While the season includes terrible episodes such as "Fear Her" and "Love and Monsters," the impact of this season on the Doctor stays with him throughout his Tenth incarnation, making it a vital watch. Furthermore, this season also introduces the Cybermen to the modern revival of Doctor Who , giving them a new backstory for a new generation and even having the Cybermen face off against the Daleks in the thrilling season finale.
This season would ultimately be the last in the classic era of Doctor Who , and it was a real shame that the show failed to make much of an impact with its final season, though this would be indicative of the eventual hiatus that Doctor Who would experience until While this season did build on the relationship between the Seventh Doctor and Ace, there was very little in terms of compelling story that makes this season worth watching, aside from the fact that it was the final season in the classic era.
Writer living in Adelaide, Australia. Long-suffering post-graduate student and lover of pop culture from Game of Thrones to DC. Twitter: samchinson. By Sam Hutchinson Published Apr 08, Because, let's face it, Doctor Who is simply the best sci-fi show you have ever watched.
You're happy that, in recent years, it has gone up from cult status to an incredible mainstream popularity and, should a Church of Doctor Who ever be legally established, you'd be the first to apply for the post of 'High Priest and Keeper of the Sacred Relics of Rassilon'. Yes, you and millions of other counter candidates from around the world hi, there!
But let's just pretend for a few minutes that you're new to this. And yet, in interviews Russell T. He clearly loves Rose and Donna, but leaves them with a compromised version of happiness.
They go on extraordinary journeys only to end up somewhere that leaves them less than who they want to be, with Russell T. Davies being more brutally honest than Steven Moffat, who nearly always goes the romance route.
Andrew Blair is a writer and performer from Scotland. He also writes poetry, including a pamphlet of poems about a fictional version of Robert Pattinson. Skip to main content area. Photo: BBC. Join our mailing list Get the best of Den of Geek delivered right to your inbox! Share: Share on Facebook opens in a new tab Share on Twitter opens in a new tab Share on Linkedin opens in a new tab Share on email opens in a new tab Comment: Comments count: 0.
Using IMDb user rankings, we've crunched the numbers: adding up the scores of all the episodes from each Doctor's era, then working out an average score for that Doctor's episodes. Pretty technical, right? A couple of things to note before we get going — this ranking only takes into account full-length televised episodes, with no minisodes or spin-offs. And the War Doctor doesn't feature, since he doesn't have a bona fide 'era', his two TV appearances taking place in Eleventh Doctor stories.
The 13th Doctor peaked at 7. We wouldn't dream of accusing angry fan-boys of targeting the IMDb ratings as a way of venting their disdain for a female Doctor or "PC" storylines , but if that had happened, well, it would explain why a series that's done so consistently well in the ratings and proven enormously popular with viewers appears so low in this ranking. Pity the poor Eighth Doctor, who — judged solely by the TV movie — is one of the fans' least favourite incarnations.
That divisive film scored just 6. An important note: we're sticking to our guns regarding minisodes, but McGann's comeback in 'The Night of the Doctor' scored a terrific 9.
Average episode score: 6. Colin's first full series — the part season 22 — averaged at 7. But his unpopular first story — 'The Twin Dilemma', which makes up the final four episodes of season 21 — scored a paltry 5.
Unsurprisingly, the divisive season 24 McCoy's debut polls pretty low with an average of 5. But from there, it's up and up: season 25 scores an average of 7. Average episode score: 7.
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