Doctor Who/Recap/S24/E02 Paradise Towers

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Maddy: No cause for panic? Two of my next-door neighbours have just disappeared down the waste disposal chute!

The Doctor and Mel decide to go and visit a famous housing project (because it has a nice pool), but it turns out that all of the fit adults left years before to fight a war. The block has devolved into a bizarre sort of anarchy, inhabited by color-themed all-female youth gangs called "Kangs" who use crazy terminology, rampaging janitor robots, cannibalistic old women, rule-obsessed security guys led by a guy who looks suspiciously like Adolf Hitler, a lone quixotic draft-dodger, and the disembodied mind of the block's Ax Crazy architect.


Tropes

  • The Apunkalypse: the Kangs are a G-rated version
  • Ax Crazy: Kroagnon
  • Badass Bandolier: Pex wears one. It doesn't help.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Subverted by Pex, who has a habit of showing up and trying to save the day (usually with a fair bit of property damage involved) even when there's no danger whatsoever. He successfully manages to pull the trope off later in the story, just in time to save Mel from Tilda.
  • Bland-Name Product: Fizzade
  • Book Ends: The Doctor begins and ends the serial politely doffing his hat to what appears to be some kind of disused water pipe.

Melanie: No, Doctor.
The Doctor: Well, you never can tell.

Chief Caretaker: Careless chat about the robotic self-activating Mechapodic Mark 7Z Cleaners having got out of control is not going to help anyone! And may needlessly upset other Caretakers.

  • Strange Salute: the Kang's elaborate "how do you do" ritual, which looks like a Shout-Out to the video to Adam and the Ants' "Prince Charming". And the Caretakers' salute, which is the British playground "put your finger under your nose like a moustache to allude to Adolf Hitler" gesture.
  • Teenage Wasteland
  • What Do You Mean It's Not Political?: as usual during this era, there are political subtexts, but Word of God has specifically denied fan theories that the red, blue and yellow Kangs were a reference to the colours of the UK's three major political parties at the time.
  • Whole-Plot Reference: acknowleged inspiration from the novel High Rise by J. G. Ballard.