Doctor Who Keeps Getting The Cybermen Wrong

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  • Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 668

  • @zacmumblethunder7466
    @zacmumblethunder7466 11 месяцев назад +411

    The loss of the gloves on the original cybermen worked out for the good. When they first appear they seem like robots until the camera focuses in on the hands and we see a human hand. Added to the later scenes where we see the bone structure under the surgical dressing, the opening mouth and glimpses of an eyeball deep in the dark eye sockets, the overall effect is of the remnants of a human held together with technology. Which I think is creepier than just a brain in a tin.

    • @Noodle_Druid
      @Noodle_Druid 10 месяцев назад +15

      The mindless cyborgs having human hands kind of reminds me of that robot arm that uses dead spiders as grabbing claws. Maybe the meatbags have some useful parts on them after all

    • @paulashe61
      @paulashe61 10 месяцев назад +3

      If you enjoyed the proper cybermen. Big Finish - Spare Parts.

    • @Theking-kk3pk
      @Theking-kk3pk 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@paulashe61a man of culture I see

  • @maryakawhovian
    @maryakawhovian 11 месяцев назад +511

    Bill turning into a ciberman must be one of the most horrific and interesting stories. Cant rewatch the episode to this day.

    • @atticstattic
      @atticstattic 10 месяцев назад +13

      Completely agree - that was horrifying

    • @melleen629
      @melleen629 10 месяцев назад +10

      I like that idea, but I really wish they did more with it besides the reveal.

    • @Gojirawars03
      @Gojirawars03 6 месяцев назад +3

      A shame that episode was so bogged down by the presence of not one, but TWO Masters.

    • @Ryysight
      @Ryysight 4 месяца назад +7

      Still the best Cyberman story ever, the body horror, the fact the incomplete Cybermen were suffering in agony for over 10 years, the desperation which lead to them... The Cybermen are at their best when they're not an intergalactic empire of terror, they're best when it's humans suffering unimaginable horror in the name of progress

    • @randomaccountwithmusic4206
      @randomaccountwithmusic4206 4 месяца назад

      Having watched it recently having her chest caved out and then replaced entirely oh, it made my skin crawl and I felt my heart beat the entire time. Also the fact that dumbass doc took ten minutes explaining time dilation and then go in the elevator anyway, FUCKER could've done it in the lift and saved Bill Easy!

  • @TheCuriosity8
    @TheCuriosity8 11 месяцев назад +362

    I loved the line where the doctor explains that no matter how many times the cybermen are stopped they just keep happening anew as the end point of a common development path.

    • @JOCoStudio1
      @JOCoStudio1 11 месяцев назад +115

      That's a great horror aspect to explore in itself. You can wipe out every cyberman and every trace that they ever existed, but still they would independantly develop again at some later point in the future of humanity (or whatever similar species). How do you keep humanity from taking its own humanity away?

    • @animationfanatic2133
      @animationfanatic2133 11 месяцев назад +8

      We survive

    • @bobsempletank5362
      @bobsempletank5362 11 месяцев назад +25

      ITs kinda like how tons of species evolve into crabs over time. It's like the "peak" of evolution

    • @owenwiltshire8497
      @owenwiltshire8497 10 месяцев назад

      Cylon type story lines where they can mate with humans? Till you can't tell whats what no more? Start talking about "beings" as many do today?

    • @cheafmin1399
      @cheafmin1399 10 месяцев назад +3

      Ah, the good ol "theres nothing more human then inhuman mechanical death" philosophy.

  • @bryancorrell3689
    @bryancorrell3689 11 месяцев назад +228

    Ideally, the Cybermen shouldn't be portrayed as "evil." They genuinely believe that converting you is for your own good. From a purely logical perspective you're better off as a Cyberman. It's just those pointless emotions that get in the way of you accepting that.
    Edit: I would add that 'Attack of the Cybermen' (the Colin Baker cyberstory) does contain at least some of the body horror aspects with a couple characters being partially converted 'rejects' and Lytton in the middle of conversion at the climax.

    • @intergalactic92
      @intergalactic92 11 месяцев назад +4

      Thank you for bringing up Attack of the Cybermen. Very underrated in my opinion.

    • @JohnBloggs-m8l
      @JohnBloggs-m8l 10 месяцев назад +7

      Yeah but trouble is in the classic show they did start to become synonymous with Daleks because they often didn't care about converting humans they just wanted to dominate for domination's sake which is a very boring plotline cos then they don't have any depth to their motivations. In tom bakers one Cyberman story not only do they have zero interest in converting the humans they even allow them planned escape time after a mission is concluded involving the doctor and company

    • @lawrencestalbow-best2317
      @lawrencestalbow-best2317 4 месяца назад +2

      Underrated episode.

    • @Silverwind87
      @Silverwind87 4 месяца назад

      That's why I don't buy the constant theme of the Cybermen forcefully converting humans. I imagine there would be at least some people who would voluntarily be "upgraded." Terminally ill people, for instance. Children who don't know any better. Wealthy opportunists who believe that they'd be more powerful as Cybermen. Also, why stop at humans? There are countless human-ish lifeforms in the universe. Show us Cyber-Silurians, or Cyber-Thals, or maybe even Cyber-Tivolians.

    • @valentinagacha_tt
      @valentinagacha_tt 2 месяца назад

      They remind me of the handbots from the girl who waited, theyre just doing what they think is right

  • @rudevoices9204
    @rudevoices9204 11 месяцев назад +952

    I often think about that scene in Age of Steel where a cyberman comes up to Pete and is like "I was Jackie Tyler" but thinks nothing of it while Pete is absolutely horrified and like...that's one of the most terrifying things to think about

    • @pokenutter
      @pokenutter 11 месяцев назад +176

      And then Pete and Rose make a note that they'll come back and rescue her, but can't remember which one she was. Age of Steel/Rise of the Cybermen was honestly my favorite story of Series 2.

    • @OscarOSullivan
      @OscarOSullivan 11 месяцев назад +17

      Best nuwho cyberman story

    • @OscarOSullivan
      @OscarOSullivan 11 месяцев назад +74

      Age of steel has plenty of subtle body horror. The sammy cyberman was genuinely depressing.

    • @cement_eater
      @cement_eater 11 месяцев назад +19

      @@OscarOSullivan still world enough and time/the doctor falls for me. both great though

    • @RAFMnBgaming
      @RAFMnBgaming 11 месяцев назад +24

      @@OscarOSullivan *thinks back to the machine with all the saws*
      Subtle. yes.

  • @base-mint
    @base-mint 11 месяцев назад +177

    If I ever wrote a cybermen story, I would incorporate the ship of Theseus within the story itself. That encapsulates the entire concept of why the cybermen are so controversial and scary.

    • @jeddeane4359
      @jeddeane4359 11 месяцев назад +7

      Yes

    • @base-mint
      @base-mint 10 месяцев назад +3

      Wow, with this kind of response, maybe I should write the story myself. I’ll do some research on Theseus and see if there’s opportunities to include the Doctor and the Cybermen within a story and present it to this channel.

    • @skullzans
      @skullzans 10 месяцев назад +10

      if ever I was given the reigns, I think a concept basing initially off of the Ship of Theseus would work, but also go into the gradient of cybermen. At what point is it...cyber anymore? Showing a history of multiple cyberman factions which are disagreeing on how to handle their race, the doctor showing up to stop them at each turn causing frustration and unknowingly destroying the unity they had.
      Some cybermen become more and more robotic as a militaric response against the opposition of armies and the Doctor, some of them choose to remain closer to human and "Upgrade" people out of a sense of warped justice that they are saving them from themselves and would simply take the side of fixing humanity from the sidelines, some would be an empire that believed it had achieved closeness to perfect form and thus had to educate the lower races into understanding this perfection of logical persuits and optimization, but all 3 ideologies would eventually collapse into extremes.
      The Military ones fighting the Doctor and moving to conquer the doctor would be two seperate factions of cybermen that generally compete but do not fight one another often. Instead prioritizing on adapting to fight against their foes more and more until ending up becoming little more than mindless machines with no amount of flesh or biomatter remaining leading to the question of "is this a cyberman or just a robot that identifies as a cyborg". This would end up explaining the super cybermen from that episode with "Mr Clever".
      The "Saviors" would upgrade people more and more, while being more and more aggressive, until they see themselves as saboteurs trying to outright destroy humanity as they do not see a reason to believe humans could ever be redeemed except through assimilation or control outright, this would comprise of a mix of Mondasian and Cybusian Cybermen and end up be a group that believes it knows best and that it would be the smarter of the three in the end, manipulating puppets that were once governments and people.
      The "Educators" would start by assimilating with genuine sharing of their ideals and consent, but end up as infultrators similar to the "Saviors", but focusing on the benefits of their craft, trying to achieve perfect ideals and systems that turn out to be dangerous and harmful. "No Cost is too great" becoming a mantra for them. In the end they would have empty paradises and no movement, showing the true escapism in their intentions. They were aiming to escape imperfections of mortality only to end up losing meaning.
      This would explore the "Ship of Theseus" concept but with how the Cybermen lost their meaning over time, and why. However, this is not a good perspective, I would probably butcher it.

    • @luisd.mancilla8169
      @luisd.mancilla8169 4 месяца назад

      I was about to say they've done that before in Deep Breath with the SS Marie Antoinette service droids, but that was more of "you've taken so many parts you're more human than machine", while the cybermen could be more of the other way around "you're more machine than human"

  • @dustinakadustin
    @dustinakadustin 11 месяцев назад +492

    The original Mondassian Cybermen design is great, super creepy and eventuates the body horror. I really liked seeing them in season 10 was awesome. Also my favourite season of the show.

    • @tylerboothman4496
      @tylerboothman4496 11 месяцев назад +9

      They're the best modern Cybermen

    • @OscarOSullivan
      @OscarOSullivan 11 месяцев назад +4

      Cybus men in their first appearance second

    • @minicle426
      @minicle426 11 месяцев назад +7

      I wish they'd bring back the Moonbase/Tomb designs. That was always my favourite.

    • @ace-smith
      @ace-smith 11 месяцев назад +14

      one of the greatest cyberman stories by virtue of also being one of the best stories of the whole show. (pro tip: if you're watching s10 for the first time and happen upon this comment, SKIP THE PREVIEWS: they'll spoil this particular episode completely. also this comment.) the way it recontextualizes the mondasian cybermen from that shoddy cloth suit making you go "wow, what a shoddy cloth suit" to it making you wonder what grotesquery could be concealed under it. incredible.
      sure, it was kind of signposted that all the "healing" full conversion promised was less than so, but that surgeon guy going "this won't help the pain. but it will make you stop caring about it" and holding up the identifiably cyberman head handle thing as the final reveal that Yeah These Are Cyberman still makes me shiver. they made the HEAD HANDLES scary. going full body horror due to treating the actual cyberman part as a big twist was an amazing choice.
      also the doctor falls follows this up by convincingly explaining away the many origins of cybermen in a way that's actually thematically cool and resonant and not just a handwave

    • @doctorwhyyt11
      @doctorwhyyt11 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@minicle426omg yessss

  • @supersecret4390
    @supersecret4390 11 месяцев назад +968

    My biggest problem is scenes like in The Big Bang where you see Amy fending off the mostly functional cyberman that doesn't have any organic components. It makes the audience ask why they need to get parts of people's bodies so badly if they can work fine without them. Anytime the cybermen are depicted as a robot that wants some parts put into them rather than a heavily augmented person it loses what makes them scary imo. The heavily robot designs we've been seeing since the 80s don't help with this

    • @jmurray1110
      @jmurray1110 11 месяцев назад +80

      The cybus men were really stretching it
      Like it worked because of the mesh keeping them together but the armour while practical removed that humanity
      The nightmare in silver designs just said fuck it and gave them automated hardware updates

    • @karachter
      @karachter 11 месяцев назад +31

      i like to think that all cybersuits have the one goal to first convert themselves and then convert others, as each without a body inside would immediately want to produce more cybermen, and obviously the first thing it would do is convert one human with itself

    • @Gojirawars03
      @Gojirawars03 11 месяцев назад +60

      @@jmurray1110Cybusmen felt realistic. Indestructible suits of armor housing a human brain inside. They were feasibly industrial. The ones after the fact just felt ridiculously over the top.

    • @dmaxwell910901
      @dmaxwell910901 11 месяцев назад +26

      Also, that Cyberman gets impaled by a damn sword.
      They're literally meant to be impervious to bullets, yet Moffat made them killable with Roman weaponry.

    • @supersecret4390
      @supersecret4390 11 месяцев назад +31

      @@Gojirawars03 I never liked the idea of it just having a human brain inside of it. It should be a person that's just been modified a lot. The second it's made into a robot that has a brain into it then it makes you ask why they don't just use a computer instead and that completely loses all of the body horror. There shouldn't be any separation between the organics and mechanics. It should just be one augmented person

  • @TheDanishGuyReviews
    @TheDanishGuyReviews 11 месяцев назад +73

    The bit about chasing the high of the Daleks coming out of the ship reminds me of the fact that those episodes has the coolest interaction between Daleks and anyone, ever. I've referred to "We would destroy you with ONE DALEK!!" with "Oh, to have the confidence of a Dalek!" for years now.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 11 месяцев назад +11

      I rather liked one of their few comic interactions, just because it conveyed a lot with very little: Two characters who have almost no body language and were still able to convey meaning with the most basic of movements and no language. In The Power of the Doctor, where The Master is in full-on villain gloating and breaks out in a song-and-dance number by way of taunt. There's a moment representatives when his allies-of-convenience, a Dalek and a Cyberman, just turn towards each other in the background. A moment of face-to-eyestalk exchange that sums up their unspoken agreement: "I know he's a monumental prat, but just ignore it, we need him."

  • @Rajesh-Koothrappali
    @Rajesh-Koothrappali 11 месяцев назад +77

    I like how they have actual human hands in the original cybermen costume, it looks like there is actual human components, and is actually quite disturbing, these cyborgs that are fully metal, have human hands, I like to think they kept them because they couldn’t replicate touch and they still need to be able to feel things

  • @melleen629
    @melleen629 11 месяцев назад +71

    The scene where emotional inhibitor blows and the cyberman starts talking about being ready for a wedding gets it so well

    • @KeesekuchenLP
      @KeesekuchenLP 10 месяцев назад +23

      One of my favorite scenes from season 2. Hearing the Cyberman go "I'm so cold. Why am I cold..." in its monotone robotic voice is spine chilling.

    • @quali-vd3ud
      @quali-vd3ud 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@KeesekuchenLP It doesn't make any sense though. If you were a brain in a box without any skin nerves connected to you, you would feel neither hot nor cold. The absence of sensation would be far weirder than just feeling "cold".

    • @PrisMar_YT
      @PrisMar_YT 4 месяца назад +7

      @@quali-vd3ud I think its metaphorical. Like without emotions its just coldness. Darkness. There's an empty pit where you used to keep your feelings.

    • @quali-vd3ud
      @quali-vd3ud 4 месяца назад

      @@PrisMar_YT i get that but if you were a cyberman who just woke up your ass would not be prepared for busting out the slam poetry. idk i think cybermen are dumb

    • @Virtualblueart
      @Virtualblueart 4 месяца назад +4

      @@quali-vd3ud the white stringy stuff you see in one of the opened up Cyberman are the flayed nerves connected to the cybernetic parts.
      It's not just the brain, it's a lot of the nervous systems as well.
      And the cold feeling is probably similar to phantom pain of a lost limb.

  • @sck8000
    @sck8000 11 месяцев назад +37

    "The Daleks and The Master are alien threats. The Cybermen are us."
    That's a really great way to put it. I wasn't a fan of a lot of Moffat's era, but I loved World Enough And Time / The Doctor Falls for really digging into their roots and putting a lot of emphasis on the horrors of the whole process of becoming a Cyberman. It's not just about what they end up as - it's about the journey from human to Cyberman, and what that means. Moffat was a so-so showrunner, but he's always been fantastic at telling short-form stories, especially if they're darker ones.

  • @IsaacAllwood
    @IsaacAllwood 10 месяцев назад +9

    "Effects that looked fantastic when I was 7" I didn't deserve to be called out like this... I didn't have it coming :(

  • @matthewparker9276
    @matthewparker9276 11 месяцев назад +31

    The best critique I've heard is that nighmare in silver is a dalek story, and asylum of the daleks is a cyberman story.

    • @Gojirawars03
      @Gojirawars03 6 месяцев назад

      Jesus Christ you’re right, and I hate so much that you are.

  • @mechaflood2247
    @mechaflood2247 11 месяцев назад +96

    I like the cybermen because they're a threat the doctor can't ever get rid of. The cybermen coming from humans trying to reach some form of perfection or immortality means that wherever there are humans there will be cybermen. I think a good way to do a cybermen story would be making them the season's main villain rather then some side villain. Have a series where the doctor goes somewhere that prosthetics are common and encouraged so that they can explore what it would be like to have a large mass of people willingly convert because I think that aspect has been ignored by Dr who (ashad is dumb and I hate them). I feel like the concept of the cybermen could use a writer who's familiar with cyberpunk and its themes

    • @Zenn_Chan
      @Zenn_Chan 10 месяцев назад +8

      It would be interesting to see a story where there’s a cyberman “civil” war, where two separate colonies of humans each individually became cybermen, and those two groups of hive minded cybermen clash over their ideals of what is the best way forward. Like, could be a message that there’s no real “perfection”, there’s always little things you improve by sacrificing others. Like maybe one of the cybermen have the guns, while the other is purely melee, but they’re more durable as a result. Could be interesting.

    • @voltinator
      @voltinator 10 месяцев назад +7

      The funny thing is that the Time Lord process of Regeneration is basically what the Cybermen are after ultimately. The Cybermen are humanity's ill-fated attempt at becoming Time Lords.

    • @AmberMetallicScorpion
      @AmberMetallicScorpion 10 месяцев назад +6

      honestly all the best doctor stories come from when he has to deal with an intangible threat. he could easily beat the daleks, the master, etc. but how do you fight the concept of self-preservation? how do you fight the concept of capitalism? there's a reason why episodes like midnight, listen, rise of steel/age of the cybermen, dark water/death in heaven, and world enough and time/the doctor falls, oxygen, and hell bent are among the most loved episodes of the show. because sure the doctor can escape, he can get people to safety, he can destroy the immediate threat, but he can't destroy a concept, and we see what happens if he tries with the timelord victorious (which i'm fully convinced is the only reason the waters of mars is as highly rated as it is). those kinds of episodes are where we see who the doctor really is. they're not perfect, not some overpowered being, they're just a madman in a box, passing by and helping out if they can

  • @jamlemon
    @jamlemon 11 месяцев назад +82

    Really hope when the Cybermen come back they’re not like robots again. Best Cybermen stories in the last few years are the Bill Cyberman episode and the Mary Shelly one.

  • @fredjones2170
    @fredjones2170 11 месяцев назад +110

    Excellent video! I completely agree; I think the Cyberman AND Daleks should only be used for stories that make the most of their respective concepts: The Cybermen’s horror of being altered and stripped of your humanity, and the Daleks being the embodiment of fascism and bigotry. Both have been used as generic enemies time and again, and I think it’s really taken the teeth out of them, so to speak.
    We need another Cyberman story that really explores the horrors behind their concept, and I think it’d be interesting to explore that again through the lens of modern-day issues.

    • @Sir_Gerald_Nosehairs.
      @Sir_Gerald_Nosehairs. 11 месяцев назад +6

      But the Daleks aren't really good embodiments of fascism or bigotry, if you think about it. They have had traits like empathy genetically bred out of them by their creator, they can't act any other way than how they do. The real horror of fascism, especially the Nazi strand of it, was how it was ordinary people, often decent and kindly ones in their personal life, doing terrible things.

    • @loganderhund606
      @loganderhund606 11 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@Sir_Gerald_Nosehairs. I think that some of the best Dalek stories are those were they go after themselves and show the hypocrisy in the concepts they represent. Like the episode of the 13th doctor where the one recon dalek cloned itself and basically took over the world but was killed by the normal Daleks because they were "impure".

    • @irrevenant3
      @irrevenant3 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@Sir_Gerald_Nosehairs. Daleks are supremacists. They are embodiments of the idea that "We are superior, all others are inferior". One of the things I love about the Daleks is that they are repeatedly self-defeating, because any time Daleks make moves to change and grow, the others immediately smack them down for being not Dalek enough.

  • @carrot708
    @carrot708 11 месяцев назад +185

    The funny thing is the Whittaker era was on track to deliver one of the best Cyberman stories of Nu Who....and then The Master hijacked the story

    • @beesus1412
      @beesus1412 11 месяцев назад +44

      when i first watched ascension of the cybermen i really thought they were leading to something with the "cyberman that makes other cybermen scream" thing, along with the timeless child flashbacks i thought the idea was going to be that the dormant cybermen were being fed their old lives as a way of conditioning them with familiar imagery without completely getting rid of emotion, something along those lines leading to ashad making some sense as a leader since he found the value of using emotion as a tool for control
      but no... ashad still just doesn't make sense and the other cybermen screaming didn't make sense cause they were literally just robots

    • @dr.feelgoodmalusphillips2475
      @dr.feelgoodmalusphillips2475 11 месяцев назад +4

      Like He/She did post Moffat era for almost every Cybermen story...

    • @schmendrickcoldwater1727
      @schmendrickcoldwater1727 11 месяцев назад +3

      Still one of the best. Only World Enough and Time/The Doctor Falls is better imo.

    • @Josh-the-man
      @Josh-the-man 11 месяцев назад

      Nah

    • @RealCoolstriker64
      @RealCoolstriker64 11 месяцев назад +24

      Chibnal era. we will NOT let an innocent actress take the fall for his shitty writing just because he didn’t last long enough to have more than Doctor.

  • @Jermbot15
    @Jermbot15 11 месяцев назад +14

    We saw how to fix the Cybermen in the first season of Torchwood. You make them sexy, cover them in barbeque sauce and have them do battle with a pterodactyl.

  • @Paul-wd8cz
    @Paul-wd8cz 11 месяцев назад +71

    I love the cybermen. As a child, they terrified me, probably because of the death of Adric who was my audience surrogate - as I was also good at maths.
    I remember there was a Dr Who exhibit at Blackpool, and every year the family would go for the illuminations, and I would beg my dad to go into the Dr Who exhibit.
    And every year, I would take two steps in, see a cyberman, close my eyes and cling onto my Dad. Refusing to open my eyes until we had exited the exhibit.... and then repeat the same thing the next year.
    I still have no idea what was in the exhibit.

  • @PsyrenXY
    @PsyrenXY 11 месяцев назад +52

    You hit the nail on the head with what makes good Cybermen stories good!
    One thing i was hoping you'd touch on though was the weird tendency of NuWho to turn them into minions of the Master. We saw it with Missy in Death in Heaven, Simm in Doctor Falls and now again with Sacha using Cybertimelords. If they are one leg of the Big 3, shouldnt the Master be as reluctant to use them as minions as they would be to use a bunch of Daleks? To me it undercuts their danger if they become the go-to trooper for the Master's schemes rather than a major Big 3 threat in their own right.

    • @Wanten-the-stormtrooper
      @Wanten-the-stormtrooper 11 месяцев назад +13

      Join the club, mate! I _hate_ how this weird association between them and the Master has kinda consumed them. Like, did Moffat just watch the 5 Doctors and get it in his head that that's what Cybermen are supposed to be? We need another Cyber Controller to speak for them, not someone who's not alligned with them at all.
      In fact, this bizarre association got so bad that in the miniatures game (yes, there was 1 that was a bit like Warhammer 40k but for Doctor Who, but it got killed when it started referencing the Whitaker stuff) they had a Cybermen army box that was - you guessed it, "Missy and the Cybermen". The only actual Cyber character we got was the Cyber Controller from Tomb of the Cybermen in a 5-pack of metal figures.

    • @matt6506
      @matt6506 11 месяцев назад

      this is where my cyberman fatigue came in, it was essentially the same thing over and over and I just got sick of it. I am hoping with the return of RTD he does good with them, if he brings them back

    • @TheJonesdude
      @TheJonesdude 11 месяцев назад +1

      I think it's meant to be a reflection on the Doctor. The Doctor allies with the best of humanity and the master allies with the worst, the worst being the cybermen.

    • @Wanten-the-stormtrooper
      @Wanten-the-stormtrooper 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@TheJonesdude But again, that's more about the Master than the Cybermen themselves. I think the last time they had a Master-free story to themselves was the one with James Corden in 2011...

  • @VinnieBartilucci
    @VinnieBartilucci 11 месяцев назад +21

    You know what drives me the maddest about Cybermen?
    Gold.
    The weakness to gold was introduced into the series in Revenge of the Cybermen. Powdered gold would coat their respirators and they'd asphyxiate. Sounds plausible. But over the course of the rest of the series, the weakness got more and more prevalent so it started to affect Cybermen the way silver affected werewolves. The Doctor was able to cripple Mr. Clever by slapping a bit of gold foil on his face. Oh Come On. If they come back again I'm afraid they'll be defeated by throwing Ferrero Rocher chocolate coated hazelnuts at them.

  • @danieljames6899
    @danieljames6899 11 месяцев назад +285

    I agree with you, we need them to treat the Cybermen differently from the Daleks. The Cybermen are an idea that was born out of a fear in the 1960s that people could replace their parts by prosthetics to the point of becoming unrecognisable, it's a fear that has its roots in iatrophobia and I think that's what they need to focus on. With a twist though, I think that instead of seeing technology and conventional medicine being taken to the extreme, it is more interesting that Cybermen have their origins in people who refuse to use conventional medicine and use alternative medicine, but not being experts in it damage themselves in irreparable ways by becoming Cybermen

    • @davidpo5517
      @davidpo5517 11 месяцев назад +26

      I like your idea, but not for the cybermen. It should be its own thing, a new creature.
      Cybermen should be body horror, based on humans becoming so integrated with technology (with a good thing taken to extremes) that they become no longer human. They lose a part of themselves. It's a nice transhumanism concept from classic sci-fi that's still relevant today, and will still be relevant in 100 years.
      But if you add this "alternative medicine" thing in there, it's not going to help the cybermen. It's just going to add a bunch of baggage that goes along with the term "alternative medicine."
      Especially after Covid, where people weren't following traditional medicine specifically because they didn't trust what became a politicized discussion about the institution. People aren't going to chop off their arms and replace them with robotics limbs just because of "alternative medicine" and not trusting the institutions.

    • @Sir_Gerald_Nosehairs.
      @Sir_Gerald_Nosehairs. 11 месяцев назад +6

      I always thought the Cybermen were a Communist allegory? "You will be like us", individuality being consumed by the collective, etc.

    • @davidpo5517
      @davidpo5517 11 месяцев назад +12

      @@Sir_Gerald_Nosehairs. sure, I can see similar themes there comparing communist society to a machine, since communism was created around the time of industrialization, and the mechanization of production in society. But it's really about transhumanism.
      The 60s when Cybermen first came out was the time when sci-fi started really dealing with transhumanism, since Huxley had just come up with the term.
      Apart from that, the guys who came up with the Cybermen was inspired by what was then a type of new medical procedure that was literally called "spare parts surgery," which is the replacement of organs or limbs through either transplants or artificial replacements. In the scientific world, they had just invented some sort of artificial heart/lung machine that everyone was hearing about. The writers were concerned about the technology that helps us actually leading to a loss of humanity.
      Tie that to the inhumanity of the communist system and yeah, I can see parallels.

    • @OscarOSullivan
      @OscarOSullivan 11 месяцев назад +3

      The problem is we no longer by and large fear transplants.
      Technology making us less human is and that is why I love the age of steel story.

    • @danieljames6899
      @danieljames6899 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@davidpo5517 The point is precisely this: I am not talking about current conventional medicine, but about a more sci-fi version, in which there are nanorobots and an increasing integration of technology into humanity.
      Today, we no longer live in the 1960s: there is already a reality in which very few people can partially recover their sight thanks to a microchip under the skin, wirelessly connected to a computer that sends impulses to the brain, allowing them to see.
      From today's perspective, the integration of people with technology is already a reality and will continue to develop more and more.
      For me, the Cybermen come from the distant future and my idea of 'Alternative Medicine' is relevant. These Cybermen derive from people who use this technology even though they do not need it (such as those who perform surgeries at home or in other non-legal places) or those who do not trust conventional medicine and, instead of using the nanorobots prescribed by their doctor, employ nanorobots found on the dark web or the like (such as those who avoid vaccines by undergoing unregulated injections with serious consequences).
      I imagine that the 'Upgrade' process of Cybermen is slower and comes from within, a change that can only be detected when it is too late. In the series we could visualise this transformation from human to Cyberman in a visceral way, through a moment in which the skin of one of the characters falls off, revealing underneath it muscles transformed into metal.

  • @oliviaconstanzewoodward-wh7361
    @oliviaconstanzewoodward-wh7361 11 месяцев назад +23

    personally, i think the best cybermen premises are the ones which lean into the fact that, in their own fucked up ways, the cybermen are *benevolent.* from their perspective, they are ultimately helping the people they 'upgrade'!

    • @neilroberts6213
      @neilroberts6213 10 месяцев назад +2

      This show is awful and I hope it goes for another thousand years ❤

  • @kilo1012
    @kilo1012 10 месяцев назад +4

    I liked the "believer" aspect of Ashad. I think there's something very chilling and rife with potential there if chibs was interested in that at all

  • @najawin8348
    @najawin8348 11 месяцев назад +41

    They just need to bring in Kroton. (And Frobisher. And Faction Paradox.)
    Re:Gaiman, at least part of the issue there is that he wasn't super experienced writing for TV and budgets. In S6 Moffat could spend a lot of time going back and forth with him on drafts, pairing down what he was asking for, but in S7, with the 50th, he didn't have that time. So his original intention was to have it be set at an actual real life carnival, and you see Cybermen rising up out of the water, etc, rather than in space, but they couldn't do this for budgetary reasons. Somewhere in the process it was heavily rewritten, I *_believe_* by the script editor, not by Moffat, but that's tea leaf reading - Gaiman said it was heavily rewritten by _someone,_ and that he'd be willing to come back for Capaldi, so my guess is that it wasn't Moffat. (And Moffat didn't have the _time_ during S7b, due to the 50th coming up and Sherlock and an EP he hated, which is why it was such a mess. So it probably wasn't him. But that's largely a guess.)

  • @SirMagicToast
    @SirMagicToast 10 месяцев назад +13

    I always liked the idea that the human race keeps accidentally trending towards becoming cybermen over years and years, and it always takes someone to yell "stop!" and save us for it to not happen. This idea is so close in the show but never quite hit it right for me. Like starting as ear pieces, then why not also have a mic on it, then if you have a mic may as well get an air filter, then eye filters, then a neck brace, ect. Then the doctor shows up and stops it, but another few hundred years go by and someone else has come out with this great glove that lets you lift really heavy stuff. Eventually the glove gets upgraded to a full sleeve, and boots, ect and the cycle has started again. The idea of humanity slippery-sloping towards an inevitable end that is indisputably evil yet all the steps to that end seem good I think is really cool, and uniquely a cybermen story.

  • @Discotekh_Dynasty
    @Discotekh_Dynasty 11 месяцев назад +19

    Babe wake up Owen posted a new Doctor Who video 🥰

  • @reverendtgirl8680
    @reverendtgirl8680 11 месяцев назад +18

    I feel like the initial Cybus Cybermen did exactly what they needed to do. The creative team wanted to make the Cybermen feel real and not just guys in rubber costumes running around on cheap sets. They feel like they r actually made of metal, streamlined and powerful which makes them work in that story. But it does fundamentally take away the body horror aspect by making them come off as robots and with a few exceptions throughout the new series, they still use this robot look which I think does a lot to damage the impact of these creatures.
    I like Ashadd’s design cause wt least it reminds viewers that they r cyborgs and not just robots. I rly wish we could have another few stories with the Mondasian design or something along those lines

    • @eliotreader8220
      @eliotreader8220 10 месяцев назад

      I can remember watching torchwood's cyber women with my brother. Lisa being left partially converted explained a lot for me

  • @karachter
    @karachter 11 месяцев назад +8

    the times the cybermen are at their best is when the humans inside know what's going on, like the one lying on the ground in rise saying their "fiance can't see them like this" always makes my heart sink, same with the hospital modasian cybermen saying "kill me" and "pain" over and over again, but just getting muted

  • @paulaburrows8660
    @paulaburrows8660 11 месяцев назад +9

    The Modasian Cybermen were always the version that actually lived up to the description of what Cybermen are, humans replacing body parts. New Who Cybermen were just robots with human brains

  • @cipherfresh
    @cipherfresh 11 месяцев назад +36

    I love your analysis of how to make the Cybermen interesting, it hadn’t occurred to me how uninteresting it was to do “What if an evil Cyberman had emotions!” I also really enjoyed your humor and editing, this was a fantastic video.

  • @minicle426
    @minicle426 11 месяцев назад +5

    The Cybermen for me peaked in the Troughton era.

  • @Cropcircledesigner
    @Cropcircledesigner 10 месяцев назад +4

    Great vid!
    I thinkt he issue with the Cybermen is that they're too iconic for their own good, they're basically one of the mascots of the show so whenever there's an assortment of Baddies they gotta be there, and I imagine that whenever someone pitches a robotic villain, someone in the writers room suggests they make it a cyberman story.

  • @Look_Over_There
    @Look_Over_There 11 месяцев назад +10

    My main issue with the cyber men is that they seem to be forgetting their origin as emotionless human/technology fusion and making them more robotic. The only time in new who I was genuinely unsettled by them was in the age of steel, that scene where they just stand on the other side of the chainlink fence staring at mickey after the other guy gets shocked was creepy. The mondasian cybermen in world enough and time were also great.
    One thing that doesn't help is the voice its again getting more and more robotic, theses a difference between 'robotic' and 'emotionless' I would LOVE for the next generation of cybermen to have a deep 'human' but emotionless voice, like the 456 in torchwood children of earth would be perfect for them or even like those AI voices you hear where something is slightly off.

  • @jbanks979
    @jbanks979 11 месяцев назад +13

    Cyberman have got at least 25 years on the B word, so if anything Star Trek ripped who off with this.
    I fully agree with both the premise of the article and the list. I didn’t fully appreciate the Mondassian design thinking it was just 1966 Who making another monster out of egg cartons and tissue paper (it probably was that)
    Part of what makes that design so horrifying is it most resembles human beings who have upgraded themselves beyond their humanity. They don’t look like action heroes they look like nightmares, and when you add in the sing song voice I think you get an effect that few stories since have replicated.
    I’ll be that guy and say while Earthshock is great, the standard evil monster villan voices aren’t actually a good Cyber story, since they’re clearly both angry and motivated by spite (when they should not have those emotions)
    I’ll also defend nightmare in silver for making them an unstoppable terrifying threat and then deduct points for how much of a mess the rest of that story is

  • @spacelem
    @spacelem 11 месяцев назад +9

    I'm glad we agree that World Enough And Time, and The Doctor Falls were absolutely brilliant, and horrifying, and my god that cliffhanger broke me.
    Also the bit in The Age of Steel (?) when The Doctor frees a Cyberman from its emotional inhibitor, and there's a woman inside who says she's so cold, and she was about to get married, then later when he removes them all and you can see one wailing at its own reflection in horror... those are the moments that make the Cybermen truly terrifying, not just when they have stompy shoes and big shooty guns.

  • @Silverwind87
    @Silverwind87 4 месяца назад +1

    In defense of Mr. Clever, the Cyber Controller did mention that it would have to rework the Doctor's neural interface. It was probably talking about having to delete the Doctor's emotions. As for Ashad, I see him as resentful of his own emotions. It's like a reverse version of Bill as a Cyberman. Rather than trying to cling onto his emotions, Ashad is trying to delete his emotions. It reaffirms the idea that the Cybermen are voluntarily removing their own humanity for the sake of survival. Danny Pink was also partially converted and willingly deleted his own emotions. Not to remove the physical pain of becoming a Cyberman, but the emotional pain from losing Clara. The true horror and tragedy of the Cybermen is that even when they're forcefully converted, the removal of emotions is something they do to themselves. Out of necessity.

  • @blueknight07
    @blueknight07 11 месяцев назад +38

    I think the Cybermen stories from the 1960s are their strongest portrayals. Tenth Planet, Tomb of the Cybermen showed how utterly creepy they could be.

  • @darwoodtechnology
    @darwoodtechnology 10 месяцев назад +1

    The problem you outline is a similar problem with the Borg in Star Trek. A lot of writers just didn't get the concept so suddenly we have Borg Queens who are the leaders of the Borg. The original vision of the Borg in Star Trek was a collective consciousness that has no leadership, no centrality, to attack. The Borg were more akin to a virus whose only goal is to expand but can actually react and adapt to problems presented. Humans celebrate their individuality so the horror of the Borg is having all of that taken away from them. There is a great line from the classic episode "Best of Both Worlds" where Picard, as a converted Borg, tells his crew "We just want to give you a better quality of life." To the Borg, there is no hunger, poverty, or inequality. Everyone is equal and part of the collective consciousness with the only sacrifice being that person's individual consciousness.

  • @pebrero8
    @pebrero8 10 месяцев назад +2

    Why have I only discovered you now? I love you. More Dr Who content please.

  • @Synthpopper
    @Synthpopper 11 месяцев назад +13

    If the Cybermen aren't terrifying then I'm not interested. When done right they're the scariest Doctor Who adversary *by far*

  • @GallifreyanGunner
    @GallifreyanGunner 10 месяцев назад +2

    I disagree with you about Ashad. He was different because he was a collaborator against humans before his partial conversion. He even betrayed and murdered his own children for resisting. The Cyberman rejected him and, though it's unclear on TV , I think he partially converted himself because the Cyberman wouldn't - hence no inhibitor and patchwork armour. His army are all Cyberman that he's altered to serve him - ironically by removing the last of the organic parts. He's a really fascinating character whose potential was wasted by being senselessly sidelined and then killed by The Master.

  • @elqi8129
    @elqi8129 11 месяцев назад +11

    Good video! I don't quite share your level of enthusiasm for the cybermen so I'm less offended by them being used as background villains for other plots and I don't necessarily think thats enough to write an episode off as bad. That said, I do think you make a really good point about the potential for the cybermen as a unique villain and the show's failure to lean into that. I feel the same way about most of the Moffat and Chibnall eras -- with a couple notable exceptions, most of the antagonists were super forgettable and basically interchangeable. I wasn't quite as partial to the cybermen in the series 8 finale as you were. I feel like he really squandered the potential of the death sphere concept and ironically I thought that the best part of the story was Missy handing over the army because at least it felt like an attempt to address or wrap up the doctor's character arc throughout the season with his relationship with Danny and Clara and stuff, even if ultimately it didn't land. Anyways, yeah! This was mostly rambling and you probably won't read it but I enjoyed the video thanks

  • @seanmcerlean1222
    @seanmcerlean1222 11 месяцев назад +2

    The best Cybermen bit in all the RTD era was in Doomsday when they ar eon TV saying
    "Cybermen now occupy every land mass on this planet, but you need not fear. Cybermen will remove fear. Cybermen will remove sex and class and colour and creed. You will become identical."
    That's their triumph and their terror. Amd thays all we saw of it until Wprld Enough And Time.

  • @SuddenBiscuit
    @SuddenBiscuit 11 месяцев назад +5

    Great analysis. You've hit the nail on the head here - the Cybermen have such a unique and interesting concept so it's always disappointing when nothing is done with that and they are reduced down to their very basic functions as the story's villains, because they can be so much more than that.

  • @zigzacpaddywhack4212
    @zigzacpaddywhack4212 11 месяцев назад +2

    I only saw The Next Doctor once, when it was first broadcast, and I can remember his tethered aerial release developed in style, and his sonic screwdriver which is sonic because it makes a noise when you tap it, but had literally no recollection of the cybermen

  • @UmSteven
    @UmSteven 11 месяцев назад +5

    Used to not be a fan of the cybermen, and after this video i realize i just hated the writing of them bc you're right Capaldi's banger with the cybermen was really good (Not just because Capaldi) - Great video thx

  • @izzypleasures3545
    @izzypleasures3545 10 месяцев назад +2

    I've been bouncing this idea in my head for a while after watching this video and I think an important aspect to writing a good Cyberman story is to actually point out that the Cyberman's basic ideal (To upgrade) has no actual purpose.
    Like sure the call for body horror is a good step but I think an element that's sorely missing is to acknowledge in the story itself that the Cybermen are just a rogue paperclip maximizer. Invading planets, subjugating its people, extracting its resources and using both to build better and better Cybermen but towards no purpose. That way, you can actually put the body horror, in fact all the horror in Cybermen into perspective.
    All this pain, suffering, death and resurrection towards no goal. Even better if all this upgrading is actually unsustainable (you'll eventually run out of things to make more Cybermen) and worse not even uniform between different battalions of the same Cyberarmies. Worse than a civil war between two competing but separate armies, but a civil war between two sects of the same army because they've adapted and upgraded so divergently they deem each other unfit and must then upgrade them by force.
    Like what else would they do? They have no individuality, no culture, they only have the desire to upgrade and eventually when/if they win they'll just be statues, and you most certainly cannot adapt to entropy as their relentless march towards an unspecified perfection takes its toll. Climate collapse erodes their steel, the flesh within (if there's any left) would wither away, civil wars between competing battallions shatter their numbers, and all that's left is a mad Cybercontroller unable to command or to kill itself as the stars themselves invariably consumes them in the heat death of the universe.

  • @IsraRai-uc3gn
    @IsraRai-uc3gn 10 месяцев назад +1

    It's really telling to me that I like Rise of The Cybermen/Age of Steel & World Enough and Time/The Doctor Falls far more than any other NuWho Cyberman story, but could never really put my figure on why; the closest I could say is that I like both appearing to have a much more emotional connection and relation in general to what it means to be converted, and that's seems like a touchpoint in your video that has me also realising everything else you said. Those two stories really are far better at keeping to the original point and origin of the Cybermen.
    I do think Ashad is an interesting case in point in that he shares the self-loathing of others that have been partially converted or deconverted- but in the opposite way. He doesn't despair that he has been mutilated into a cyber-being, he angers that he is still human. To me that feels like a genuinely interesting position. Not only is it the inverse of what we usually see with part-converts, but it roots in the superiority ideology of cybermen quite well. We often compare Daleks to the Nazis, but there is a huge theme around eugenics when it comes to cyber-existence. You have to wonder who originally reached the specific conclusion that the most effiicient way to live was to become cybermen, and who implemented that, and Ashad's desire to become a cyberman seems to suit this theme well.
    That being said, the execution of Ashad is pretty poor, and the cyber-master was terrible.

  • @Cybermat47
    @Cybermat47 11 месяцев назад +9

    _Spare Parts_ is the best Cyberman story ever made IMO. It takes all the best things about the Cybermen and makes them much more disturbing thanks to being aimed at an adult audience rather than a family one.
    _The World Enough and Time_ is a fairly close second (in fact, both feature someone having a botched conversion before reuniting with their friends and/or family, and both use the Mondasian Cybermen).

    • @minicle426
      @minicle426 11 месяцев назад

      'Illegal Alien' is a very underated Cyberman story.

  • @justawanderingsoul8643
    @justawanderingsoul8643 10 месяцев назад +1

    NGL, the Three Words were one of the best parts of Capeldi's cyberman stories. Because if the choices available are between experiencing a cremation from start to finish or being cyber-converted, there's not many people who WOULDN'T give up their humanity (and I wouldn't be able to blame them, not at all).
    That's some proper horror right there.

  • @ellie4328
    @ellie4328 9 месяцев назад +2

    You look identical to the man who currently plays Marty Mcfly in the Back to the Future musical on the West End

  • @Dynamick65
    @Dynamick65 11 месяцев назад +4

    In my opinion they peaked in the episode Dalek where they had a Tom baker Era Cyberman's head in a glass box looking awesome. Also that one time where a cyberman fucking smashed through rich Jackie's window. That was rad.

  • @maldon3659
    @maldon3659 11 месяцев назад +5

    The Time Lords being converted into Cybermen was done better in Supremacy Of The Cybermen comic in which they basically convert every species in the universe (including The Daleks) into Cybermen

  • @fkez0510
    @fkez0510 11 месяцев назад +6

    The way i understood Mr Clever was that as he had not fully taken over The Doctor's mind and body, the way he acted was a result of the The Doctor's personality leaking through and affecting how he talks etc
    Because The Doctor still remained in there, Mr Clever was just using his personality. If The Doctor had been converted fully, then none of that influence would be there, and Mr Clever would act like a cyberman as there's no emotions or personality left

  • @joshuacarpenter1223
    @joshuacarpenter1223 11 месяцев назад +3

    Idk if you ever listen to fan audio stories on RUclips, I basically gave a go at a Cyberman story for a series because of wanting to be more challenging with the Cybermen. For me, the big three are interesting bc they represent different aspects of us; the Daleks are our past atrocities, the Master is our present negativities on the other side of the coin, but the Cybermen have the most to play with as the manifestation of our potential missteps and horrors. I think a good Cybermen story should explore that ideology with more than just the physical and emotional change, but the sociopolitical change too.

  • @danielcurren2119
    @danielcurren2119 11 месяцев назад +2

    The cybermen need to be treated like the ship of Theseus. Like with Bill, If you replace too much of what makes you human with machine or other parts, are you still you? Imagine having cybermen without emotional inhibitors, having to wrestle with the existentialism of losing themselves to technology and immortality. Like alchemy, there is an equivalent exchange and those with a fear of death lose themselves. Maybe have a regretful cybermen wanting to stop a conversion center after realizing the horror of what they have become

  • @Sir_Gerald_Nosehairs.
    @Sir_Gerald_Nosehairs. 11 месяцев назад +4

    What I never understood was their motivations. They are power-hungry, often angered, those are emotions that beings with "inhibitor chips" shouldn't feel.
    Always thought if they were portrayed as well-intentioned, utterly incapable of understanding people might not want to be like them, it would be scarier.

  • @rileylungthief
    @rileylungthief 11 месяцев назад +4

    great video owen!!!!! i love how tormented you are. never change

  • @Alfwin
    @Alfwin 11 месяцев назад +7

    Excellent video; I don't have much to add, but I agree with pretty much all of this! "If it works as a Dalek story, it's not a good Cyberman story" is such an apt way of putting it. Heck, a lot of Cyberman stories could've just as easily swapped them out for the _Sontarans_ and it wouldn't have made much difference.
    I also think that the Cybermen would be much more effective if they brought back the desperation they had in their early appearances. They turned themselves into Cybermen _because they were dying._ They capture and convert others because they're on the brink of extinction and _need_ others so they don't die out. In the 60s, "We must survive" was basically their catch-phrase, and I think they should lean into that: Cybermen driven not by desire for conquest nor uniformity nor by a sense that they're superior, but by an unyielding determination to _continue existing at literally any cost._
    EDIT: oh, and there's one Big Finish Cyberman story, in all but name, to rival Spare Parts: the third part of the first War Master series, The Sky Man. SPOILERS: it doesn't use the term "cyberman", but it takes that survival-at-all-costs idea and runs with it, and gives us an origin for Cybermen brought about not by a cackling megalomaniac nor a heartless computer, but by a good, honest, empathetic person who has just... run out of less-drastic ways to keep these people from dying. It's a really powerful story, and one of my favorites from Big Finish.

  • @Casterborous
    @Casterborous 11 месяцев назад +3

    I think the problem with RTD cybermen is that he wrote them like upright daleks. They have catchphrases, they're just a brain in a metal suit as opposed to a mutilated human. also the stomping they do is stupid and I hate it

    • @chaserseven2886
      @chaserseven2886 11 месяцев назад

      Huh? That’s still a mutilated human they literally cut the head open

    • @Casterborous
      @Casterborous 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@chaserseven2886 still more boring than the person in a suit. They're one bodypart away from a robot

    • @minicle426
      @minicle426 11 месяцев назад

      I agree. It's why I find the Cybus versions overated.

  • @vikiai4241
    @vikiai4241 10 месяцев назад +1

    I always liked that Cybermen were a villain with branding. And I don't just mean the corporate C branding of the modern era, but the in the originals, their transport tubes had cyberman-head logos on them. Why? Who who for? It doesn't matter, I just loved it!
    (I am specifically referring to the episode you had a clip from at 1:08, where (IIRC) the Cybermen were travelling as concealed cargo, fully branded on their transport packaging. So silly, but just the sort of thing that a no-longer-human entity could conceivably not understand why it probably isn't a good idea... Actually, I recall that being from a colour-era show, so possibly your clip shows this branding going back even further!).

  • @idle_speculation
    @idle_speculation 11 месяцев назад +2

    Perhaps a more chilling route to go with the CyberMasters' basic concept would be to reference one of 12's lines from World Enough And Time, where he says that cybermen are a phenomenon which repeatedly occur over and over across the universe.
    Consider that by Series 9 the Time Lords had safely parked themselves at the end of time away from all other threats. What happens when the universe itself starts to fail and die, long after even the Toclafane have vanished? They could go back to the past, but that would more than likely start another Time War. They could leave for other parts as Division did, but, seeing as Division hasn't been associated with Gallifrey directly since the universe was young, they may lack the ability to. At the very end, Me's reality bubble began to collapse, and that would likely happen far sooner at a planetary scale.
    what's the best option for them in this situation? To get an upgrade, to transform themselves into mechanical, infinitely regenerating horrors to survive. From there, some nutcase like Rassilon could go back in time to try to spread this "perfection" to everyone else before it's too late. The Time Lords spread a genetic virus to cause other species to evolve in their own image, so it's not out of character, and there could also be another dimension added to it, in that they're coming back from the end of everything as prophets with a warning, revealing that their modifications, though horrific, will prove to be the only way to stay alive in the end. As the last sparks of life in a cold, dead universe, their desire to convert others might stem from, or even be superseded by, a fundamental need to continue doing the one thing they've done since the very beginning.
    Survive.

  • @yoboom21
    @yoboom21 11 месяцев назад +4

    "some twink" ☠☠☠

  • @djneo92nl
    @djneo92nl 11 месяцев назад +2

    i loved the story in Torchwood

  • @ritchiewalker570
    @ritchiewalker570 10 месяцев назад

    Another smash hit of a video - sending love and support for your continued brilliance!

  • @RandomChannelTMBE
    @RandomChannelTMBE 10 месяцев назад +1

    Plot idea: the Tardis malfunctions and gets sent through the time vortex randomly. The Doctor can’t tell where they are and so they begin to explore and perhaps try to find help with fixing the Tardis. Through the episode (or 2) we see the Doctor interact with people who’ve started to get cybernetic enhancements (maybe with some Bladerunner/Cyberpunk aesthetics). The Doctor finds people who have more enhancements seem duller and less emotional in themselves and eventually discovers he is on Mondas and is witnessing the early development of the original Cybermen. From there it’s pretty open as to how it could end. Maybe the Doctor tries to intervene but causes a full conversion accidentally, or just runs away knowing he can’t change it

    • @affsteak3530
      @affsteak3530 9 месяцев назад +1

      I would do many great and/or terrible things to see a story set during the Fall of Mondas. Imagine the desperation of an entire dying civilization.
      Maybe they could steal some ideas from Frostpunk? 😯

    • @RandomChannelTMBE
      @RandomChannelTMBE 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@affsteak3530 it would be fascinating, and would give us multiple things we haven’t seen in a long time: effective twists, impossible situations and a dark plot. Newer Who needs it

  • @lastwingedwolfflying
    @lastwingedwolfflying 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great vid!! And thank you for reminding me I should rewatch World Enough and Time/Doctor falls now

  • @teddyboucher1848
    @teddyboucher1848 11 месяцев назад +3

    I feel like Cybermen are more interesting the less powerful/technologically advanced they are. If you want a technologically advanced non-dalek alien conqueror just use the Sontarans.

  • @Astaphxios
    @Astaphxios 11 месяцев назад +1

    You have somehow managed to encapsulate my inner monologue since the first time I saw Cybermen and I didn’t think I’d ever come across a video that is as bizarrely impassioned about Cybermen as my inner monologue tends to be

  • @caberknight9013
    @caberknight9013 11 месяцев назад +2

    this was a great video, I'd love to see more Doctor Who stuff from you!

  • @Jimmyd2107
    @Jimmyd2107 10 месяцев назад

    I completely agree! The concept of losing our emotions and the things that make us human is one of the scariest concepts in the show and the writers do need to remember that more 👍
    This is the first of your videos I’ve stumbled across and I have to say the quick witty jokes at the ends of your lines had me cackling; they definitely won me over so have yourself another subscriber ☺️👍😆

  • @greedy9310
    @greedy9310 11 месяцев назад +4

    I'm personally far more of a fa of Ashad given he encapsulates a part of the trope that of which is missed by some of the older ones - what if someone willingly became a cyberman? That's why he acts the way he does, with such vitriol, he wanted to be the way he is and lashed out when told that he had no choice, when it was his choice. Transhumanism of the future won't be "assimilate or die", it'll be lots of people choosing to become Cyberman esque.

    • @ILikedGooglePlus
      @ILikedGooglePlus 4 месяца назад

      Nah transhumanism of the future will be upgrade so you can increase productivity, or be fired and starve.
      With cryptobro bellends insisting its cool, while we all think the upgrades look dorky as fuck

    • @dannyboi5887
      @dannyboi5887 4 месяца назад

      @@ILikedGooglePlus I think you underestimate just how many utter nutjobs there are IRL who would unironically be 100% down for full-body transhumanism, like Adam Smasher and the Maelstrom gang from Cyberpunk 2077.

  • @OMGSAMCOPSEY
    @OMGSAMCOPSEY 10 месяцев назад +1

    The CM story i want is more of march forward for humanity over a march after them. Think cyberpunk mixed with the Dreamworks movie "Robots". People have started wanting upgrades, "A chip in your brain compete with AI, join the future" People essentially choosing to be robocop. People arent just steadily becoming cyberized, theyre purchasing it, often on loan, with bodyparts as collateral (not always their own) and full cybers as bailiff.

    • @affsteak3530
      @affsteak3530 9 месяцев назад +1

      Imagine you've got a family on dying Mondas and one of the kids loses both their hands to the cold. How hard would you work to "upgrade" them?

  • @andrewmorton7482
    @andrewmorton7482 4 месяца назад

    I remember the Cybermen from watching "Tomb Of The Cybermen" when I was a kid. Bearing in mind I'd be 7 and I'm now 61 that tells you how scary it was. The only Cybermen story to come close to it has been "The World Enough And Time" which, along with "Heaven Sent" will, I believe, come to be regarded as classic episodes of the modern era

  • @Eltonlaleham
    @Eltonlaleham 18 дней назад +1

    The mark one Cybermen are awesome in billions of ways

  • @davidharding1299
    @davidharding1299 11 месяцев назад +12

    Considering the changes to Davros by RTD... can the Cybermen even be used again? I mean, if old Davros showed people in wheelchairs as being evil, aren't the Cybermen a representation of the amputee and/or transplant community... or even plastic surgery recipients as being evil too?

    • @the_once-and-future_king.
      @the_once-and-future_king. 11 месяцев назад

      Oh he'll retcon Lady Cassandra for sure.

    • @pinealdreams1064
      @pinealdreams1064 11 месяцев назад +7

      Which is a stupid mentality, really. Why can't someone in a wheelchair be evil? Are we to believe they're all exactly the same and good at heart? Ridiculous stupidity.

    • @BanTskTvaoan
      @BanTskTvaoan 5 месяцев назад

      Maybe a counter could be useful. Something to show that cyberware and such aren't bad on their own. But mistakes when utilizing them, implementing them, and more would lead down to such a dark path. I think.

  • @lughtube5596
    @lughtube5596 11 месяцев назад +7

    I liked the autism joke. So me

  • @finalscore2983
    @finalscore2983 11 месяцев назад +1

    I love the cybermen. My first introduction was in age of steel, which solidified them as imposing and powerful. Only in nightmare in silver did I properly understand them as an adaptive force that throws itself at your defences until you drown. If you crossed a bridge over a valley and then cut the bridge, the cybermen would fall in single file into the valley until they could walk across the bodies of their comrades to get to you.
    My main gripe was how they seem to be associated with the master? 3 times, with Simm, Missy and the hot one whose name i can't remember.

  • @nefariousgremlin7554
    @nefariousgremlin7554 11 месяцев назад +3

    More body horror. More body horror, and emphasize the psychological horror of what being turned into something like that would do to your brain. Also, bring the old, creepy sing-song voices back.

  • @danpomusic4423
    @danpomusic4423 11 месяцев назад

    Rarely ever subscribe after one video or let alone comment but great video man! You’re humour is gold

  • @KeithWWatson
    @KeithWWatson 10 месяцев назад +2

    I love the designs of the Cybermen of NewWho

  • @btf_flotsam478
    @btf_flotsam478 6 месяцев назад

    "The Master, who (has) also suffered from showing up in stories that they're not really needed in" as opposed to his debut, which consisted of him doing just that for a whole season

  • @FuryousD
    @FuryousD 11 месяцев назад +1

    Id add a 4th to that trio now, the Weeping Angels

  • @DanS044
    @DanS044 10 месяцев назад +1

    I love your editing and vibes

    • @DanS044
      @DanS044 10 месяцев назад

      And I like all of your opinions, but of course that’s not the point. They’re all good videos/ essays.

  • @theinvisiblegentleman1142
    @theinvisiblegentleman1142 10 месяцев назад +1

    "It's the worst thing ever put on television, and I think it's fantastic."
    Aye, I'll drink to that.

  • @packman2321
    @packman2321 11 месяцев назад +1

    This was really interesting. I think I didn't really notice before watching that I've often seen Cybermen as second stringer Daleks, and you're right that that does a really creepy and compelling concept a disservice.
    Also I have a soft spot for Mr Clever, but that's just because evil versions of the Doctor are kind of my favourite villains, which I will admit could have been done with a number of other aliens (and has been).

  • @KarolYuuki
    @KarolYuuki 11 месяцев назад

    I found this channel today and thought this was a dr who analysis channel, but actually I just happened to be recommended all of the dr who videos in a row.
    Well, world enough and time is a masterpiece and it was my first doctor who episode. If it wasn't for it, who knows if I would be here 6 years later having watched the entirety or new and classical who. The cyberman are a great concept and it's sad when they are treated as robots, cause they work the best when they remind you that they once were people.

  • @daninellins
    @daninellins 11 месяцев назад

    Quickly becoming one of my favourite video essayists ☺️☺️💖🌸

  • @KeithWWatson
    @KeithWWatson 10 месяцев назад +1

    Cybermen are by far my favourite Doctor Who Villians, followed closely by the Ice Warriors.
    I always find things that turn you into them are more scary than things that just kill you.

  • @GypsyxDarling
    @GypsyxDarling 11 месяцев назад

    Oh no, I’m about to become completely obsessed with your channel. Excited to be here before you blow up, because you’re definitely going to.

  • @kattybratt1353
    @kattybratt1353 10 месяцев назад

    the cybermens first 5 stories were their best, i believe. they understand the concept and play with it beautifully, like the design in 10th planet or the afraid cyberman in the invasion

  • @sanddagger36
    @sanddagger36 10 месяцев назад +2

    there are 2 halves to this. A lot of people were bored of the cybermen and Daleks being the series finale every time and wanted them to show up in smaller side roles, and Moffet was one of those people. It is obvious from Victory of the Daleks which has them not even accomplish anything and them being a minor inconvenience in big bang. Moffet wanted these villains to be scattered throughout time and space as normal everyday villains rather than ultimate beings that needed to be wiped out every time the doctor saw them. This both helped explain why they kept coming back despite supposedly being wiped out, and it neutered them because supposedly the greatest villains in the universe just F off by themselves on Scarro for the majority of their life when they have more than enough resources to wipe out the galaxy.

    • @sanddagger36
      @sanddagger36 10 месяцев назад +1

      I actually liked the premise of Nightmare in Steel. It suggested the Cybermen were a massive force trying to convert the galaxy but they had been defeated. However, as they were merely metal grafted onto humans, they could always return if someone was stupid enough to tinker with one of their corpses. (this also explained where the original cybermen went and why alternative cybermen needed to be brought in.)

  • @brettrigby2226
    @brettrigby2226 4 месяца назад

    love your take on this, you're a pretty funny guy! defo subbing

  • @helmetsandhandgrenades5636
    @helmetsandhandgrenades5636 Месяц назад

    Me and my family always reference the hospital scene to freak each other out, the repeated "pain" of the mondasians will always be horrifying.

  • @nisswa789
    @nisswa789 11 месяцев назад +2

    SOMEONE MENTIONED BIG FINISH 🎉 gold star ⭐️

  • @thomfoster4430
    @thomfoster4430 11 месяцев назад

    Love this video! You've got yourself a new subscriber

  • @MrMann0123
    @MrMann0123 10 месяцев назад +1

    A great Cyberman story would be similar to a great Borg story but as you say it is the threat from within that sets it apart. There were some elements in some of the bad ones that showed exactly what it could be. That moment in Nightmare in Silver, the protocol that any Cyber tech being detected means a whole planet gets wiped out to isolate it. That should have given more chills than it did. I know that it had echos of the speech in Dalek about what one lone Dalek could do but it didn't land as well.
    As an old fart growing up in the OG era the Cybermen were a threat because of relentlessness. I hadnt seen the Terminator at that time, it probably hadnt been made yet. The speech about "absolutely will not stop" and not running, never running... that was terrifying. Why run, we have all the time in the world, we will walk, we don't tire, we will catch you, keep running, keep stumbling, keep falling, keep looking back...

    • @EternalEmperorofZakuul
      @EternalEmperorofZakuul 10 месяцев назад

      Imagine keeping the upgrade in progress in following episodes

  • @rorywilson656
    @rorywilson656 11 месяцев назад +1

    Dark water worked until the magic water turned every dead body ever into cybermen, that was so silly even for this show. World Enough and Time? Pure dead Brilliant