On Fanlore, users with accounts can edit pages including user pages, can create pages, and more. Any information you publish on a page or an edit summary will be accessible by the public and to Fanlore personnel. Because Fanlore is a wiki, information published on Fanlore will be publicly available forever, even if edited later. Be mindful when sharing personal information, including your religious or political views, health, racial background, country of origin, sexual identity and/or personal relationships. To learn more, check out our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Select "dismiss" to agree to these terms.
Resurrection of Evil
Fan Film | |
---|---|
Title: | Resurrection of Evil |
Creator: | MEV Films |
Date: | August 1993 |
Length: | 75 minutes |
Medium: | Video 8 |
Genre: | |
Fandom: | Doctor Who |
URL: | Homepage |
Click here for related articles on Fanlore. | |
Resurrection of Evil was a 1993 Doctor Who fan film. In 2002, it was remastered digitally. It was reviewed in A Pirate's History of Doctor Who.
Cast and Crew
Cast
- Mark Bennett as The Doctor
- Liz Cahill as Liz King
- Andrew Cottingham as Farendon
- Nik Lusser as Adam Taylor
- Lucie McDonnell as Dr. Jones
- Steve Trasler as Mailer
- Paul Taylor as Roberts
- Steve Trasler and Ritchie Taylor as Sharok
- Kevin Littlefield as Philips
- Ritchie Taylor as Metcalfe
- Lee James as Security
- Noel Daniels as Security
- Marq English as Sullivan
- George Murphy as The Doctor
Crew
- Writer and Director: Marq English
- Original Music: Ritchie Taylor
- Makeup: Stillframe FX
- Editors: Marq English, Kevin Littlefield, and Ritchie Taylor
- TARDIS Modelmaker and Visual Effects: Rob Martins
Reactions and Reviews
Resurrection of Evil was very entertaining. I've been getting into home-movies and out of the number that I've seen yours was the least boring! Thats the problem with these things, most of the ones I've got are lots of people wandreing around in 80s costumes muttering to themselves for 4 hours, but it was very relieving to find a video that was well scripted, well acted and the quality was good enough to hear and see without having to fiddle with the tracking.Chris Pollock[1]