Season 29 (1992-93)

Season 29 would've aired in September 5th, 1992 to January 2th, 1993, being the second season with Robert Lindsay as the Eighth Doctor and the third season with Julia Sawalha as Kate Tollinger.

This season would've been the last to use the recolored McCoy titles.

It would've had 6 serials and 18x25 minute episodes. With that being said, here is Doctor Who season 29.

RED EYES

by COLIN BRAKE

The TARDIS accidentally materializes in Gallifrey, where one of the Doctor's greatest enemies is waiting, waiting for his virtue. And the Doctor and Kate soon realize that their hopes aren't all they seem to be.

It's a race against time and the Doctor and Kate are up against all the time lords who ever encountered him.

After all, red eyes tell lies...

This would've marked the return of the Master.

THE MAN IN THE VELVET MASK

by DANIEL O'MAHONY

24 Messidor, XXII: the TARDIS has landed in post-revolutionary France, or so it appears. But the futuristic structure of the New Bastille towers over a twisted version of Paris. And First Deputy Minski, adopted son of the infamous Marquis de Sade, presides over a reign of terror that has yet to end.

Revolutionary soldiers arrest an ailing Doctor as a curfew breaker. Kate is recruited by a band of wandering players whose intentions are less than pure. Deep in the dungeons of the Bastille, Prisoner 6 tries desperately to remember who he is. And outside time and space, a gathering of aliens watch in horror as their greatest experiment goes catastrophically wrong.

This would've been set in an alternate Paris, France.

THE REVELATION

by PAUL CORNELL

The parishioners of Cheldon Bonniface walk to church on the Sunday before Christmas, 1992. Snow is in the air, or is it the threat of something else? The Reverend Trelaw has a premonition, too, and discusses it with the spirit that inhabits his church. Perhaps the Doctor is about to visit them again?

Some years earlier, in a playground in Perivale, Chad Boyle picks up a half-brick. He's going to get that creepy Dorothy who says she wants to be an astronaut. The weapon falls, splitting Dorothy's skull. She dies instantly.

The Doctor has pursued a space-time anomaly from prehistoric Mesopotamia to Nazi Germany, and then to the end of the universe. He has tracked down the creature again: but what trans-temporal trap has it prepared for their confrontation?

This would've been extremely disturbing. I mean the 8th Doctor's era is dark, right?

AUTUMN MIST

by DAVID A. McINTEE

The Ardennes, December 1944: the Nazi forces are making their last offensive in Europe — a campaign which will come to be called the Battle of the Bulge. But there is a third side to this battle: an unknown and ancient force which seems to pay little heed to the laws of nature.

Where do the bodies of the dead disappear to? What is the true nature of the military experiments conducted by both sides?

The Doctor and Kate must seek out the truth in a battlefield where no one and nothing is quite what it seems...

This would've been one of those war episodes.

TWILIGHT OF THE GODS

by CHRITOPHER BULIS

Many years have passed since the Doctor's first visit to the Web Planet, and he finds a very different world from the one he knew; a world now embroiled in a bitter interplanetary war between the opposing factions of a divided race.

To restore peace, the Doctor and Kate must first resolve a deadly ideological conflict, solve the paradox of the nature of life on Vortis, and finally confront the Gods of Light themselves.

As the stakes are raised, can the Doctor contain the ancient terror that threatens to devastate an entire star system?

This would've been the first time we ever see Vortis.

THE PIT

by NEIL PENSWICK

In an attempt to lift the Doctor out of his irritable and erratic mood, Kate suggests he investigates the mystery of the Seven Planets — an entire planetary system that disappeared without trace several decades before Kate was born.

One of the Seven Planets is a nameless giant, quarantined against all intruders. But when the TARDIS materialises, it becomes clear that the planet has other visitors: a hit-squad of killer androids; a trespassing scientist and his wife; and two shape-changing criminals with their team of slaves.

As riot and anarchy spread on the system's colonised worlds, the Doctor is flung into another universe while Kate closes in on the horror that is about to be unleashed — a horror that comes from a terrible secret in the Time Lords' past.

No exact year is given for the UNIT section of the serial. The decade can be deduced as the 1990s, as the time period is referred to as the 20th century and Colonel Philips learns of the Doctor's time as UNIT's scientific advisor in the 1970s and 1980s.

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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