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Saturday, 24 May 2025

Doctor Who: Wish World

 "This isn't exposition, Doctor."

The opening scene to this episode is decidedly odd, in ways which, I think, are oddly clever. It's Bavaria, 1865. A time and place which is somewhat redolent of fairy tales. And, sure enough, a seventh son is born to the seventh son of a seventh son, which must surely be rather unlikely. And so in swoops Archie  Panjabi's rather wonderful new Rani to steal the baby... and magically turn the rest of the family into violets (evoking Luke being turned into a tree in Mark of the Rani?), ducks and an own respectively.

This is pretty much as fairytale as it gets. Magic, not science, although I suppose there's that famous quote from Arthur C. Clarke. But hasn't there been a lot more of this sort of thing in doctor Who lately, along with the fourth wall breaking? Almost as though reality is not the same as it was. Perhaps since the Doctor and Donna did that thing with the salt in Wild Blue Yonder...?

We then move to a bit of a mini-Doctor Who trope: reality has changed. The Doctor (or "John Smith") and Belinda are a married couple, and Poppy from Space Babies (and as glimpsed in The Story and the Engine) is their Daughter. The likes of Ruby, Mel, Kate Lethbridge-Stewart, Colonel Ibrahim and Shirley all exist within this world, which is disturbingly trad and socially conservative, especially with regards to gender roles and sexuality. Given this existence's reactionary bent, it shouldn't be a surprise for us to see Conrad, that cad, on the telly. It'll be May the 24th tomorrow. And there's this constant, Orwellian pressure not to doubt this reality, or one may be disappeared.

Oh, and there are skeletal dinosaurs walking all over the place, because of course there are.

There are some nice touches. Ruby remembers a little more because, with the events of 73 Yards, she has previous. Conrad's storybook, about the story of "Doctor Who" (was that the sound of the fourth wall collapsing again?) is by "I.M. Foreman". And even Susan Triad works at "John's" office... from tech billionaire to tea lady.

And yet there are, in another nice little assault on the fourth wall, little plot holes in this reality which make it really rather hard not to doubt. Things cannot hold. Conrad is exhausted from maintaining his ideal reality. The older Rani is beginning to resent her "mistress". The Rani is at the centre of London, with a plan that does not bode well for the continued existence of the populace. And Shirley, with the other marginalised, disabled, lets Ruby in on their plot against Conrad and... well, as in other episodes, I approve of what's been said in the socio-political commentary here, but would it not be more effective if it were a little more subtle? Subtext over didacticism? Never mind.

Inevitably, the Doctor and Belinda find themselves doubting this implausibly reality and captured... via appearances by both Rogue and Susan: with all that's going on, with there be much time to devote next season to the latter? Or is she for Season Forty-Two?

And so we have them both introduced to the Rani, as memories stir and we get some answers. The Doctor "stirred the gods"... during Wild Blue Yonder? The baby is Desiderium, god of wishes, boosted by the Vindicator and a sprinkling of technobabble. It's May the 24th, the stroke of midnight, and the outside world dissolves (the "Bone Palace", conveniently, is a fixed point). And the revelations come quick as the cliffhanger approaches. The Rani is doing this to find the "One Who Was Lost"... Omega! and one last thing... Poppy actually, genuinely is the Doctor's daughter! And... Susan's mum...?

Hmm. I enjoyed this episode, it entertained me, but will they stick the landing? That's the question. It's all contingent.

(Incidentally, I love how, in a world where we Brits have been pronouncing the word "omega" the American way for decades now, Doctor Who has accidentally preserved the older British pronunciation that's archaic in 2025... fandom aside!)

13 comments:

  1. you just know a franchise is out of ideas when the writers end up returning an old character from the past. my response to it, to steal a quote from the Nostalgia Critic was "How can something sound so right and yet feel so wrong?"

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  2. I do remember this vaguely from way back when, but never read it. You may have just tempted me.

    But yes, the War Doctor, and even more the Timeless Child stuff, has made the Doctor's past an almighty tangled mess. Bring back the simplicity of Lungbarrow and the looms...

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  3. I highly recommend it (if the link above works, it does for me) and would like you to know your reaction if you read it all the way to the end; the comic is *fantastic*. It’s amazing how Rich not only weaves together the stories of dozens of characters and slots them neatly into the overall plot, but also manages to nail the personalities of every memorable character (Doctors, companions, Sabalom Glitz) and cartoonify them so well that most of the characters are instantly recognizable. I read this a few years ago, and had a hard time trying to *not* turning another page (well, loading the next page anyway) in this epic-sized labor of love.

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  4. it taps into something deeply true for many fans. The Ten Doctors exists in a kind of perfect time capsule: a point in the fandom where the classic series had been lovingly re-evaluated, the modern series under RTD was new and exhilarating, and the future still felt wide open, full of possibility rather than division.

    It captures not just the show, but a feeling—of being a fan when it felt more like a shared celebration than a battleground of opinions. Before debates about canon and continuity fractured communities. Before the discourse felt like homework. Before “Doctor Who” became more about “what it should be” and less about “how it made us feel.”

    Rich Morris’s comic radiates the joy of the series. It revels in the silly, the sincere, the epic, and the personal, without irony or apology. There’s no need to reconcile timelines, retcons, or canon wars. You just get to love the characters, the stories, and the daft brilliance of it all.

    And yes—by the fact he just the official Ten and not having to fold in the War Doctor, or the Timeless Child, or the expanded pre-Hartnell lore—it preserves a continuity that feels both complete and intact. It lets us play in a version of the universe where things made sense enough, and more importantly, felt right.

    In that way, The Ten Doctors becomes more than just a fancomic—it becomes a refuge. A reminder of why so many of us fell in love with Doctor Who in the first place: not because it was perfect, but because it was strange and brave and human and fun. And in the middle of fan wars or divisive storytelling choices, it's comforting to know there's still a place you can go where all the Doctors are together, the companions are heroic, and the story is full of heart.

    Sometimes, nostalgia isn't about living in the past—it's about remembering the parts of it that still matter.

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  5. P.S., I hope you have not lost the link to the fan made 10 Doctors comic, so you can read it whenever you want if you were curious

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  6. Don't worry, I have the link saved into a tab to read:)

    But yes. much as I find much to enjoy in this episode there is a certain tendency both to cram in too much stuff and to lean far too heavily into characters and concepts from the show's now very distant past, thereby threatening to tell new viewers that they need to do loads of homework, much of it in black and white, before they're allowed to watch.

    This is something RTD was actually very good about not doing, about keeping references to the past subtle and not making newer viewers feel that way, between 2005 and 2010. So it's not as though the thought won't have occurred to him. What's made him change his mind now, I wonder? Because to me it certainly looks to be a deliberate choice. Does he see things differently in an age of streaming, where iPlayer and Disney Plus views are starting to make live viewing figures meaningless and the audience is no longer the same family demographic? I've no idea!

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    1. Let me know what you think of the Ten Doctors comic. You can even write a review on it if you want to

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    2. I will- remind me if I don't! I don't usually review comic bools because the format as a serial format is awkward (although I may at some point start blogging the Marvel stuff in the complete reading order from 1961 onwards...!) but I may possibly blog this one.

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  7. Have you heard of the Doctor Who fan film "El Mundo Imperfecto" on YouTube? It was a fan made film made for the 50th anniversary that features actors playing Classic and New Who Doctors and Companions. It features good acting and nice references. It is in Spanish so you have to turn on the captions but they are accurate. It offers an interesting prespective from the Spanish side of the Doctor Who fandom.

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    1. Can't initially find it- do you have a link? No issues with captions: I'm a hearing aid wearer so always use them anyway. Probably why I like my foreign cinema.

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    2. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltRxJtp38QE

      Try to add link here. Let me know if you got it.

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  8. I thought it was odd RTD has apparently turned the Rani into a version of Missy, having her suddenly obsessed with the Doctor and hinting at a romantic past. I preferred the Kate O'Mara cold distain for Baker and McCoy's Doctors, one more in tune with the then contemporary audience. It was hard not to compare Rani to Missy or the Master, especially as RTD used the same tired musical number routine act that Simm and Dhawan employed in Last of the Time Lords and Power of the Doctor. I

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  9. Initially it does seem a little that way- it'll be interesting to see how the character develops next episode. She's not really the amoral scientist of Mark of the Rani.

    Mind you, you could arguably make the same criticism of Time and the Rani. After criticising the many other deserving things...

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