Showing posts with label disney plus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disney plus. Show all posts

Wednesday, 3 September 2025

The undead assemble in Marvel Zombies



The spooky season is coming to Disney+. On Tuesday, Marvel Animation dropped an official trailer for Marvel Zombies.



Read the official synopsis:

"After the Avengers are overtaken by a zombie plague, a desperate group of survivors discover the key to bringing an end to the super-powered undead, racing across a dystopian landscape and risking life and limb to save their world."

The voice cast includes Elizabeth Olsen, Paul Rudd, Florence Pugh, David Harbour, Tessa Thompson, Simu Liu, Awkwafina, Hailee Steinfeld, Wyatt Russell, Randall Park, Iman Vellani and Dominique Thorne.

The ghoulish new four-part series premieres exlusively on Disney+ on 24th September.

Are you looking forward to Marvel Zombies on Disney+? Let me know in the comments below.

Friday, 22 August 2025

Doctor Who is going nowhere



Ever since Ncuti Gatwa announced his departure from Doctor Who after only two seasons, fans (myself included) have speculated about the beloved series' uncertain future in partnership with Disney+.

Kate Phillips, the BBC’s new chief content officer, has appeared at the Edinburgh TV Festival and aimed to quell concerns and speculation about the franchise’s future:

“Rest assured, Doctor Who is going nowhere. Disney has been a great partnership – and it continues with The War Between The Land And The Sea next year – but going forward, with or without Disney, Doctor Who will still be on the BBC … The TARDIS is going nowhere.”

Longtime fans (myself included) have been here before, back in the eighties. Let's hope it's not another sixteen years before a new series.

What are your thoughts on the future of Doctor Who? Let me know in the comments below.

Thursday, 14 August 2025

Alien: Earth



Noah Hawley's Alien prequel series is a blood-stained Peter Pan parable, stirring subconscious fears of a life-changing childhood trauma on Disney+.

For the first few years of rehabilitation following an unreported head injury witnessed by my primary school teacher and classmates, which culminated in a brain haemorrhage and diagnosis of paraplegia after awaking from a coma, I didn't think I'd live long enough to become an adult.

My parents shared that fear and initially thought the hospital had sent me home to die. The reality was that medical staff ignored the advice of the senior consultant; I was immunocompromised, and within days, I was readmitted.

At the time, I was obsessed with puzzles, LEGO, Doctor Who, The Muppets and The Six Million Dollar Man. The latter's toy line from Kenner would play a crucial role in trauma therapy, as a 5-year-old, to begin to make sense of what had happened and adapt. I was the boy who lived.

So, I found myself empathising with Wendy, sublimely played by Sydney Chandler. Developed by Prodigy, a competitor of Weyland-Yutani, she is the first hybrid synthetic with the consciousness of a terminally ill child. A chance at immortality, but at what for-profit price?

Wendy's first scenes with the Lost Boys were profoundly poignant as I'd befriended children on the hospital ward who didn't get to go home. Hawley deftly cuts between the Maginot's monstrous managerie and children bravely facing tragedy with hope.

Hawley has said of the Alien franchise: “For me, the first film may be the best horror movie ever made, the second film may be the best action movie ever made.”

The unmistakable look and feel of Alien DNA permeates Alien: Earth. And I got goosebumps as composer Jeff Russo, like Benjamin Wallfisch (Alien: Romulus), adroitly weaves familiar franchise leitmotifs from Jerry Goldsmith, James Horner and more into a brave new world of MU/TH/UR.

Hawley's Neverland examines existential fears of climate change, artificial intelligence (AI), and tech titans vying to control our lives, but never forgets its body horror roots in the biomechanical grotesqueries of H.R. Giger unleashed by Ridley Scott in Alien.

Like many, I watched the original Alien far too young and the titular xenomorph has stalked my nightmares and woven itself into the fabric of fragmented memories of a childhood trauma featuring creepy hospital corridors, flickering neon lights and faceless adults.

Alien: Earth opens with one of the best pilot episodes of all time. Alien has found its Andor.

Have you watched Alien: Earth on Disney+? Let me know in the comments below.

Monday, 11 August 2025

Alien at the Natural History Museum



Alien: Earth crash-lands this week on Disney+, and an alien egg is on display at the London Natural History Museum.

For the next fortnight, visitors and fans alike can bear witness to the first stage in the life cycle of the titular xenomorph in this special display, celebrating the release of FX’s Alien: Earth, a new sci-fi series from Emmy Award-winning Noah Hawley (Fargo).

Professor Caroline Smith, planetary scientist at the Natural History Museum, says: "Extraterrestrial life and the secrets of the solar system have forever fascinated humans. It's a treat to have one of the most iconic depictions of alien life opposite our fantastic exhibition, which reveals the very latest scientific discoveries as it explores the age-old question - are we alone in the universe?"

Read the official synopsis for Alien: Earth:

“When the mysterious deep space research vessel USCSS Maginot crash-lands on Earth, “Wendy” (Sydney Chandler) and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet’s greatest threat in FX’s “Alien: Earth.”

In the year 2120, the Earth is governed by five corporations: Prodigy, Weyland-Yutani, Lynch, Dynamic and Threshold. In this Corporate Era, cyborgs (humans with both biological and artificial parts) and synthetics (humanoid robots with artificial intelligence) exist alongside humans. But the game is changed when the wunderkind Founder and CEO of Prodigy Corporation unlocks a new technological advancement: hybrids (humanoid robots infused with human consciousness). The first hybrid prototype named “Wendy” marks a new dawn in the race for immortality. After Weyland-Yutani’s spaceship collides into Prodigy City, “Wendy” and the other hybrids encounter mysterious life forms more terrifying than anyone could have ever imagined.”


The cast for Alien: Earth includes Sydney Chandler (Don't Worry Darling), Alex Lawther (Andor), Samuel Blenkin (The Sandman), Kit Young (Shadow and Bone), Essie Davis (Assassin's Creed), Adarsh Gourav (The White Tiger) and Timothy Olyphant (The Mandalorian).

Alien: Earth's first two episodes premiere exclusively on Disney+ on 13th August.

Are you looking forward to Alien: Earth? Let me know in the comments below.

Friday, 8 August 2025

Hulu goes global on Disney+



After 4 years, Star on Disney+ internationally will be rebranded as Hulu later this year as the House of Mouse consolidates its streaming services and focuses on the Disney+ app after buying out Comcast’s stake in Hulu.

Star ushered in grown-up content on Disney+ in 2021. However, Hulu is synonymous with prestige television from The Bear to Shōgun, and has far greater brand recognition. In 2009, Hulu and ITV almost signed a content deal.

Disney+ currently comprises Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars and National Geographic, with the ESPN and Star brands available in selected territories.

“Work is already underway to continue enhancing our technology, and over the coming months, we will be implementing numerous improvements within the Disney+ app, including exciting new features and a more personalised homepage,” said Disney in a statement. “All of this work will culminate with the unified Disney+ and Hulu streaming app experience that will be available to consumers next year.”

Could UK-based Disney+ subscribers (myself included) see Hulu launched as soon as next week to tie in with Alien: Earth?

What are your thoughts on Hulu launching internationally on Disney+? Let me know in the comments below.

Tuesday, 5 August 2025

Star Wars fans urged to back Boba Fett



Appearing at the Tampa Bay Comic Convention, Temuera Morrison, who has played bounty hunters Jango Fett and Boba Fett, was asked about his involvement in future Star Wars projects.

“No,” Morrison answered. “We really have to treasure those moments now. All of you need to send a fax, or a letter or an email to those powers-that-be at Lucasfilm. I’m sure they’d love to hear from everyone. Please give Daniel Logan and Temuera Morrison another chance and put them somewhere.”

The enigmatic and mysterious mercenary Boba Fett was first introduced in an animated segment during the infamous Star Wars Holiday Special. However, most fans (outside the US) wouldn't have known about him until Kenner's mail-away action figure promotion before appearing in Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back, played by the late Jeremy Bulloch.

The bounty hunter's apparent demise in Star Wars: Return of the Jedi was less than satisfactory and was used mostly for comedic effect. A school friend and I were left nonplussed and, wrongly, assumed he'd escape moments after the Rebels had destroyed Jabba's Sail Barge as creator George Lucas rushed to tie up loose ends leftover from Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back and sell more toys.

Daniel Logan, who played a young Boba Fett in the prequel trilogy and appeared alongside Morrison on the panel, reflected on his experience being part of the Star Wars franchise.

"The crazy part with Star Wars is that you don’t know about filming anything until like, a week, or maybe two, or even less than that, right?" he said.

"But the thing is, Temuera is the greediest person in Star Wars. He’s played so many characters, he’s got the most characters in Star Wars, if you go down the line — from Jango, Boba, all of the Clones, Rex, Cody, Fives — he’s got the most characters in Star Wars."

Logan added, "There’s going to be plenty of opportunities. Especially for this guy, especially with this era of Star Wars, like Ahsoka, and all this stuff set after Return of the Jedi."

Morrison last played the fan-favourite bounty hunter in The Book of Boba Fett and confirmed he won't be appearing in The Mandalorian and Grogu movie next year.

If you hadn't already guessed, Boba Fett's one of my favourite characters from the franchise and the 12-inch action figure was a cherished Christmas gift from childhood - I was too excited to sleep after discovering Santa had left a smuggler's bounty on the landing.

Would you like to see the return of Boba Fett? Let me know in the comments below.

Thursday, 24 July 2025

Alien: Earth first look



San Diego Comic-Con (SDCC) is currently underway. Go behind the scenes on the set of FX’s Alien: Earth and see what’s in store for humanity when technology and biology collide — with deadly consequences.



Read the official synopsis:

“When the mysterious deep space research vessel USCSS Maginot crash-lands on Earth, “Wendy” (Sydney Chandler) and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet’s greatest threat in FX’s “Alien: Earth.”

In the year 2120, the Earth is governed by five corporations: Prodigy, Weyland-Yutani, Lynch, Dynamic and Threshold. In this Corporate Era, cyborgs (humans with both biological and artificial parts) and synthetics (humanoid robots with artificial intelligence) exist alongside humans. But the game is changed when the wunderkind Founder and CEO of Prodigy Corporation unlocks a new technological advancement: hybrids (humanoid robots infused with human consciousness). The first hybrid prototype named “Wendy” marks a new dawn in the race for immortality. After Weyland-Yutani’s spaceship collides into Prodigy City, “Wendy” and the other hybrids encounter mysterious life forms more terrifying than anyone could have ever imagined.”


The cast for Alien: Earth includes Sydney Chandler (Don't Worry Darling), Alex Lawther (Andor), Samuel Blenkin (The Sandman), Kit Young (Shadow and Bone), Essie Davis (Assassin's Creed), Adarsh Gourav (The White Tiger) and Timothy Olyphant (The Mandalorian).

The tech bros are the monsters in Noah Hawley's (Fargo) upcoming series.

Alien: Earth premieres only on Hulu and Disney+ on 13th August.

Are you looking forward to Alien: Earth? Let me know in the comments below.

Sunday, 20 July 2025

Alien: Earth's frightening flora and fauna



Alien: Earth is less than a month away, and the second official trailer teases Noah Hawley's (Fargo) spin-off series is leaning heavily into classic sci-fi movies from The Thing from Another World to Invasion of the Body Snatchers. It! The Terror from Beyond Space was an inspiration for the original Alien.



Read the official synopsis:

“When the mysterious deep space research vessel USCSS Maginot crash-lands on Earth, “Wendy” (Sydney Chandler) and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet’s greatest threat in FX’s “Alien: Earth.”

In the year 2120, the Earth is governed by five corporations: Prodigy, Weyland-Yutani, Lynch, Dynamic and Threshold. In this Corporate Era, cyborgs (humans with both biological and artificial parts) and synthetics (humanoid robots with artificial intelligence) exist alongside humans. But the game is changed when the wunderkind Founder and CEO of Prodigy Corporation unlocks a new technological advancement: hybrids (humanoid robots infused with human consciousness). The first hybrid prototype named “Wendy” marks a new dawn in the race for immortality. After Weyland-Yutani’s spaceship collides into Prodigy City, “Wendy” and the other hybrids encounter mysterious life forms more terrifying than anyone could have ever imagined.”


The cast for Alien: Earth includes Sydney Chandler (Don't Worry Darling), Alex Lawther (Andor), Samuel Blenkin (The Sandman), Kit Young (Shadow and Bone), Essie Davis (Assassin's Creed), Adarsh Gourav (The White Tiger) and Timothy Olyphant (The Mandalorian).

The Alien vs. Predator (AVP) movies are also set on Earth. However, Hawley's upcoming series is much more compelling as it deals with contemporary issues of climate change, artificial intelligence (AI) and tech titans vying for control over our lives.

Alien: Earth premieres only on Hulu and Disney+ on 13th August.

Are you looking forward to Alien: Earth? Let me know in the comments below.

Friday, 18 July 2025

Fantastic Four livestream on Disney+



Disney+ will livestream the blue-carpet event for Marvel Studios’ “The Fantastic Four: First Steps,” offering subscribers an exclusive front-row seat to a world premiere for the first time ever. The star-studded event will unfold at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, celebrating the upcoming theatrical debut of Marvel’s First Family. The livestream kicks off on Tuesday, July 22 at 3am BST, with a full replay available to stream following the event.

This unprecedented live experience marks a new chapter for Disney+, bringing fans closer than ever to the excitement, glamour, and behind-the-scenes action of a red-carpet film premiere. From celebrity arrivals to cast interviews and special surprises, the livestream provides Disney+ subscribers around the world exclusive access, including a special sneak peek at the film before it opens in cinemas.

The film’s cast and filmmakers will be in attendance, including Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Joseph Quinn, Ralph Ineson, Julia Garner, Paul Walter Hauser, Natasha Lyonne, Sarah Niles, director Matt Shakman, producer Kevin Feige, executive producers Louis D’Esposito, Grant Curtis, and Tim Lewis, and composer Michael Giacchino, as well as a host of other talent and filmmakers.

Read the official synopsis:

"Set against the vibrant backdrop of a 1960s-inspired, retro-futuristic world, Marvel Studios’ The Fantastic Four: First Steps introduces Marvel’s First Family—Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic (Pedro Pascal), Sue Storm/Invisible Woman (Vanessa Kirby), Johnny Storm/Human Torch (Joseph Quinn) and Ben Grimm/The Thing (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) as they face their most daunting challenge yet.

Forced to balance their roles as heroes with the strength of their family bond, they must defend Earth from a ravenous space god called Galactus (Ralph Ineson) and his enigmatic Herald, Silver Surfer (Julia Garner). And if Galactus’ plan to devour the entire planet and everyone on it weren’t bad enough, it suddenly gets very personal."


The Fantastic Four: First Steps is in cinemas on 25th July.

Will you be watching the livestream on Disney+? Are you looking forward to The Fantastic Four: First Steps? Let me know in the comments below.

Friday, 11 July 2025

Disney and ITV partner in streaming wars



The Walt Disney Company and ITV have announced a strategic deal for Disney+ and ITVX.

The partnership will be billed as a “Taste of ITVX” and a “Taste of Disney+” on their respective streaming services in the UK.

Starting 16th July, a curated, and regularly refreshed selection of hit shows and movies from Disney+ and ITVX will be available to viewers on both platforms. The agreement showcases ITV and Disney’s world-class content to each other's complementary audiences, extending reach and allowing more viewers to discover Disney+ and ITVX.

Joe Earley, President, Direct-to-Consumer, Disney Entertainment commented: “We are proud of this innovative collaboration with ITV, which will allow us to bring Disney+ customers some of the UK’s favorite and buzzworthy shows and encourage ITVX viewers to discover some of Disney+’s award-winning series and blockbuster films.”

It will allow Disney+ viewers to watch the likes of ITV‘s Love Island, Mr Bates vs The Post Office or Spy Among Friends, and vice versa: ITV audiences can watch the first season of FX’s The Bear or Lucasfilm’s Andor alongside other hit Disney movies.

Kevin Lygo, Managing Director of Media and Entertainment, ITV said: “Disney are fantastic partners with a brilliant breadth of content. This mutually beneficial alliance allows us to show our complementary audiences a specially selected collection of titles, regularly updating, that gives a flavour of the range in our respective offerings. For us, this deal means even more great content for viewers on ITVX, and even more opportunity for viewers to find and enjoy our distinctive titles and services.”

Lucasfilm and ITV have a storied history. Star Wars premiered on ITV in 1982, and I remember recording it off-air on my parents' Panasonic VCR. I will follow this development with great interest.

What are your thoughts on the Disney and ITV deal? Is it a good idea? Let me know in the comments below.

Tuesday, 1 July 2025

Return to Oz



Before Wicked, there was Return to Oz.

Disney's dark fantasy fairytale sequel to The Wizard of Oz, directed by Walter Murch with an uncredited assist from George Lucas (Star Wars) and Francis Ford Coppola (The Godfather), was released 40 years ago and formed part of a childhood cinematic collective of stylistically similar movies including The Neverending Story, The Dark Crystal and Labyrinth (the latter two directed by Muppet creator Jim Henson).

Although Return to Oz, based on L. Frank Baum’s early novels, Ozma of Oz and The Marvelous Land of Oz, passed me by at the cinema for reasons unknown. I vividly remember the Wheelers appearing on Blue Peter as instant nightmare fuel for Dorothy (Fairuza Baulk) and friends to evade.

Murch's movie forgoes the Technicolor trappings of the beloved MGM musical starring Judy Garland in favour of muted tones in a twisted tale of psychiatric wards, disembodied heads, talking clockwork toys and an exploration of childhood trauma, which many (myself included) can relate to.

David Shire's sumptuous soundtrack deserves special mention for its haunting orchestrations, which transcend the movie's shortcomings. My friend, Professor Michael Williams, lent me his copy of Bay Cities' CD release when we were in college together. Subsequently, the fine folks at Intrada released a remastered album years after the CD went out of print, which is available to stream - I'm listening to it as I write - on Apple Music.

A box office bomb, Return to Oz embodies a darker and riskier creative chapter of family fare from the House of Mouse, which also includes The Black Hole and The Black Cauldron. It became a cult classic on home media and the subject of critical analysis with fellow media students at college.

Return to Oz is streaming on Disney+.

What are your memories of watching Return to Oz? Let me know in the comments below.

Saturday, 21 June 2025

Alien: Earth teases Predator



It's the summer solstice in the northern hemisphere, and we're less than two months away from Alien: Earth, a new sci-fi series from Emmy Award-winning Noah Hawley (Fargo) based on the acclaimed Alien franchise, on Hulu on Disney+. An official trailer was released earlier in the month of flaming June.



Read the official synopsis:

“When the mysterious deep space research vessel USCSS Maginot crash-lands on Earth, “Wendy” (Sydney Chandler) and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet’s greatest threat in FX’s “Alien: Earth.”

In the year 2120, the Earth is governed by five corporations: Prodigy, Weyland-Yutani, Lynch, Dynamic and Threshold. In this Corporate Era, cyborgs (humans with both biological and artificial parts) and synthetics (humanoid robots with artificial intelligence) exist alongside humans. But the game is changed when the wunderkind Founder and CEO of Prodigy Corporation unlocks a new technological advancement: hybrids (humanoid robots infused with human consciousness). The first hybrid prototype named “Wendy” marks a new dawn in the race for immortality. After Weyland-Yutani’s spaceship collides into Prodigy City, “Wendy” and the other hybrids encounter mysterious life forms more terrifying than anyone could have ever imagined.”


The cast for Alien: Earth includes Sydney Chandler (Don't Worry Darling), Alex Lawther (Andor), Samuel Blenkin (The Sandman), Kit Young (Shadow and Bone), Essie Davis (Assassin's Creed), Adarsh Gourav (The White Tiger) and Timothy Olyphant (The Mandalorian).

As an Alien franchise fan since watching the original movie far too young on VHS, the Alien: Earth official trailer, with its allusions to Peter Pan, in the synthetic form of Wendy and Neverland Research Island, has piqued my interest further. Corporate espionage, an age-old quest for immortality and blood-stained xenomorphs! What’s not to like?

Predator: Badlands, directed by Dan Trachtenberg (Prey), features a Wayland-Yutani synthetic, and you can hear a Predator in the Alien: Earth trailer. With Trachtenberg and Hawley mixing up the franchise DNA at Disney, I'm amped for an Alien vs. Predator (AVP) reboot.

Hulu is being rolled out internationally following its full acquisition from Comcast, and Alien: Earth would be the perfect launch title on Disney+.

Alien: Earth premieres only on Hulu and Disney+ on 13th August.

Are you looking forward to Alien: Earth? Let me know in the comments below.

Monday, 2 June 2025

The War Between The Land And The Sea first look



Ncuti Gatwa regenerated into Billie Piper in The Reality War, but the Whoniverse continues with a first look at The War Between The Land And The Sea, coming soon to BBC iPlayer and Disney+.



Read the official synopsis:

"When a fearsome and ancient species emerges from the ocean, dramatically revealing themselves to humanity, an international crisis is triggered. With the entire population at risk, UNIT step into action as the land and sea wage war."

The five-part series stars Russell Tovey as Barclay and Gugu Mbatha-Raw as Salt, with Jemma Redgrave, Alexander Devrient, Ruth Madeley, Colin McFarlane, Adrian Lukis, Patrick Baladi, Francesca Corney, Mei Mac and Vincent Franklin. Additional guest stars who can be spotted in the trailer are Waleed Hammad, Iestyn Arwel, Hannah Donaldson, Manpreet Bachu and Ann Akinjirin.

Russell T Davies, Showrunner, Writer and Executive Producer says: “The excitement is beginning to build, as the Whoniverse expands. I can’t wait for people to see this magnificent cast in such a powerful, vital, epic story. Look to the seas!”

The upcoming Doctor Who spin-off series is darker in tone, like Torchwood and features a soundtrack composed by Lorne Balfe (His Dark Materials). This is great news, as I was hoping Balfe was going to work on seasons one and two of Doctor Who on Disney+!

Are you looking forward to The War Between The Land And The Sea? Let me know in the comments below.

Sunday, 1 June 2025

Doctor Who: The Reality War



The second season of Doctor Who on Disney+ has been somewhat overshadowed by speculation surrounding the series’ future, a decades-spanning tabloid trope since the classic era.

Rumours of Disney stepping away from the deal, regeneration, series cancellation, or hiatus haven’t detracted from my enjoyment. And the Fifteenth Doctor (Ncuti Gatwa) and Ruby Sunday (Millie Gibson) are plastic fantastic as Barbie dolls. Don’t forget Belinda Chandra (Varada Sethu), Mattel!

Does The Reality War stick the landing, unlike Empire of Death, or is the Doctor’s fate sealed with a headache-inducing hot mess of Russell T Davies' making?

Alas, it's the latter as Davies indulgently uses the Disney intellectual property (IP) playbook like a child in a candy store. The special runs the gamut from Avengers: Endgame to Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back. It was all too much.

We last saw the Doctor falling to his death in Wish World. He's rescued by Anita Benn (Stephanie de Whalley) from Joy to the World. Anita became an instant fan-favourite and possible future companion. Working at the Time Hotel and channelling the Time Variance Authority (TVA) from Loki, she's 6 months pregnant with the hotel manager's baby, and this ties into a theme of Time Lord reproduction or lack thereof, as revealed by the Rani (Archie Panjabi) as Poppy becomes the Doctor's surrogate child. A pivot too far, as Susan Foreman (Carol Ann Ford) is all but forgotten and Belinda is put in a box.

I couldn't keep track of all the twisted-up threads. Davies is at his best when using restraint, as seen in 73 Yards.

Ultimately, Omega was another classic villain to fall foul of Scooby Doo voodoo! Like Sutekh, he was a giant CGI monstrosity and a boring boss battle with zero stakes, dispatched using a reject prop from Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure. Snacking on the Rani, he's more Rancor monster from Star Wars: Return of the Jedi than the vengeful creator of the Time Lords. What was far more interesting was the dynamic between the Doctor and his companions, Belinda and Ruby.

Here, the series shone brightest.

Whilst the bombastic battle at Avengers Tower, I mean UNIT HQ, was derivative and filled with far too many cameos, it was the mind games between Ruby and Conrad Clark (Jonah Hauer-King), her fake ex-boyfriend from Think Tank, that piqued my interest as giant skeletons attacked! Here was a former TARDIS companion with PTSD confronting her abuser.

Jodie Whittaker reprises the role of the Thirteenth Doctor on television for the first time since The Power of the Doctor. Her cameo, aboard the TARDIS, was a surprise, but a welcome one, subverting the expectation that David Tennant would return for the finale as the Fourteenth Doctor.

The chemistry between Gatwa and Whittaker sparkled, and I was a little misty-eyed. Davies has embraced former series showrunner Chris Chibnall's divisive Timeless Child with aplomb.

A time traveller for the TikTok generation.

As much as I’ve enjoyed this second season, I wanted to spend more time (pun intended) with the Fifteenth Doctor, Belinda and Ruby aboard the TARDIS. That’s good, even if it feels far too brief over two seasons. However, after an emotional goodbye with Belinda and Poppy (I teared up), Ruby was completely ignored back at UNIT HQ, the Fifteenth Doctor regenerates into Rose Tyler (Billie Piper) or is it?

Bad Wolf?

When the Disney+ partnership was announced in 2022, beginning with the 60th anniversary specials spearheaded by a returning series showrunner, I was excited about the future of my all-time favourite television series. Fast forward to 2025, and it’s trapped in an infinite loop of nostalgia.

The revival has come full circle from small beginnings in Rose. If the series is to continue in partnership with Disney+, it's time for a change and not a moment too soon.

Doctor Who is available to stream on BBC iPlayer and Disney+ outside the UK and Ireland. Season two is available for pre-order from Amazon (affiliate link).

Have you watched The Reality War? What did you think? Let me know in the comments below.

Friday, 30 May 2025

Millie Gibson teases return of Omega



Millie Gibson (Ruby Sunday) teased the return of Omega in the Doctor Who season two finale, The Reality War, in an interview with the Radio Times: "He's terrifying… I think people are going to be really shocked."

Omega, a founder of the Time Lord society corrupted by anti-matter and his ego, first appeared in the 10th anniversary special The Three Doctors, which featured William Hartnell and Patrick Troughton reprising their roles as the First and Second Doctors alongside Jon Pertwee as the Third Doctor. He was originally played by Stephen Thorne, and his disembodied voice is heard in Wish World. The dialogue was taken directly from a Big Finish audio drama, Gallifrey: Intervention Earth, recorded before Thorne died in 2019.

Gibson goes on to say: "I think Archie is just such a cool Rani – she kind of worships Omega. I think it's a really cool two-villain dynamic. The more the better! This is why it's the biggest battle for the Doctor – there are two of his biggest villains that he has to defeat."

New episodes of Doctor Who drop every Saturday on BBC One, BBC iPlayer and Disney+ outside the UK and Ireland. Season two is available for pre-order from Amazon (affiliate link).

Are you looking forward to Omega's return in The Reality War? Who do you think should play him, Brian Blessed? Let me know in the comments below.

Sunday, 25 May 2025

Doctor Who: Wish World



We're in the endgame now with the first part of the season two finale. I was right about the Rani all along. Is it a case of be careful what you wish for?

The Story & the Engine explored the theme of storytelling through the lens of the Doctor.

Wish World takes this to the nth degree in an episode of Jackanory narrated by Conrad Clark (Jonah Hauer-King), Ruby Sunday's (Millie Gibson) Think Tank-leading ex-boyfriend from Lucky Day, seen through a cathode-ray tube (CRT), in a callback to the Dan Dare retrofuturism of The Robot Revolution. It's worth noting that both Belinda Chandra (Varada Sethu) and Ruby's ex-boyfriends are self-absorbed narcissists.

For generations of fans (myself included), Doctor Who was teatime family viewing watched on a CRT TV. I’m in danger of falling down a nostalgic rabbit hole littered with fossilised bones and ghosts of the past.

62 years later, Doctor Who continues to draw inspiration from eclectic popular culture sources. This second season on Disney+, the intertextual references to Disney-owned franchises have included Aliens, Avengers, Loki and Star Wars.

Wish World is Russell T Davies' spellbinding tribute to Wandavision, replete with knowing nods to Flash Gordon and Masters of the Universe. An imperious Rani (Archie Panjabi) channelling Agatha Harkness (Davies is a fan of the Marvel Comics witch) in a Grimm fairytale, steals the infant God of Wishes from his parents, before flying a space scooter back to Castle Grayskull in a sight to behold.

The Doctor, under the alias of John Smith, and Belinda are a married couple with a daughter, Poppy from Space Babies, in an alternate right-wing reality of Conrad’s creation where men work and women stay at home. A horrifying vision of conformity and ableism. I've alluded to the latter in The Well. Doubt undermines this cosy conservative world, and it all comes crashing down like the masquerade ball in Labyrinth when Ruby turns up at the front door of their home.

Former companion, Mel Bush (Bonnie Langford), lives on the same street as the Doctor and Belinda. The Rani, as first played by Kate O'Mara, pretended to be Mel during the Seventh Doctor's (Sylvester McCoy) story, Time and the Rani.

Sethu continues to be a standout. It's chilling to watch Belinda storm out of her Tim Burton-inspired suburban home and run, screaming, into the woods.

Season one’s big bad reveal of Sutekh fell flat. This time, the Rani searches for Omega in the Underverse, first mentioned in The Giggle, and we hear his disembodied voice. A tragic villain, Omega was stranded in an anti-matter universe after becoming the first Time Lord and sought revenge against his fellow Time Lords in The Three Doctors and Arc of Infinity. The Seventh Doctor used the Hand of Omega, known as the Omega device by the Daleks, to destroy the Dalek homeworld, Skaro, in Remembrance of the Daleks.

Omega is a curious choice as Davies has gone to great pains to avoid classic villains in this Disney era. However, it has far-reaching implications for the series' future.

With the return of Susan Foreman (Carole Ann Ford), the Rani and Omega, is The Reality War a feature-length multi-Doctor story to end the status quo and to close the 20th anniversary of the revival?

Oh, boy!

New episodes of Doctor Who drop every Saturday on BBC One, BBC iPlayer and Disney+ outside the UK and Ireland. Season two is available for pre-order from Amazon (affiliate link).

Have you watched Wish World? What did you think? Let me know in the comments below.

Thursday, 22 May 2025

Preview the two Ranis in Doctor Who



Following the revelation that Mrs Flood (Anita Dobson) is the renegade Time Lord, the Rani. The BBC has released a preview for Wish World featuring the two Ranis. Whovians see what you did there, Russell T Davies.



On joining Doctor Who as the Rani following a bi-generation, Archie Panjabi says: "It seems there’s been quite a bit of speculation about the Rani’s return... and who can blame you? Kate O’Mara’s portrayal was brilliant, ruthless and unforgettable. Now, under Russell T Davies, she’s back - and I’ll ask... what in the Whoniverse will we bring to her? Let’s just say, you might not be ready!"

New episodes of Doctor Who drop every Saturday on BBC One, BBC iPlayer and Disney+ outside the UK and Ireland. Season two is available for pre-order from Amazon (affiliate link).

Have you watched the preview of Wish World? What did you think? Let me know in the comments below.

Tuesday, 20 May 2025

Predator: Killer of Killers hunting through history



On Monday, 20th Century Studios released an official trailer for Predator: Killer of Killers, an original animated action-adventure film from the director of Prey set in the Predator universe.



Read the official synopsis:

"The anthology story follows three of the fiercest warriors in human history: a Viking raider guiding her young son on a bloody quest for revenge, a ninja in feudal Japan who turns against his Samurai brother in a brutal battle for succession, and a WWII pilot who takes to the sky to investigate an otherworldly threat to the Allied cause. But while all these warriors are killers in their own right, they are merely prey for their new opponent – the ultimate killer of killers."

Predator: Killer of Killers is directed by Dan Trachtenberg with Josh Wassung, from animation company The Third Floor, serving as co-director. The film stars Lindsay LaVanchy, Louis Ozawa, Rick Gonzalez, and Michael Biehn and is written by Micho Robert Rutare and story by Trachtenberg and Rutare, based on characters created by Jim Thomas & John Thomas. The producers are John Davis, Dan Trachtenberg, p.g.a., Marc Toberoff, Ben Rosenblatt, p.g.a., with Lawrence Gordon, James E. Thomas, John C. Thomas, and Stefan Grube as executive producers.

Predator: Killer of Killers premieres only on Hulu on Disney+ on 6th June.

Have you watched the official trailer for Predator: Killer of Killers? What did you think? Are you looking forward to it? Let me know in the comments below.

Sunday, 18 May 2025

Doctor Who: The Interstellar Song Contest



Eurovision is an annual music extravaganza, spawning pop royalty ABBA and Celine Dion.

One of my earliest memories of watching the Eurovision song contest was the year Bucks Fizz won in 1981. This coincided with a visit to family friends and the first time I ever experienced a toastie from a Breville sandwich toaster (my parents soon owned one, which was perfect for Doctor Who teatime viewing).

As I've written previously, a life-changing childhood trauma overshadowed my early life, so songs like Bucks Fizz's The Land of Make Believe became an inspirational anthem in the darkest days of rehabilitation.

So, in a timey-wimey twist worthy of the metaverse (no, not that one), The Interstellar Song Contest preceded this year's Eurovision grand final on BBC One. Is it a season two hit or miss?

With cameos from popular presenters Rylan Clark (a self-confessed Whovian) and Graham Norton, as themselves, it's a hit from start to finish. The Doctor (Ncuti Gatwa) and Belinda Chandra (Varada Sethu) take one last detour aboard the TARDIS before returning to Earth on 24th May, 2025. This time, materialising on a space station, the Harmony Arena, hosting an interstellar song contest 900 years later.

The event is hijacked, and trillions of lives are put in peril. The Doctor, Rylan, the contestants, and the audience are blasted into space where they freeze. An unconscious Doctor has a vision of his first companion, granddaughter Susan Foreman (Carole Ann Ford), and this sparks him back to life. This is a monumental moment for the Whoniverse, and I got goosebumps at the implication. Susan was last seen in The Five Doctors.

There’s a playful homage to Disney Pixar’s WALL-E as the Doctor, marooned in space, propels himself back to the Harmony Arena using a confetti cannon! Things twist from cosmic camp to horrifying dark melodrama as the Doctor is triggered by the trauma of Gallifrey's destruction and the demise of the Time Lords, and mistakenly thinks Belinda is dead. The Fifth Doctor (Peter Davison) infamously failed to save Adric (Matthew Waterhouse) from the Cybermen in Earthshock.

Once down the dark path...

As seen in Dalek twenty years ago, the Doctor becomes the torturer and electrocutes Kid (Freddie Fox) in a scene evoking the Emperor using Force lightning to kill Luke Skywalker before Darth Vader stops him in Star Wars: Return of the Jedi. This time, it's another vision of Susan that halts the Doctor from being seduced by the dark side. Belinda, very much alive, is struck by the Doctor's anger and, again, challenges him to be more open with her.

Rylan, the contestants and audience are revived by the duo of Mike Gabbastone (Kadiff Kirwan) and Gary Gabbastone (Charlie Condou) to the victorious sounds of Bucks Fizz's winning song, Making Your Mind Up. I was overcome with misty-eyed joy.

Norton, a staple of Eurovision, appears as an interactive hologram and harbinger of doom. He explains the Earth was destroyed on 24th May, 2025. The Doctor and Belinda board the TARDIS only to be greeted by the apocalyptic sound of the cloister bells.

It was the Rani all along.

During a mid-credits scene, a staple of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), Mrs Flood's (Anita Dobson) true identity is finally revealed. She is the Rani, first played by Kate O'Mara, a renegade Time Lord, and undergoes her own bi-generation, introducing a second Rani (Archie Panjabi). In doing so, the Doctor's isolation as the last of his kind has ended.

Does this tease that we may see the Fourteenth Doctor (David Tennant) and Donna Noble (Catherine Tate) in the two-part finale? If this is the last season of Doctor Who for a while, we're getting our Avengers: Endgame.

New episodes of Doctor Who drop every Saturday on BBC One, BBC iPlayer and Disney+ outside the UK and Ireland. Season two is available for pre-order from Amazon (affiliate link).

Have you watched The Interstellar Song Contest? What did you think? Let me know in the comments below.

Friday, 16 May 2025

Buffy finds new slayer from Star Wars



The upcoming Buffy revival has found its slayer! Star Wars: Skeleton Crew's Ryan Kiera Armstrong.

"I want to introduce you to [Ryan Kiera Armstrong]," Sarah Michelle Gellar wrote on Instagram underneath a video telling a teary-eyed Armstrong that she got the part. "From the moment I saw Ryan's audition, I knew there was only one girl that I wanted by my side. To have that kind of emotional intelligence, and talent, at such a young age is truly a gift. The bonus is that her smile lights up even the darkest room. Welcome to #NewSunnydale #btvs."

Armstrong will play the new slayer opposite Gellar, who is reprising the role of Buffy Summers. Oscar winner Chloé Zhao is directing the pilot, written by Nora and Lilla Zuckerman.

"We are so overjoyed to have found this generation's slayer in Ryan Kiera Armstrong, she absolutely blew us away — there is no question in our mind that she is the chosen one," Nora and Lilla said in a statement.

Are you excited about a Buffy the Vampire Slayer reboot or revival on Hulu on Disney+? Let me know in the comments below.