The Cybermen advance across Natty Longshoe's Comical Castle. ("Nightmare in Silver") ©BBC |
And here's the first problem: if your stated goal is to make the Cybermen scary, you need to use the most effective tool in their arsenal -- being converted into a Cyberman. Part of the reason things like The Tomb of the Cybermen work as well as they do is that they play on that. "You shall be like us," the Cyber Controller grates in that story, but we get little in the way of that here. Mr. Webley is the most effective because he's partially converted, but people like those two troopers and the two children get a blinking light attached to their heads and that's it. No body horror, no people dragged away or instantly converted by Cybermites. We're told the Cybermen are dangerous and terrifying, but we don't see enough evidence to really believe that.
The other major problem is the inclusion of Artie and Angie, the two children Clara babysits. To be frank... why are they in this story at all? There doesn't seem to be anything requiring their presence (there's a suggestion that children's brains are needed by the Cybermen because they're clever, but that's immediately (as in, within the same line) discounted in favor of the Doctor's brain), and they tend to be a drag while they're around. Well, that's not fair; Artie is actually rather likeable, as he actually seems to be interested in his surroundings, but Angie is presented as an obnoxious teenager, which is as much fun as it sounds. I'm all for realism, but did no one think that having Angie walk into a room full of soldiers and declare that she's bored was taking things too far? She's incredibly unpleasant to be around, and it's frankly something of a mercy when the Cybermen put her in a "walking coma".
So we've got new look not-actually-very-scary Cybermen and a kid and his annoying sister wandering around, but there are some good moments here. The best one is the partial conversion of the Doctor himself, mainly because Matt Smith is so good portraying both the Doctor and the Cyber Planner -- it's a surprisingly nuanced performance for a character that seems to involve a lot of smug shouting, but Smith pulls it off. And I'm happy any time Warwick Davis shows up in anything, and his portrayal of Porridge/Emperor Ludens Nimrod Kendrick Cord Longstaff XLI doesn't fail to deliver. The resolution of the storyline, where Porridge activates the planet-imploding bomb and then his imperial ship comes and rescues everyone, should feel like a massive copout but doesn't. And the Cyber redesign looks nice -- and the Cyber-tombs underground have nice visual callbacks to The Tomb of the Cybermen, just like Attack of the Cybermen should have done.
But in the end "Nightmare in Silver" fails to deliver. The feeling you get, watching this, is that this should have undergone either one more rewrite or several fewer. It feels like Neil Gaiman's authorial voice was slowly edited out of the episode, but nothing was brought in to replace it, and the purpose behind some of the decisions (such as the presence of the kids) was lost in the rewrites. It's not incompetent, and like all Doctor Who there are good moments in here if you look for them, but the final result falls far short of the intended goal.
Oh and look: in fine old tradition, they've misspelled Kit Pedler's name as "Pedlar" in the closing credits.