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Weeping angels in the village of Devon around 1967. A World War II veteran who helps the Doctor repel them, armed only with a cricket bat and an old-fashioned British pinch. What should we not enjoy?
However, this atmospheric episode Doctor Who (BBC One) started brilliantly before disappearing into its time vortex. The recurring problems of the Chris Chibnall / Jodie Whittaker era have returned to haunt him.
The six-part story of Flux continued with work from the pacy period entitled Village of the Angels. A 10-year-old girl has disappeared. Someone was leaving notes for residents to leave before it was too late. There was one tombstone too many in the cemetery. It was a pleasantly creepy horror set-up – even before exorcist-style voices and monsters appeared in the bathroom mirrors.
When the weeping angel kidnapped the Tardis, the doctor and her companions catapulted on November 21 – in full bloom, on the date of the transmission of this episode – 54 years ago. After a gruesome, moonlit encounter with a “scarecrow,” Dan (John Bishop) and Yaz (Mandip Gill) were thrown into 1901, where they found a missing schoolgirl, Peggy (Poppy Polivnick). In a shocking but depressing twist, it turned out that in 1967, the disastrous old lady had grown up to be Peggy.
Meanwhile, local master Professor Eustacius Jericho (top Kevin McNally) performed psychic experiments on the mysterious Claire (Annabel Scholey, equally excellent). This duo effectively swapped companions and teamed up with the Doctor as weeping angels surrounded the professor’s house – the siege of Jericho, you see? But what did the army of sinister statues want? When Claire’s tears turned to dust and her hands to stone, did she become that?
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