Which is the best Doctor Who festive special of all time?
For the first time in 13 years, the Tardis won’t be landing on December 25th – so let’s take a look back at the very best times it did
The news that Doctor Who’s annual special is moving from Christmas Day to New Year’s Day has upset quite a few fans, and looking back at some of the festive fun over the past 13 years and beyond it’s not hard to see why.
Still, now that the Christmas specials are taking a bit of a break it is at least the perfect time to revisit some of your favourites from the crop of Who-letide adventures, and settle something once and for all - which one's the best?
- When is the Doctor Who special on TV this Christmas? What's the plot and who are the guest stars?
- Doctor Who fans are OBSESSED with Jodie Whittaker's Tom Baker-style scarf for the New Year's special
- RadioTimes.com newsletter: get the latest TV and entertainment news direct to your inbox
Take a look at our list below for a reminder of each special, then cast your vote at the end. If you don't, well, you might just end up with coal in your stocking this year...
The Feast of Steven (1965)
This isn’t actually a full Christmas special, but given that it’s technically the first ever Doctor Who festive episode we could hardly leave it out.
Broadcast as the third part of The Daleks’ Master Plan serial (footage of which is now mostly lost), The Feast of Steven ended up airing on Christmas Day so some Yuletide elements were included in the middle of the multi-part adventure, including First Doctor William Hartnell’s famous fourth wall break to wish a Merry Christmas to viewers at home.
Yes, it was just a brief interlude in the middle of an unrelated story – but it was definitely a small festive treat when it aired in 1965.
The Christmas Invasion (2005)
This episode gave us our first decent look at David Tennant’s Tenth Doctor – although he did spend most of the runtime konked out in bed after his regeneration. With killer Christmas trees, swordfights and a deadly satsuma it was a decidedly different take on Christmas – but introduced us to one of the most popular incarnations of the Time Lord.
The Runaway Bride (2006)
Another introduction here to companion Donna Noble (though at this time actress Catherine Tate was intended as a one-off guest star), who was beamed right into the Tardis of a depressed Doctor. There were yet more killer trees, a Tardis/car chase, a deadly “Christmas star” and some dark moments for the Tenth Doctor – but in the end, Christmas was saved again. Huzzah!
Voyage of the Damned (2007)
Doctor Who went all disaster movie in this adventure, which featured a guest appearance from popstar Kylie Minogue as Astrid Perth. We also learned a little more of how humans are perceived by other species, specifically as cannibals with a hatred for the people of Turkey – no wonder aliens seem to have such an axe to grind with Earth at Christmas.
The Next Doctor (2008)
At this time speculation was rife as to who could succeed David Tennant’s confirmed-to-be-departing Doctor, only for the series to throw a curveball by actually framing an episode around the next incarnation– but was this Doctor (David Morrissey) who he seemed? Cybermen, the voice of the Marks and Spencer ads as a villain (Dervla Kirwan) and plenty of steampunk fun (including a huge rampaging Cyber-King) made this episode a Christmas to remember.
The End of Time (2009/10)
David Tennant got his brood on for his long-heralded exit from the show. Despite Wilf’s (Bernard Cribbins) antlers and a bit of gift-giving, there wasn’t too much Christmas cheer as the Master (John Simm) returned with his most extreme plan yet and the Doctor headed towards death. We didn’t want him to go either – but it was the end of the line for the Tenth incarnation of the Time Lord.
A Christmas Carol (2010)
Matt Smith’s Doctor rang in his first Christmas episode with an opera singer (Katherine Jenkins), a flying shark and a national treasure – Michael Gambon, as the Scrooge-like Kazran Sardick who the Doctor attempts to cheer up through rewriting history in a Dickens-style structure. Hopefully, he could do it in time to save his companions from yet another plummeting spaceship – it seems to be a serious problem at this time of year.
The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe (2011)
The Eleventh Doctor went all CS Lewis for this particularly family-themed episode, set in an endangered forest where Christmas trees bedecked with ornaments grow for real – but who also had plans of their own. The special also gave us a taste of the Doctor’s interior design skills, which were eccentric to say the least (see above).
The Snowmen (2012)
This time the Doctor himself was a bit of a Scrooge, having lost his companions Amy and Rory (Karen Gillan and Arthur Darvill) to the past. Not to worry, though – he soon cheered up with the help of a snowman-themed plot from an old enemy, and a strangely familiar new friend called Clara (Jenna Coleman)…
The Time of the Doctor (2013)
Matt Smith’s final(ish) episode had a lot to cram in plot-wise and basically acted as a finale for his entire run as the Time Lord, but they still managed to include plenty of Christmassy fun including the most accurate depiction of cooking a turkey in science-fiction history. And, of course, we got our first (but not last) fully Christmas-based regeneration into Peter Capaldi’s Twelfth Doctor, who had to wait a year for his first real festive appearance.
Last Christmas (2014)
It was a few years ago now, but how could anybody forget this Santa-meets-The Thing dream adventure? With twists and turns galore, there was plenty to get our food-befuddled brains around – but it also gave us by far the creepiest Who Christmas special to date, and an unexpected reprieve for Jenna Coleman's companion Clara (who had originally been planned to leave in this episode).
The Husbands of River Song (2015)
Peter Capaldi’s Doctor finally teamed up with his time-displaced wife River Song (Alex Kingston) in this frothy adventure, which saw the duo take on the evil King Hydroflax (Greg Davies), steal a diamond from his head and finally say their goodbyes to one another.
The episode is also significant for introducing Matt Lucas’ character Nardole, who was intended for a one-off guest appearance but ended up starring in the series as a companion for the next couple of years.
The Return of Doctor Mysterio (2016)
After a year off screens Doctor Who returned at Christmas with this romantic superhero story, which featured a powerful vigilante called the Ghost (Justin Chatwin) who teamed up with the Doctor and Nardole to unravel a devious alien conspiracy. And if he did manage to find happiness with his unrequited love, well, that was all the better.
Twice Upon a Time (2017)
Peter Capaldi’s final ever episode packed a lot in, featuring a multi-Doctor story (thanks to the performance of David Bradley as the Doctor’s first ever incarnation), the return of Pearl Mackie’s companion Bill, cameos from former cast members Matt Lucas and Jenna Coleman AND the Time Lord’s long-awaited regeneration into Jodie Whittaker’s Thirteenth Doctor.
The fact that they managed to fit in a story about glass aliens saving the consciousness of the dead AND the First World War Christmas Day Armistice as well is frankly a marvel.
Those are the festive episodes we have to date – but which is the best? Which will you be rewatching this Christmas in lieu of a new special, and which do you think you’ll be revisiting for years to come?
Doctor Who returns to BBC1 on New Year’s Day at 7.00pm