logo
Doctor Who's Latest Story Was About the Power of Doctor Who Itself

Doctor Who's Latest Story Was About the Power of Doctor Who Itself

Gizmodo12-05-2025

As Doctor Who has, inch-by-inch, diversified the casting of its heroes, its willingness to tell stories directly influenced by those decisions has trailed a little behind. When Jodie Whittaker became the 13th Doctor, only a few of her stories ultimately engaged with what it meant that the Doctor now inhabited a female body. With the arrival of Ncuti Gatwa in the TARDIS last year, his debut season tackled his status as the first Black man and the first openly queer actor to play the Time Lord to… mixed success, especially on the former.
But now, in the strongest episode of his sophomore season yet, we have a story that nails exploring the Doctor's latest identity, because it allows itself the grace of being up front about engaging with that idea.
Last season's 'Dot and Bubble' played with the notion of the Doctor's racial identity by trapping him on a planet of white supremacists being eaten by giant slug monsters, but by saving that reveal for its closing scene as a gotcha for the Doctor and the audience alike, the episode failed to really engage with what it meant for the Doctor's identity as a Black man to be called into question outside of a single moment. 'The Story and the Engine,' then, by playwright Inua Ellams, stands as an interesting contrast. It is Gatwa's first Doctor Who script written entirely by a person of color (this season's 'The Well' was co-credited between Russell T Davies and Sharma Angel-Walfall). It is also a story that explicitly leverages Gatwa's identity as a Black man to tell a story that can only be told in such a circumstance.
But perhaps most crucially of all that in contrast, is that it is a story that uses that identity to tell a story of joy, of the universality and power of storytelling, something that connects the Doctor to the people they yearn to protect. And it can only do so by clearly establishing that connection between the story being told, and its setting, to the Doctor's current identity from the get-go.
Where that story takes place is Lagos, Nigeria, as the Doctor and Belinda continue to charge up their 'try and find 2025 London' device by hopping around in time and space. Landing in Lagos, the Doctor gets what he needs almost immediately, but is reluctant to move on quickly: there's a local barbershop, ran by a man named Omo (Sule Rimi), that he loves visiting. We've seen Gatwa's Doctor play with myriad styles, especially with his hair, but as Belinda points out to him, he has a massive time ship that does all that for him. The reason Omo's shop is special, the Doctor argues, is because it's a place that makes his current incarnation feel seen, in a way he hasn't before.
Although it's not the first time the Doctor has ever been Black (as we get a wonderful nod to with a brief surprise appearance by Jo Martin's Fugitive Doctor later on), having the Doctor articulate to Belinda his desire to feel recognized and welcomed in spaces as a Black man–and having them both, as the first TARDIS team completely made up of people of color, connect over that in their developing friendship–is an incredibly compelling idea, and it's one that really resonates compared to the times this Doctor's racial identity has been used in stories only to serve as a point of conflict, like 'Dot and Bubble' or briefly in 'Lux'.
After Belinda acquiesces and lets the Doctor check in for a trim though, things kick into high gear. It turns out Omo's shop is under new management, a mysterious figure known only as the Barber (Ariyon Bakare), who has trapped Omo and several other men there, wrenching the shop out of time and space to keep them all in an endless cycle of haircuts and storytelling: their tales of history and myth powering a massive mechanical spider that is whisking the Barber and his ally Abena, the daughter of Anansi (Michelle Asante), on a quest for vengeance against the gods themselves. The Barber, it turns out, helped spread the myths of countless gods and folklores throughout human history by creating a Nexus, a literal web of storytelling and culture that spread their reach and influence but also laid the fundamental groundwork for human civilization itself, the act of sharing and developing thousands of years of stories, passed on through generations. No longer needing him with the Nexus' creation, the gods cast the Barber out, and now he wants to destroy it, and take them with it.
Much of this plays out within the confines of Omo's barbershop, an infinitely tiny space for all these big ideas to burst out of, even if it's also revealed that said barbershop is currently temporally displaced and being carried about an alternate dimension by a giant mechanical spider. At times, 'The Story and the Engine' threatens to lose itself in the strains of bandying about all these big, heady ideas, but where episodes before it this season have hit those issues, here, it almost becomes part of the metatext of Doctor Who itself. After all, as this episode reminds us, what bigger story is there out there than the Doctor themselves, countless lives lived over and over? The Doctor's status as this being who has seen so many histories and futures is the crux of the whole premise. It's why Omo tells the Barber about them in the first place; it's a story left untold—that the Fugitive Doctor once promised to free Abena from the clutches of her father, but failed to do so, telling her and us in a brief moment that she was wrapped up in a story for another time—that creates the conflict between the Doctor and Abena in the first place.
It's how, ultimately, the Doctor manages to save the day, tempting the Barber with himself as the simplest story ever told: they live, they die, they are reborn. What saves the day in 'The Story and the Engine' is not necessarily the Doctor's brains or any kind of technobabble, it's the very fact that they are the star of the story that is Doctor Who, an ongoing, living, breathing narrative that stretches across life after life, is shared between generations of people. The Doctor isn't just a story of potentiality, but one so powerful it manages to overwhelm the Barber's engine, freeing everyone trapped in the shop and guiding the Barber and Abena away from their misguided quest for revenge.
That might be a story that could've been told with any incarnation of the Doctor–and that is arguably part of the point, given it's the Doctor's narrative potentiality that proves key to foiling the Barber's plans. But 'The Story and the Engine' also directly engages with beats that re-iterate that this is a story that could have only been told by pushing the Doctor's story to a place where people of color can be part of it, as well. It's not just in the yearning for community the Doctor seeks by going to Omo's shop in the first place, it becomes even more important when Abena decides to help the Doctor by braiding his hair with a map to the heart of the Spider so he can stop it, drawing on real-world historical traditions of braided hair being used to hide messages and maps in the era of colonialism and the slave trade. 'The Story and the Engine' is laser-focused on the power of Doctor Who as a story, metatextually or otherwise, but there's also a lot of power in how it chooses to tell this story intertwined with how it leverages Gatwa's identity as the first Black, queer man to be a major player in that story.
This era of Doctor Who in particular has been very interested in the metanarratives of stories, and with playing of awareness of them for both the audience and our heroes alike. Sometimes it's worth celebrating for a moment, as we get to here, that that story can now help connect even more people from different backgrounds and welcome them to be a part of it. And that's just vital a story to tell with the first mainline Doctor played by a man of color as any story of prejudice is.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dutch beach beasts find a final resting place in a new exhibition
Dutch beach beasts find a final resting place in a new exhibition

Associated Press

time30 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Dutch beach beasts find a final resting place in a new exhibition

DELFT, Netherlands (AP) — The famous wind-powered beach beasts have scuttled along the Dutch North Sea coast, into a swanky Miami art show and even onto 'The Simpsons.' Now. they have a final resting place in a Dutch city most famous for 'Girl with a Pearl Earring' painter Johannes Vermeer and blue-painted pottery. The 'bones' of Theo Jansen's 'strandbeesten' — beach animals in Dutch — have taken over a former cable factory in Delft, the small city in the western Netherlands that Jansen has called home for decades. 'During the years, there has been a sort of evolutionary history, you could say. And you could see these animals as sort of natural historical objects,' the 77-year old artist told The Associated Press before the installation's opening. The Strandbeesten Mortuary, as the exhibition is called, follows the various versions of the mobile sculptures since 1990 when Jansen created the first one from plastic pipes and tape. As the animals evolved, Jansen incorporated plastic bottles, wooden planks, cloth and cardboard. The life and death cycle of these famous animals — formed mostly out of PVC pipes — has left behind an impressive fossil record, which is on display at the exhibition. Marloes Koster, who organized the exhibition for Delft's Prinsenhof Museum, said that Jansen's ultimate goal is to create a beast that will live forever. 'He's not there yet, so these are the ones that didn't make it,' she added. The museum is undergoing major renovations, so Koster and her colleagues have been putting together arts and culture events at alternative venues around the city while the building is shut. Born near the North Sea, Jansen grew up captivated by the wind that often hits the Dutch coastline. He harnessed it to allow his animals to 'walk' along the beach. Every year, he creates a new strandbeest and, at the end of the summer, declares the animal dead. 'All summer I do experiments, and in the fall I'm a little bit wiser (about) how these animals should survive in the future,' Jansen said. Many of the visitors to the opening of the exhibition had followed Jansen's work for years and were keen to understand how the strandbeesten had changed over time. 'You see a kind of development in the way he does things. So they start out very simple, and then it gets increasingly complicated. So they evolve,' said Cor Nonhof, a Delft local who had come to see the exhibition with his wife. Even at the opening, Jansen was already keen to return to the beach to work on the latest evolution of his strandbeesten. 'I cannot do anything else,' Jansen said. 'And I am very happy with that.'

Wynne Evans engaged to girlfriend Liz Brookes following Strictly Come Dancing controversy
Wynne Evans engaged to girlfriend Liz Brookes following Strictly Come Dancing controversy

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Wynne Evans engaged to girlfriend Liz Brookes following Strictly Come Dancing controversy

Former Strictly Come Dancing star Wynne Evans has announced an engagement to his girlfriend Liz Brookes, after proposing during a holiday to Morocco last weekend. The Welsh opera singer, best known as the face of advertisements for price comparison company revealed the 'big news' on Instagram. Evans, 53, told his followers: 'Somewhere between the couscous, the camels, and me limping around the souks like a man with no spatial awareness, I proposed to Liz — and she said yes! (No take-backs, I've checked.)' Sharing a photo of himself down on one knee, Evans said of his future wife: 'She's clever, she's kind, she's got excellent taste in men. Absolutely no idea how I pulled that off, but here we are! Feeling very lucky, very happy, and just a tiny bit smug.' The news comes after Evans, who was previously the host of a BBC Radio Wales breakfast show, was dropped by the BBC after apologising for making 'inappropriate and unacceptable' remarks during the Strictly live tour launch last December. Evans' apology at the start of this year arrived months after his controversial time on the 2024 series of Strictly. During live one episode, he was spotted engaging in a 'silly inside joke' with his professional dance partner, Katya Jones, which saw her awkwardly remove his hand from her waist. In another moment, Jones was seen avoiding a high-five offered by Evans – but after rumours circulated of a behind-the-scenes feud, the pair told viewers it was part of 'a running joke'. While announcing the BBC had dropped him, Evans thanked his fans for their support, stating on Instagram: 'These past few months, your love has been the light in my darkest days. Every message, every word of encouragement, every moment you stood by me has carried me through more than you could ever know. 'And because you've given me so much, I need to tell you this. It breaks my heart to say the BBC has decided not to renew my contract. That show wasn't just work – it was home. It was us. We laughed, we cried, we sang like nobody was listening. And somehow, through the airwaves, we became a family.' Brookes, 50, owns a successful events company in Cardiff, and met Evans at one of her business's parties in Wales. The opera singer asked Brookes out the following day and they have been together for the past 18 months. Evans was previously married to singer Tanwen Evans, 48, with whom he shares two children: Ismay and Taliesin. They divorced in 2016.

Edinburgh residents baffled as streets become 'dystopian future' for film set
Edinburgh residents baffled as streets become 'dystopian future' for film set

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Edinburgh residents baffled as streets become 'dystopian future' for film set

Edinburgh residents opened their windows to find themselves in the future, after a film set transformed the city streets. Those in the old town will have spotted cast and crew on set, with several spots in the area taken over for filming. The Warner Bros set is understood to be JJ Abrams upcoming movie, Ghostwriter. It's rumoured to have a cast including the likes of Samuel L Jackson, Glen Powell, Jenna Ortega and Emma Mackey. While details have been kept under wraps, the film is said to be a sci-fi story that tells of a writer whose fictional, futuristic world turns out to be very much real. READ MORE: Edinburgh resident makes disturbing discovery after noticing 'gate left open' READ MORE: Popular Edinburgh Old Town pub transformed as filming gets underway in capital Production is also said to be happening in London. Spots in Edinburgh such as West College Street, Merchant Street, and Chambers Street are being used as filming locations. On Tuesday, Candlemaker Row was transformed into a dystopian set, with residents impressed One posted to TikTok: "POV - you're walking around Edinburgh and enter a dystopian future." Sign up for Edinburgh Live newsletters for more headlines straight to your inbox Another resident responded: "Warner Bros trucks have been seen in the city along with a couple of big actors." A second asked: "Most important question, will this affect Greggs opening time?" Locals first spotted the cast and crew setting up in Holyrood Park. It's understood that the film is set for release in 2026, though this is yet to be confirmed. Join Edinburgh Live's Whatsapp Community here and get the latest news sent straight to your messages. One lifelong Samuel L Jackson fan claims to have had an interaction with his hero while the star is here filming in Edinburgh. Matt's partner, Rosie, told Edinburgh Live: "Matt finally had his dream come true this week when the legendary actor was spotted filming scenes for his new movie Ghostwriter in the city. "Determined not to miss his hero, Matt camped out for 15 hours near the filming location with snacks, a fold-up chair, and unshakable optimism. Armed with only hope and a homemade sign that read 'I've had it with these motherlovin' waits!' he finally got the moment he'd waited a lifetime for."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store