In the interest of full disclosure, I must confess: I am not a 
science fiction buff, and I have never seen an episode of Dr. Who in its
 entirety.  I am also approaching these two films, clearly 
aimed at juvenile audiences, from the perspective of a somewhat cynical 
and adult perspective.  In short, I am not the “ideal” 
audience for these two pictures – but given that reviews should 
encompass all varying points of view, hopefully my perspective will not 
seem invalid.
 
Having dispensed with that, let us get down to brass tacks.  Dr.
 Who made a tremendous splash on UK audiences in the 1960s, initially 
with the distinguished actor William Hartnell cast in the title role.  The show was low on budget but big on ideas, and like so many programs of its era, it was in black and white.  When
 producer Joe Vigoda decided the time might be right to bring the good 
doctor to cinema screens, he knew it would be necessary to sweeten the 
pot by adding color – and widescreen photography.  Given 
that Hartnell’s name was unknown outside of the UK – and given that much
 could be said for the character of Dr. Who himself, who had yet to 
mushroom into an international “brand name” of sorts – it was decided 
that it would have to be sold on the basis of a bigger box office draw.  Vigoda
 was affiliated with
 producers Max J. Rosenberg and Milton Subotsky, the heads of Amicus 
Productions in the UK , and so the casting of Peter Cushing in the lead 
seemed a master stroke.

 

 
Cushing was already an established
 name on both side of “the pond,” and his presence would help to ensure 
that audiences would respond to the concept.  Screenwriting
 chores inevitably fell to Subotsky, a process expedited by the fact 
that Terry Nation, who created the series, was unavailable.  In
 addition to watering the material down so that it would be more 
suitable for the matinee crowd, Subotsky also altered the character of 
Dr. Who himself – in the series, he was an alien and a Time Lord, 
whereas in the film he’s a kindly old duffer and most definitely human.  The changes put Cushing firmly in “kooky old man” mode, which hardly shows him at his best.
 
The first of the film films, Dr. Who and the Daleks, was released 
in 1965 – with much of the same technical personnel carried over from 
another, vastly superior, Cushing-Amicus vehicle: The Skull.  The
 story deals with Dr. Who’s invention of a time travel device known as 
TARDIS, which enables one to be transported to any time frame, past or 
present, anywhere in the universe.  The plot is set in 
motion when the beau (Roy Castle, wearing thin early on and getting more
 and more irritating as the story unfolds) of Dr. Who’s granddaughter 
(Jennie Linden, previously terrorized in Hammer’s Nightmare, 1963) 
accidentally triggers the device, thus transporting them all – including
 Dr. Who’s younger granddaughter (Roberta Tovey) – to a remote future, 
wherein the world has been reduced to ashes and is lorded over by the 
power-hungry Daleks, a race of robots.
 
To his credit, director Gordon Flemyng does a decent job with a laughable screenplay.  The
 humor is flat and heavy handed, and Cushing’s absent minded professor 
routine is about as stale as stale can be, but the low budget production
 has some nice camerawork and is paced at a good clip.  The
 Techniscope framing is eye catching throughout, and some of the 
lighting (courtesy of John Wilcox) evokes the ornate, color-drenched 
aesthetic of Italian genre filmmaker Mario Bava.  Unfortunately, all the technical polish imaginable can only do so much to redeem such a hopelessly hokey enterprise as this.  There
 is zero suspense, the characters are flat and listless, and the whole 
thing is so relentlessly pitched at children that it seems virtually 
impossible for a more mature audience to get much out of it.  Cushing would
 normally present as something of an oasis in such a situation, but in this instance, even he falters.  To be fair to the actor, he played the character as written by Subotsky – as a sweet natured eccentric.  To
 be fair to the audience, however, this only serves to make the 
character tolerable in small doses – and with him at the center of so 
much of the action, he is ill equipped to fill the role of hero.  The
 supporting cast includes a number of actors (playing part of a tribe 
known as the "Thals," who are being oppressed by the power-hungry 
Daleks) who look embarrassed to be kitted out in ludicrous wigs and 
heavy eye liner, including Michael Coles, who would later reunite with 
Cushing on Hammer’s two modern day Dracula adventures: Dracula AD 1972 
and The Satanic Rites of Dracula.
The film opened to withering reviews and big box office, so Amicus
 wasted no time lining up a sequel.  Cushing returned to play the lead 
once again, apparently on the understanding that he would only do it if 
they brought back Roberta Tovey to play his granddaughter.  And thus it 
came to be, Daleks' Invasion Earth: 2150 AD would emerge in 1966...
 
Here, Dr. Who is accompanied by his niece (Jill Curzon), 
granddaughter (Tovey) and a hapless Scotland Yard bobbie to the year 
2150... for no real apparent purpose in particular.  Upon arrival, the 
group of time travelers discover that London is now a bombed out shell 
of its former glory, with a group of freedom fighters engaged in a 
desperate struggle against an alien force... which turns out to be those
 pesky Daleks.
Unlike many sequels, this one manages to improve upon its 
predecessor - but given the quality of what came before it, it seems to 
be more of a case of the filmmakers learning from their mistakes.  
Flemyng is again in charge of direction, and again he makes good use of 
the 'scope format.  The canvas is larger this time, with more exterior 
shots and more ambitious matte and miniature work; alas, the quality of 
the FX is highly variable, ranging from the effective (some of the matte
 work is pretty well done) to the downright laughable (the Dalek 
spacecraft is plainly supported by strings).  Cushing is allowed to play
 things a little more low key this time, which is most definitely for 
the best.  It's still not a characterization that will ever rank among 
his more distinguished, but at least there isn't quite so much emphasis 
on his being a slightly dotty old duffer this time
 around.
The supporting cast is an improvement, as well.  Bernard Cribbins 
is far more engaging as the outsider roped into the plot compared to Roy
 Castle in the first film.  Cribbins had previously played opposite 
Cushing in Hammer's She (1964) and would go on to play the nasty bar man
 in Hitchcock's Frenzy (1972).  Tovey is plucky and engaging as the 
doctor's brainy grandchild, while Andrew Keir adds plenty of gusto as 
one of the freedom fighters.  Keir had already effectively subbed for 
Cushing as the gun toting Father Sandor in the Van Helsing-less Dracula 
Prince of Darkness (1965) and would later go on to replace the ailing 
thespian on Hammer's troubled Blood from the Mummy's Tomb (1971).  
Philip Madoc, later to star in the superior British crime series A Mind 
for Murder, is also in good form as a mercenary whose lust for cash gets
 the better of him.
On the downside, the film is saddled with a horrendous score by 
Bill McGuffie.  McGuffie would later add an equally jarring lounge score
 to the tacky Cushing vehicle Corruption (1967), so clearly he did not 
make much improvement over time.  The first film had been scored by 
Malcolm Lockyer - who also provided the music for the Cushing sci-fi 
items Island of Terror (1965) and Night of the Big Heat (1967) - and his
 music, though not among his finest efforts, was far better suited to 
the material.  John Wilcox's classy photography adds as much gloss here 
as it had in the first film.
Sadly (or fortunately, depending on one's point of view), lighting
 did not strike twice.  The sequel garnered reviews every bit as dismal,
 but it failed to repeat the first film's box office performance.  
Subotsky and company were ready and willing to push ahead with a third 
Dr. Who adventure, but it was ultimately decided that it was a case of 
diminishing returns, to plans to continue with the doctor's adventures 
were scuttled.  Given that the sequel improved on the first film in so 
many areas, it's not unreasonable to suppose that the third may have 
been better still... that's firmly in the realm of supposition, however,
 as we are left with only two vehicles for Cushing's Dr. Who.

 
Fans of 
the series have long dismissed the films for being too far removed from 
the mythos of the series, while other viewers may have a hard time 
relating to them on any level.  For matinee
 audiences of the 1960s, however, these were probably rip roaring 
entertainment - and Cushing can hardly be faulted for essaying the 
character as (re)conceived by Subotsky.  Fans of the actor will want to 
check these films out, and this is much more convenient to do now that 
they have emerged on DVD and Blu Ray in immaculate condition courtesy of
 Studio Canal.