Doctor Who Season 2 Episode 2, titled “Lux,” is written by Russell T Davies and directed by Amanda Brotchie. The episode stars Ncuti Gatwa, Varada Sethu, Linus Roache and Alan Cumming. The Doctor and ...
It's 1952 in a sparsely populated cinema as the audience watches a breathless newsreel on the power of the atomic bomb. The projectionist flips over to a Merrie Melodies-style cartoon of Mr.
"Lux": Written by Russell T Davies, directed by Amanda Brotchie "The Well": Written by Russell T Davies & Sharma Angel Walfall, directed by Amanda Brotchie Serving as Television Editor since 2018, Ray ...
The Doctor is trying to get Belinda back to Earth on May 24th by taking the long way, bouncing through past and future to latch onto the date they're after, unaware that the Earth has been destroyed ...
If you'd seen the "Doctor Who" season 2 trailers, you already knew that cartoon character Mr Ring-a-Ding would climb out of a cinema screen like some kind of malevolent Roger Rabbit. As well as being ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. In the build up to this season of Doctor Who, this episode was the most ...
Matthew Wilkinson is Movie/TV Features Staff Writer at Game Rant with over a decade of experience writing for various publications. Throughout his career he has covered some of the biggest events in ...
Doctor Who’s latest episode, “Lux”, is a gloriously weird outing from showrunner Russell T Davies that delivers just the right balance of chaos and charm. But beyond the surface-level delights of its ...
Matthew Wilkinson is Movie/TV Features Staff Writer at Game Rant with over a decade of experience writing for various publications. Throughout his career he has covered some of the biggest events in ...
Following a disappointing season premiere, this week’s Doctor Who is a meticulously crafted descent into a retro-tinged nightmare, where daring storytelling collides with a pervasive, unsettling ...
Spoilers for “Lux.” It’s an interesting time to be a long-running science fantasy media property in the streaming TV age. Star Trek is in the grip of an existential crisis as it (wrongly) fears it’s ...