OK, the Radio Times preview for this Saturday's Doctor Who makes me want to see it RIGHT NOW:
"Those who dismiss Who as lightweight fluff should give tonight's story a try. The conclusion to a 1913-set two-parter, it's rich, complex, resonant and Bafta-worthy on its own merits. Remember when Rose begged the Doctor to take her on a sentimental journey in Father's Day? Well, The Family of Blood is nothing like that. But it's by the same writer, Paul Cornell, and it puts us though the emotional Moulinex in the same way. The eponymous alien family is close to sniffing out the Doctor from his hiding place (as human John Smith, teaching at a posh private school), and are killing anyone who stands in their way. It's apt that the key to the Doctor's reinstatement is an antique timepiece, but for some reason its young custodian won't surrender the object . . . It's a beautifully mature work, with performances to match from a bestever Tennant as Smith/the Doctor, Jessica Hynes as Smith's sweetheart Joan Redfern, and Freema Agyeman as the exasperated, lovelorn Martha. Overflowing with moral dilemmas and memory-searing moments, it also contains the best description of the Doctor we've ever heard in the show. Take a bow, Mr Cornell."
Roll on, Saturday night!