“Doctor Who:
The Movie”
Obviously,
we have to start with Eight’s big foray.
Don’t get me wrong – the TV movie has massive problems, ranging from the half-human nonsense to Eric
Roberts’s insanely hammy Master. But Eight is just magnificent in it. Kind, exuberant, romantic-ish, and an odd
Doctory mix of scatterbrained and laser focus, he’s every inch the Doctor, and
his interactions with Grace pave the way for the not-always-platonic
Doctor-companion relationships of the new series.
This
little snippet is really lovely, bittersweet and weighty. After years (decades? centuries? who knows)
of the Time War, the Doctor comes to the realization that he must be the one to
end it. Even more so, that he (Eight) cannot do it himself. He maintains wisps of his old humor and heart
right to the end – an excellent coda to a fine Doctor.
Destiny
of the Doctor, Volume 8: “Enemy Aliens” (audiobook)
As part
of the 50th anniversary Destiny
of the Doctor series, the Doctor and long-running audio companion Charley
end up in 1935 London, where German spies aren’t the only “enemy aliens” about. Charley seems like a top-notch character, and
she’s great with the Doctor. Oh, and a worldwide
invasion hinges on the frickin’ William
Tell Overture! That’s pure Who right there.
Prisoners
of Time, Chapter 8: “The Body Politic” (comic story)
Another
50th anniversary publication – Prisoners
of Time is awfully cool, showing companions to each Doctor being kidnapped
by a shadowy adversary and culminating in a big showdown for Eleven. Anyway, this chapter shows the Doctor
reuniting with Grace for a proper TARDIS trip.
I like the alien agrarian culture depicted, and the story’s almost fairytale-esque
quality. I also love the Doctor making
fun of their shoddy prison when they’re inevitably captured.
The
Forgotten, Chapter 5: “Revelation” (comic story)
Like Prisoners of Time, this is a story in
which all the Doctors have a featurette.
Ten has arrived in a mysterious museum that seems devoted to his past
exploits, and his memories hold the key to getting out alive. The Eight story is set during the Time War, and
we see some of how the war has transformed the Doctor. Though he hasn’t yet turned to despair, he’s
demoralized and beginning to think about possible ways to bring it to an end. It’s a sobering chapter in an absolutely
marvelous story; I really can’t speak highly enough of The Forgotten in its entirety.
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