IMO this scene allowed Dr Who to survive beyond the first regeneration. If a Dalek recognises the Doctor, even with a new face, then there can't be any question that it is still Dr Who.
There's a moment when the Doctor messes with the Dalek and it momentarily hesitates before repeating its mantra, and it's such a subtle little moment showing how much the Dalek must be seething at having to play its part. No face, staccato voice, yet they still manage to convey subtlety in its performance. One of my favorite DW stories.
Daleks are preprogrammed with orders usually so anything anyone else tells it to do after that runs counter to its order generally won't be accepted unless deception is one of their original instructions. In other words, your right, it doesn't.
Probably because Victory took the edited highlights of Power and reused them like how you take butter that you first put on toast and put it in roadkill pot pie.
@@Icelandic_Sand the paradigm Daleks were truly awful and I hate them but I really like the "ironsides" and the cabinet war room set. Ian Mcniece as Churchill was also great. But it is not the greatest Dalek story by a long way!
1966: I am your servant!
2010: I am your soldier!
That was intentional :)
2025: I am your Sushi chef!
@@martinwood744ah, fellow Time Lord. How do you do?
One of the best cliffhangers in doctor who!!
I AM YOUR SERVANT!
IMO this scene allowed Dr Who to survive beyond the first regeneration. If a Dalek recognises the Doctor, even with a new face, then there can't be any question that it is still Dr Who.
I noticed that the Dalek was shouting "I am your servant" to silence the Doctor about what he was talking about.
Noticed that, did you?
@@TakeNoteOfThat Yes Yoda, we did.
For the love of god, you hear something like a Dalek speak with that voice and assume you can trust it?
Muggles in Doctor Who are pretty dumb.
@@MinscFromBaldursGate92 I'd say only for the sake of plot, but there are people that foolish. Magic or otherwise.
Always struck me as one of the creepier moments in Doctor Who.
Not if you assume they were your own creation
Which they weren't @@reubensalter8125
The way it shrinks its pupil tells me it doesn't like being told what to do
There's a moment when the Doctor messes with the Dalek and it momentarily hesitates before repeating its mantra, and it's such a subtle little moment showing how much the Dalek must be seething at having to play its part. No face, staccato voice, yet they still manage to convey subtlety in its performance. One of my favorite DW stories.
When was that?
Daleks are preprogrammed with orders usually so anything anyone else tells it to do after that runs counter to its order generally won't be accepted unless deception is one of their original instructions. In other words, your right, it doesn't.
Funny. Just watched this the other day. I enjoyed it.
i love how you can hear the faint original dalek theme.
makes it really creepy
Very unnerving & disturbing episode. The music really gives you a sense of dread, also the idea of someone trying to use the Daleks.
We have “The Krotons” in full and three episodes of “The Wheel in Space”. And nothing of this masterpiece grrrr
😊
So stupid when Steven Moffat copied this for the Eleventh Doctor’s episode.
Mark gatiss wrote it
I thought it was a reference
this reminds me of victory of the daleks i am your soldier
@Jack The Film Fanatic it's cool reference
Probably because Victory took the edited highlights of Power and reused them like how you take butter that you first put on toast and put it in roadkill pot pie.
@@ShamrockParticle explain the pot pie reference please lol
@@andiparker3733 he's calling Victory of the Daleks trash
@@Icelandic_Sand the paradigm Daleks were truly awful and I hate them but I really like the "ironsides" and the cabinet war room set. Ian Mcniece as Churchill was also great. But it is not the greatest Dalek story by a long way!
Why is the animation on par with those crappy videogame song parody videos like Story of Undertale?
Sadly, lost episodes of 60’s Doctor Who have a very niche appeal. There’s only so much time and money that the BBC are willing to dedicate to it.