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‘Doctor Who' Plays a Weird Waiting Game for the Beginning of Its End

‘Doctor Who' Plays a Weird Waiting Game for the Beginning of Its End

Gizmodo26-05-2025

'Wish World' straddles a peculiar line between killing time and presenting a very weird world for the Doctor and Belinda to be trapped in.
There are a lot of parallels between 'Wish World' and last year's 'The Legend of Ruby Sunday.' They are both, of course, penultimate episodes of their respective seasons of Doctor Who. They are also both built around the return of a classic Doctor Who villain, and paying off a mystery that had played out throughout their respective seasons. Unfortunately they also both share a pretty fatal parallel: they're both aimless waiting games that have little meat on their bones as they count down to a last minute cliffhanger reveal.
'Wish World' has even more of a problem than 'The Legend of Ruby Sunday,' however. That latter episode could at least hinge some tension and atmosphere on the fact that we didn't already know that the last moments were building up to the reveal of Sutekh's return (unless you read the rumors, that is). 'Wish World,' for the most part (more on that later), is building up to a dramatic moment its audience already knows while its main character doesn't: for the Doctor to encounter the returned Rani, and understand what that may mean. And that just makes it a very weird experience, even before you get to the mechanics of how Doctor Who is ticking down to that big reveal.
The titular world of 'Wish World' is a contemporary Earth before its apparently fated obliteration, except it's a sideways version of it. Thanks to the help of a convenient magic baby the Rani goes and picks up in medieval Bavaria in the opening moments—the seventh son of a seventh son of a seventh son, which doesn't feel very Evil Science Villainess of her, especially when the baby just essentially starts letting her bend reality in whatever way she wants—noted Utter Bastard Conrad from 'Lucky Day' is the apparent benevolent dictator of the world, broadcasting from a bone palace upon high in London to decide the state of the world, weather, and creepily pleasant lives of everyone in it with a little help from this magic wunderkind.
Those subjects include the Doctor and Belinda, who are now Mr. John Smith and his wife Belinda, living a retro-modern nuclear family dream with their baby daughter Poppy as Belinda revels in being a stay-at-home mom and Mr. Smith goes to work at UNIT, now a unified insurance team rather than a vanguard against alien threats. The creepy vibe of this overtly heteronormative existence is in part the point, it turns out: everyone makes very pointed acknowledgements about the role of women being good daughters, good wives, and then good mothers, and when 'Mr. Smith' passingly describes a male co-worker (none other than Colonel Ibrahim, blissfully unaware of who he's meant to be) as handsome, reality almost turns in on itself around him, as if the mere thought of something not cisgender or heterosexual is an affront to this world that Conrad has wished up for everyone.
It turns out we can also add 'Hates Disabled People' to the Bumper List of Conrad's Shitty Bigotries, because aside from retrograde thoughts about women and queer people, his bigotry around disabled people has led to an underground society of disabled people who, because they are 'unseen' by Conrad in so much that he doesn't ever think or care about them, are practically invisible to the world around them… except Ruby Sunday, who's likewise unaffected by what's going on around her, letting her team up with Shirley and her friends in the disabled camp to start trying to figure out what's going on. Good job Conrad really sucks in some very specific ways!
This is just about where 'Wish World' checks out of trying to tell much more of a story, which is a shame, because the weird creepy vibes are quite good, even if they also mean continued exposure to Conrad (again, no disrespect to Jonah Hauer-King, he's just incredibly good at playing a man with utterly rancid vibes). After 'Mr. Smith' has his brush with the curse of fatal compulsory heterosexuality (spurred on again by a wild, random returning cameo from Jonathan Groff's Rogue, who gets a message out to the Doctor to help him doubt the nature of the Wish World by basically saying 'I am gay and in a hell dimension but please remember that you like men!'), his entire role in the episode is to sit around swirling with doubt about the nature of his existence until he remembers that he's the Doctor. After she links up with Shirley, Ruby's 'investigation' essentially slams the brakes on its own momentum so the two of them can basically look up from below the giant bone palace as it sits above London.
And then there's the Rani, or rather the Ranis plural, who are sitting up in that aforementioned bone palace, who are also largely just biding their time, as the latest incarnation of the renegade Time Lady practically begs the Doctor to figure out the world that she's dominating through Conrad is a falsehood, so he can remember who he is, and more importantly, who she is. But it's a weird vibe of the less intentional sort than those given off by Conrad's Bigot Paradise. The episode is, essentially, ticking down until you get to that moment of realization between the Doctor and the Rani, even after she spends much of the third act of 'Wish World' expositing to his face in an attempt to get the artifice to crumble around him once and for all.
But because we already know that she's the Rani, and that the Doctor is not an insurance salesman named John Smith, there's no tension or mystery in what's being built towards, you're just a knowing audience waiting for the shoe to drop for the show's protagonist, a shoe you've known all along is going to drop. At least 'The Legend of Ruby Sunday' had the mystery of Susan Triad to build a sense of dread around, even if there wasn't much more to the episode beyond that—all 'Wish World' has is a compelling creepy concept it largely discards halfway through and then a literal ticking clock as we wait for the episode's final moments.
So it turns out 'Wish World' needs to throw in another mystery reveal right at the last moment, because the Doctor realizing who the Rani is is not that much of an actual reveal to us any more. It turns out the Rani's big ticking clock counting down to May 24 has been powered by collecting the doubts of anyone who's questioned Conrad's reality, the Doctor included, juicing up the Vindicator the Doctor and Belinda have charged throughout the season even further to rip a hole through Earth and reality itself… opening up a dimension where none other than Omega, the ancient, godlike co-founder of Time Lord society (well, Timeless Child stuff nonwithstanding!), awaits.
Admittedly 'Wish World' does get the leg up on 'Legend of Ruby Sunday' by putting its 'devastating destruction of pretty much everyone but our hero that will be inevitably undone next episode' moment before the cliffhanger this time, as we watch Earth splinter apart and collapse into the underverse, seemingly blipping everyone but the Doctor, Conrad, and the Ranis out of existence, Belinda included. But the Omega reveal is more confusing than it is shocking in the moment, because it feels like it comes out of nowhere after the episode builds towards an already dramatically compromised reveal. Sure, we don't know why the Rani is doing all this weird stuff with Conrad and a magic baby, but the episode never treats that as a mystery to interrogate, it's just ticking in the background while the Rani yearns for the Doctor to recognize her.
So when Omega is invoked—we don't see him, it's just his name being dropped—what could've been something 'Wish World' built to just largely comes out of left field (unless you already happened to see that Russell T Davies teased on Instagram last week that there was a mystery third party in the villainous mix between Conrad and the Ranis, but should you have to check the showrunner's social media for suitable dramatic tension?). The Rani and the Doctor's encounter is all that 'Wish World' was building toward up to that point, and because it's building up to it for all of its runtime, the moment itself doesn't really get to sit beyond the climactic final minutes, robbing it of what little tension could remain.
And so again, we're left waiting to see if next week's grand finale will retroactively make this week's preparation feel worth the clock-ticking… and if we really needed the Rani's return to herald Omega, and all the implications that then has for the Time Lords and Gallifrey at large beyond that. That feels like a lot to dig into, at least. Imagine if we'd gotten a two-part finale that actually leveraged its time to do just that?

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DOCTOR WHO: 5 Jaw-Dropping Moments From the Season 2 Finale
DOCTOR WHO: 5 Jaw-Dropping Moments From the Season 2 Finale

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DOCTOR WHO: 5 Jaw-Dropping Moments From the Season 2 Finale

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Cillian Murphy's Role in the '28 Years Later' Trilogy Is Coming Later Than We Hoped
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Writer Bernardine Evaristo receives lifetime accolade for a career of breaking boundaries
Writer Bernardine Evaristo receives lifetime accolade for a career of breaking boundaries

Associated Press

time3 hours ago

  • Associated Press

Writer Bernardine Evaristo receives lifetime accolade for a career of breaking boundaries

LONDON (AP) — Bernardine Evaristo doesn't like boundaries. For the Booker Prize -winning novelist, rules about genre, grammar or what a working-class biracial woman can achieve are all to be challenged and swept away. Evaristo was announced Wednesday as recipient of the 100,000-pound ($135,000) Women's Prize Outstanding Contribution Award for her 'transformative impact on literature and her unwavering dedication to uplifting under-represented voices.' Evaristo, 66, received the prize both for her work to help promote women and writers of color, and for writing that takes in poetry, a memoir and seven novels including the Booker-winning 'Girl, Woman, Other.' 'I just go wherever my imagination takes me,' she said. 'I didn't want to write the kind of novels that would take you on a predictable emotional or moral journey.' An eclectic output Evaristo had already explored autobiographical fiction, historical settings and alternate realities when she won the Booker in 2019 for 'Girl Woman, Other,' a polyphonic novel told from the point of view of a dozen characters, largely Black women, with widely varying ages, experiences and sexualities. She was the first woman of African heritage to be awarded the prize, which was founded in 1969 and has a reputation for transforming writers' careers. When she won, Evaristo was 60 and had been a writer for decades. She says the recognition 'came at the right time for me.' 'Maybe I wouldn't have handled it so well if I was younger,' she told The Associated Press at her London home. 'It changed my career –- in terms of book sales, foreign rights, translation, the way in which I was viewed as a writer. Various other opportunities came my way. And I felt that I had the foundations to handle that.' Evaristo's house on a quiet suburban street is bright and comfortable, with wooden floors, vibrant textiles and a large wooden writing desk by the front window. Large photos of her Nigerian paternal grandparents hang on one wall. Her work often draws on her roots as the London-born child of a Nigerian father and white British mother. Like much of Evaristo's work, 'Girl, Woman, Other' eludes classification. She calls it 'fusion fiction' for its melding of poetry and prose into a novel that relishes the texture and rhythm of language. 'I kind of dispense with the rules of grammar,' she said. 'I think I have 12 full stops in the novel.' If that sounds dauntingly experimental, readers didn't think so. 'Girl, Woman, Other' has sold more than 1 million copies and was chosen as one of Barack Obama's books of the year. Passion for poetry Evaristo traces her love of poetry to the church services of her Catholic childhood, where she soaked up the rhythms of the Bible and sermons, 'without realizing I was absorbing poetry.' When she started writing novels, the love of poetry remained, along with a desire to tell stories of the African diaspora. One of her first major successes, 'The Emperor's Babe,' is a verse novel set in Roman Britain. 'Most people think the Black history of Britain only began in the 20th century,' Evaristo said. 'I wanted to write about a Black presence in Roman Britain -– because there was a Black presence in Roman Britain 1,800 years ago.' Another novel, 'Blonde Roots,' is set in an alternative historical timeline in which Africans have enslaved Europeans, and was nominated for a major science-fiction award. 'Mr Loverman,' which centers on a closeted gay 70-something Antiguan Londoner, was an attempt to move beyond cliched images of Britain's postwar Caribbean immigrants. It was recently made into a BBC television series starring Lennie James and Sharon D. Clarke. Levelling the playing field Her latest award is a one-off accolade marking the 30th anniversary of the annual Women's Prizes for English-language fiction and nonfiction. Women's Prize founder Kate Mosse said Evaristo's 'dazzling skill and imagination, and her courage to take risks and offer readers a pathway into diverse and multifarious worlds over a 40-year career made her the ideal recipient.' Evaristo, who teaches creative writing at Brunel University of London, plans to use the prize money to help other women writers through an as-yet undisclosed project. She has long been involved with projects to level the playing field for under-represented writers, and is especially proud of Complete Works, a mentoring program for poets of color that she ran for a decade. 'I set that up because I initiated research into how many poets of color were getting published in Britain at that time, and it was under 1%' of the total, she said. A decade later, it was 10%. 'It really has helped shift the poetry landscape in the U.K.,' she said. Partial progress Evaristo followed 'Girl, Woman, Other' with 'Manifesto,' a memoir that recounts the stark racism of her 1960s London childhood, as well as her lifelong battle for creative expression and freedom. If Evaristo grew up as an outsider, these days she is ensconced in the arts establishment: professor, Booker winner, Officer of the Order of the British Empire, or OBE, and president of the 200-year-old Royal Society of Literature. That milestone -– she's the first person of color and the second woman to head the RSL -– has not been trouble-free. The society has been ruffled by free speech tows and arguments over attempts to bring in younger writers and diversify its ranks -– moves seen by some as watering down the accolade of membership. Evaristo doesn't want to talk about the controversy, but notes that as figurehead president she does not run the society. She says Britain has come a long way since her childhood but 'we have to be vigilant.' 'The country I grew up in is not the country I'm in today,' she said. 'We've made a lot of progress, and I feel that we need to work hard to maintain it, especially in the current political climate where it feels as if the forces are against progress, and proudly so. 'Working towards an anti-racist society is something that we should value, and I hope we do, and that we don't backslide too much.'

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