The current Cybermen are my favorite. Better design, much better use of the Cybermen concept. 

How so?The current Cybermen are my favorite. Better design, much better use of the Cybermen concept.![]()
I'm guessing you only mean in appearance...The current version, by far the least cheesy.
The original Cybermen were marginally interesting in terms of nature in their first couple of appearances. After that, the core themes associated with the characters have been completely abandoned and the Cybermen have become just another band of space thugs bent on world domination. Some people may call that an "interesting motivation". I call that "crappery".That's very much a matter of opinion. I'd say the original Cybermen were far more interesting in terms of nature and motivation than the recent clunkers.
Not really. Their first two parter wasn't a patch on The Tenth Planet and was a weak retread of the original idea with bad dialogue and as stupid a resolution we've ever had (emoing out and blowing up, that's what I call "crappery"), and their only other real story was pissing about in Victorian London like tin idiots. Hardly a terrific realisation of the concept.We had to wait until the new series to find writers at last willing to deal with the themes of dehumanization through technology, loss of identity, the threat of uncontrolled mass production and industrialization, i.e. what was supposed to make the Cybermen scary in the first place.
For obvious reasons I can't take your usual vitriol seriously, but I think it's interesting to note that you're trying to compare this story with The Tenth Planet specifically. It's a telling sign that in the 40 years between these stories, we'd be hard pressed to name any other serial that did anything with the original Cybermen concept.Not really. Their first two parter wasn't a patch on The Tenth Planet and was a weak retread of the original idea with bad dialogue and as stupid a resolution we've ever had (emoing out and blowing up, that's what I call "crappery"), and their only other real story was pissing about in Victorian London like tin idiots. Hardly a terrific realisation of he concept.
For obvious reasons I can't take your usual vitriol seriously, but I think it's interesting to note that you're trying to compare this story with The Tenth Planet specifically. It's a telling sign that in the 40 years between these stories, we'd be hard pressed to name any other serial that did anything with the original Cybermen concept.Not really. Their first two parter wasn't a patch on The Tenth Planet and was a weak retread of the original idea with bad dialogue and as stupid a resolution we've ever had (emoing out and blowing up, that's what I call "crappery"), and their only other real story was pissing about in Victorian London like tin idiots. Hardly a terrific realisation of he concept.
Not really. Their first two parter wasn't a patch on The Tenth Planet and was a weak retread of the original idea with bad dialogue and as stupid a resolution we've ever had (emoing out and blowing up, that's what I call "crappery"), and their only other real story was pissing about in Victorian London like tin idiots. Hardly a terrific realisation of he concept.We had to wait until the new series to find writers at last willing to deal with the themes of dehumanization through technology, loss of identity, the threat of uncontrolled mass production and industrialization, i.e. what was supposed to make the Cybermen scary in the first place.
New daleks dont bother me. They look a bit funny from the side, but the colours a fine and they are still daleks. In fact I quite like some aspects of them like the head lights and the eye stalk with it's organic pupil.
Cybermen on the other had have been shafted in new who imo.
"Rise of the Cybermen"/"The Age of Steel" was loosely inspired by Big Finish's Spare Parts, which is a wonderfu spiritual continuation of The Tenth Planet and The Moonbase. Unfortunately, the two-parter has very little to do with the audio play.
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