Nightmare in Silver (TV story): Difference between revisions
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*[[Porridge (Nightmare in Silver)|Porridge]] is inside an undefeated "automated" chess player. This is very similar to real-world [[the Turk]], who was too exhibited as an undefeatable chess-playing machine, but was actually controlled by a man inside. | *[[Porridge (Nightmare in Silver)|Porridge]] is inside an undefeated "automated" chess player. This is very similar to real-world [[the Turk]], who was too exhibited as an undefeatable chess-playing machine, but was actually controlled by a man inside. | ||
* Interestingly, the Turk was the inspiration for the [[Clockwork Droid]]s. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Girl in the Fireplace (TV story)|The Girl in the Fireplace]])'' | * Interestingly, the Turk was the inspiration for the [[Clockwork Droid]]s. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Girl in the Fireplace (TV story)|The Girl in the Fireplace]])'' | ||
* During the exterior shot of Porridge's ship, writing in [http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Aurebesh Aurebesh] is visible on the hull. This is the writing system used in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars Star Wars] by the [http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Galactic_Republic Galactic Republic] and later the [http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Galactic_Empire Galactic Empire], paralleling the presence of an unidentified human empire in this episode. It may also a reference to [[Warwick Davis]], who appeared in ''Star Wars''. | * During the exterior shot of Porridge's ship, writing in [http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Aurebesh Aurebesh] is visible on the hull. This is the writing system used in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars Star Wars] by the [http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Galactic_Republic Galactic Republic] and later the [http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Galactic_Empire Galactic Empire], paralleling the presence of an unidentified human empire in this episode. It may also be a reference to [[Warwick Davis]], who appeared in ''Star Wars''. | ||
== Story notes == | == Story notes == |
Revision as of 12:33, 19 May 2013
Nightmare in Silver was the twelfth regular episode of the seventh series of Doctor Who produced by BBC Wales. This adventure introduced a dramatic evolution to the Cyberman race employing a multitude of new abilities that replaced the previous design they had maintained since their return in TV: Rise of the Cybermen. Likewise, the Cybermats evolved with their progenitors into a more compact form known as Cybermites. Additionally, the Cybermen utilised a Cyber-Planner for the first time onscreen in the revived series, last seen in TV: The Invasion.
Synopsis
Hedgewick's World of Wonders: the perfect theme park day out. And ground zero for a deadly silver resurrection.
Plot
The TARDIS lands and the Eleventh Doctor, Clara, Angie, and Artie Maitland step out. The Doctor welcomes them to Hedgewick's World of Wonders, the biggest and best amusement park ever. Though Clara and Angie look sceptical, the Doctor repeats that it's not the Moon. Suddenly, a rock opens and a short man in a top hat peeks out. A shout goes up and the man disappears. A military platoon comes storming out and demands identification from the travelers. The Doctor flashes his Golden Ticket, and when that doesn't work, whips out the Psychic Paper. The captain recognises him as the Imperial Consul, and asks for news of the Emperor. The Doctor dismisses the platoon, and the top-hat man comes out again. He leads them into the desolate, formerly grand amusement park, and then into his attraction: Webley's World of Wonders.
He introduces himself as Impresario Webley, and shows them his waxwork attractions of beings. He asks Artie for a game of chess, and leads him to a Cyberman at a chess board. The Doctor yells to get down as the Cyberman powers up. Webley reassures them that it's completely harmless. He cites his display as "the six hundredth and ninety-ninth wonder of the universe", and a master at chess, despite the fact that it is an empty shell. He offers five Imperial shillings for a penny if Artie can beat the Cyberman at chess. Artie offers a sandwich, and Webley accepts. He shows that the shell is free of all devices. Webley offers a silver penny to Angie if she can figure out how it works. She guesses that it's done with mirrors. The Doctor deduces that it's being controlled by a man inside the box, named Porridge, and Webley gives Angie a silver penny. Webley shows off the rest of his Cyberman collection, as well as a wax figure of Emperor Ludince Nimrod Kedbrig, etc. the 41st, Defender of Humanity and Imperator of Known Space. The adults lead the kids off to the Spacey-Zoomer ride. The Spacey-Zoomer ride turns out to be an anti-grav ride, letting the children fly and float around. Clara wants to get the kids home, but the Doctor doesn't want to leave. He finds "funny insects" that he wants to investigate, and forces everybody to stay longer. The kids crash on couches in Webley's house, and adults go off, with the Doctor warning the kids not to wander off. The terrified kids settle into the couches.
Webley resets his chess board while eating the sandwich he won off of Artie. Suddenly, the Cyberman grabs him and begin upgrading Webley. Meanwhile, Angie declares the future to be stupid, complaining that there isn't even phone service. She leaves, despite protests from Artie, as the insects crawled over Clara's phone. Elsewhere, Porridge explains the Cybermen to Clara. He tells her of the Tiberian Spiral Galaxy, which had to be blown up to destroy the Cybermen. Porridge comments that he feels like a monster: Instead of mourning a billion trillion deaths, he feels sorry for the person who had to press the button. The Doctor interrupts and asks Clara if she told Angie she could go to the barracks. Clara realises that Angie had wandered off. In the barracks, the platoon are trying to fix their systems, when Angie appears. The captain asks Angie where her sister was. Realising that she meant Clara, Angie denied that they were sisters, calling Clara stupid and saying she was talking to Porridge. The captain pulls Angie off for a talk.
Meanwhile, Artie wanders off, looking for a light switch. He finally finds the lights. Suddenly, a Cyberman abducts him. At the barracks, Angie is telling the captain about Porridge when Clara storms in. Without warning, an upgraded Cyberman appears in the doorway. The Cyberman, able to move faster than their eyes can follow, captures Angie and escapes. Clara tries to go after Angie, being stopped by the Doctor. He promises that he will get her back. The Doctor invokes his "power" as "Imperial Consul", stripping the captain of her rank and giving it to Clara. He tells Clara not to let them blow up the planet, to get to somewhere defensible, and to stay alive. The Cyberman brings Angie to a room, where she finds her brother controlled by a Cyber earpiece.
Meanwhile, Clara in her new role as commander, scrounges up all their resources to build a offense against the Cybermen. They decide to move to Natty Longshoe's Comical Castle for defense. The captain informs Clara that the platoon can deal with one Cyberman, but there are protocols that they must follow if they cannot find and destroy it: specifically to blow up the planet. Clara rejects this and orders the platoon to move to the castle.
The Doctor returns to where he left the children, finding them missing. He spots a cyber insect on a display. Regarding it, he informs whoever is watching the feed that the children are under his protection, and he is coming to get them. Then he informs the machine that "[it] is beautiful!", sonics it, and studies it. He uses the sonic to tune into the local transmat, bringing himself to the children. He realises what has happened to them and Webley. His brain fully converted, Webley speaks for the Cybermen. He informs the Doctor that they needed children, and declares him the "savior of the Cybermen".
The platoon approaches the castle, and the captain tries to convince Clara to blow up the planet. Clara declares that the only reason she was alive is because she listened to the Doctor.
Webley tells the Doctor of the Cybermen. As the battle raged between humanity and the Cyberiad, they built a bunker to repair their damaged units. They needed children's brains to build a new Cyber-Planner, as a child's brain has infinite potential. However, now that the Doctor is there, they have no need of the children. The Doctor scoffs, telling them that they can only convert humans. Webley tells him that that is no longer true. He throws Cybermites on the Doctor, which incorporate him into the Cybernetwork. He becomes the Cyber-Planner, with non-human brain power to dream up ideas to strengthen the Cyberiad. He takes stock of his body, noting the unfamiliar systems and remarkable brain power. Inside the Doctor's mind, the two meet. Rather in a Jekyll and Hyde manner, the two wage war for control, the Cyberplanner using his memories to torment the Doctor.
The Cyberplanner finds delight in his cleverness, realising that there is information on the Time Lords available. The Doctor blocks it all but information on regeneration. He threatens to regenerate right then and there, to burn out the Cyberplanner. He doesn't want to, unsure of what he'll end up with next, but acknowledges that he could do it. The Cyberplanner declares a stalemate, concluding that they are too well balanced. One must take over. Each controls 49.881% of the brain, leaving .238% unclaimed. The Doctor challenges the Cyberplanner to a game of chess, winner takes all. If the Cyberplanner wins, he gets the Doctor's mind. If the Doctor wins, he gets his mind back, the children are freed, and nobody dies.
Missy takes guard of a corridor. She notices a shadow, and reports it as possibly a Cyberman. The Cyberman detaches its hand, which crawls over to Missy and drags her out of her hiding place. Back at base, the platoon realise that the Cyberman is on its way. Clara demands to be shown all weapons. There is only one anti-cyber gun. She is shown hand pulses, which are able to disable a Cyberman on contact. Finally she is shown the weapon which can implode the planet. Clara takes the remote control from the captain, but the captain informs her that it is set to respond to her voice only. Clara orders her to detonate the device only when she directly orders her to. The captain challenges Clara's command, but Clara asserts her authority and signs for the remote control.
The Doctor and the Cyberplanner begin their game. While they play, the Cyberplanner asks the Doctor why the Cyberiad has no record of him. He then realises that the Doctor purposely erased himself from history, noting that he could be reconstructed from the holes he left. The Cyberplanner rails against him, telling the Doctor that he cannot win against him. The Doctor counters with his knowledge of early Cybermen. Their codes can be scrambled by cleaning fluids and gold. He then slaps his Golden Ticket on the the metallic growth on his face, temporarily scrambling the circuits. He comes back to himself, collects the chess board, and brings the children and Webley to another room.
The captain and Porridge are discussing a secret regarding Porridge. She talks about guarding the old Emperor, and how she knows. Clara interrupts, asking why it was necessary to blow up a whole planet just to get rid of one Cyberman. Porridge says there are ways to kill a Cyberman, but they don't always work. Blowing up the planet is the only surefire way to do it. The captain says that she was sent to the punishment platoon because she didn't follow orders, and that she can make up for it now. She declares that she will do what she was born to do: fight for the Empire. She begins to voice-activate the weapon. As Clara tries to stop her, she is shot by the Cyberman. Clara decides to go on the offensive, otherwise facing death. The platoon mobilises with hand pulses and the anti-cyber gun. The members of the platoon launch sneak attacks on the Cybermen, with limited success.
The Doctor approaches the castle with the children and Webley in tow. Clara comes out with the anti-cyber gun and the Doctor greets her. The Doctor rattles off his news: he kidnapped the Cyberplanner, which is in his head. The kids are in a walking coma, which he may or may not be able to correct. There are more cybermen active, and the Cyberplanner is installing a gold patch. He asks for a table and for somebody to immobilise him (except for his hands). Once tied up, the Doctor removes the gold sheet from his face. The Cyberplanner reemerges, taunting Clara. As the Cyberplanner continues to rattle on, the Doctor moves his hand, writing "HIT ME!" on the notepad beside the chess board. Clara obliges. The Doctor thanks Clara, who demands to know the stakes. The Doctor elaborayes that the Cyberplanner will probably break his promise. Clara begs the Doctor to fix Angie and Artie. He says that they're just in standby mode. He then explains that they are more likely to leave alive than she is. Sensing the change in control, she surmises that the Cyberplanner said those words. He threatens her immediate death, and she leaves to prepare the platoon for the coming onslaught.
Clara discusses their weapons, which are minimal at that point. Spotting a cable, she cleverly devises a plan to electrify the water in the moat. They drop the cable into the water, turn on the power, and raise the drawbridge to force the Cybermen to cross the water.
The Doctor's game continues. Inside his mind, the Cyberplanner awakes the legions of Cybermen hidden in the barracks. Inside the citadel, the platoon prepares their defense. The Doctor calls for Clara, and she goes to check on him. The Doctor cheerfully asks her for a rundown on their weapons, with keen interest in the planet-imploding bomb. She shows him the remote trigger, which he tries to take possession of. She snatches it away from him, suspicious of who really is in control. The Doctor says the Cyberplanner is hibernating, but Clara doesn't buy it. She tells him to tell her something only the Doctor knows. Looking rather sincere, the Doctor begins to tell her that he is falling in love with her. He moves to kiss her, but Clara slaps him again. The Doctor comes to himself, overtaking the Cyberplanner's tricks. Clara tells him to finish the game, and the Cyberplanner grabs her hand, wresting the remote control from her and destroying it.
Clara and the platoon ready their attack with the five hand pulses and the nearly empty anti-cyber gun. The Cyberplanner declares endgame and moves to finish the Doctor. The Cyberarmy begins to assault the castle. One steps into the moat and is apparently electrocuted. The platoon celebrates, but then the Cyberman upgrades itself. The patch is spread through the ranks, and the Cybermen continue. Clara gives orders to defend the castle, and tells Porridge to keep himself safe. Two soldiers shoot down the first Cyberman, but balk as more come through. Porridge grabs the bomb, muttering that he should have destroyed the planet when he had the chance.
The Cyberplanner taunts the Doctor, offering him one more deal. If he sacrifices his queen in five moves, he'll release the children and take the Doctor's mind. The Doctor accepts the deal and Angie and Artie are released. The Doctor appears to have lost, but the children are free. The Cyberplanner taunts him once more, telling him how foolish he was to have pointlessly sacrificed himself for two human children. He mockingly asks the Doctor if he thinks that the death of the children will affect his relationship with Clara. Webley moves to kill the children, but Porridge slaps a hand pulse onto his leg and kills him. Angie awakes and the Doctor tells her to look after Artie.
The platoon are losing the battle. They are out of weapons, and the Cybermen's continual upgrades are proving to be more than a match for the ragtag soldiers. The Doctor taunts the Cyberplanner, telling him that sacrificing his queen was the best move he could have made. The Time Lords invented chess, and the Doctor has cleverly set up a trap that will give him checkmate in three moves. The Cybermen appear to be overwhelming the platoon, but as they are about to delver the killing blows, the Cyberplanner pulls in their resources, giving him extra processing power. It saves the lives of Clara and the rest of the platoon, but puts the Doctor at a serious disadvantage. As the platoon makes their last stand, the Doctor begins his endgame. Move One: Turn on sonic screwdriver. Move Two: Activate pulse. Move Three: Apply pulse. With some resistance from the Cyberplanner, the Doctor slaps himself with the hand pulse and destroys the Cybercircuitry in his body.
Clara rushes in to find the Doctor completely back to himself and unties him. The Doctor decides that they need to blow up the planet to destroy the Cybermen. This seems impossible since the captain is dead, but Angie deduces that Porridge can voice activate it, since he is the Emperor. Porridge confirms it and activates the Desolator, just as the Cybermen begin to regain their mobility. The Imperial ship warp-jumps them from the planet, including the TARDIS. The bomb ticks down, and the planet blows up, taking the Cyberiad. Porridge remarks that he liked being normal: not an emperor of a thousand galaxies, not lonely. Clara says that he doesn't have to be lonely, and he agrees, proposing to her on the spot. The Doctor attempts to interrupt, but is shushed by Clara, who prompts the Emperor to continue. Porridge makes a convincing argument, to which Clara declines gently. Angie calls her stupid for not saying yes, loudly declaring that one day, she'll be Queen of the Universe. Porridge pretends to threaten them with execution, before mirthfully telling them to leave.
The Doctor returns the children and Clara to their home, pondering Clara's identity once more. Back on the imperial ship, the Emperor asks if there was any Cybertech remaining. With the answer being no, the Emperor then flies his ship home--with a floating Cybermite blinking in the darkness of space.
Cast
- The Doctor - Matt Smith
- Clara - Jenna-Louise Coleman
- Angie - Eve De Leon Allen
- Artie - Kassius Carey Johnson
- Webley - Jason Watkins
- Porridge - Warwick Davis
- Captain - Tamzin Outhwaite
- Beauty - Eloise Joseph
- Brains - Will Merrick
- Ha-Ha - Calvin Dean
- Missy - Zahra Ahmadi
- Cyberman - Aidan Cook
- Voice of the Cybermen - Nicholas Briggs
References
Alien Species
- Waxworks sculpted in the likeness of a Uvodni head and upper body of a Blowfish can be seen on display inside the room housing the chessboard.
Cybermen
- The Cyber-Wars ended 1,000 years ago. The planet Hedgewick's World is on was used to hide 3 million Cybermen and repair them.
- Whilst not being able to convert non-humans in the past, the Cybermen can now process creatures like Time Lords, at least partially.
- The "Cyberiad" refers to collective consciousness of the Cybermen.
The Doctor
- Whilst under possession by the Cyber-Planner, the Doctor mimics the Ninth Doctor's accent and catchphrase of "Fantastic", as well as the Tenth Doctor's of "Allons-y".
- When the Cybermites take over, the Doctor lets them see the regeneration power, by showing him his previous incarnations, plus the regeneration from his tenth to his current self. He claims that he can regenerate at will.
- When describing the state of the neurons in the Doctor's brain, the Cyber-Planner says he has had "ten complete re-jigs".
- The Doctor has been erasing himself from history, leaving a hole in the Cybermen's records that used to be him.
Clara
- It is suggested that the Doctor and Clara meet on Wednesdays for their adventures, as opposed to Clara being in residence aboard the TARDIS.
Games
- The Doctor claims that the game of chess was invented by the Time Lords.
Cultural references from the real world
- The Doctor has a 'Golden Ticket' for World Of Wonders. Possibly a nod to the Golden Tickets from Roald Dahl's 'Charlie & The Chocolate Factory'. Webley's costume of a top hat and cane is similar to what Willy Wonka may wear too.
- Porridge is inside an undefeated "automated" chess player. This is very similar to real-world the Turk, who was too exhibited as an undefeatable chess-playing machine, but was actually controlled by a man inside.
- Interestingly, the Turk was the inspiration for the Clockwork Droids. (TV: The Girl in the Fireplace)
- During the exterior shot of Porridge's ship, writing in Aurebesh is visible on the hull. This is the writing system used in Star Wars by the Galactic Republic and later the Galactic Empire, paralleling the presence of an unidentified human empire in this episode. It may also be a reference to Warwick Davis, who appeared in Star Wars.
Story notes
- The episode's title, Nightmare in Silver, is reminiscent of TV: Silver Nemesis.
- The working title for this episode was The Last Cyberman.[1]
- The Cyber-Doctor answers to Clara's question of "More Cybermen?" with "They're waking from their tomb right now." which is a possible reference to the television story TV: Tomb of the Cybermen.
- Subsequently, the Cybermen exiting their tombs mirrors the cliffhanger of Earthshock Part 3 when three rows of Cybermen march towards the camera. It's also very similar of the scene where the Cybermen come out of their tombs in The Tomb of the Cybermen.
- The Doctor also had a conversation with himself in another Cybermen-story. (TV: The Moonbase)
- When the Doctor lets the Cyber-Doctor access his memories on regeneration, his previous ten incarnations are seen. Each image of an incarnation is taken from photograph stills used as promotional material during the respective actors' tenures.
- The Cybermen's ability to adapt to attacks is reminiscent of the Borg from Star Trek: The Next Generation. Additionally, the Borg used nanotechnology to convert individuals, similar to the cybermites, and Webley's cyber-appearance is reminiscient of the Borg's "half machine, half human" face. And as of "Star Trek: First Contact" they, like these Cybermen, assimilated new members by use of something coming out of their wrists.
- The Cyber-Doctor imitates the Ninth Doctor and says "Allons-y" like the Tenth Doctor.
- The converted Webley tells the Doctor that the Cybermen had turned children into Cyber-Planners in the past because of a child's imagination. This mirrors the reasoning behind the Renegade Daleks' use of a young girl as their Battle computer in Remembrance of the Daleks.
- This episode uses a camera technique known as "Bullet Time", popularised in the science fiction film The Matrix, to frame out the high-speed movements of the new Cybermen, as shown in the "Behind the Scenes" featurette for Nightmare in Silver.
- The Cyber-Planner makes its first appearance within the revived series. However, this is not the first time it has been incorporated into the elements of the revived timeline. Cyber-Planners previously appeared in GAME: The Eternity Clock.
Ratings
to be added
Filming locations
to be added
Production errors
to be added
Continuity
- It is never made clear whether these Cybermen are of the Mondasian or Cybus variety, although they use the phrase "upgrade" and one of Webley's Cybermen being similar to the ones from Closing Time with his other two having the Cybus logo like the ones from The Pandorica Opens. Webley's explanation that the Cybermen have adapted and that the new model will be unstoppable may hint that the two types of Cybermen have encountered each other and merged their technology. This would explain why Cybus-like versions had Mondasian ships in The Pandorica Opens and A Good Man Goes to War, why two of Webley's models have the Cybus logo, and why the Cyber-Wars lasted longer than has been previously stated.
- The Doctor can play chess. (TV: The Sun Makers, The Androids of Tara, The Curse of Fenric, The Wedding of River Song). Also, the Time Lords inventing chess was a query first considered by the Second Doctor. (PROSE: Dreams of Empire)
- This is not the Doctor's first encounter with a Cyberman purported to be an automated game-playing machine. When the Eighth Doctor encountered the Silver Turk, a Cyberman, it too attacked its 'controllers'. (AUDIO: The Silver Turk)
- The Doctor mentions and exploits the Cybermen's weakness to gold (TV: Revenge of the Cybermen, et. al.) and cleaning fluid. (TV: The Moonbase)
- Two Impact suits can be seen. (TV: The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe)
- The Doctor says the children are under his protection. (TV: The Bells of Saint John)
- Angie and Artie Maitland travel in the TARDIS, as they had previously blackmailed Clara into taking them along. (TV: The Crimson Horror)
- The Tenth Doctor's regeneration is seen. (TV: The End of Time).
- Several wax replicas of creatures from previous episodes are seen in Webley's room. This includes an Uvodni head, (TV: Warriors of Kudlak) a Blowfish head, (TV: Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang) a Shansheeth head, (TV: Death of the Doctor) a Chameleon, (TV: The Faceless Ones) a dummy, (TV: The God Complex) and several aliens seen in TV: The Rings of Akhaten (TV story), including an Ultramancer, a Pan-Babylonian and a Lugal-Irra-Kush.
- The Doctor previously visited an amusement park "controlled" by aliens. (TV: The Greatest Show in the Galaxy)
- Angie's mobile phone has no service, indicating that the Doctor didn't give her a superphone, as he had with every one of his regular companions since his ninth incarnation. (TV: The End of the World, 42, The Doctor's Daughter, Dinosaurs on a Spaceship) She is given a new phone "from the TARDIS" at the end, although it isn't clear whether or not this is a superphone.
- The Doctor says to the Cybermite, 'Not even a Cybermat'. (TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen, et. al.)
- The Doctor echoes a quote from his former companion Rory Williams when confronted by the troops aiming guns at him: "Don't shoot, I'm nice!" (TV: The God Complex)
- The Doctor's defeat of the Cyber-Planner, distracting him with a bluff about an alleged checkmate to drain his power, is the same stratagem he used against Fenric in his seventh incarnation. (TV: The Curse of Fenric)
- The Doctor refers to an enemy, the Cybermite, as "beautiful." (TV: Tooth and Claw, The God Complex, PROSE: Dark Horizons)
- Webley claims that the Chess playing Cyberman is the 699th Wonder of the Universe. The Third Doctor claimed the destruction of the Exxilon City brought the universe down from 700 to 699 Wonders in TV: Death to the Daleks
- UNIT also designed a device that would blow up a planet to be used if left with no other options, the Osterhagen Project. (TV: The Stolen Earth/Journey's End)
- The Doctor and Mr. Clever discuss the Doctor removing himself from databanks across the universe. (TV: Asylum of the Daleks, Dinosaurs on a Spaceship, The Angels Take Manhattan)
- The Doctor says that the Cybermen can't convert non-human beings. However, in his sixth incarnation, he met Cybermen who, whilst in the Land of Fiction after Zoe Heriot piloted them there, converted; Faries, Trolls, Merpeople, Vampires and even a Wale into their Cyber-forces. (AUDIO: Legend of the Cyberman)
Home video releases
to be added
External links
to be added
References
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