Search & filter every Whoniverse story ever made!
View stories featuring your favourite characters & track your progress!
Complete sets of stories, track them on the homepage, earn badges!
Join TARDIS Guide to keep track of the stories you've completed - rate them, add to favourites, get stats!
Lots more Guides are on their way!
14 April 2025
Changing everything, one mission at a time!
"RANDOM SHOES: EUGENE’S SLIGHTLY DULL LIFE, DEATH, AND UNLIKELY AFTERLIFE"
Random Shoes stands out in Torchwood Series 1 for taking a bold structural swing—it places the spotlight not on the Torchwood team, but on an awkward, alien-obsessed outsider named Eugene Jones. Told from Eugene’s posthumous perspective, this melancholic detour tries to emulate Love & Monsters from Doctor Who Series 2, focusing on a nobody’s brush with the extraordinary. But where Elton Pope’s tale was equal parts funny, sad, and whimsical, Eugene’s story leans more heavily into sentimental introspection and doesn’t quite land with the same impact.
EUGENE JONES: THE INVISIBLE MAN
Eugene is your classic socially awkward nerd: a maths prodigy, failed Torchwood groupie, and hoarder of alien tat. His death by traffic accident is the mystery driving the plot, but his personality—while perhaps intentionally underwhelming—isn't quite engaging enough to carry an entire episode. His constant narration offers some insight into his hopes and regrets, but his slightly smug, overly earnest tone makes him a hard character to warm to. He’s not a bad person—just not a particularly interesting one.
GWEN TAKES THE LEAD
With Eugene observing the action as a ghostly narrator, Gwen steps into the protagonist role, digging into Eugene’s life to uncover the truth behind his death. While most of Torchwood is relegated to the background (Jack and Owen have little to do, Tosh gets sidelined), Gwen’s compassion and persistence are the emotional core of the story. Her slow realisation that Eugene was duped by his so-called mates—and that he felt invisible all his life—gives the episode its heart, even if their supposed “connection” feels one-sided and underdeveloped.
THE PLOT THAT SHUFFLES ALONG
Narratively, it’s a bit of a plod. The investigation follows Gwen as she interviews Eugene’s mum and his friends, eventually piecing together that Eugene was tricked into selling a mysterious alien eye—an artefact that’s never properly explained, but which he later swallows. It turns out that eye is what’s keeping him around as a ghost, which he eventually uses to… save Gwen from a car crash. This final act of heroism briefly grants him visible form at his own funeral, before he’s spirited away into the sky like a glowing angel. Whether that’s touching or slightly absurd is up for debate.
SENTIMENTAL OVER SUBSTANTIAL
The real emotional through-line is Eugene’s estranged relationship with his father, and the sweet, if predictable, reveal that his dad did care after all. This is genuinely moving, if a little heavy-handed. Thematically, it’s all about how people can feel unseen, unimportant, and how everyone’s life has value—worthy ideas, but not delivered with much nuance.
ALIEN EYE, SHALLOW TIES
The sci-fi elements are barely there. The eye is more magical MacGuffin than meaningful plot device, and Eugene’s unexplained ability to interact with the world in his final moments—saving Gwen from being hit by a car—feels unearned. The ghostly mechanics aren’t explained, and the glowing angelic send-off feels tonally at odds with Torchwood's usual grit and cynicism.
📝VERDICT: 5.6/10
Random Shoes is a gentle, introspective ghost story with a heart, but not much narrative muscle. Its slow pace, bland central character, and limp sci-fi twist stop it from soaring. Gwen gets some solid material, and the premise—viewing Torchwood through an outsider’s eyes—isn’t without merit. But despite its emotional ambition, it doesn’t quite pack the punch it wants to. A slightly awkward oddity with a glowing heart but not much fire.
MrColdStream
View profile
Not a member? Join for free! Forgot password?
Content