"The Brain of Evil" succeeds because it balances genuine horror with the Doctor's characteristic wit. It pushed the boundaries of what was considered "family viewing" at the time, resulting in a memorable, macabre masterpiece that remains a favorite for its atmosphere, its introduction of the Sisterhood, and its bold expansion of Time Lord mythology.
At its core, "The Brain of Evil" is a deliberate homage to Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein . The episode centers on the mad scientist Solon and his obsessive quest to build a "perfect" body for the disembodied brain of the renegade Time Lord, Morbius. By using various alien parts to stitch together a monstrosity, the story leans heavily into the "Hammer Horror" aesthetic that defined the Philip Hinchcliffe era of the show. [S8E8] The Brain of Evil
Morbius serves as a dark reflection of the Doctor. While the Doctor uses his knowledge to explore and preserve life, Morbius represents the corruption of Time Lord power—a tyrant who sought immortality through conquest and, eventually, grotesque surgery. Their mental "Mindbending" duel remains one of the most iconic sequences in the series, famously hinting at faces of the Doctor prior to William Hartnell (a plot point that would eventually be revisited decades later in the "Timeless Child" arc). "The Brain of Evil" succeeds because it balances