Top Five Creatures Who Just Won't Quit (feature)
From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Top Five Creatures Who Just Won't Quit was a piece of short prose fiction included in Doctor Who The Official Annual 2021.
Although it adopted an in-universe point of view — being allegedly written by Jack Harkness himself, some time after the events of TV: Fugitive of the Judoon — it was not strictly speaking a story.
It presented itself as a "Top 5" list of monsters whom the Doctor had defeated once only for them to return to plague them once more. For each monster, Jack summarised the Doctor's first encounter with them then one of their "Classic Comebacks".
Contents[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Daleks ("Classic Comeback": The Stolen Earth)
- Cybermen ("Classic Comeback": Army of Ghosts)
- Judoon ("Classic Comeback": Fugitive of the Judoon)
- Zygons ("Classic Comeback": The Zygon Invasion)
- Weeping Angels ("Classic Comeback": The Angels Take Manhattan)
- Bonus: Jack Harkness himself (summarising his temporary deaths in The Parting of the Ways, Utopia and The Sound of Drums)
Characters[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Jack Harkness
- The Doctor
- Martha Jones
- Rose Tyler
- Daleks
- Davros
- Cybermen
- Judoon
- Zygons
- The Loch Ness Monster
- Weeping Angel
- The Saxon Master
Worldbuilding[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The First Doctor defeated the Daleks on "their home planet", unaware that they'd "be back throughout his different lives".
- The Cybermen once had a "massive dust-up" with the Daleks at Canary Wharf.
- The Judoon once "took control" of Gloucester.
- The Weeping Angels are described as stone assassins.
- When they first came to Earth, the Zygons "brought the baby Loch Ness Monster with them".
Notes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- Jack's mini-file on the Weeping Angels clarifies a plot point of TV: The Angels Take Manhattan by claiming that the Angels "transformed" the Statue of Liberty into an Angel; the TV episode does not spell this out, leaving open alternative possibilities, such as an Angel instead replacing the real Statue — or, indeed, the Statue having actually been an Angel all along, unbeknownst to humanity