'' (1956) The story was repeated across four consecutive evenings on BBC1 from 5–8 July 1976, with a start time varying between 6:20 pm and 6:35 pm. It was the first story since
Spearhead from Space to be repeated in its entirety on BBC TV and the first ever to be stripped across consecutive evenings. The viewing figures were 5.0, 5.0, 4.3 & 3.9 million viewers, respectively.
Paul Cornell,
Martin Day and
Keith Topping wrote of the serial in
The Discontinuity Guide (1995), "For an eight-year old, this was the most terrifying slice of
Who. Now it seems a little ordinary, a simple reworking of classic themes. It is unfortunate that the detailed jungle set is in such sharp contrast to the (cheap) minimalism of the Morestran spaceship." In
The Television Companion (1998),
David J. Howe and Stephen James Walker described
Planet of Evil as "a wonderfully creepy story" with the borrowing of material from
Jekyll and Hyde "done with such style and panache that the viewer, far from complaining about a lack of originality, delights in spotting all the familiar sources to which the writer and the production team are paying homage." They also noted that the antimatter monster, depicted only as a shimmering red outline, was "in all but name, the Id monster from the 1956 MGM feature film
Forbidden Planet." Howe and Walker also praised the jungle set and the performances of Frederick Jaeger and Ewen Solon, but criticised Prentis Hancock's "poor" portrayal of Salamar. Ray Dexter's assessment of
Planet of Evil also acknowledged the influence of the 1956 film
Forbidden Planet, which inspired the writers to include an invisible, murderous monster, as well as elements of
Jekyll and Hyde. Reviewing the serial in 1999, literary critic
John Kenneth Muir drew attention to similarities between
Planet of Evil and
Ridley Scott's 1979 film
Alien, in particular the scenario of a spaceship answering a distress call, the crew being gradually killed by a malevolent alien life form, and corpses being ejected into space in metal coffins. Muir hesitated to suggest that
Alien was directly influenced by this story, but considered it significant that
Doctor Who dealt with science fiction themes that became popular later in the 1970s. In 2010, Patrick Mulkern of
Radio Times awarded the serial four stars out of five and wrote that it "feels original", particularly praising the jungle set and
David Maloney's direction, as well as Tom Baker's performance. ==Commercial releases==