However interestingly, I've noticed that this finale seems to play out better with viewers who have children, and this is a key point here. Now the fact that the silver giants were defeated by an emotional overload has had alot of folk rolling their eyes and muttering about a sentiment over sense RTD style ending. So then, moving on from silver rats, the other issue for this Spoiler Zone is the possible niggle I mentioned in the previous review, which I can now reveal concerns the final confrontation with the Cybermen. The new design is a nice synthesis of the previous versions, but with a rather pleasing though somewhat disturbing twist - a set of very organic and nasty looking teeth! Not only did the reveal of these biological components provide a decent shock for Cybermat lovers old and new but also was a rather well thought-out addition, as the Cyber-race are flesh and steel cyborgs after all.Īnd I think it safe to say these little beasts have proved to be a big hit, and not only with old fans who are delighted to see them back in a cool new form, for it looks like a toy Cybermat will now be top of many children's Christmas lists this year *. So then, it was really only a matter of time before they made a reappearance in the new series - they'd been mentioned in The Almost People and played a part in the adventure game Blood of the Cybermen, so the stage was set to bring to a new audience. However the Cybermats would make reappearances in various Doctor Who audio dramas, novels and comics - evidently the concept of the Cybermen having these quasi-animals, and perhaps those googly eyes, hold a deep appeal. Anyhow, moving swiftly on! The Cybermen would return to plague to the Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Doctors, but sadly they no longer brought their pets with. Yes, I know, they do now look like some species of hideously prehensile martial aid! I'm not sure I should mention that their prime function in this story is spreading diseases. However Tom Baker did encounter them once in his first season in Revenge of the Cybermen& and the Cybermats were back too, albeit with a radical redesign. In fairness, however this wasn't due to the Cybermats being an unpopular creation, but due to the fact that the Third Doctor never tangled with the Cybermen (although one of the silver giants did appear in a cameo appearance as a denizen of the Miniscope in Carnival of Monsters and this Doctor did eventually battle them in the 1980s reunion story The Five Doctors).Ĭyber-appearances were thin on the ground too during the Fourth Doctor's reign. However despite an upgraded design (most notably the eyes were made, well, a little less googly), this was the last time we were to see them for quite some time, although apparently they were originally pencilled in to appear in The Invasion too. Well there's not too much to add to the spoiler-free review, however there are a couple of items worthy of comment!įirstly, and perhaps most importantly for old school Who fans, was the return of the Cybermats! Now for those of you who don't know, these little cyber-infiltration units first appeared back in the Second Doctor era, making their début in the classic adventure Tomb of the Cybermen.Īnd despite looking insanely goofy with their googly eyes and oh-so-1960s antennae, the little critters proved such a hit that they quickly made a second appearance in The Wheel In Space. And given how overly convoluted and rushed The Wedding Of River Song turned out to be, it makes one wonder if Closing Time should have been scrapped in favour of a traditional two-part finale.DOCTOR WHO 6.12 - Closing Time Spoiler Zone Overall the whole episode is very forgettable, a bit of filler before the Series 6 finale. but it's also horribly cliched and just feels very bland on a rewatch. Yes it's cute that the power of love for little baby Alfie is what wins the day for The Doctor and co. In fact Corden and Matt Smith's comedic chemistry is about the only thing the story has going for it.Īside from bringing back the Cybermats from the classic series, the story offers nothing new for the Cybermen, who are defeated by one of the most over-used plot devices from the Steven Moffat era - love. In fairness the Gavin And Stacey star turned talk show host is hardly at fault for the episode's shortcomings. After first appearing in Series 5's The Lodger, Craig Owens (Corden) is reunited with the Eleventh Doctor as the pair investigate a Cybermen invasion taking place at a nearby department store.
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