Stories Television The Sarah Jane Adventures Series 1 The Sarah Jane Adventures S1 Episode: 1-2 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane? 1 image Back to Story Reviews Add Review Edit Review Sort: Date (Newest First) Date (Oldest First) Likes (High-Low) Likes (Low-High) Rating (High-Low) Rating (Low-High) Word count (High-Low) Word count (Low-High) Username (A-Z) Username (Z-A) Spoilers First Spoilers Last 5 reviews 8 March 2025 · 728 words Review by MrColdStream Spoilers 2 This review contains spoilers! Investigating through time and space, one case at a time! “WHATEVER HAPPENED TO SARAH JANE?: A REALITY-BENDING MASTERPIECE” Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane? wastes no time in pulling viewers into its gripping mystery. The lighthearted opening—with Luke questioning skateboarding, Clyde showing off, and Alan unexpectedly revealing some skills—immediately gives way to something far darker. A hooded figure lurks in the background, setting up an eerie tension that lingers throughout the story. The introduction of the Trickster—one of The Sarah Jane Adventures’ most iconic villains—elevates this episode to something truly special. The slow-burn reveal, with glimpses of a genuinely unsettling figure and the mysterious box that won’t open, is brilliantly handled. Even though Part 1 focuses on Maria’s desperate search for proof that Sarah Jane ever existed, the Trickster’s presence is always felt. His cold, whispering voice, the skeletal design, and his reality-warping abilities make for an antagonist so powerful it’s almost surprising he never made it into Doctor Who itself. THE TRICKSTER AND THE HORROR OF ALTERED REALITY What makes the Trickster so terrifying is that he doesn’t kill outright. Instead, he changes things, warping reality and manipulating people’s fates to create chaos. This is most evident in his dealings with Andrea, who unknowingly made a bargain as a child, resulting in Sarah Jane’s erasure from existence. The real horror comes when Andrea, given a second chance at life, is willing to erase Maria’s memories just to protect her own happiness. It’s a chilling moral dilemma that makes Andrea an incredibly complex character—she’s not evil, but her selfishness makes her hard to sympathise with. Even when she realises what she’s done, she clings to the life she’s been given, willing to let the world burn rather than give it up. The Trickster’s ultimate plan—erasing the Doctor’s existence entirely—is a terrifying prospect, instantly raising the stakes beyond just Sarah Jane’s disappearance. The idea that a single change in history can doom the world is executed brilliantly, creating a truly high-stakes scenario for Maria to unravel. MARIA JACKSON’S MOMENT TO SHINE With Sarah Jane erased, Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane? becomes Maria’s story, and Yasmin Paige carries it effortlessly. She’s resourceful, determined, and heartbreakingly vulnerable, making her one of the most relatable companions in Doctor Who history. The scene where she furiously lashes out at Andrea, telling her she shouldn’t exist, is one of her finest moments, showing just how much Sarah Jane means to her. Maria’s father, Alan, also gets a more prominent role, and while his skateboarding subplot feels a little out of place, it pays off in a fun moment when he uses it to knock over the Graske. More importantly, his direct involvement in the story—finding himself in a version of reality where Maria never existed—pushes him to take action, culminating in his emotional confrontation with Andrea. His desperation to bring Maria back makes for one of the most heartfelt moments in the episode. A BEAUTIFULLY CRAFTED ATMOSPHERE The episode’s direction is outstanding, with eerie music and creative camerawork adding to the sense of unease. The shifting angles, particularly in the cliffhanger where Alan activates the box, are visually striking. The contrast between the vibrant 1964 flashbacks and the stark white void where Sarah Jane is trapped reinforces the episode’s themes of lost time and altered fate. The limbo scenes, where Sarah Jane and Maria confront the fragility of their existence, are beautifully bleak, filled with quiet sorrow. The inclusion of the Graske—first seen in Attack of the Graske—is a nice touch, reinforcing the Trickster’s influence. Though more of a secondary threat, his role in erasing Maria and Alan from existence adds another layer of tension. 📝 VERDICT: 10/10 Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane? is The Sarah Jane Adventures at its absolute best—intelligent, emotionally rich, and genuinely gripping. With a compelling mystery, a terrifying villain, and standout performances from Yasmin Paige and Elisabeth Sladen, it transcends its "children’s TV" label, delivering a story that holds up alongside Doctor Who’s best. The Trickster’s debut sets the stage for even bigger threats, but even on its own, this is a masterpiece of storytelling that cements Maria as one of the show’s strongest characters. MrColdStream View profile Like Liked 2 3 March 2025 · 42 words Review by InterstellarCas Spoilers 3 This review contains spoilers! All those close zooms were silly but it was a solid story. It’s almost like a Turn Left-lite. The Trickster is a solid villain and it was interesting to see how morbid the plot got for a children’s show lol. InterstellarCas View profile Like Liked 3 29 November 2024 · 38 words Review by whitestar1993 Spoilers 4 This review contains spoilers! Wow. I am a bit speechless after that episode. that was amazing. The Trickster is a great villain so far, looking forward to seeing him more. And that it ties in with Turn Left is cool. Great Episode! whitestar1993 View profile Like Liked 4 21 May 2024 · 855 words Review by eleanorvancecoded Spoilers 4 This review contains spoilers! This is my first exposure to SJA: I missed it as a kid, and didn't see much point in taking the time to watch a children's spinoff, until the theories about Ruby Sunday's paradoxical existence potentially being related to The Trickster started popping up. What can I say? A story that's incredibly silly and illogical plot-wise, yet on an emotional and tonal level almost reaches Torchwood levels of morbid. Certainly feels like a first draft run-through of Turn Left: the difference is that, whereas the Doctor's untimely death in TL understandably lead to cataclysmic events pretty soon that were prevented by his adventures in the original timeline, the idea that Sarah Jane Smith is the only person on Earth capable of stopping a meteor wiping humanity out is absurd to the point where it almost takes away from the intended emotional impact. We like to joke that continuity doesn't matter, and to an extent in a fictional universe so expansive that's true, but there was a UNIT book on Sarah Jane's shelf. So UNIT must exist, even if Torchwood (presumably for obvious reasons) don't. If Sarah Jane owns a supercomputer powerful enough to deflect an apocalyptic meteor, then how come UNIT, the international organisation charged with protecting the planet from all extraterrestrial threats, don't have their own Mr. Smith that could do the job nicely? Why is Sarah Jane so important to the Trickster? (On a Watsonian level. "She's the protagonist of the show" doesn't count.) Yeah yeah, she used to be the Doctor's companion. Then why, if he's so powerful, is he going after her instead of targeting the Doctor directly? Seems like a far more surefire way to jumpstart the end of the world. Oh wait. Donna's beetle? Part of the Trickster's brigade. Turn Left. I'm describing the plot of Turn Left. Ah well, apparently gaping plot holes are excused when it's a show for kids, and being a nitpicky nerd is generally frowned upon - maybe not on the whovian website, but who am I to take any more chances? That's the cons nearly over, on to the pros. First of all, I am inclined to partially believe the Ruby theory now. Malicious fantasy foes erasing people from time before they had the chance to grow up and affect the future - that's the plot of The Church on Ruby Road. In fact, the scene where Maria's mum forgets her and tells her husband tearfully that she "never had a maternal bone in her body" is practically a 1-to-1 mirror of a similar scene in TCORR, when the Doctor speaks to the cold and jaded version of Carla that never adopted Ruby. It's certainly possible. The Trickster is quite a compelling villain, menacing enough in his lust for chaos, and would slot quite neatly into Russell's new Pantheon of unpredictable primordial deities, perhaps even under the alias of The One Who Waits. He'd need a minimal revamp in both design and motivations. It could work. Only time (ha ha) will tell. As for Andrea Yates: god, what a human, complex, sympathetic antagonist. Really, her role in this episode inspires pure existential terror in the way only a Who story is able to: the real magnitude of the hopelessness only sets in after you peer through the veneer of whimsical charm and sci-fi babble. Doctor Who goes out of its way to tell audiences that every person's life is equally significant ("Nine hundred years and I've never met someone who wasn't important before") but on a meta level this episode proves otherwise. Sarah Jane is important. She has to grow up to become a journalist, to meet the Doctor and travel in the TARDIS, to save the world multiple times with her son and his friends. Her narrative role is to become the Main Character. Andrea Yates' role in the narrative is... to die. To die as a child, afraid and without hope as her best friend looks on, so that she can become an 'inspiring memory' and 'motivate' Sarah Jane to 'cherish the value of every innocent life'. How sweet. How ironic. Imagine being told that your entire existence and its abrupt violent end is a plot device that somebody else's wild and adventurous future hinges on. But death is nothing special, death is a mundane eventuality, even a teenager's death. What's worse is living a full life and sharing it with people only to never be remembered. The idea that our memory lives on is what keeps many of us optimistic even in the face of the great maw that inevitably consumes us all, but nobody will remember the adult Andrea Yates. All those forty? fifty? years-that-never-were, for nothing. Gone. She died at 13. Wouldn't you make a Faustian bargain too? Not knowing about the meteor, not knowing about the grand design? I would. I know I would. Mixed feelings. Strange brew. Distinctly Doctor Who, haunted by the phantom of that persistent question: does the universe revolve around the Doctor? Are his companions more important than everybody else? Where does that leave us "Andreas"? Mere mortals. Clara knew that. Ruby doesn't. Yet. eleanorvancecoded View profile Like Liked 4 25 April 2024 · 91 words Review by 15thDoctor Spoilers 7 This review contains spoilers! It makes sense that a Doctor Who spin off would eventually travel back in time but I didn’t expect it to happen in series one. Through a delicious sci-fi twist we see a 13-year-old Sarah-Jane’s friend become twisted by trauma and become a pitiful, yet abusive and powerful villain. The fact that Angela, at a glance, looks so similar to Sarah-Jane is spooky! The return of the Graske is unexpected and cute - but it’s the faceless Trickster that imprints itself on the mind's eye of a child. 15thDoctor View profile Like Liked 7