Doctor Who: Enemy Mine – The Hybrid’s Choice & Fear Nothing Review

“Enemy Mine” is the last War Doctor Begins box set (although there is already a stand-alone release featuring Jonathan Carley’s great early War Doctor announced so thankfully it’s not the last in general) so it’s time to tie up the one dangling loose end that is Case. At the end of the previous box set she had merged with a Berserker Dalek and then was recruited by the enemy side, so does the story come to a happy end? … Well, you’ll have to wait for the final story in the set to be reviewed in a couple of days, but as for the first two stories? Let’s take a look!

Continue reading

Doctor Who: In The Bleak Midwinter – The Empty Man & Winter of the Demon Review

The final two-thirds of “In The Bleak Midwinter” has less of a Christmas focus and more of a horror / sci-fi focus with the stories happening around the festive period. It certainly helps the box feel fresher and both stories are perfectly fine in their own right, even if the second story is a little on the plain side. Let’s take a look and then relax over Christmas… before I quickly try and write the review of the new Christmas special on Boxing Day or thereabouts!

Continue reading

Doctor Who: In The Bleak Midwinter – Twenty-Four Doors in December Review

I’d like to say “I love it when a plan comes together!” but in reality it just so happens that this festive Doctor Who boxset is able to be reviewed on Christmas Eve itself, with just a little bit of “why not?” schedule managing by myself. That being said, I’m putting both halves up today because I don’t want to worry about handling my blog on Christmas Day itself, nor do I was to put up a Christmas story review after Christmas (new TV Who special aside because that actually airs on the day itself, so can’t get around that!) “Twenty-Four Doors in December” is a good old fashioned heart-warming story set in roughly modern-day revolving around a down-on-his-luck man looking for a Christmas miracle… does he get it?! Well… I mean it wouldn’t be very heart-warming otherwise, but let’s take a look and act surprised anyway!

Continue reading

Doctor Who: The War Master – Rogue Encounters Review

The latest War Master set continues the trend of stand-alone stories that vary greatly in quality and normally fall into one or two categories of “The War Master acts nice but is actually evil” or “The War Master fights an evil more evil than himself”, but I will give Rogue Encounters some praise for being a bit more outside of the box with one or two of the stories. Let’s take a look!

Continue reading

Doctor Who: Audacity – The Great Cyber-War Review

The second half of the Audacity set is, as the title plainly points out, set during the “Great Cyber-War” that was all the talk during the Fourth Doctor’s only TV encounter with the Cybermen. In fact this is a prequel to that story, showing how the war came to an end and even explains some of sillier aspects of the Cybermen from that period away in a fittingly silly way, all leading to an unexpected reveal at the end of the story that flies in the face of this “new era” being advertised, but I was happy though! Let’s take a look.

Continue reading

Doctor Who: Audacity – The Devouring Review

Now the 60th Anniversary stuff is out of the way it’s time to catch up with the Big Finish audio releases, and thankfully there isn’t actually that much to catch up on! “Audacity” was advertised as a fresh start for the Eighth Doctor, back in his younger velvet coat days with a new companion, and while this is true only until the end of the last episode of the set I can say that “The Devouring” is still a fun companion introduction story, if nothing else. Let’s take a look!

Continue reading

Doctor Who: Cold Fusion Review

“Cold Fusion” was originally a novel for the “Virgin Missing Adventures” line, pitched as a Fifth Doctor story that happened to feature the Seventh Doctor and his then-current companions from the main “New Adventures” line, but like some of the other novels (though not nearly as many as I’d like) it was turned into a full cast Audio Drama, and boy it’s a really fun one too. At six parts it moves around at a quick pace and gives lots to do for pretty much everyone while keeping a light-hearted but occasionally serious tone. Let’s take a look at what is the last audio in this marathon (as I’m going by release order of the original book, otherwise it would’ve been closer to the start!)

Continue reading

Doctor Who: The Sirens of Time Review

Where to start with “The Sirens of Time”? It was the first full cast Doctor Who audio Big Finish produced (not including the Bernice Summerfield spin-offs anyway) and as such the audio quality, script and small-part actors are all of lower quality that what you got even one year later honestly, it didn’t take long for them to get a better handle of things but this first release is rough. That being said the set up isn’t bad, in fact its one we’ve seen many times in this multi-Doctor marathon in that the first three parts are for one Doctor each then they all come together for the fourth, though there is a weird anti-Fifth Doctor thread across the story… Anyway, let’s take a look!

Continue reading

Doctor Who: Project: Lazarus (II) Review

This is an awkward release to cover as “Project: Lazarus” was released as a single story made of two halves but the issue I always ran into was that the first half, which is a self-contained Sixth Doctor story, has a major companion departure (pretty much anyway) whereas this second half, a self-contained Seventh Doctor story (featuring the Sixth Doctor, sort-of) isn’t really that important. So to give the Sixth Doctor story its rightful spotlight I’ve broke it up into two reviews, with the first half appearing next year (hopefully!) when I cover all the Evelyn Smythe stories here and there. So let’s take a look at the second story in Project: Lazarus, itself a sort of second story in a loose trilogy…

Continue reading

Doctor Who: Zagreus Review

This is a review I was hoping I would’ve got to in my sadly-put-on-hold “filling in the gaps” covering of older Who stories I had to stop a year or so ago as instead of a big anniversary story with multiple Doctors meeting its instead a near four hour story wrapping up a bunch of the Eighth Doctor and Charley Pollard storylines and setting up the next era of the audio-exclusive series (the show’s TV revival had yet to come about at this point so these audios with Paul McGann were very much the continuation of the show) so while I’m happy to talk about this now it does feel like reviewing a season finale without having reviewed any other part of the season. There is a brief scene with four Doctors talking, in case you’re wondering why it’s part of this marathon, plus each of Doctors 5-7 and a bunch of their companions play other roles in the story as well. Confused? I bet. Strap in, it’s a long story…

Continue reading