Power of the Daleks Review: Animated Fascism
Power of the Daleks is also a fantastic metaphor for the gradual rise of fascism, making some of the best use of the Daleks ever put to screen.
Power of the Daleks is also a fantastic metaphor for the gradual rise of fascism, making some of the best use of the Daleks ever put to screen.
Veteran Doctor Who writer Paul Cornell sets all the necessary elements in place for a return to the era where The Third Doctor #1 truly kicks off.
In dramatic fashion, Torchwood #1 opens with the flutter of a grey trenchcoat on an alien world. Captain Jack stands proud in a location so breathtakingly other that it makes the television series seem conservative by comparison.
Supremacy of the Cybermen #1 shows off the 50th anniversary of the Cybermen with a bang, putting four Doctors and their companions in imminent peril.
Donna Noble has seriously bad luck with weddings. In Death and the Queen, Donna gets another chance at a fairy tale ending, with a Prince no less, but life with the Doctor is never so simple.
What starts out as a simple side-step quickly becomes an engaging story with high stakes, engrossing alien lore, and an incredible sacrifice. It’s an episode that finds the Doctor embracing his inner space buccaneer and Donna having none of it.
In Technophobia, the first of three new stories, the Tenth Doctor and Donna face a foe that is a match for even the Doctor’s intelligence, turning humanity’s own technology against them and allowing Donna the chance to shine.
Doctor Who fans, rejoice! Probably the most important news about 2017’s Series 10 has come out with the announcement of Pearl Mackie joining the
Good news for the Whovians out there: the BBC has announced that they’ll be revealing their newest companion to Peter Capaldi’s 12th Doctor this