Doctor Who’s only major television outing during the 1990s was an 89-minute collaboration between the BBC and Universal Television. Conceived, like other US television films of the period, as a single-camera production shot on 35mm film, the Doctor Who TV movie enjoyed degrees of technical and creative freedom unimaginable in the days of multiple cameras recording onto videotape.
The role of production designer was assigned to Richard Hudolin, whose previous genre credits included the Jean-Claude Van Damme action-thriller Timecop (1994) and the prophetically plotted Sherlock Holmes Returns (1993) - in which the eponymous Victorian detective, played by Anthony Higgins, is reawakened on the other side of the Atlantic in the late 20th century…
Executive producer Philip David Segal had, from the outset, advised Hudolin and his team against devising a TARDIS interior that was too high-tech in appearance, feeling that any explicitly futuristic designs would date rapidly. He was also keen that the interior of the Doctor’s ship should be far larger and more elaborate than had been previously depicted on screen.