon, Adrasta's former astrologer, a bearded talkative soul who introduces himself thus: "astrologer extraordinaire, seer to princes and emperors. The future foretold, the past explained, the present apologized for." Together in the pit, they discover the nature of the title creature, which is huge and glows an eerie green colour.
Myra Frances plays Adrasta as a cruel despot--she even slaps Romana in one scene! Eileen Way, who is Karela, Adrasta's vizier, appeared in the very first Doctor Who story as the Old Mother. Karela is indeed someone just as ambitious and cruel as her mistress. Geoffrey Bayldon is good as the chatty but clearly sign-obsessed Organon. However, John Bryans plays Torvin as a hammy East London Jew, complete with accents and bushy beard: "My beautiful boys," he calls his subordinates, who are just as hirsute and bearded as he.
The Doctor has a funny line when he asks Adrasta to spare Doran, a court engineer-scientist who displeased her: "He may be an idiot, but he is a conscientious idiot, and engineers are hard to come by."
Romana's aristocratic bearing is apparent when she is captured by Torvin and his rebels. She is hardly scared when they threaten to kill her. Indeed, she keeps calm until K9 comes along, and then walks off. Dressed in her white robe, it's no wonder, as Lalla Ward's full name is Lady Sarah Ward, who is the daughter of Lord Bangor (Edward Ward). Ward really plays it straight here.
Some of Douglas Adams' silly humour is apparent in the story following the classic The City Of Death. One of the funniest moments involves the Doctor who's clinging along the side of the pit and is reading a book on mountain climbing, only to find out the book is in Tibetan. He then pulls out a book, Teach Yourself Tibetan. Unfortunately, it's established in other stories that the Doctor already knows Tibetan, so either the book is highly technical or this was just a scene done for laughs. And when going through some of the Doctor's old junk, Romana asks him if he really needs the jawbone of an a**, to which the Doctor retorts, "Don't be a philistine." That's a biblical joke, for those who don't get it.
Not a bad story, but seeing as how this came after the top-rated City Of Death, something of a comedown.