TV #11 of 2026:
Classic Doctor Who, season 24
One of the last real times of change for the old British series before its long hiatus, introducing us to the final classic TV Doctor and (eventually) companion. The transition is bumpy and short, spanning only four stories and fourteen episodes in total, which is down from a height of eight and forty-two respectively back in the debut season of the show. Given that smaller size, let’s examine them each in turn:
TIME AND THE RANI (24×1 – 24×4): The titular villain was introduced two years before, but she’s more fun in the sequel now that she’s not playing second fiddle to the Master. She also spends half her screentime imitating Mel to fool an addled post-regenerative Seventh Doctor, which is a broad performance but a generally good time. The main thing to note about this serial is that we do have a new star, and rather suddenly, too; whereas every previous outgoing Doctor had regenerated at the end of an adventure that taxed them to their limits, Six merely trips and falls at the start of this one and changes there on the TARDIS floor. He’s furthermore clearly played by Sylvester McCoy in a wig, in a case of the production team making the best of a bad situation: Sixth Doctor Colin Baker was fired between seasons, and although he was invited to return and film a regeneration scene, he understandably declined. Those circumstances cast a pall over the story that follows, but McCoy’s Seven makes a decent first showing even if he is a bit more clownish than he’ll soon grow to be. The writing quality isn’t quite there yet, but it’s a breath of fresh air and an improvement over much of the Sixth Doctor era already. ★★★☆☆
PARADISE TOWERS (24×5 – 24×8). This one gets knocked some by critics, but in my view the campy acting and costumes are a part of the charm. It’s a heady social satire placed in a superbly original dystopian setting, a highrise apartment building that was supposed to be the next elevation of fine living but has instead become a graffiti-filled squalor populated with killer robots, cannibal matrons, and teenage gangs. This came out the same year as the Schwarzenegger version of The Running Man, and if you cross that movie with The Warriors, you’ll be in the right general ballpark for the tone. The worldbuilding is full of neat details like the particular slang the kids use, which hilariously from a 2026 perspective includes “unalive” as a synonym for dead. The Seventh Doctor is really coming into his own, too, and I love any premise where that errant time-traveler is aiming somewhere but winds up wildly off-course. Quite a few of the later Virgin New Adventures books would seem to take their inspiration from this serial directly, and it’s pretty easy to see why. ★★★★☆
DELTA AND THE BANNERMEN (24×9 – 24×11). I can just about glimpse the potential here, and I appreciate a few elements like the futuristic spaceship that’s been painstakingly remodeled to look like a beat-up old bus, but it needed several more rounds of rewrites for it to develop its ideas properly. As is, the scripts aren’t sufficient to sell the scope of the conflict or the different characters and cultures that populate it, and though it’s meant to be funny, the comedy suffers as a result, even before you consider the genocide plot. It’s largely a drag, in my opinion. ★★☆☆☆
DRAGONFIRE (24×12 – 24×14). Another story that feels half-baked throughout, which is a shame since it’s our introduction to Ace, who will remain by the Doctor’s side through the rest of the classic era and beyond. She’s fine, and it’s unexpected but welcome to get a repeat dose of the rogue Sabalom Glitz from the previous season, but the plot around them never really comes together in a satisfying way. Mel exits the TARDIS rather perfunctorily too, which is the wrong sort of throwback to how companions used to come and go without any sort of drama and cements her as one of the more boring main characters on the program. The writers would begin pushing and developing her replacement after this, making Ace in effect the first “modern” companion, but we get the mere glimmers of that here. And don’t even get me started on that literal cliffhanger at the end of episode 1, in which the Doctor climbs out on a ledge for no clear reason and gets stuck. The writing was probably already on the wall, as the show would last just two more seasons in this form, but the production thankfully only improves from this point onward. ★★★☆☆
Overall season rating: ★★★☆☆
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