Season 28 (1991)
Season 28 would've aired in September 7th to December 7th 1991, being the first season with Robert Lindsay as the Eighth Doctor and the second season with Julia Sawalha as Kate Tollinger.
by EDWARD YOUNG
by JIM MORTIMORE and ANDY LANE
Cody McBride, ex-pat American private eye, sees the sphere crash-land and split open — and glimpses something emerging from within. But the military dismiss his account of events — the sphere is simply a new German secret weapon that has malfunctioned in some way. What else could it be?
With a new Doctor and producer, an edited version of the McCoy titles were made. Everything would've been red, McCoy's face would've been replaced with Lindsay's and there would've been a new theme by Distant J.
Like season 27, it would've had 4 serials and 14x25 minute episodes. With that being said, here is Doctor Who season 28.
NIGHT THOUGHTS
by EDWARD YOUNG
A remote Scottish mansion. Five bickering academics are haunted by ghosts from their past. Reluctantly they offer shelter to the Doctor and his companion Kate.
Kate, already troubled by a vivid nightmare, is further disturbed by the night-time appearance of a whistling, hooded apparition.
After that, she tries to befriend the young housemaid, Sue. Sue knows secrets. She knows why the academics have assembled here, and she knows why they are all so afraid. But Sue's lips are sealed — she prefers to communicate through her disturbing toy, Happy the Rabbit.
And then the killing begins. Gruesome deaths that lead the Doctor and his friends to discover the grisly truth behind the academics' plans, and — as the ghosts of the past become ghosts of the present — to recognise that sometimes death can be preferable to life...
This would've been one of, if not, the darkest story of all time. It also would've featured a doll as a monster. Not even kidding.
LUCIFER RISING
by JIM MORTIMORE and ANDY LANE
Kate has asked the Doctor to bring the TARDIS to the planet Lucifer, site of a scientific expedition. It's history to her: the exploration of alien artefacts on Lucifer came to an abrupt halt three centuries before she was born, and she's always wondered why.
Uncovering the answer involves the Doctor and Kate in sabotage, murder, and the resurrection of eons-old alien powers.
Are there Angels on Lucifer? And what does it all have to do with Kate?
This episode would've featured a planet named Lucifer. Not referring to the beast with the same name.
WARHEAD
by ANDREW CARTMEL
The place is Earth. The time is the near future — all too near.
Industrial development has accelerated out of all control, spawning dangerous new technologies and laying the planet to waste. While the inner cities collapse in guerrilla warfare, a dark age of superstition dawns.
As destruction of the environment reaches the point of no return, multinational corporations and super-rich individuals unite in a last desperate effort — not to save humankind, but to buy themselves immortality in a poisoned world.
If Earth is to survive, somebody has to stop them.
From London to New York to Turkey, Kate follows the Doctor as he prepares, finally, to strike back.
This would've been set in a post-apocalyptic-ish world. And every post-apocalyptic-ish world is a fight for survival.
ILLEGAL ALIEN
by MIKE TUCKER and ROBERT PERRY
Arriving amid the chaos, the Doctor and Ace are the only people to believe McBride. The sphere bears all the hallmarks of sophisticated alien technology — and whatever was inside it is now loose in London.
Before long, they have embarked on a trail that brings them face to face with hidden Nazi operatives — and some very old enemies...
This story would've marked the return of the Cybermen after two whole years. And have they gained a more classic look.
Well, that's it for this episode for Doctor Who: Cerulean Future. Leave a comment on this post if you want more. And until then, see ya!
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