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TARDIS Guide

Review of Jubilee by MarkOfGilead19

3 June 2025

This review contains spoilers!

A fable that warns of the danger of history repeating itself when societies forget the past, promoting the return of fascists governments aided by citizens with rotten morals and with hate in their hearts. It is such a powerful story and even now, 20 plus years since it came out, it is still relevant for our times and the state of the world we live in (you know, with the rise of fascism and ethnic cleansing being committed while the world turns a blind eye or facilitates it)

The 6th Doctor is at his best here and it is Colin Baker's best performance for now at least. Evelyn Smithe is a key player too, as her relationship with the Dalek is the only proof that humankind can be better if we put our minds and souls into making it happen.

It is such a dark and bleak story but ends with an inspirative, although ominous, quote by the Doctor. Assuring that hatred is still in people's hearts, but they can take warning and avert history being repeated once more.

There are many outstanding stories written for Doctor Who, be it in TV, audio, books, comics... And I have given many a perfect score, for differing reasons but mainly for personal enjoyment contrary to what I believe may be objectively good or bad. But there are a few stories which I'd put above the rest simply for the advances it brings to the world of sci-fi and storytelling in general, and for enlightening the spectators in differing fields of knowledge and of reasoning. This story is one of them, and funnily enough Chimes of Midnight and Scherzo would be classified as such too, both by the same author of Jubilee, the great Robert Shearman.


MarkOfGilead19

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