‘The Brilliant Book of Doctor Who 2012’ book review
More wittily ingenious than any mainstream TV tie-in book has a right to be, this is the Doctor Who annual we always wanted from our childhoods.
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More wittily ingenious than any mainstream TV tie-in book has a right to be, this is the Doctor Who annual we always wanted from our childhoods.
For many of us, Torchwood: Miracle Day was a disappointment. Too baggy and too sprawling a journey of ten weeks, it felt like a drunken meander through various high-octane scenarios. And, like many a drunken meander, it began with ill-judged certainty, became directionless before leading to violence, then ultimately left us scratching our heads, questioning … >
Allegations of soapiness and preposterousness have dogged this year’s series. So – what went wrong with Series 2, and where should Downton go from here?
You don’t maintain your status as television’s premier drama by being safe. Downton Abbey was better than this. It needs to be again.
This lavish, revised edition of 2007’s Doctor Who Encyclopedia manages exhaustively to catalogue almost every onscreen detail of the revised series.
In the final episode of the period drama’s second series, there’s excitement in the air with the wedding approaching, but will Branson’s plans rattle everyone?
With Miranda‘s second series arriving on DVD next week, we look back at the ups and downs and ups again of the traditional British studio sitcom.
In the Downton universe, simple gallantry will always win out over minor medical considerations, like paralysis of the spine and stuff.
In the next episode of Julian Fellowes’ period drama, a new development stuns the family. How long can Sybil and Branson keep their secret?
Blatantly targeting the Christmas book-buying market, The Silent Stars Go By is as traditional a slice of Who storytelling as you’d expect from the festive season.